Part-18-The-Suffolk-Line-1770-to-1850

PART EIGHTEEN

 

The Main Suffolk Line - 1770 to 1850

 

This is the second of four sections of Part 18 of the Collett family

 

Updated October 2023

 

 

Anthony Collett [18N1] was born at Walton near Felixstowe in 1769, where he was baptised on 6th April 1770, the eldest son of Anthony Collett and Catherine Trusson.  He attended University College at Oxford where he matriculated on 13th February 1787.  The college records also confirmed that he was the eldest son of Anthony Collett of Walton in Suffolk.  It was there that he gained a Bachelor of Arts degree on 17th December 1790, and a little later his Master of Arts on 28th June 1793.  He was presented by Lord Huntingfield in 1800 and to Heveningham in Suffolk by the Lord Chancellor in 1803, the latter making him the Rector of Heveningham.  He married Anne Rachel Curtis before the turn of the century and was later the incumbent at Heveningham Hall.  In 1813 Anthony paid out £420 for a modest two-up, two-down house in Ubbeston, about one mile from Heveningham, that was built in 1776 by Robert Baldry.  That house later became The Old Rectory and is still in existence today with a stone sill that records the year built and Baldry’s initials.  Baldry died in 1806, but not before he had rebuilt Heveningham Hall which was vacated by Anthony Collett in 1813

 

Anthony was a wealthy man, owning 600 acres of land and a year after buying the modest two-up two-down property he extended the building at the eastern end to accommodate his growing family.  The family remained living in the house until 1826, when it was passed to eldest son Anthony.  It was around that time, that it would appear Anthony Collett senior and his wife Anne left Ubbeston and moved, the ten miles east, to Aldringham near Leiston.  Their son Anthony did not stay long living in the house at Ubbeston, but moved to Bury-St-Edmunds, at which time the house was leased to local farmer Simon Smyth and his wife Phoebe and their two teenage children.  By 1841 the house had been further extended at the back to accommodate two live-in servants.  Three years prior to that date Anthony Collett senior had died at Heveningham during February in 1838, and it was there also that he was buried on 26th February 1838.  The parish register record that he 68 and a rector.  An article in the Gentleman’s Magazine reported his death as follows:  February 27th at Leamington aged 67, the Reverend Anthony Collett of Kelsale House in Suffolk, an acting magistrate of that county, Rector of Heveningham and perpetual curate of Aldringham-with-Thorpe(ness) and Great Linsted

 

Anthony’s Will was proved on 22nd May 1838 and was listed as the Will of ‘Reverend Anthony Collett, Rector, and Clerk of Heveningham in Suffolk’.  Sometime following the death of her husband his widow moved to Bury-St-Edmunds, where Anne Rachel Collett was living when she died in March 1849.  However, she was buried with her husband at Heveningham on 20th March 1849, aged 73.  Her Will was proved on 2nd May 1849 and was recorded as the Will of ‘Anne Rachel Collett widow of Heveningham’.  Less than three years before he died, on 22nd December 1835, the Reverend Anthony Collett, magistrate, had tried unsuccessfully to persuade a mob of 200 rioters at Bulcamp Workhouse near Blythburgh to disperse.  In the end he was forced to read them the Riot Act which was more successful, although they threatened to return later.  All of this was reported in a letter from Harry White, Clerk to the Guardians of the Blything Poor Law Union, to the Poor Law Commission, enclosing minutes of the meeting of the board of guardians of the Blything Poor Law Union, and resolutions relating to mob control.  The full story was told in Collett Newsletter No. 64, available upon request

 

18O1 - Anthony Collett was born in 1800 at Heveningham

18O2 - Anne Collett was born in 1802 at Heveningham

18O3 - Catherine Charlotte Collett was born in 1805 at Heveningham

18O4 – William Collett was born in 1812 at Heveningham

 

Thomas Collett [18N2] was born at Walton in 1771 and was baptised there on 7th July 1771, the son of Anthony Collett and Catherine Trusson.  He married Margaret Bushell with whom he had five children.  It is very likely that the children were all born at Minster-in-Thanet to the west of Ramsgate in Kent, since it was there, in the Church of St Mary, that they were all baptised within a few days of their birth.  Thomas Collett was known as ‘Thomas of Ringleton’ (Woodnesborough in Kent) and towards the end of his life he lived at Woodnesborough near Sandwich in Kent, where he died in 1845 at the age of 73.  His wife Margaret died in 1838.  Whilst Ringleton does not appear to be a hamlet or a village settlement, it is most likely to be a reference to Ringleton Farm at Woodnesborough, which was known to be farmed by members of the Collett family

 

18O5 - Margaret Collett was born in 1804 at Minister-in-Thanet

18O6 - Thomas Collett was born in 1805 at Minister-in-Thanet

18O7 - George Collett was born in 1806 at Minister-in-Thanet

18O8 - Mary Collett was born in 1808 at Minister-in-Thanet

18O9 – Catherine Collett was born in 1810 at Minister-in-Thanet

 

Catherine Collett [18N3[ was born at Walton in 1773 and it was there that she was baptised on 16th April 1773, the only daughter of Anthony Collett and Catherine Trusson.  Catherine married Henry Pett Hannam of Northbourne near Deal in Kent, at Walton on 20th September 1797.  Once married Catherine and Henry settled in Northbourne where their children were born.  Only two are listed here, although there may have been others.  The couple’s eldest daughter Catherine Ann Hannam was born on 12th December 1799 at Northbourne in Kent and was only 34 years old when she died on 21st January 1834, while her mother Catherine Hannam nee Collett died twenty years later on 5th December 1854.  The younger daughter Harriet Pett Hannam, who was born on 20th July 1802 and also at Northbourne, married Anthony Collett [18O1]

 

Charles Collett [18N4] was born at Walton in 1774 where he was baptised on 3rd November 1774, the son of Anthony Collett and Catherine Trusson.  Charles married (1) Charlotte Lynch at Walton-cum-Felixstowe in 1801.  During their short-married life Charlotte presented Charles with six children before she died at the end of 1813, possibly during the birth of the sixth child.  All of their children were born and baptised at Walton in Felixstowe, where Charlotte Collett died on 27th December 1813 and was buried on 1st January 1814 at the age of just 37.  Within the Walton burial records is the following poorly written entry: “Ch Altar tomb palisaded Charlotte w of Cha Collett 27 Dec 1813 age 37, 3 of their sons d. inf. Cha Collett 16 Aug 1842 age 67, Cath their 2nd dau w of Hen.......”.  Thereafter the handwriting is very difficult to read

 

It was during the year following the death of his wife that Charles Collett married (2) Elizabeth Harmsworth at Walton in 1814.  That second marriage produced a sixth child for Charles, who was also baptised at Walton in Felixstowe.  All of Charles’ children had been born at Walton and, by June 1841, the remnants of family were living at the High Street in Walton on the day of the census that year.  The five members of the family were recorded with rounded ages, with Charles Collett being 65 and a farmer, his wife Elizabeth Collett being 60, their two daughters Charlotte Collett and Elizabeth Collett being 30 and 25 respectively, together with their son William Collett who was 20.  All of them were confirmed as having been born within the County of Suffolk.  On that day, Charles employed three female servant and one male servant.  They were Elizabeth Self aged 30, Susan Whitby aged 25, Mary who was 15, as was James Nice.  Living next door, at Wadgate, was coast guard James Hannah.  Charles Collett died at Walton on 16th August 1842 and was buried there on 24th August 1842 aged 67, when he was referred to as Charles Collett of Walton.  It was nine years after the death of her husband that Elizabeth Collett nee Harmsworth died at Bury-St-Edmunds during the last week of September, following which she was buried at Stanningfield on 27th September 1851, aged 75.  Six months prior to her passing, Elizabeth Collett from Newbury was 74, when she was living at Bury-St-Edmunds with her son William Collett who was the Curate at Stanningfield, who conducted his mother’s funeral service

 

18O10 – Mary Lynch Collett was born in 1807 at Walton-cum-Felixstowe

18O11 – Catherine Collett was born in 1807 at Walton-cum-Felixstowe

18O12 – Charlotte Collett was born in 1809 at Walton-cum-Felixstowe

18O13 – Elizabeth Collett was born in 1810 at Walton-cum-Felixstowe

18O14 – Charles Lynch Collett was born in 1811 at Walton-cum-Felixstowe

18O15 – Charles Collett was born in 1813 at Walton-cum-Felixstowe

The child of Charles Collett by his second wife Elizabeth Harmsworth:

18O16 – William Collett was born in 1818 at Walton-cum-Felixstowe

 

Cornelius Collett [18N5] was born at Walton in 1786 and was baptised there on 30th March 1787, the son of Anthony Collett and Catherine Trusson.  However, it would appear that he must have suffered an infant death, since the next child born to Anthony and Catherine was also given the name Cornelius.  Curiously though, while there are two baptism records for Cornelius Collett, both the sons of Anthony and Catherine, there is no burial record for a Cornelius between the two dates.  Furthermore, upon the death of Cornelius Collett (below), his date of birth was given as the date of the baptism of the first of the two Cornelius.  So was there only one of them, and could he have been baptised twice, just two years apart.  Alternatively, if there was only one, the first ‘baptism date’ may have been his birth date

 

Cornelius Collett [18N6] was born at Walton shortly after the death of his brother of the same name in 1787, and it was there also that he was baptised on 2nd March 1789, the youngest and last child of Anthony Collett and Catherine Trusson.  Cornelius Collett was around 35 years old when he married Amelia Daniel on 14th May 1822, the wedding taking place at Falkenham, in Suffolk, on Amelia’s twenty-eighth birthday.  Amelia was the daughter of Robert Daniel and his wife Alice Woodruffe, and was baptised at Falkenham near Felixstowe on 19th May 1794.  Following their marriage, Cornelius and Amelia settled in Beverley, within the East Riding of Yorkshire, just north of Kingston-upon-Hull.  However, it was at Amelia’s home town of Falkenham, that the couple’s first child was baptised, with the parish register stating the child was of Beverley.  During his life, he was referred to as ‘Cornelius Collett of Beverley’ in Yorkshire, and it was there where three of the couple’s four sons were born.  Cornelius Collett died at Beverley on 30th March 1840 and was buried there on 6th April 1840.  The Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser, published on 4th April 1840, included the following death notice for him.  "On Monday last at his house in Beverley, Cornelius Collett, Esq.  He was born 30 March 1787 and died 30 March 1840, having just lived to complete his 53rd year."  It is very interesting that the stated date of his birth was actually the baptism date for his brother.  See the notes above on this subject

 

The first national census in June 1841 recorded Amelia Collett, aged 45 and a widow, living at North Bar Street in Beverley with just three of her four sons.  Her three sons were listed as Charles Collett and Samuel Collett, both aged 15, and Daniel Collett who was 12.  At that same time, Amelia’s youngest son Trusson Collett, who was nine years old, was staying with his uncle Charles Collett (above) at Woodbridge.  Twenty years after the death of Cornelius Collett, an item appeared in The Times newspaper on 7th September 1860.  The article reported that “Trusson, youngest son of the late Cornelius Collett Esquire of Beverley, had married Elizabeth Charlotte Collett”.  There was also a similar notice published in the Ipswich Journal on 8th September.  According to the Beverley census conducted in 1851, widow Amelia Collett from Falkenham was 56 and an annuitant, employed two female servants and one male servant, who had living with her at North Bar Street, her son Trusson Collett who was 18, with no stated occupation

 

Sometime later, Amelia left Beverley when she moved to London where, in 1861 she was living at Newton Street in Paddington at the age of 66, when she was a fund holder.  On that day, she was staying at the home of her married son Giuseppe Collett, formerly Trusson Collett, her youngest son.  The other two residents were Elizabeth C Collett, his wife, and his sister-in-law Catherine A Collett.  Within the following decade she moved again, that time to Spring Grove Road which runs between Heston and Isleworth, through Hounslow in Middlesex, where she had been reunited with her unmarried son Samuel.  In the census of 1871, Amelia Collett was 76 and a widow having an annuity, as had her eldest surviving son Samuel.  At the time of the death of Amelia Collett nee Daniel on 3rd September 1880, at the age of 86, she was recorded as being of Clare Lodge, Spring Grove in Isleworth.  However, it was at Ramsey near Harwich in Essex, where she was buried six days later on 9th September, where a headstone for her mother’s Woodruffe family refers to her as “the relict of Cornelius Collett of Beverley”

 

In addition to the burial of many members of the Woodruffe family, Ramsey’s churchyard also contains a record of the burial of William Woodthorpe, who died on 15th September 1806 at the age of 55.  He was the husband of Judith Woodthorpe who died on 17th April 1792 aged 38 years and the son-in-law of John Woodruffe (Judith’s father) who died on 2nd April 1788 aged 65, whose wife was Judith Woodruffe who died on 11th March 1808 aged 80.  Probate of the Wil of Amelia Collett was proved at the Principal Registry in London on 11th March 1881, when the two beneficiaries were her son Samuel Collett and Trusson Collett.  Why her other surviving son Daniel was not mentioned is curious

 

18O17 – Charles Collett was born in 1823 at Beverley, Yorkshire

18018 – Samuel Collett was born in 1824 at Beverley, Yorkshire

18O19 – Daniel Collett was born in 1828 at Beverley, Yorkshire

18O20 - Trusson Collett was born in 1831 at Beverley, Yorkshire

 

Cornelius Collett [18N7] was born at Woodbridge in 1774, where he was baptised at St Mary’s Church on 20th July 1774, the eldest son of Cornelius Collett and Susanna Page.  Tragically, it was less than a week later that baby Cornelius Collett was buried there on 25th July 1774

 

Susanna Collett [18N8] was born at Woodbridge around June 1775, and was baptised at St Mary’s Church on 2nd July 1775, the eldest daughter of Cornelius Collett and Susanna Page.  She later married attorney Rayner Cox, who was born at Harwich where he was baptised at the Church of St Nicholas on 17th October 1775, the son of Rayner and Sarah Cox.  The couple’s wedding service was conducted at St Mary’s Church in Woodbridge on 8th October 1799.  Susanna Cox later died in Hertfordshire, where she was buried

 

Cornelius Collett [18N9] was born at Woodbridge in 1776, where he was baptised at St Mary’s Church on 24th August 1776, the second son of Cornelius Collett and Susanna Page.  He was named after his older brother of the same name, who had died just two years earlier.  By 1797 he was Lieutenant Cornelius Collett of the Royal Navy.  Upon his death, he was buried at Woodbridge

 

Lucy Collett [18N10] was born at Woodbridge in 1777.  It was also there that she was baptised on 9th January 1778, the daughter of Cornelius and Susanna Collett, although sadly she died not long after that while still an infant

 

Elizabeth Collett [18N11] was born at Woodbridge, where she was baptised on 11th December 1778, the daughter of Cornelius Collett and Susanna Page.  She later married John Gurling (Girling) who worked at The Customs House in London, and they had a son.  The only other known fact about Elizabeth is that she died at Ingatestone (Inggleston) in Essex, where she was buried.  It may be of interest that William Collett [18L38] married his second wife Mary Girling at Wilby in 1801.  Whether she was related in some way to John Girling is not known at this time

 

Mary Collett [18N12] was born at Woodbridge during July 1780, the youngest child of Cornelius Collett and Susanna Page, and was baptised at St Mary’s Church in Woodbridge on 25th July 1780.  She was 21 when she married William Whincosp at Woodbridge on 22nd March 1802.  William Whincosp of Bridfield was a surgeon, and all of their children, apart from the last one, were baptised as St Mary’s Church in Woodbridge.  They were Mary Whincosp on 4th January 1803, Elizabeth Whincosp on 14th January 1804, William Horatius Whincosp on 8th August 1806, Susanna Whincosp on 4th August 1808, and Sarah Helen Whincosp on 1st September 1815, but at Melton in Suffolk, north-east of Woodbridge.  On some occasions, the surname was written as Whincopp

 

Robert Henry Collett [18N13] was born in London on 9th April 1781 and was baptised at All Hallows Church in Bread Street on 3rd may 1781, the eldest son of Robert Collett and his wife Jane Brice.  He was educated at Fulham School in London by Mr Owen, and from there he entered Trinity College in Cambridge on 4th July 1798 at the age of 18.  The university records confirm he was the son of Robert Collett of London, and that he was born in 1782.  He matriculated in 1799 and obtained his BA in 1803, followed three years later by his MA in 1806.  He married Frances Meyler Smith, the daughter of Henry and Frances Smith of Peckham House in Camberwell, Surrey, who was baptised on 6th April 1786 at Hartburn in Northumberland.  The marriage took place at St Giles Church in Camberwell on 27th October 1809, following which the couple initially lived at Little Ilford in Essex, where their first nine children were born, before moving to Kent where their last two known children were born

 

It may also be of interest that Robert’s son William Lloyd Collett married Frances Harriett Smith, the daughter of one Henry Smith, who may well have been a relative of Robert’s wife.  Frances Meyler Smith lived on for almost another twenty years after his death, before she passed away at Tunbridge Wells on 26th August 1857.  Robert Henry Collett died at Brighton on 22nd July 1838 and was buried there on 28th July.  His Will was proved on 4th September 1838.  In the Will, he was referred to as ‘Reverend Robert Collett, Clerk of Westerham’.  In addition to the previously listed seven children, it is now known that Robert and Frances had another daughter who died at Torquay on 16th October 1848 at the age of 18, and she was their nineth child Jessie Collett.  The later Letters of Administration of Frances Meylor Collett were signed on 25th June 1858, when her personal effects were valued at under £8,000 when the Principal Registry granted to the Reverend William Lloyd Collett of Shepherd’s Bush, a clerk (in Holy Orders) one of the children of the deceased, he having been first sworn

 

18O21 – Frances Jane Collett was born in 1811 at Little Ilford, Essex

18O22 – Mary Ann Collett was born in 1812 at Little Ilford, Essex

18O23 – Robert Henry Collett was born in 1814 at Little Ilford, Essex

18O24 – Caroline Collett was born in 1815 at Little Ilford, Essex

18O25 – Helen Maria Collett was born in 1817 at Little Ilford, Essex

18O26 – William Lloyd Collett was born in 1818 at Little Ilford, Essex

18O27 – Henry Gerard Collett was born in 1823 at Little Ilford, Essex

18O28 – Christopher Theophilus Collett was born in 1825 at Little Ilford, Essex

18O29 – Jessie Collett was born in 1827 at Little Ilford, Essex

18O30 – Philip Morden Collett was born in 1829 at Speldhurst, Kent

18O31 – John James Collett was born in 1832 at Westerham, Kent

 

William Brice Collett [18N14] was born in London on 27th May 1785 where he was baptised on 29th June 1785 at St Pancras Church in Soper Lane, the second of two children of Robert Collett and Jane Brice.  Nothing else is known about William, except that he was still a bachelor when he died on 19th September 1808 at the age of 23.  He was subsequently buried at Bow Church in London on 24th September 1808, where his father, who had died sixteen years later, was a merchant

 

Anna Collett [18N15] was born at Swanton Morley in 1785 and it was there in All Saints Church that she was baptised on 29th April 1785, the same day she was born, the eldest child of William Collett, Curate of Swanton Morley, and his wife Anna Carthew.  Anna was only twenty-one when she died at Swanton Morley on 16th November 1806 and was buried on 21st November in the family grave at All Saints Church, her father conducting the burial ceremony, as he had done the previous year for Anna’s sister Charlotte (below)

 

Charlotte Collett [18N16] was born at Swanton Morley in 1787, where she was baptised on 28th January 1787, the second daughter of William and Anna Collett.  She was only 18 years old when she died on 27th February 1805 and was buried in the family grave at All Saints Church on 5th March.  A memorial tribute to her father within the church also includes the names of Charlotte and her sister Anna (above), who died during the following year

 

Sophia Collett [18N17] was born at Swanton Morley on 17th February 1788, the third child of William Collett and Anna Carthew, and was baptised at All Saints Church on that same day.  One year before she was married, Sophia Collett was a beneficiary under the terms of the 1815 Will of her brother-in-law Thomas Leventhorpe, the husband of her younger sister Frances Elizabeth Collett (below).  Sophia was then married by licence to the much older John Deacon on 12th October 1816 at Swanton Morley, when John was described as an Esquire from the Parish of St Peter Cogn Hill in London, a widower.  Sophia was a spinster ‘of the parish’ and the service was conducted by Vicar Morden Carthew, standing in for her father William Collett, Rector of Swanton Morden, who had taken charge of the marriages in the parish register.  The situation was the same at the wedding of Sophia’s sister Frances Elizabeth (below).  Both Sophia and John signed the register in their own hand, while the two witnesses were Frances Elizabeth Collett and William Collett junior, Sophia’s sister and brother

 

John Deacon was a banker of London and of Mapledon Park in Kent, and their marriage produced at least nine children.  By the time of the June census in 1841, six of their nine known children were living with the couple in the Marylebone Rectory registration district of London, while the three absent children were very likely attending a boarding school elsewhere, since they were back living with the family ten years later.  The 1841 Census listed the family as John Deacon who was 65, Sophia Deacon who was 50, their daughters Mary Deacon and Sarah Deacon, who both had a rounded age of 20, Helen Deacon who was 14, Harriet Deacon who was 10, Lucy Deacon who was nine, and Catherine Deacon who was eight years old.  Ten years after that the family was once again recorded at Marylebone Rectory when it was comprised John Deacon who was 78, his wife Sophia who was 60, Mary who was 29, Sophia Deacon who was 27, Honora Deacon who was 26, John Deacon who was 25, Ellen (Helen) who was 23, Harriet who was 20, Lucy who was 19 and Catherine who was 18.  Missing from this list of children is William Samuel Deacon, who was named as Sophia’s son (with John Deacon), two of the three executors of her 1869 Will

 

Sometime after 1851 the family left London, when they retired to the south coast and Hasting.  It was also during that decade that John Deacon died at the age of 71, and was buried on 10th December 1851 at St Luke’s Church in Chelsea.  Nine years after being made a widow Sophia Deacon was 73 when she was residing within the St Mary-in-the-Castle district of Hastings in 1861 with just three of her unmarried daughters.  They were Mary Deacon who was 42, Sophia Deacon who was 39, and Ellen B Deacon who was 34.  Sophia Deacon nee Collett died eight years later on 16th July 1869 at Mabledon (in the Parish of Tonbridge) in Kent.  Her Will was proved at the Principal Registry on 19th August 1869 by the oaths of John Deacon Esquire and William Samuel Deacon Esquire, both of 20 Birchin Lane in London, her sons, and George Campion Courthorpe of Whiligh in Sussex, the three executors of the Will, assessed as being valued under £140,000

 

It is now established that Sophia’s daughter Sarah Deacon married the Reverend George Whitmore of Shropshire.  He was the younger son of the senior branch of the Whitmore family of Apley Park in Shropshire.  The Apley Whitmore family was related to the Wolryche Whitmore family at Dudmaston Hall in Shropshire, as well as the Whitmore family of Lower Slaughter in Gloucestershire, which included two General George Whitmores, one of whom allegedly married Sarah Collett, the younger sister of Sophia Collett, which has now been disproved by Margaret Davison, a current day descendant of the Whitmore family.  Sarah Deacon and George Whitmore had several children, including Geraldine Ellen Georgina Whitmore, their youngest daughter.  She married Percy Robert Kenyon-Slaney of La Florida, Rosario, Argentina, the son of Colonel Kenyon-Slaney of Hatton Grange in Shropshire, at St. Peter’s Church, Eaton Square, Belgravia, London in 1895

 

Mary Collett [18N18] was born at Swanton Morley on 27th February 1789 and was baptised there on 1st March 1789, the fourth daughter of William and Anna Collett.  It was also at Swanton Morley on 29th July 1811 that Mary married Thomas Leventhorpe of St Pancras London and Exmouth.  Thomas had been baptised at St Mary’s Church, Whitechapel, Stepney in London on 14th June 1776, the son of Samuel and Elizabeth Leventhorpe.  Their marriage only survived for four short years, when first Thomas passed away, followed by Mary who died on 23rd September 1819.  However, they did have three children; Mary Anna Leventhorpe baptised at St Pancras Old Church on 15th August 1813, Thomas William Leventhorpe who was born on 28th March 1814 and baptised at St Georges Bloomsbury on 15th November 1814, and another son who was born on 15th May 1815 and baptised on 29th February 1816 also at St Georges Bloomsbury.  The Will of Thomas Leventhorpe of Aldgate in the City of London, together with two Codicils, was proved in London on 1st May 1815, the Codicils proved on 31st August and 16th November that same year.  His wife Mary Leventhorpe was mentioned in all three documents, with the first Codicil leaving a bequeath to Mary’s mother Anna Collett

 

Frances Elizabeth Collett [18N19] was born at Swanton Morley on 14th April 1792, where she was baptised on the following day 15th April, the fifth child of William and Anna Collett.  She was later married by licence to the Reverend John Preston Reynolds of Thetford, the son of Francis Riddell Reynolds of Great Yarmouth, who was born there on 27th October 1794 and baptised on the very next day.  The entry in the church register for Swanton Morley, for their wedding on 6th October 1818, described John as a bachelor from the Parish of Dereham, while Frances was ‘a spinster of this parish’.  They both signed the register in their own hand, when the witnesses were three members of the Reynolds family, Anne Elizabeth Reynolds, Mary Ann Reynolds, and Phyllis Preston Reynolds, John’s sister.  The fourth witness was Frances’ married and widowed sister Mary Leventhorpe (above) who died during the following year.  Whilst their marriage ceremony was conducted by Vicar Morden Carthew, all of the other marriages around that time were conducted by William Collett, the Rector of Swanton Morley, who was Frances’ father

 

It was John’s sister Phyllis Preston Reynolds who married Frances’ brother William Collett (below).  John Preston Reynolds was educated at Caius College in Cambridge and later took on Necton Parish in Norfolk, where he served from 1845 to 1861 and where he died on 22nd May 1861 at the age of 66.  And it was at Necton where he was buried on 29th May.  His Will, valued under £20,000, was proved at the Principal Registry by William Collett Reynolds of Great Yarmouth, and Jacob Reynolds of Liverpool, his sons and executors of the Will.  His wife Frances Elizabeth Reynolds nee Collett passed away four years later when residing in the hamlet of Thorpe St Andrew, just east of Norwich, when she was 73, and was buried at Necton with her husband on 7th July 1865.  The Will of Frances Elizabeth Reynolds was estimated to be worth less than £1,500 and was proved at Norwich on 5th August by the oath of sole executor Theophila Reynolds her daughter and spinster of Thorpe, following her death on 1st July 1865

 

Their marriage produced ten children, possibly all born at Little Munden in Hertfordshire, where their father may have been attached to All Saints Church in that village.  The first child John Collett Reynolds was born a year after Frances and John were married, during October 1819, while another son William Collett Reynolds was born at Little Munden in 1826.  Both those two sons attended the King Edward Grammar School in Bury-St-Edmunds between 1831 and 1839.  The other children were: Frances Mary Reynolds (born 1820), Charlotte Reynolds (born 1823), Anna Reynolds (born 1825), Theophila Reynolds (born 1828), Jacob Reynolds (born 1830), Thomas Reynolds (born 1831), Francis Samuel Reynolds (born 1834), and Edward Henry Reynolds (born 1837)

 

It may also be of interest that, in 1814, John Collett Reynolds of Little Witchingham, north of Norwich, and James Collett Reynolds of Rumburgh near Bungay in Suffolk were farmers of 74 acres and 112 acres respectively.  It was from the family of the Reverend John Preston Reynolds and his wife Frances Elizabeth Collett that today we have the family of their great granddaughter Gillian Shackleton Hawley, who has been instrumental in putting together details for this section of The Suffolk Line.  In 2012 Gillian was living on the Writtlemarsh estate at Blackheath in London, the area formerly being the site of the home of Sir John Morden, which is situated next to Morden College where William Collett (below) was the chaplain.  And it was from Gillian’s ‘Yorkshire Shackleton Family’ that the explorer Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton (1874-1922) was descended

 

Sarah Collett [18N20] was born at Swanton Morley in 1794 who, prior to 2021, was not confirmed as another daughter of William and Anna Collett.  Now, thanks to Roger Collett, it is known that ‘sisters-in-law’ Sarah Collett and her older sister Sophia Collett (above) and their mother Anna Collett, ‘mother-in-law’, were beneficiaries under the terms of the first of two Codicils to the Will of Thomas Leventhorpe proved on August 1815.  Thomas was the husband of Frances Elizabeth Collett (above)

 

William Collett [18N21] was born at Swanton Morley on 17th August 1796 and was baptised that same day at All Saints Church in Swanton Morley, the youngest child and only son of William Collett and Anna Carthew.  His early education was conducted at North Walsham School, Hingham School, and Fransham School where he matriculated in 1815.  He entered Trinity College in Cambridge on 18th November 1814 but after just over a year he migrated to Sidney Sussex College on 23rd February 1816.  He gained a BA in 1819, and achieved an MA in 1825, by which time he was a married man with two children.  The university records confirm that he was the son of William Collett, Rector of Swanton Morley.  He married (1) Phillis Preston Reynolds, the daughter of Francis Riddell Reynolds of Great Yarmouth, and the sister of the Reverend John Preston Reynolds who married William’s sister Frances Elizabeth Collett (above).  The wedding took place at St Nicholas’ Church in Great Yarmouth on 24th October 1820, after which the couple settled in Bramerton, five miles to the east of Norwich, where their first five children were born.  By the time of the birth of their sixth and last child William and Phillis were living in Thetford.  Tragically, it was over a year after the birth of their sixth child that Phillis Preston Collett nee Reynolds died on 4th June 1831, at the age of 29, and was buried at Great Yarmouth on 10th June 1831, Phillis having been born on 28th October 1801 and baptised the following day

 

Upon receiving his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1819 he was ordained as a deacon in Norwich on 12th December that year, and less than a year later, he was made a priest on 15th October 1820.  From 1821 to 1836 he was Vicar (and patron) of Surlingham St Saviour with St Mary in Norwich, which overlapped with him being curate of St Mary’s Church in Thetford from 1828 to 1862.  He was also the curate at Thetford Hospital for a while.  Four years after the death of his wife, William married (2) Ellen Clarke Bidwell on 2nd June 1835.  Ellen was the daughter of Leonard Shelford Bidwell and Sarah Clarke and was born on 18th December 1809 and was privately baptised four days later on 22nd December at Thetford.  William’s second marriage to Ellen, who was thirteen years younger than her husband, added another seven children to his family and all of them were born at Thetford.  It was during that time in his life that William was the Rector of Bressingham, to the east of Thetford, from 1836 to 1841.  Following his time as the Rector of Thetford from 1841 to 1861 he spent the period from 1862 to 1865 as the Chaplain of Morden College at Blackheath in South-East London, which was founded by Sir John Morden in 1700.  The method by which he achieved that position was by submitting a family tree which confirmed his connection to Elizabeth Morden, the first of four wives of the Reverend Thomas Carthew of Woodbridge Abbey, who was William’s maternal grandmother, being the mother of William’s mother Anna Carthew

 

It was Elizabeth Morden's uncle, Sir William Morden, who inherited the Harbord family estate, at which time he was obliged to change his name to Harbord, following which the Harbords became Lord Suffield of Gunton Hall at Aylsham in Norfolk.  It was therefore fitting that one of his brother’s great grandchildren (William Collett) became the Chaplain at Morden College.  Upon his retirement as the outgoing chaplain, the position was filled by his distant cousin the Rev. Hon. John Harbord who held it from 1865 to 1892.  Such was the high regard for the Morden name, that William’s son Charles Preston Collett gave his daughter Margaret the second name of Morden, as did William’s cousin, Robert Henry Collett (above), who named his son Philip Morden Collett.  All of this information has been kindly provided by Gillian Shackleton Hawley, the great granddaughter of the Reverend John Preston Reynolds and Frances Collett (above)

 

The first national census to be held in the United Kingdom on 6th June 1841 used rounded ages for adults, while children’s ages generally reflected their actual age.  On that day in 1841, William Collett and his family were living at Bungay Road in Thetford, where William’s rounded age was 40, when he was a clergyman.  His wife Ellen Collett was 30, and the children living with the couple at that time were Anna Collett who was 15, rather than 19, Sophia Collett who was 13, Lucy Collett who was 11, Henry Collett who was five, Edward Collett who was three, and baby Mary Collett who was eight months old.  Just seventeen months earlier William and Ellen suffered the loss of their daughter Ellen who was only a few months old.  The next census in 1851 for Thetford provided a better indication of their actual ages.  In that, William was 54 and Ellen was 41.  The same children as in 1841, with the exception of their son Henry, were still living with the couple, but with the addition of two extra children.  The children were Anna, aged 29, Sophia 22, Lucy 21, Edward 13, Mary 10, Ellen who was eight, and Laura who was six years old.  As ten years earlier William and Ellen had again suffered the infant death of one of their children, in this case it was their youngest and last child Alfred

 

By 1861 only five of William’s six daughters were still living with him and Ellen at The Rectory in Thetford.  The census revealed that William was 64, Ellen was 51, Anna was 39, Lucy was 31, Mary was 20, Ellen was 18, and Laura was 16.  Just four and a half years later, while William and Ellen were enjoying a holidaying at Whitby on the North Yorkshire coast, William died on 11th September 1865 at the age of 70, the same age that his father had died exactly forty years earlier.  The Will of the Reverend William Collett, formerly of Thetford and late of Morden College, who died at Whitby, was proved at the Principal Registry on 24th October 1865 by the oaths of the Reverend William Reynolds Collett of Hethersett in Norfolk, a clerk (in Holy Orders), and Edward Collett of Gosmore Lodge, Surbiton in Surrey, Esquire, his sons and two executors.  The estimated value of the Will was said to be under £3,000

 

During his time as the Vicar of St Mary’s Church in Thetford, he officiated at the baptism of two-year-old George Blackwell Collett on 22nd January 1860 who was born in Thetford during the summer of 1857.  He was the only child of George Collett from Oaksey in Wiltshire and his wife Emma Hammond from London, whose family details can be found in Part 78 – The Collett Families of Oaksey & Poole Keynes in Wiltshire

 

In the north-east corner of the churchyard of All Saints Church at Swanton Morley, near Dereham in Norfolk, is the Collett family tomb wherein lie William’s father and mother, and his two eldest sisters Anna and Charlotte.  Whilst weathered after all these years, the inscription on the gravestone includes the following reference to William Collett, the only son of William Collett, Rector of Swanton Morley and his wife Anna Carthew.  “Also of their son The Revd. WILLIAM COLLETT, formerly of Thetford Norfolk, And afterwards Chaplain of Morden College, Blackheath, who died Sept. 11th 1866 in the 70th year of his age, And was laid to rest in Charlton Cemetery, Kent

 

In a letter dated 21st February 1873 sent from the Great Stukeley Vicarage by Eliza Ebden, the daughter of Elizabeth Collett [18M13] and her husband John Ebden, to her sons Frank and Edward Ebden, she referred to an earlier exchange of correspondence in which a Mr Collett was mentioned.  She wrote “the Mr Collett you enquired about, who seems to be in the Civil Service, your father thinks is a son of the later William Collett of Thetford who died and was found at Whitby, the place they (he and his wife) were sojourning at for the sea air.”  That was indeed a reference to this William Collett and his second wife Ellen Bidwell, while the unnamed son mentioned in the letter, was very likely a reference to Edward Collett, who was in the Civil Service.  By the time of the census in 1871, William’s his widow, Ellen C Collett aged 61 and from Thetford, was living in the London area of Kingston-upon-Thames with her three youngest children, Mary Collett who was 30, Ellen A Collett who was 28, and Laura Collett who was 26.  Ellen’s eldest son Henry was in India by then, and her other son Edward Collett was living at Winchester in Hampshire.  Obviously upon the death of her husband Ellen and her family had to relinquish their occupation of The Rectory at Thetford

 

As regards the earlier children of William Collett, from his first marriage, his married son William Reynolds Collett was living at Humbleyard near Norwich in 1871, where two of his sisters Sophia Norgate and Lucy Collett were also living, while his brother, bachelor Charles Preston Collett, was living in the Westminster district of London.  According to the next census in 1881 Ellen C Collett of Thetford, a widow at 71, was living at Trafford House in Ewell Road at Kingston-upon-Thames with just two of her five children.  They were bachelor son Edward Collett who was 43, and unmarried daughter Ellen Collett who was 38, both of them from Thetford.  The family was still living at Trafford House in Kingston-upon-Thames ten years later when Ellen was 81 and living on her own means.  Still living with her was her son Edward 53, and daughters Mary 50 and Ellen 48.  Upon the death of their mother, her three unmarried children left Kingston and moved into London, where they settled in the Kensington area of the city.  Ellen Clarke Collett, a widow of Trafford House, Ewell Road, Surbiton in Surrey, died on 19th January 1892, following which her Will was proved in London on 18th February that same year, which named her son Edward Collett, Esquire, as the sole executor of her estate valued at £7,488 2 Shillings and 4 Pence

 

18O32 – Anna Collett was born in 1822 at Bramerton, Norfolk

18O33 – William Reynolds Collett was born in 1823 at Bramerton, Norfolk

18O34 – John Collett was born in 1824 at Bramerton, Norfolk

18O35 – Charles Preston Collett was born in 1826 at Bramerton

18O36 – Sophia Collett was born in 1828 at Bramerton

18O37 – Lucy Frances Collett was born in 1830 at Thetford

The children of William Collett by his second wife Ellen Clarke Bidwell

18O38 – Henry Collett was born in 1836 at Thetford

18O39 – Edward Collett was born in 1837 at Thetford

18O40 – Ellen Collett was born in 1839 at Thetford

18O41 – Mary Collett was born in 1840 at Thetford

18O42 – Ellen Anna Collett was born in 1842 at Thetford

18O43 – Laura Collett was born in 1844 at Thetford

18O44 – Alfred Collett was born in 1848 at Thetford

 

Woodthorpe Collett [18N22] was born at Grundisburgh in Suffolk in 1795 and was the son of Woodthorpe Collett and his first wife Charlotte Spurling, who were married at Burgh near Woodbridge in July 1794.  Sadly, his mother died during the following year, giving birth to his sister Charlotte (below).  Woodthorpe attended Woodbridge free school where he was a boarder on 4th February 1807 when he was described as Woodthorpe Collett of Clopton, a village one mile north of Grundisburgh.  He was educated at Katherine Hall in Cambridge (St Catherine’s College today), which he entered on 27th March 1817, after he matriculated at Easter that same year.  His admissions record confirmed that he was the son of Woodthorpe Collett, and the grandson of Anthony Collett, Lord of the Manor of Eyke in Suffolk.  He was awarded a BA in 1821 and on 17th June 1821 he was ordain Deacon of Buckden Parish Church, just south of Huntingdon.  The following year he accepted the position of stipendiary curate offered by George Pelham, the Bishop of Lincoln, which resulted in a move to Hainton, fifteen miles north-east of Lincoln, where he took up the post on 20th April 1824.  It was while he was living at Hainton that he met his future wife, the daughter of the Reverend Samuel Pyemont and Susanna Pyemont.  Subsequently, Woodthorpe Collett and Elizabeth Pyemont, of Linwood, were married there on 2nd February 1826, when Elizabeth’s father very likely conducted their wedding service.  Elizabeth was born at Linwood, where she was baptised on 20th May 1795, with the couple’s first child born at Linwood, near the end of that same year, and baptised at nearby Market Rasen in March 1827

 

He was awarded his Master of Arts degree in 1827 and that same year, on 18th October, he was working for John Kaye, the new Bishop of Lincoln, and had the use of a house at Wickenby, where he continued his work as stipendiary curate.  Wickenby lies between Lincoln and Hainton.  However, it would appear that the family only stayed at Wickenby for a short while since, by the time of the birth of the couple’s second child, Woodthorpe and Elizabeth were living in Suffolk.  And it was there, over the following years at Little Glemham, Sweffling, and Woodbridge, that all of their remaining children were born, all of which are situated within the area of the Plomesgate Hundred, around Ipswich.  The move to Suffolk was prompted by the offer of the position of Curate at Blaxhall, the next village to the east of Little Glemham while, it was during 1836 that, he became Headmaster of Woodbridge Grammar School, a post that he held until 27th December 1841.  By the time of June census in 1841, Woodthorpe and his family were still involved with the school, their residence described as being a school on Seckford Street.  He and his wife were both recorded with a rounded age of 40, while their eight children were listed as John Collett 13, Henry Collett 12, Charles Collett 10, Elizabeth Collett who was nine, Catherine Collett who was eight, Robert Collett who was seven, Bertha Collett who was five, and William Collett who was two years old.  Completing the household were two of Elizabeth’s sisters, Annis Pyemont who was 45 and Letitia Pyemont who was 35, and three domestic servants.  The couple’s missing eldest son Woodthorpe, who was 14, was attending boarding school at Lower Brook Street in Ipswich managed by the Ebden family

 

During 1842 Woodthorpe was appointed Principal of King’s College School at Nassau in the New Providence of Bahamas, and the following year he was made Rector of Normanton in Lincolnshire, a position he held from 1843 to 1854.  Sometime during the next few years, he and his family moved into the village of Hasketon, near Woodbridge, where they were living at the time of the census in 1851.  By that time the family comprised Woodthorpe from Clopton, who was 55 and the Rector of Normanton, his wife Elizabeth was also 55 and from Linwood, and just four of their nine children.  They were Charles who was 20, Elizabeth who was 18, Catherine who was 16 and Robert who was 15.  Youngest son William, aged 12, was attending the same boarding school at Lower Brook Street in within the St Mary Quay area of Ipswich, where his older brother Woodthorpe was being educated in 1841.  While the couple’s other son Henry, aged 21, was attending Trinity Hall College in Cambridge.  Their absent daughter Bertha Emily Collett from Woodbridge was 13 and was receiving her education with the Sanderson family at their home in Ipswich St Matthew, while it is known that their son John was away working on the steam ships, and that he perhaps never returned to England.  Also living at the same address in 1851, were two Linwood born sisters of Elizabeth’s family, they being Keeling Pyemont who was 60 and Letitia Pyemont who was 49.  In addition to them, the family employed two servants, who would have assisted Elizabeth with the schooling of five male pupils aged eleven years.  Interestingly, widow Letitia Pyemont aged 81, was the head of the household in 1881 when she had living with her, at 27 Park Terrace on Fonnereau Road in Ipswich St Margaret, her niece Bertha Emily Wright, nee Collett, the married daughter of Elizabeth Collett, nee Pyemont

 

One year earlier, at the time of the entry to Trinity Hall College of his son Henry Pyemont Collett in July 1850, Woodthorpe Collett was described in the college records as being the Clerk of Hasketon near Woodbridge in Suffolk.  It was not long after 1851 that Woodthorpe secured a new position at Brightwell to the east of Ipswich, which resulted in another move for him and his family.  From 1854 to 1868 Woodthorpe was the Reverend Woodthorpe Collett of Brightwell and of Kesgrave, the former being confirmed at the marriage of his eldest daughter Elizabeth Charlotte Collett on 5th June 1860.  In addition to that, Woodthorpe’s son, the Reverend H P Collett, assisted the Reverend James Collett Ebden (see Ref. 18M13) during the wedding ceremony of his sister at Brightwell Church.  According to the census in 1861 for the parish of Foxhall within the Woodbridge & Colneis registration district, Woodthorpe Collett from Clopton was 65 and a Perpetual Curate of Foxhill, his wife Elizabeth was 66 and, still living with the couple, were just three of their unmarried children.  They were Henry Pyemont Collett who was 32, Bertha Emily Collett who was 24, who had returned to the family after her absence in 1851, and William Michael Collett who was 23.  On that day, the family employed three domestic servants, when only one eight-year-old male pupil was still residing there.  The couple’s eldest son, Woodthorpe S Collett, aged 34, single, and born at Market Rasen, was a patient in a hospital in Harpenden

 

The Reverend Woodthorpe Collett of Brightwell in Suffolk was named as one of the executors at the proving of the Will of his unmarried sister Charlotte Collett (below) in Ipswich on the 18th November 1867, following her death a month earlier at the age of 71

 

It was just over two years later that the Reverend Woodthorpe Collett died on 9th June 1869 during a visit to London, when he was staying at 11 Bulstrode Street, Cavendish Square, Middlesex.  His death was recorded (Ref. 1a 327) at Marylebone, at a time in his life when he and his family were living at Foxhall, just east of Brightwell, where he was buried on 14th June 1869 aged 73.  An article in the East Suffolk Gazette on 19th June 1869 reported that the Reverend Woodthorpe Collett, the incumbent of Brightwell-cum-Kesgrave, had died in his seventy-fourth year, thus placing his year of birth as the aforementioned 1796.  In a letter written on 16th June 1869 by Eliza Ebden, nee Wylde, wife of James Collett Ebden (above), to her youngest son Edward in India, she says “You will have heard of Mr Collett’s death.  After undergoing the severe operation for lithotomy in London, and was doing well, when a sharp attack of asthma on that weakness caused him to sink.  Your father buried him at Brightwell at the earliest request of the family.  It was a trying business for him, he having known him so many years.  There was no Will to be found, and poor Mrs Collett and Kate find themselves left wholly unprovided for.  If Woodthorpe [his eldest son] is allowed by the Lunacy Commission to remain with his mother and sister, that would help them a little. but not sufficiently without aid from the County Clergy Charity.  Mrs Collett being 73 years of age & Kate [35] by no means youthful now, your father is using every effort in the letter writing to promote their interests in Lincolnshire, her native county”

 

Her perception of him having no Will was correct, since the Letter of Administration was completed at Ipswich on 10th July 1869, which was granted to Elizabeth Collett of Brightwell, widow and relict of the deceased Reverend Woodthorpe Collett, when his estate was valued at under £600.  So, by the time of the census in 1871, Elizabeth Collett was 75 and head of the household, a clergyman’s widow living at White House Road in Trimley St Mary within the sub-district of Woodbridge known as Colneis, which lies between the Rivers Orwell and Deben.  Living there with her were three of her unmarried children, together with two of her grand-child through her youngest daughter Bertha, who was married in Shanghai six years earlier.  They were Woodthorpe S Collett who was 44, Catherine A Collett who was 37, William M Collett who was 32, Bertha L P Wright who was four, and William A C Wright who was one year old.  It was three years after that when Elizabeth Collett nee Pyemont died at Ipswich St Clement on 15th March 1874, following which she was buried at Brightwell on 20th March 1874, aged 78.  Administration of the personal effects of widow Elizabeth Collett of 10 Adelphi Place in Ipswich, valued at under £100, was granted at Ipswich on 30th March 1874 to the Reverend William Michael Collett of Oxford, a clerk (in Holy Orders), her son and one of her next-of-kin

 

18O45 – Woodthorpe Schofield Collett was born in 1826 at Market Rasen, Lincolnshire

18O46 – John Anthony Collett was born in 1828 at Little Glemham

18O47 – Henry Pyemont Collett was born in 1829 at Little Glemham

18O48 – Charles Keeling Collett was born in 1831 at Little Glemham

18O49 – Elizabeth Charlotte Collett was born in 1832 at Sweffling

18O50 – Catherine Ann Collett was born in 1834 at Sweffling

18O51 – Robert Ebden Collett was born in 1835 at Woodbridge

18O52 – Bertha Emily Collett was born in 1837 at Woodbridge

18O53 – William Michael Collett was born in 1839 at Woodbridge

 

Charlotte Collett [18N23] was born at Grundisburgh in 1797, the second child and only daughter of Woodthorpe Collett and Charlotte Spurling, her mother tragically dying either during or shortly after she was born.  Charlotte Collett was living at Berner Street in the St Matthews district of Ipswich in 1841, 1851, and again 1861 when she was 65 and her place of birth was Clopton near Grundisburgh.  It was there also where she died six years later on 26th October 1867, although she was then buried at Grundisburgh on 1st November 1867.  The Will of Charlotte Collett, spinster of Ipswich, was proved at Ipswich on 18th November 1867 by the oath of the Reverend Woodthorpe Collett of Brightwell in Suffolk, a clerk (in Holy Orders) her brother and one of the executors.  The death of Charlotte Collett, aged 71, was recorded at Ipswich (Ref. 4a 347)

 

Letitia Mary Collett [18N24] was born after 1798, the year in which her father, Woodthorpe Collett, married his second wife Letitia Skinner.  Letitia was very likely born at Grundisburgh and was in her early thirties when she married Thomas Read at Wetheringsett in Suffolk on 13th January 1834.  Thomas had been baptised at Helpringham in Lincolnshire on 12th June 1791, the son of Henry and Mary Read.  Baptism records for five children have been discovered and they were Thomas Read (born 1835), Henry Read (born 1837), Charlotte Matilda Letitia Read (born 1840), Anne Maria Lines Read (born 1842), and William Collett Read (born 1845).  The death of Letitia Mary Read was recorded at Woodbridge, Suffolk (Ref. xii 323) during the last three months of 1850.  Many years after losing his widow, when Thomas was 92 years old, he died at Grundisburgh on 28th December 1883, following which his Will was proved at the Principal Registry on 25th January 1884.  His estate was valued at £153 13 Shillings and 7 Pence when the Will of Thomas Read formerly of Melton and lately of Grundisburgh was proved by William Collett Read of Grundisburgh farmer and son, and Thomas Manby farmer, and Charlotte Matilda Letitia Waspe (wife of Frederick Waspe) daughter, both of Pettistree Suffolk, the three executors.  The death of Thomas Read was recorded at Woodbridge (Ref. 4a 451) during the first quarter of 1884

 

James Collett [18N25] was born in 1805, the son of Samuel Collett and Sarah Day.  In 1830 James married Sophia Ebden of Barton Bendish, the seventh child of Thomas Ebden and Mary Grimmer, who was baptised on 12th July 1799.  Thomas was the brother of the James’ uncle John Ebden who had married Elizabeth Collett [18M13].  The marriage of James and Sophia produced two children before great tragedy struck the family in 1836 when, first Sophia died during the month of January, and was followed later in the year by James, both of them passing away while the family was living at Loddon in Norfolk.  What happened to their two young children, at that time, has not been determined

 

18O54 - Fanny Collett was born in 1832 at Loddon, Norfolk

18O55 - Ebden Collett was born in 1834 at Loddon, Norfolk

 

William Collett [18N26] was born at Fressingfield in 1793 and was baptised there on 20th October 1793, the eldest child of William Collett and his second wife Ann Flint.  His early adult life appears to be shrouded in mystery but, recent discoveries in 2011, have determined that he was married three times, rather than just twice, as previously stated here.  However, it is still not known who his first wife was, except that when he married (2) Sarah Balary on 8th November 1817 at Cookley to the west of Halesworth, he was only 24 but already a widower.  It is also unclear as to how long he was married to Sarah, although it is now established that all of his children were the result of his third marriage.  What is known is that twenty years later, when he was 44, he married the much younger (3) Mary Ann Dye on 19th December 1837 at Poringland.  Mary Dye was baptised at Newton Flotman near Norwich on 20th September 1818, the daughter of John and Mary Dye.  The couple’s marriage certificate revealed that they were both residents of Poringland Magna, that Mary was a spinster whose occupation was that of a servant and, whose father was John Dye, a butcher, while William was recorded as a widower who was also a labourer, as had been his father William Collett before him, who was confirmed as his father in the marriage register.  It would also appear that shortly after they were married, Mary Ann presented William with a son followed by a daughter, and very shortly thereafter the couple left Poringland and headed south across the county boundary into Suffolk, where the remainder of their children were born

 

Upon leaving Poringland, William and Mary Ann, together with their infant son William, settled in the village of Henstead, near Kessingland, and it was there that the child’s birth was registered during the first quarter of 1838.  That confirms Mary Ann was with-child at the time of her wedding, just four months earlier, so perhaps the move to Suffolk was forced upon the couple to overcome any embarrassment.  Over the next two years the couple’s second child was born while the family was still living at Henstead, although by the time of the June census in 1841 the family was living at New Court in Halesworth.  William Collett was 48, his wife Mary Collett was 25, and their two children were William Collett who was three, and Honor Collett who was one year old.  It would therefore appear that the family had moved to Halesworth shortly after daughter Honor had been born at Henstead.  And it was at Halesworth where all of the remaining children of William and Mary Ann were born, and where the couple spent the rest of their lives together

 

Five more children were born over the following ten years, although the family suffered the tragic loss of their son Daniel at the age of just three months, followed by the loss of their first daughter Honor eight years later.  By 1851, the family was still living at 189 New Court in Halesworth when it comprised agricultural labourer William, aged 57, his wife Mary Ann, aged 33, plus their five surviving children.  They were, William Collett, aged 13, Maria Collett who was seven, Eliza Collett who was four, Fanny Collett who was two, and John who was not yet one year old.  Towards the end of the next decade William and his family must have fallen on hard times because, on the day of the census in 1861, he was recorded as living in the Blything Union Workhouse at Bulcamp-with-Blythburgh in Suffolk.  William was described as an inmate and agricultural labourer and a married man from Fressingfield who was 67 who had living there with him his two sons John Collett who was eleven, and Charles Collett who was eight, both of whom had been born at Halesworth.  It is thanks to Liz Whittaker, and Roger Collett, that the three of them have been identified, where they have not been located up until 2013, because they were simply listed as W C, J C and C C

 

At that same time in 1861, his wife was still a resident of Halesworth, where she was employed as a charwoman.  On that occasion though she was not living at New Court, where the family had been living at the time the two previous censuses.  Instead, Mary Collett from Newton in Norfolk was 42 when she was living at Barrack Yard on Mill Hill Street in Halesworth with her daughters Eliza Collett aged 13, and Fanny Collett 11, and her youngest son Frederick who was five.  It therefore seems very likely that the accommodation where Mary Ann was living and working, was not of a sufficient size to accommodate the whole family.  Living apart from both family groups was daughter Maria Collett who was 18 and living-in and working at a private school in Halesworth.  Ten years later Mary Ann Collett was still living at Barrack Yard where she died during the last few days of 1870 with her husband at her bedside, following which she was buried at Halesworth on 4th January 1871.  Her death was recorded at Blything (Ref. 4a 473), at the age of 53, after her burial.  Just three months later William Collett, aged 77, was listed as a widower in the census that year.  According to the census return he was once again living at New Court, at number 112, in Halesworth, from where he was still working as a labourer.  Sharing the accommodation with William were his two youngest children, his sons Charles Collett, aged 17, and Frederick Collett who was 15.  By that time William’s eldest daughter Maria had been married for five years, while daughters Eliza and Fanny were still spinsters living and working away from home in London and Woodbridge respectively.  Also living at the same address with the three men in 1871 was spinster and domestic cook Susan Dye, who was 53 and the younger sister of the late Mary Ann Collett.  William survived for a further six years, when he died during November 1877 while living at Barrack Yard in Halesworth.  It was therefore at Halesworth that labourer William Collett was buried on 14th November 1877, at the age of 85, with his death recorded at Blything (Ref. 4a 427)

 

18O56 – William Collett was born in 1838 at Poringland

18O57 - Honor Collett was born in 1840 at Poringland

18O58 - Daniel Collett was born in 1842 at Halesworth

18O59 - Maria Collett was born in 1843 at Halesworth

18O60 - Susanna Eliza Collett was born in 1846 at Halesworth

18O61 - Fanny Collett was born in 1848 at Halesworth

18O62 - John Collett was born in 1851 at Halesworth

18O63 - Charles Collett was born in 1853 at Halesworth

18O64 - Frederick William Collett was born in 1855 at Halesworth

 

Henry Collett [18N27] was born at Fressingfield in early 1795 and it was there that he was baptised on 26th April 1795, the son child of William Collett and Ann Flint.  On 5th March 1821 Henry married Elizabeth Colls at Rushall in Norfolk, to the west of Harleston, where Elizabeth was born in 1796 and was baptised on 19th January 1797, the daughter of Christopher Colls and Mary Goldspink.  On the couple’s marriage certificate, Elizabeth was described as being of Great Glemham, near Framlingham, where the couple initially settled, but where something must have happened to cause them to be evicted just over two months after they were married.  An entry in the great Glemham Parish Records dated 16th May 1821 referred to a Removal Order on Henry Collett labourer and Elizabeth his wife, back to Mettingham.  By the time of the census in 1841, Henry Collett, aged 45, and his wife Elizabeth, aged 44, were still living in Mettingham with just four of their nine children.  All of their children were born at Mettingham, where three of them also died while still very young.  They were the couple’s two eldest daughters and their third son.  In addition to these losses, their two ‘missing’ eldest sons had already left the family home prior to the census day in June 1841.  The remaining four children were Mary Ann Collett who was 12, Susan Collett who was 10, Robert Collett who was nine, and five-year-old Christopher Collett

 

Ten years later in 1851, the family was residing at Mill Hill in Mettingham, when agricultural labourer Henry Collett from Fressingfield was 55, Elizabeth Collett from Rushall in Norfolk was 54, and their three children were Susan Collett aged 20 and a silk winder, Robert Collett who was 19 and an agricultural labourer, and Christopher Collett who was 15, another ag lab.  All three children were confirmed as having been born at Mettingham.  Just over three and a half years after the census day in 1851, Henry Collett died at Mettingham, where he was buried at All Saints Church on 24th December 1854, aged 59.  The death of Henry Collett was recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 447).  His widow Elizabeth only survived him by fourteen months, when she was also buried at Mettingham on 24th February 1856, her death also recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 445)

 

18O65 – William Collett was born in 1822 at Mettingham

18O66 – Henry Collett was born in 1824 at Mettingham

18O67 – Maria Elizabeth Collett was born in 1825 at Mettingham

18O68 – Samuel John Collett was born in 1826 at Mettingham

18O69 – Rachel Collett was born in 1827 at Mettingham

18O70 – Mary Ann Collett was born in 1828 at Mettingham

18O71 – Susan Collett was born in 1830 at Mettingham

18O72 – Robert Collett was born in 1831 at Mettingham

18O73 – Christopher Collett was born in 1836 at Mettingham

 

Charles Collett [18N28] was born at Fressingfield in 1798 and was baptised there on 6th January 1799, the son of William and Ann Collett.  No other information has been discovered regarding Charles, who was not listed in any of the national census records.  That was because he died in 1839, when Charles Collett from Stoke Holy Cross, south of Norwich, was buried at Hedenham in Norfolk on 23rd August 1839 at the age of 42

 

Samuel Collett [18N29] was born in late 1800 or early 1801 at Fressingfield, where he was baptised on 12th April 1801, the son of William and Ann Collett.  He later married Marianne Read at Earsham near Bungay on 31st October 1826.  Marianne (Mary Ann) was older than Samuel by ten years and that may have been the reason why the only child attributed to the couple was their son Charles who was born at Earsham during the year after they were married.  Their son’s baptism record confirmed the parents as Samuel and Marianne Collett.  At the time of the 1841 Census, the family of three was still living at Earsham, near Bungay, where Samuel Collett was 40 and an agricultural labourer, his wife Mary Ann Collett was 50, and son Charles Collett was 13.  Staying with the family on that occasion was Samuel’s father, 73-year-old agricultural labourer William Collett.  Charles was the only one of the four of them to have been born within the county of Norfolk.  Following the departure of their son some years later, Samuel and Mary Ann were living alone in Earsham in 1851, where Samuel was 50 and a labourer, while his wife Mary was 60.  Ten years later, according to the census in 1861, Samuel Collett, aged 60, was a patient being cared for at Norwich General Hospital, while at that same time his wife Mary Ann, at 72, was still at their home in Earsham, within the Depwade & Harleston registration district.  Samuel obviously recovered from his injury or illness, and it was his wife who passed away during the following years.  In 1871, as widower Samuel Collett aged 70, he was once again recorded as residing at Earsham.  Samuel Collett was recorded in error as being 75 when he died at Earsham, where he was buried on 30th April 1878.  Upon recording his death at Depwade (Ref. 4b 134), he was correctly given the age of 78

 

18O74 – Charles Collett was born in 1827 at Earsham near Bungay, Norfolk

 

Benjamin Collett [18N30] was born at Fressingfield in 1802 and was baptised there on 8th May 1803, the son of William and Ann Collett.  He lived all his life at Fressingfield, where he worked as a labourer, and it was there that he was twice married, and there also that all his children were born.  He married (1) Bertha Philpot, who was born in 1803, when they were both 21, and the wedding took place on 26th February 1824 in the parish church of St Peter & St Paul in Fressingfield.  It was later that same year that the first of the couple’s seven known children was born.  That may have taken place at Fressingfield, although the baptism of Benjamin Anthony Collett, the son of Benjamin and Bessiah (?) Collett, took place at nearby Cratfield, just seven months after they were married.  Upon presenting Benjamin with their seventh child, it would appear that Bertha died, either during the birth, or shortly thereafter.  The parish records confirmed that Bertha Collett nee Philpot was buried on 24th April 1834 at the age of 30.  Five years later Benjamin Collett married (2) Sarah Vincent at Fressingfield on 21st May 1839, their wedding recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 577).  Sarah was baptised at Fressingfield on 16th August 1807, the daughter of labourer David Vincent and Lydia Bloyce, and added a further three children to Benjamin’s family.  It would also appear that Benjamin’s sons John and Charles had also died during that time, since both of them were missing from the 1841 Census, with Benjamin then naming a subsequent son Charles, from his second marriage to Sarah

 

According to the Fressingfield census of 1841, when the family was living at New Street, Benjamin’s rounded age was 35 and Sarah’s was 30, when Benjamin Collett was working as an agricultural labourer.  The children living with the couple were Benjamin Collett who was 17, William Collett who was 15, Keziah Collett who was eight, Elizabeth Collett who was seven, Isaac Collett who was six, all from the first marriage, together with half-brothers Charles Collett who was two years old, and baby George Collett who was just three months old, both from the second marriage.  A few years later Sarah presented Benjamin with their last child, daughter Sarah.  By the time of the census in 1851, agricultural labourer Benjamin was 48, his wife Sarah was 43, and the three of their four children still living with them were Charles Collett who was 11, George Collett who was 10, and daughter Sarah A Collett who was seven years old.  At that time the family was living in New Street in Fressingfield and had living there with them Mary Munn who was 79.  Also living nearby in New Street was Benjamin’s eldest son from his first marriage; Benjamin Collett junior, who was married with his own family by that time, and his youngest son from his first marriage Isaac Collett who was 15

 

Benjamin’s eldest daughter Keziah, from his first marriage, was 18 at that time and was living and working in the South Ockendon & Orsett area of Essex, whilst the other two children from his first marriage, William and Elizabeth, have not yet been located in the census returns of 1851.  Over the next ten years the family members grew up and all of them had left their parent’s home in Fressingfield prior to 1861.  The census that year confirmed that agricultural labourer Benjamin Collett was 61, and that Sarah was 56, when they were staying at the Fressingfield home of their recently married son George and his wife Harriet.  Benjamin survived for only another nine months, before he died at the start of 1862 and was buried at St Peter’s & St Paul’s Church at Fressingfield on 22nd January 1862 aged 59.  The cause of death was phthisis, a form of tuberculosis commonly referred to as the cobbler’s illness.  The death of Benjamin Collett was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 341).  Tragically, later that same year, Benjamin’s eldest son Benjamin died of the same wasting disease at the age of 38.  Following the death of her husband, his widow Sarah married widower James Wright who was a labourer and the son of thatcher Jonathan Wright.  Their wedding was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 771) during the second quarter of 1863, while the very next entry for Hoxne was that of the marriage of Susan Collett [18O106] and Amos Sharman, also during the second quarter of that year.  The later death of Sarah Wright was also recorded at Hoxne register office (Ref. 4a 381) during the third quarter of 1894 at the age of 87

 

18O75 - Benjamin Anthony Collett was born in 1824 at Fressingfield

18O76 - William Collett was born in 1826 at Fressingfield

18O77 - John Collett was born in 1828 at Fressingfield

18O78 - Charles Collett was born in 1829 at Fressingfield

18O79 - Keziah Collett was born in 1832 at Fressingfield

18O80 - Elizabeth Collett was born in 1833 at Fressingfield

18O81 - Isaac Collett was born in 1834 at Fressingfield

The children of Benjamin Collett by his second wife Sarah Vincent:

18O82 – Charles Collett was born in 1839 at Fressingfield

18O83 – George Collett was born in 1841 at Fressingfield

18O84 - Sarah Ann Collett was born in 1843 at Fressingfield

 

John Collett [18N31] was born at Fressingfield during 1805 and was baptised there on 29th September 1805, the youngest son of William Collett and Ann Flint.  John was around 20 years old when he married Catherine Baldwin at Ilketshall St Andrew in 1825.  Catherine was the daughter of John Baldwin and Catherine Freeman and was born at St James South Elmham, where she was baptised on 9th October 1803, St James South Elmham being around four miles north-east of Fressingfield.  It may be of interest to note that the parishes of Ilketshall St Andrew, Ilketshall St John, and Ilketshall St Lawrence cover an area south-east of Bungay and to the east of the Roman Road known as Stone Street (A144) from Halesworth to Bungay.  The three parish churches of St Andrew, St Lawrence, and St John the Baptist, lie within one kilometre of the centre of the village of Ilketshall St Andrew, while today the village of Ilketshall St John has become part of Ilketshall St Andrew, with Ilketshall St Lawrence just a couple of miles to the south

 

The marriage of John Collett of Fressingfield and Catherine Baldwin of St James South Elmham is known to have produced five children for the couple and, although there are six children listed below, it is the first children Sarah who requires further validation.  It is likely that all six children were born at Ilketshall St Andrew, even though son Charles said he was born at nearby Ilketshall St Lawrence in a later census return.  Certainly, at the time of the registration of birth of their son William at Ilketshall St Andrew in 1838, John Collett, an agricultural labourer, was named as the father, while the boy’s mother was recorded as Catherine Collett, formerly Baldwin.  The complete family, excluding Sarah, was living at Ilketshall St Andrew within the Wangford & Beccles registration district of Suffolk in June 1841.  According to the census that month, the family comprised John Collett, aged 35, his wife Catherine 37, and their children John who was 12, Charles who was nine, Lucy who was four, William who was two years old, and latest arrival Robert, who was not yet twelve months old.  Possible daughter Sarah would have left school by then and therefore may have already started work and be living apart from the family

 

Ten years later in 1851, the family was still living in Ilketshall St Andrew, on the Great Common, when it was made up of John Collett who was 45 and a farm labourer from Fressingfield, Catherine Collett who was 46 and from St James, and four of their five previously listed children.  They were Charles Collett from St Lawrence who was 19, Lucy Collett from St Andrew who was 16, as was William Collett who was 11, and as was Robert Collett who was 10 years old.  Every member of the household was described as a farm labourer.  The couple’s absence eldest son John Collett had joined the army nearly five years earlier, and was very likely serving in India by that time.  One by one, the other children eventually left the family home and, in the census of 1861, John Collett was recorded as living in a dwelling on the west side of Great Common in Ilketshall St Andrew with just two of his children for company.  John was 55 and from Fressingfield, his daughter Lucy Collett was 24, and his son William was 22, both of Ilketshall St Andrew.  All three members of the family were described as hay trussers.  On that same census day in 1861, Catherine Collett, aged 56 and a labourer’s wife from St James (South Elmham), was recorded as a visitor at the Broad Street home in Bungay of widower Nathan Rumsby aged 31, a father of four young children, and a fitter at Smith’s shop.  His housekeeper was Catherine’s eldest unmarried daughter Sarah Collett from Ilketshall St Andrew who was 34, her mother calling in to see her daughter that day. 

 

By 1871 Catherine was once again living at Ilketshall St Andrew with her husband, where John Collett was 65 and his wife Catherine was 67, and by which time none of their children were still living were them.  Staying with them at that time was their grandson Harry Gowing, the eldest child of their daughter Lucy Gowing nee Collett. Ten years later the census of 1881 recorded that the couple was living at Great Common in Ilketshall St Andrew, where John was employed on the land as a hay cutter, a change from his earlier occupation as a husbandman.  His place of birth was confirmed as Fressingfield and his age on that occasion was given as being 76, while his wife was 77 and her birthplace was confirmed as St James South Elmham.  Just over six years later, the death of John Collett was recorded at Blything (Ref. 4a 470) during the third quarter of 1887, when he was said to be 80 years of age.  However, on being buried with his wife at Ilketshall St Andrew on 4th September 1887, his age was more accurately recorded as 84.  It was four years earlier that Catherine Collett had passed away at Ilketshall St Andrew, with her death recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 516) during the second quarter of 1883 when she was 79, as confirmed by the burial record at Ilketshall St Andrew where she was laid to rest on 2nd May 1883

 

18O85 – Sarah Collett was born in 1826 at Ilketshall St Andrew

18O86 – John Collett was born in 1829 at Ilketshall St Andrew

18O87 – Charles Collett was born in 1831 at Ilketshall St Lawrence

18O88 – Lucy Collett was born in 1835 at Ilketshall St Andrew

18O89 – William Collett was born in 1838 at Ilketshall St Andrew

18O90 – Robert Collett was born in 1840 at Ilketshall St Andrew

 

Lucy Collett [18N32] was born at Fressingfield in 1807, the daughter of William and Ann Collett, and was baptised on 24th April 1807 at Uxbridge.  It was also at Fressingfield where she married John Woolnough on 12th May 1828 with whom she had two known children.  The first of them was Eliza Woolnough who was baptised at Fressingfield on 12th September 1830.  By the time of the baptism of the couple’s second child the family was living at Tannington where John Woolnough was baptised on 13th May 1832.  Their son was born in the second half of February in 1832 and was just thirteen weeks old when he died at Tannington, although it was as John Woolner that his burial was recorded there on 22nd May 1832.  Around the time that her son was born at Tannington there was also recorded there the death of Lucy Woolnough at the age of only 24, following which she was buried at the Church of St Ethelbert on 19th February 1832.  It is therefore assumed that Lucy Woolnough nee Collett died during childbirth.  Less than two years later John Woolnough, a widower, married widow Ann Pendall at Tannington on 25th September 1834.  According to the census in 1841 John was living at Fressingfield with his new wife Ann and his daughter Elizabeth (previously Eliza), together with Ann’s daughter from her previous marriage, and two further children born to John and Ann.  During the next decade John Woolnough was made a widower for the second time in his life

 

Phyllis Collett [18N33] was very likely born around 1810 and she may have been the last child of William Collett and Ann Flint who was born at Fressingfield.  What is known for sure is that as Phillis Collett she married John Sayer at Stradbroke on 12th October 1833 and, by June 1841, she had presented John with four children at Barlow Green in Stradbroke.  The census on that occasion listed the family as John and Phillace Sayer, both with an incorrect rounded age of 25, Ann Sayer who was six, William Sayer who was five, Mariah Sayer who was three, and Betsy Sayer who was one year old.  Living with the family was William Collett, aged 85 and an agricultural labourer who was most likely Phyllis’ widowed father.  Tragically, on 11th November 1841 Phillis Sayer nee Collett of Stradbroke died there of consumption and was buried at All Saints Church in the village on 18th November when her age was correctly recorded as 31.  The death of Phillis Sayer was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 303)

 

John Collett [18N34] was born at Wingfield in 1785, the son of John Collett of Stradbroke and Elizabeth Thurlow of Wingfield.  There was a John Collett aged 55 who was born in Suffolk who was residing at Wilby in 1841

 

Ann Collett [18N35] was born at Saxmundham in 1791, the eldest daughter of John and Elizabeth Collett.  She was only twelve years old when her father was killed after falling out of tree.  As the eldest daughter she remained living with her widowed mother until she married John Hines at Saxmundham on 27th May 1817

 

Hannah Collett [18N36] was born at Saxmundham during 1793, the daughter of John and Elizabeth Collett.  Hannah later married Frederick King at Saxmundham on 16th June 1812.  Over the following decade Hannah presented Frederick with three daughters.  Emma King was baptised at Saxmundham on 29th January 1815, Rachel King was baptised at Blyford near Halesworth on 22nd November 1818, and Ann King was baptised at Bulcamp, also near Halesworth, on 29th April 1821

 

Charles Collett [18N37] was born at Saxmundham in 1795, the son of John and Elizabeth Collett.  It was in 1803 when Charles was eight years old that his father died after he fell from a tree.  The continuation of the family line of Charles Collett [18N37>30N4] can be found in Part 30 – The Suffolk & Norfolk Line

 

William Collett [18N38] was born at Saxmundham on 14th March 1798 where he was baptised at the parish church on 6th April 1798, the youngest known son of John Collett and Elizabeth Thurlow.  He was six weeks short of his fifth birthday when his father fell from a tree and died at Saxmundham as a result of his injuries.  The continuation of the family line of William Collett [18N38>30N5] can be found in Part 30 – The Suffolk & Norfolk Line and from there to Part 74 – The Suffolk to South Africa Line

 

William Collett [18N39] was baptised at Wilby on 10th September 1792, the base-born child of Hannah Collett, and may have been around two years old when he was baptised.  Tragically, his mother died when he was about ten years old.  The continuation of the family line of William Collett [18N39>20N1] can be found in Part 20 – The Suffolk to Australia Line

 

Jemima (or Jeremiah) Collett [18N40] was most likely a twin with sister Dinah (below).  They were both born at Wilby, where they were baptised in a joint ceremony on 25th May 1800, the children of William Collett and Dinah Lockwood.  Tragically, neither of them survived and both were buried together at Wilby on 8th June 1800, just two weeks after their baptism

 

Dinah Collett [18N41] was born at Wilby in 1800 and, with her likely twin Jemima (above), the pair of them were baptised at Wilby on 25th May 1800, where they were also buried two weeks later on 8th June 1800

 

Mary Ann Collett [18N42] was born at Wilby in 1802, where she was baptised on 17th October 1802, the third child of William and Dinah Collett.  Unlike her two older siblings, who both died when only a few weeks old, Mary Ann survived to reach the age of five and a half years, before she died and was buried at Wilby on 6th May 1808

 

Dinah Collett [18N43] was born at Wilby in 1804.  She later married (1) William Allum on 18th October 1824 at Worlingworth, a village in Suffolk next to Tannington.  William was born at Horham just two miles from Wilby, and it was at Wilby that the couple settled and where all of their children were born.  The census in 1841 recorded the family at Wilby as William Allum was an agricultural labourer having a rounded age of 40, Dinah Alum had a rounded age of 35, John Allum was ten years old, Robert Allum was seven, and Hannah Allum was eight months old.  Ten years later, they were still living in Wilby at Cole Street, when William Allum from Horham was 50 and a pauper (and agricultural labourer), Dinah Allum from Wilby was 45, and the children still living there with them were John Allum 20, Jemima Allum 18, Elizabeth Allum 13, Hannah Allum 10, and Dinah Allum who was four.  By that time the couple’s eldest son William Allum had already left the family home, as had son Robert, aged 16, and Mary who was 15.  Their space within the family home had been taken up by Dinah’s widowed mother Dinah Collett, nee Lockwood, who was 77 and another pauper.  Just over eighteen months later William Allum died at Wilby on 1st October 1852, following which Dinah then married Jeremiah Allum at Stradbroke on 20th February 1860, their wedding recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 660).  It seems very likely that Jeremiah was William’s brother or his cousin

 

According to the next census in 1861 Dinah Allum and her husband Jeremiah were both 56, when Jeremiah was an agricultural labourer and Dinah was a shop-keeper.  Ten years later the couple was living alone in Wilby when Dinah Allum was 67 and Jeremiah was 68, and they were still there in 1881, and again at Cole Street in Wilby.  Dinah from Wilby was 77, while Jeremiah Allum from Brundish was 78, when he was still working as an agricultural labourer.  Eight years after that census day, the death of Dinah Allum was recorded at Hartismere (Ref. 4a 360) during the second quarter of 1889.  The death of her second husband Jeremiah Allum was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 519) during the first three months of 1894, when he was 93.  Dinah’s eldest son William Allum married Mary Ann Harding on 28th December 1853, while her second son John was married and had a daughter Elizabeth Allum who married James Harwood.  James and Elizabeth had a daughter Eva Harwood who was the mother of Colin Carver, and it was Colin’s daughter Alison Carver who helped in expanding the family of Dinah Collett and William Allum

 

Jemima Collett [18N44] was born at Wilby around 1805, where she was baptised on 4th April 1807, the daughter of William and Dinah Collett.  She later married William Scales at Stradbroke on 15th May 1826.  Jemima gave birth to at least four children over the next fifteen years, all four of them still living with the couple at Worlingham in 1841.  William Scales was 35 and an agricultural labourer, Jemima Scales was 35 (both rounded ages), and the children were Marianne Scales who was 14, Dinah Scales who was 10, Samuel Scales who was eight, and Jane Scales who was four years of age.  The death of Jemima Scales was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 399) during the third quarter of 1880, when she was 76 years old.  Her husband survived for another ten years, when the death of William Scales was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 411) during the third quarter of 1890

 

William Collett [18N45] was born at Wilby and baptised there on 14th May 1809, the eldest surviving son of William Collett and Dinah Lockwood.  He married Elizabeth around 1830 and the couple settled in Cambridge where most of their children were born.  Further work still needs to be undertaken to complete the details for this family

 

John Collett [18N46] was born at Wilby, and it was there also that he was baptised on 30th January 1814, the son of William and Dinah Collett.  He was 25 in the Wilby census of 1841 when he was still living there with his parents, and it was also at Wilby where John Collett married Mary Ann Sharman, the event recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 736) during the second quarter of 1848, the first of two links between the Collett and Sharman families.  Mary Ann was the daughter of David Sharman and Sophia Harvey and was baptised at Brundish on 12th April 1829.  Mary Ann was the sister of Amos Sharman who later married Susan Collett [18O106] in 1863.  All of the children of John Collett and Mary Ann Sharman were born at Wilby.  At the time of the next census in 1851 John was 37, while his wife Marian (Mary Ann) was only 22, and their first child was Dinah Collett who was one year old.  Two more children were added to the family at Wilby during the next ten years, so in the census of 1861 the family comprised John Collett, aged 44, his wife Mary A Collett, aged 34, and their three children, Dinah Collett who was ten, William Collett who was eight, and Mary Collett who was six

 

The Wilby census of 1871 include John and his youngest son, when John Collett was 52 and an ag lab, Mary A Collett from Brundish was 43, and Jimmy Collett was nine years of age.  It was eight years later that the death of Mary Ann Collett was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 385) during the last three months of 1879 at the age of 50.  By 1881 John Collett was a widower living at Cole Street in Wilby, and at 66 he was still working as an agricultural labourer, mostly likely with his youngest son James, aged 18 and from Wilby, who was also an agricultural labourer.  Living with them at that time was John’s eldest daughter Dinah Brunning nee Collett, who was 30 and from Wilby, together with her husband Henry Brunning who was 25 and from Horham, and who was another agricultural labourer.  Also living in Cole Street, Wilby was John’s eldest son William, with his wife

 

18O91 – Dinah Collett was born in 1850 at Wilby

18O92 – William Collett was born in 1852 at Wilby

18O93 – Mary Collett was born in 1854 at Wilby

18O94 – James Collett was born in 1861 at Wilby

 

James Collett [18N47] was born at Wilby on 30th August 1817 and baptised there on 18th January 1818, the youngest son and last child of William Collett and Dinah Lockwood.  He married Lucy Mutimer on 19th October 1840 at Horham, which is north of Tannington and south of Stradbroke.  Lucy was born at Wilby in 1817, the daughter of Charles Mutimer and Elizabeth Cooke.  Just after they were married the couple was living in Wilby where, in June 1841, James was working as an agricultural labourer, when Lucy was anticipating the imminent arrival of their first child, their honeymoon baby.  James and Lucy’s first three children were all born at Wilby in Suffolk, while the remainder were born at Needham, just across the county boundary in Norfolk, after the family have moved there around 1845.  By the time of the census in 1851, the family was living at ‘the Street’ in Needham and was listed as labourer James, aged 33, his wife Lucy who was 34, Martha who was nine, Mary who was eight, Emma who was seven, William who was four, Dinah who was one year old, and Eliza who was only a few months old.  Three further children were added to the family during the next decade

 

In the next Needham census in 1861, the family was still living in the same dwelling as ten years earlier, by which time James Collett from Wilby was 44 and continuing to earn a living as an agricultural labourer, Lucy Collett was also 44 and from Wilby, Mary Collett from Wilby was 18 with no occupation, William Collett was 14, Eliza Collett was 10, James Collett was eight, Rachel Collett was five, and George Collett was three years old.  All of the five younger children had been born at Needham.  The reason for the absence of their daughters Martha, Emma and Dinah, was that Martha was married by then, Emma was working as a domestic servant at Redenhall-with-Harleston in Norfolk, and Dinah, who would have been 11, may not have survived beyond childhood.  Ten years forward found a depleted Collett family still living at ‘the Street’ in Needham, near Harleston.  James was 53, while his wife Lucy was 54, and the only child still living there with them was their youngest child George who was 13.  Still living in the village was their youngest daughter Rachel who was 15.  During the 1870s James passed away leaving his widow Lucy living at 21 Opposite Row in Lakenham in Norwich in 1881, with just her son George for company.  Lucy, aged 63, was confirmed as having been born at Wilby, while her occupation was that of an SMS nurse.  George was still a bachelor at 23, and his place of birth was confirmed as Needham.  By 1891 Lucy was 74 and at that time she was still living with her son George who, by then had been married and widowed, although not before he was presented with three children by his late wife.  It was at the start of the new century when Lucy Collett died, her death recorded at Great Yarmouth register office (Ref. 4b 36) during the first three months of 1900, when she was 83

 

18O95 – Martha Collett was born in 1841 at Wilby

18O96 – Mary Collett was born in 1842 at Wilby

18O97 – Emma Collett was born in 1844 at Wilby

18O98 – William Collett was born in 1846 at Needham

18O99 – Dinah Elizabeth Collett was born in 1849 at Needham

18O100 – Eliza Collett was born in 1851 at Needham

18O101 – James Collett was born in 1852 at Needham

18O102 – Rachel Collett was born in 1855 at Needham

18O103 – George Collett was born in 1858 at Needham

 

Ann Collett [18N48] was born at Wetheringsett and was baptised on 24th June 1804 at Tannington, the eldest child of John Collett and Susan Watling.  She married her cousin Hezekiah Lockwood at Wilby on 27th November 1829.  Hezekiah, who was born at Wilby in 1806 and who died on 7th January 1872, was the son of Evans Lockwood and Ann Collett [18M37], his mother Ann being the sister of Ann’s father John.  In 1881 Ann Lockwood nee Collett was an annuitant widow of 80 years living at Somersham in Suffolk, at the home of her daughter Lydia.  Lydia Lockwood, who was born in 1829 at Coddenham in Suffolk, where she was baptised on 31st May 1829, although the baptismal record named her parents as John and Ann Lockwood.  Lydia had married Robert Sage, who was born in 1826 at Flowton, a farmer of nine acres and, living and working with him in 1881, was his brother William Sage aged 67 and also of Flowton

 

ROBERT COLLETT [18N49] was born at Wilby where he was baptised on 23rd March 1805, the eldest son of John and Susan Collett.  He married his cousin Diana Lockwood at Brundish, to the east of Tannington, their wedding recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 517) during the third quarter of 1837.  It was only at the recording of her wedding that her name was written as Diana.  During the rest of her life she was Dinah, the daughter of Hammond Lockwood and Elizabeth Everett, and was baptised at Sprowston on 4th April 1813.  All of Robert’s and Dinah’s children were also born and baptised at Wilby.  After the wealth enjoyed by previous generations of the Collett family, Robert and his family by contrast lived on the poverty line, with Robert having to find work as a bricklayer.  It was in Wilby that the family was living in 1841, when Robert was 30, his wife Dinah was 25, and their three children at that time were Elizabeth Collett, who was three, Hammond Collett, who was two years old, and Susan Collett who was still under one year old.  In 1850 Robert was sentenced at Ipswich to two weeks imprisonment for leaving his family chargeable to the Parish of Wilby 

 

At that time his wife Dinah and the children were living at the Hoxne Union Workhouse in Stradbroke, where the couple’s last child was born.  A year later, according to the census in 1851, Robert Collett was 45 and was still living at the Workhouse in Stradbroke with three of his children, curiously though, he was recorded as a widower.  The three children with him, at the Workhouse, were his eldest son Hammond who was 12, second eldest daughter Susan who was 10, and his son John who was six years old.  His son Robert had died four years earlier, but his three other children were living with his wife at London Road in Wilby.  Head of the household was Dinah Collett who was 37 and a pauper, and the three children with her that day were the couple’s eldest daughter Elizabeth who was 13, and their two youngest children, Ann who was two, and Alfred who was not yet one year old

 

According to the next census in 1861, Robert Collett from Wilby was 54 and a bricklayer’s labourer and his wife Dinah from Sprowston was 47, when they and their family was residing in Wilby.  The three children still living with the couple John Collett who was 17, Ann Collett who was 12, and Alfred Collett who was 10 years old.  Staying with the family on that occasion was Robert’s unmarried sister Frances Collett (below) who was 49.  Living nearby was the couple’s eldest son Hammond Collett, aged 22, while their eldest daughter Elizabeth Collett, also 22 and from Wilby, was living and working in the Kentish Town area of London.  Although the whereabouts of Robert and Dinah has not been identified in the census of 1871, it was just over two years later that Robert Collett died at Wilby on 28th September 1873, his death recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 340) at the age of 67, after which he was buried at Wilby on that same day.  In the 1881 Census Dinah Collett was a widow aged 69.  The census return that year confirmed that she was born at Sprowston, and that she was living at the home of her son Alfred Collett at Framlingham Road in Wilby.  And, only two doors away from her, was her other son John and his family.  Dinah Collett survived for another seven years, when she died on 27th June 1888, her death as Dinah Collett was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 390) when she was 79

 

18O104 – Elizabeth Collett was born in 1837 at Wilby

18O105 – Hammond Collett was born in 1839 at Wilby

18O106 – Susan Collett was born in 1841 at Wilby

18O107 – John Collett was born in 1843 at Wilby

18O108 – Robert Collett was born in 1845 at Wilby

18O109 – Ann Collett was born in 1849 at Wilby

18O110 – Alfred Collett was born in 1851 at Stradbroke

 

Harriet Collett [18N50] was born at Wilby and was baptised there on 14th February 1808, but survived for just short of one year, when she was buried at Wilby on 13th January 1809, the daughter of John Collett and Susan Watling

 

Frances Collett [18N51] was born at Wilby and was baptised there on 24th June 1810, the daughter of John and Susan Collett.  It is understood that she never married and in 1841, following the death of her mother, she was living at Wilby with her widowed father when Frances Collett was 25.  The only other member of the family living with them was Frances’ younger sister Hannah (below).  After another ten years, Frances Collett from Wilby was 35 (sic), when she was living and working there as a general servant in 1851.  Ten years after that Frances Collett gave a more accurate assessment of her age, when she said she was 49, when she was living with her married brother Robert (above) and his family at Wilby, where she was described as the sister of the head of the household.  It was thirteen years later that spinster Frances Collett died at Wilby with her death recorded Hoxne (Ref. 4a 394) during the first quarter of 1874.  And it was at Wilby where she was buried on 26th March 1874, at the age of 65

 

Charity Collett [18N52] was a twin born at Wilby during the month of May 1813 and was baptised there in a joint ceremony with her twin-sister Susan (below) on 21st June 1813.  She was the daughter of John and Susan Collett, and sadly she died within four days of her baptism and was buried at Wilby on 25th June 1813

 

Susan Collett [18N53] was a twin born at Wilby during the month of May 1813 and it was there that she was baptised in a joint ceremony with her twin-sister Charity (above) on 21st June 1813.  She died two months later and was buried on 25th August 1813, at the age of three months, and just two months after the death of her twin-sister Charity

 

Hannah Collett [18N54] was born at Wilby and was baptised there on 16th July 1815, the last child of John Collett and Susan Watling.  Following the death of her mother in 1840, Hannah aged 20 (rounded), was living at Wilby with her widowed father and her sister Frances Collett (above) in June 1841.  Ten years later she was a servant at a house in Wilby when she was 36.  Curiously in 1861, Hannah Collett of Wilby was living at Bridge Street in Wickham Market when her age was recorded as 42 instead of 46, when she was unmarried, living alone, and working as a charwoman.  Less than a year later, the death of Hannah Collett was recorded at Plomesgate (Ref. 4a 425) during the first three months of 1862

 

Anthony Collett [18O1] was born at Heveningham on 21st September 1800, where he was baptised that same day, the eldest child of Anthony Collett and his wife Anne Rachel Curtis.  At the age of 26 Anthony was given the family home at Ubbeston by his father, where lived until just after 1841, when he settled in Bury-St-Edmunds.  During his later life, he was known as Anthony Collett of Bury-St-Edmunds and held the position of Captain of East Suffolk.  Around the time he took over the house at Ubbeston, he married his cousin Harriet Pett Hannam who was born on 20th July 1802 at Northbourne in Kent, and baptised there on 2nd September 1802, the daughter of H Pett Hannam and his wife Catherine Collett [18N3].  The wedding of Anthony and Harriet took place at Northbourne on 30th November 1826.  By the time of the census in 1841, Harriet had presented Anthony with the first three of their four children.  The census return recorded the family living at the Ubbeston house left to him by his father, who had passed away two years earlier.  Anthony was 40, his wife Harriet was 37, and their three children were Harriet who was eleven, Maria who was seven, and Anthony who was five years old.  Three years later the name of Capt Anthony Collett was listed in the Ubbeston Directory of 1844.  Upon moving to Bury-St-Edmunds just after that, Anthony leased out the Ubbeston property, which he eventually sold in 1847 to a wealthy local philanthropist Edmund Holland, for £600.  And it was Edmund who presented the property to the Norwich Diocese for use as a rectory which still stands there to this day – see Anthony Collett [18N1], the father of Anthony Collett

 

It was during the following year, in 1848, that the couple’s last child was born.  By 1851 the family living at Bury-St-Edmunds (St James) was made up of Anthony Collett from Cratfield who was 50 and a captain with the East Suffolk Militia, Harriet Pett Collett who was 48, Harriet 21, Maria 17, Anthony 15, and Frances who was two years old.  Anthony Collett died at Bury-St-Edmunds during January in 1856 and was buried at Hawstead on 30th January 1856 at the age of 55.  Four years later in the census of 1861 Harriet, aged 57, was a widow living at Dover St James in Kent with three of her children.  They were Maria Collett who was 27, Anthony Collett who was 25, and Frances E Collett who was 12 years old.  It was a similar situation ten years later in 1871.  The family was still living within the area of Dover St James, where Harriet P Collett was 68, and living with her was her daughter Maria Collett who was 37, and her son Anthony Collett who was 35.  According to the next census in 1881, Harriet P Collett was 78 and her place of birth was confirmed as Northbourne in Kent.  On that occasion she was living at 6 Camden Crescent in Dover St James, and her income was stated as coming from ‘dividends and land’. 

 

Still living there with her, were her two unmarried daughters, Maria Collett and Frances Collett, neither of them credited with an occupation.  Maria was curiously recorded as being 40 rather than 47, while her place of birth was given as Ubbeston Green (midway between Framlingham and Halesworth).  Frances was also given the wrong age, being 30 instead of 32, although it did correctly give her birthplace as Bury-St-Edmunds.  The three ladies were supported by three female domestic servants and, at the time of the census, had staying with them John Perryston, a magistrate, and his niece Catherine Perryston.  Also, by that time, Harriet’s eldest daughter was married to the Reverend John Ley, while her son Anthony Collett was the Rector of Hastingleigh in Kent, and Vicar of Elmsted in Kent.  Harriet Pett Collett nee Hannam of 2 Camden Crescent in Dover died on 24th June 1886, her death recorded at Dover (Ref. 2a 546) when she was 83, following which she was buried at Elmstone on 28th June 1886.  The Will of Harriet Pett Collett, a widow, was proved at Canterbury on 2nd August 1886 by the Reverend Anthony Collett of Elmstone Vicarage in Ashford, Kent, a clerk (in Holy Orders) and son, the sole executor of her estate originally valued at just over £9,162, but re-sworn in October 1886 at just over £9,257.  Having lost her mother, her daughter Maria went to live with her older widowed sister Harriet Anne Ley in Torquay, who had also just recently lost her husband

 

18P1 – Harriet Ann Collett was born in 1929 at Ubbeston

18P2 – Maria Collett was born in 1933 at Ubbeston

18P3 – Anthony Collett was born in 1935 at Ubbeston

18P4 – Frances Ellen Collett was born in 1848 at Bury-St-Edmunds

 

Anne Collett [18O2] was born and baptised at Heveningham on 5th January 1802, the daughter of Anthony Collett and Anne Rachel Curtis.  It was also at Heveningham that Anne married the Honourable Fenton John Hort on 25th April 1826, who was born on 3rd August 1794 and baptised on 23rd August 1794, the son of Sir John bart. and Margaret Lady Hort.  Shortly after they were married the couple moved to Ireland, where their son Fenton John Anthony Hort was born in 1828.  Fenton was the brother of Viscount Hort, and the son of Margaret Hort with whom Fenton and Anne were living at Furnley Lodge in Cheltenham in 1841.  Margaret Hort was 75, Fenton Hort was 46, and Anne Hort was 39.  The couple’s five children that census day were listed as Fenton J Hort aged 13, Margaret Hort aged 11, Arthur Hort who was nine, Catherine Hort who was seven, and Louisa Hort who was two years of age.  Ten year later, the family was residing at Bircham House in the village of Newland within the Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire.  Fenton Hort from Abington Street in London was 56 and a fund holder, Anne was 49 and from Cratfield in Suffolk, Margaret A Hort from Mercian Square in Dublin was 21, and Catherine Hort was 17 and born on the Isle of Anglesey.  By 1861, 66-year-old Fenton Hort from Middlesex was a Justice of the Peace for Monmouthshire, when he and Anne, aged 59 and from Cratfield, were recorded at the home of their married daughter Catherine Williams and her husband Garnons Williams at St John’s Mount, in St John’s in Brecon.  Anne died five years later at Abercamlais (Brecon), her death recorded at Brecknock (Ref. 11b 87) during the second quarter of 1866, aged 64, although on being buried at St Cattwyg’s Church in Llanspyddid on 27th June 1866 she was recorded as 63

 

Her passing left widower Fenton Hort at St John’s Mount with just his daughter Margaret living there with him in 1871, with three female servants.  When Fenton Hort died at St John’s Mount during the following year, he was buried at St Cattwyg’s Church in Llanspyddid on 22nd March 1872 at the age of 78.  Fenton Hort junior later went on to become a Hulsean Professor of Divinity at Cambridge and by 1881 he was 52 and was a Clergyman Without Cure, Doctor of Divinity, Professor of Theology living at 6 St Peters Terrace in St Mary the Lesser in Cambridge with his four children.  They were Ellen M Hort 18, Francis F Hort 13, Mary D Hort 10, and Frederick A Hort who was eight years old.  The Will of Fenton Hort, husband of Anne Collett, and late of St John’s Mount in Brecon, who died on 18th March 1873, was proved at the Principal Registry by his son the Reverend Fenton John Anthony Hort of St Peter’s Terrace in Cambridge on 21st June 1873, and by John Josiah Hort of Woodland House in Warley, Essex, a colonel in Her Majesty’s Arm, nephew, the three executors of the Will valued at under £30,000

 

Catherine Charlotte Collett [18O3] was baptised at Heveningham on 26th July 1805, the daughter of the Reverend Anthony Collett, Rector of Heveningham and his wife Anne Rachel Curtis.  She married the Reverend Thomas John Blofield MA, the Rector of Hellesdon-with-Drayton near Norwich.  The marriage took place at Heveningham on 15th April 1834, and produced a daughter and three sons for the couple.  They were Catherine Blofield, Francis Blofield, Thomas Calthorpe Blofield, and Robert Singleton Blofield.  The later death of Catherine C Blofield was recorded at Smallburgh in Norfolk (Ref. 4b 31) during the last three months of 1872 when she was 68.  She was then buried at Hoveton St John in Norfolk on 12th October 1872.  Her husband survived her by nearly nine years, when the death of Thomas John Blofield, of Hoveton St John, was recorded at Smallburgh (Ref. 4b 25) during the second quarter of 1881, when he was 74, and he was buried on 3rd June 1881.  The Will, with a Codicil, of the Reverend Thomas Blofield late of Hoveton House in Hoveton St John, who died there on 29th May 1881, was proved at Norwich on 3rd August 1881 by Thomas Calthorpe Blofield Esquire of Hoveton House and the Reverend Robert Singleton Blofield Esquire of Ormesby St Margaret, a clerk (in Holy Orders), the two sons and executors of the estate valued at under £6,000

 

William Collett [18O4] was born in 1812 and was baptised at Heveningham on 17th April 1812, the youngest known son of the Rev. Anthony Collett and his wife Anne Rachel Curtis.  Tragically he died when he was only nine years old and was buried at Heveningham on 29th November 1821 when he was described as the son of Rachel Collett formerly Curtis

 

Margaret Collett [18O5] was born at Minster-in-Thanet, near Ramsgate in Kent, where she was baptised at the Church of St Mary on 24th January 1804.  Margaret was the eldest child of Thomas Collett of Ringleton (Manor near Woodnesborough?) and Margaret Bushell.  Margaret Collett never married and in 1851 she was 47 and living at Upton House in Worth, Kent, where she was still living in 1861 at the age of 57, when she was described as a landed proprietor occupying house, garden, and pasture, and employing three servants.  Two years after that census day, Margaret Collett died on 3rd April 1863, her death recorded at Eastry (Ref. 2a 455), and was buried at Minster on 10th April 1863.  The Will of Margaret Collett of Upton House in Worth, valued as under £9,000, was proved at the Principal Registry on 11th May 1863 by the oath of Catherine Harbord of Strand Street in Sandwich, a widow, sister and sole executrix, Catherine being Margaret’s younger sister (below)

 

Thomas Collett [18O6] was born at Minster-in-Thanet on 27th May 1805 and was baptised there in St Mary’s Church on 10th June 1805.  Just like his father before him, he too was later known as ‘Thomas Collett of Ringleton’, very likely a reference to Ringleton Farm/Ringleton House in Woodnesborough where he was a farmer of some considerable acreage employing many men.  The marriage of Thomas Collett and Jane Tomlin of Ash in Kent was recorded at Eastry in Kent (Ref. v 179) during the second quarter of 1839.  Jane was baptised at Ash-next-Sandwich on 19th February 1816, the daughter of Thomas Minter Tomlin and his wife Sarah.  Thomas and Jane were only together for just six years, when the premature death of Jane Collett was recorded at Eastry (Ref. v 87) during the third quarter of 1845, when she was 29 years old, leaving Thomas with four children.  Jane was subsequently buried at Woodnesborough on 5th July 1845.  Four years earlier, Thomas and Jane were recorded in the Woodnesborough census of 1841, when farmer Thomas was 35 and Jane was 25 – both rounded ages.  With the couple was their one-year-old son Thomas

 

In 1851 Thomas, the eldest of the four children was 11 years old and a scholar at a school in Canterbury, but was back living with his father in 1861, aged 21, when daughter Ann F Collett was 19.  At that time in his life, Thomas Collett from Minster was described as a yeoman of 239 acres and a farmer of 153 acres, employing 14 men and 5 boys.  After a further ten years, Thomas Collett was 65 and a retired yeoman who was still living at Ringleton House, Woodnesborough, when still living with him was his daughter Ann aged 29.  Managing the farm by then was son George Collett who was 27, and completing the household were two female servants.  Almost exactly two years after, the death of Thomas Collett was recorded at Eastry in Kent (Ref. 2a 458) during the second quarter of 1873, when he was 67, after which he was buried at Woodnesborough on 20th May 1873.  The Will of Thomas Collett, Esquire, late of Ringleton House in Woodnesborough, who died on 15th May 1873, was proved at the Principal Registry on 1st July 1873 by Thomas Trusson Collett of Upper Clapton in Middlesex, gentleman, and George Collett a farmer of Ringleton House, the two sons and executors of the Will, the estate for which was assessed to be under £14,000

 

18P5 – Thomas Trusson Collett was born in 1840 at Woodnesborough, Kent

18P6 – Ann Friend Collett was born in 1841 at Woodnesborough, Kent

18P7 – James Tomlin Collett was born in 1843 at Woodnesborough, Kent

18P8 – George Collett was born in 1844 at Woodnesborough, Kent

 

George Collett [18O7] was born at Minster-in-Thanet on 2nd October 1806 and it was there that he was baptised on 12th October 1806 in the Church of St Mary.  He was the third of the five known children of Thomas Collett of Ringleton and his wife Margaret Bushell.  George later married (1) Sarah Crofts King by licence at the Church of St John-in-Wapping, Middlesex, on 8th June 1834.  Four members of the King family signed the register, with just one member of the Collett family, that being Catherine Collett, George’s younger sister (below).  Their marriage produced four children who were born at Monkton, two of them recorded with the couple in the Minster census of 1841.  The family that day comprised George Collett a farmer who had a rounded age of 30, Sarah Collett who had a rounded age of 20, and their two children Catharine Collett who was five, and George Collett who was three.  One year before the next census day Sarah Croft Collett died at Monkton on 10th March 1850 at the age of 43, her death recorded at the Isle of Thanet (Ref. v 353), after which she was buried at Minster on 16th March 1850.  Just over one year later widower George was 44 and a farmer of 450 acres employing 16 labourers, when he was living at Walter’s Hall in Monkton, with just two of his children.  They were Georgiana Collett who was four, and George Collett who was three

 

It was five and half years later that George was married by licence to (2) Elizabeth Smith at Minster-in-Thanet on 18th November 1856, when George was confirmed as a widower and a gentleman of Monkton, the son of Thomas Collett, gentleman.  One of the witnesses was George’s older brother Thomas Collett (above).  Elizabeth was a spinster residing in Minster, the daughter of James Smith, an attorney, who presented George with a further five children, although only four of them survived.  Just over four years after their wedding day, George Collett from Minster was 54 and a farmer of 478 acres employing 16 men and 6 boys, living at Monkton near Minster-in-Thanet in 1861.  His much younger wife Elizabeth Collett from Manchester was 36, when living with them were the first three of their five children, together with George’s eldest child from his first marriage.  Catharine Collett was 25, while Cornelius Collett was three, Charles T Collett was one year old, and Isabella Collett was three months old.  Boarding with the family was farm bailiff Thomas Browning of Monkton who was 63 and a widower, with the family employing five female domestic servants.  Two more daughters were added to the family during the next seven years although, after the birth of the couple’s last child, the family appears to have been separated, with Elizabeth Collett, nee Smith, and her daughter Emily Collett, being identified on the Isle of Wight in 1881 and at Penge in London in 1891.  However, just prior to the next census in 1871, their son Charles Trusson Collett suffered a premature death not long after his tenth birthday. 

 

As a result of the break-up of the family, in 1871 it was just ‘head of the household’ George Collett aged 64, who was still living at Monkton with only one of his children, his son George A Collett who was 23.  At that same time, his younger son Cornelius Collett of Monkton aged 13 was a pupil attending Grange School at Ewell in Surrey, within the Borough of Epsom, although the census record had his place of birth as Ramsgate.  The big family mystery is that no record has been found for all of the other members of family, including George’s his second wife Elizabeth aged 46, and daughters Isabella aged ten, Alice Maud aged eight, and Emily aged three years.  However, it has been established that they were all living and positively identified in subsequent following census returns.  By the time of the next Monkton census in 1881, George Collett, aged 74, was listed as a retired farmer who had been born at Minster-in-Thanet.  The entry in the census return still indicated that he was a married man, at a time in his life when his Manchester born wife Elizabeth was 55 who had their youngest child Emily with her at a boarding house in Ventor on the Isle of Wight

 

With George at Walter’s Hall on Main Road in Monkton that day, were three of his unmarried children, and they were George Alfred Collett who was 33 and had income from land, Cornelius Collett who was 23 and a Cambridge undergraduate, and Isabella Collett who was 20.  All three of them were confirmed as having been born at Monkton.  Taking care of the domestic duties at the residence were two female servants.  George Collett died at Walter’s Hall ten months later on 21st January 1882, just three months before his son Cornelius was married.  The death of George Collett was recorded at Thanet (Ref. 2a 563) when he was 76, and when his personal estate was valued at £66,289 2 Shillings.  The Will and Codicil of George Collett, Esquire, late of Walters Hall Monkton, Isle of Thanet, was proved at the Principal Registry on 13th March 1882 by George Alfred Collett, a gentleman, of 7 West Cliff Terrace Ramsgate, and the Reverend George Collett, nephew, of 5 St Mary’s Road Peckham in Surrey, a clerk (in Holy Orders) the surviving two executors.  The absence of the name of his wife, may further confirm that they were an estranged couple

 

Whether or not it was a result of her husband’s death is not known, but the fact remains that widow Elizabeth Collett, together with daughter Emily, eventually returned from the Isle Wight to settle back in mainland Britain.  That move was confirmed in the London census of 1891, when the two of them were still living together, with their three domestic servants at 70 Belvedere Road in Penge, within the London Borough of Bromley, Kent.  Both mother and daughter were living on their own means, when Elizabeth Collett was recorded as being 68 years of age.  All that is currently known for sure after 1891, is the Emily continued to live in South London, where she was recorded in 1901, 1911, and at the time of her later death.  It therefore possible that Elizabeth may have been in Essex visiting or staying with her married daughter Alice Maud Tidmarsh when she died, the death of Elizabeth Collett aged 72 recorded at Orsett register office (Ref. 4a 226) during the first three months of 1896.  Her recorded age at that time closely corresponds with the baptism of Elizabeth Smith at Manchester on 4th May 1823, the daughter of James and Mary Smith

 

18P9 – Catharine Collett was born in 1835 at Monkton, Kent

18P10 – George Collett was born in 1838 at Monkton, Kent

18P11 – Georgiana Collett was born in 1846 at Monkton, Kent

18P12 – George Alfred Collett was born in 1848 at Monkton, Kent

The children of George Collett and his second wife Elizabeth Smith:

18P13 – Cornelius Collett was born in 1857 at Monkton, Kent

18P14 – Charles Trusson Collett was born in 1859 at Monkton, Kent

18P15 – Isabella Collett was born in 1860 at Monkton, Kent

18P16 – Alice Maud Collett was born in 1862 at Monkton, Kent

18P17 – Emily Collett was born in 1868 at Monkton, Kent

 

 

Mary Collett [18O8] was born at Minster-in-Thanet on 6th September 1808, the fourth child of Thomas Collett and Margaret Bushell, and was baptised in the Church of St Mary on 18th September 1808.  Mary later married Thomas Wickes Solly of Dent de Lion, Margate in Kent, at Woodnesborough on 13th September 1831, with whom she had three sons and four daughters.  According to the census in 1841, the family was living at Monkton Court in Monkton, where Thomas Solly was a farmer aged 35, Mary Solly was 30, George Bushell Solly was five, James Solly was three, and Mary Solly was one year old.  After another ten years the family the census in 1851 recorded the family as: Thomas W Solly who was 48 and a farmer of 420 acres employing 14 labourers; Mary Solly was 42; Thomas C Solly was 18; James Solly was 13; Sarah Solly was eight; Catherine Solly was seven; and Margaret Ann Solly was five years old.  By 1861 the family was residing at Dent de Lion Farm, when Thomas Wickes Solly was 58, Mary was 52, George Bushell Solly was 24, James was 23, Mary was 21, Sarah was 19, Kate was 17, and Margaret Ann was 15.  Following the death of her husband and eldest son (see details below), it was just Mary Solly, a farmer of 450 acres, employing 10 men and 3 boys, a widow at the age of 63 whose only child still living with her was her daughter Mary Solly who was 31

 

Thomas was baptised on 15th February 1803 at St Peter’s Church in Sandwich, the son of George and Sarah Solly.  He died at Dent de Lion on 28th May 1861, following which his Will, valued at under £12,000, was proved at the Principal Registry by the oath of Mary Solly of Dent de Lion, widow, relict, and sole executrix.  The probate process also identified that prior to residing at Dent de Lion, his former home was Monkton Court in Monkton.  It was on 4th June 1861 that Thomas was buried at Minster.  By the time Mary Solly, nee Collett, of 17 Gauden Road Clapham in Surrey died on 10th November 1889 she had amassed a considerable fortune, the value of her personal estate being £11,989 8 Shillings and 11 Pence.  Her Will and Codicil were proved at the Principal Registry on 10th January 1890 by Samuel Collett of Clare Lodge Spring Grove Isleworth in Middlesex, gentleman, and the Reverend Harry Harbord of East Hoathly in Sussex, a clerk (in Holy Orders), the two executors

 

One of the three sons of Thomas Wicks Solly and Mary Collett was Thomas Collett Solly, bachelor, whose Letter of Administration was granted at Canterbury on 14th March 1890, following his premature death on 15th October 1853 at Dent de Lion, to the aforementioned Samuel Collett of Clare Lodge, Spring Grove, Isleworth and Reverend Harry Harbord of The Rectory East Hoathly, which also confirmed that Thomas Collett Solly was the son of Thomas Wickes Solly whose personal effects were valued at £1,142 17 Shillings and 1 Penny

 

Catherine Collett [18O9] was born at Minster-in-Thanet on 23rd August 1810, where she was baptised in St Mary’s Church on 7th October 1810 when she was confirmed as the daughter of Thomas and Margaret Collett.  She was almost 31 when she married surgeon Henry (Harry) Gordon Harbord of Liverpool on 19th August 1841 at Woodnesborough in Kent.  Harry was younger than Catherine, having been born on 14th August 1815 and baptised on 19th June 1923, the son of William and Elizabeth Harbord.  However, the marriage only lasted for eight years, but during that time, Catherine presented her husband with six children before he died.  The death of Henry Gordon Harbord was recorded at Clifton (Ref. xi 220) during the last quarter of 1849, when he was only 34 and living at Upper Parliament Street, and was buried at St Michael’s Church in Liverpool on 4th January 1850.  The only baptism record so far found is for her eldest child, Harry Harbord, who was baptised at St Peter’s Church in Liverpool on 2nd May 1844, when his parents were confirmed as Henry and Catherine Harbord.  A year after being widowed, the census in 1851 placed widow Catherine Harbord from Minster, aged 40, living at Monkton with only three of her children, when she was described as a fund holder.  The children were Harry Harbord who was seven years old, Collett Harbord who was four years old, and Catherine Harbord who was one year old and born at Monkton.  Her sons Harry and Collett were born in Liverpool and were attending Marlborough School in Wiltshire at the time of the next census in 1861, when pupils H Harbord was 17 and C Harbord was 14

 

That same year, the boys’ widowed mother Catherine was 50 years old and an annuitant living at Strand Street in St Mary-in-the-Marsh, midway between Old Romney and Dymchurch.  Staying were her were two Lancashire born sisters Jane Brownbill who was 54, and Margaret Brownbill who was 50.  Two years later, widow Catherine Harbord of Strand Street in Sandwich was the sole executrix of her eldest sister’s Will in May 1863, when the Will of spinster Margaret Collett was estimated to be close to £9,000.  In 1871 Catherine Harbord was 60 and an annuitant living at Sandwich in Kent, where she employed a live-in 16-year-old housemaid.  Visiting Catherine that day were Peckham born sisters Harriet King who was 29, and Minna King who was 26.  It is very interesting that thirty years later, the same Minna King was 56, when she was visiting Collett siblings Ann Friend C (59) and George C (57) at Main Road in Basildon, Berkshire in 1901.  Ann and George were first cousins of Catherine Harbord

 

No record of Catherine has been found between 1871 and 1891 so on the day of the census in 1891, when Catherine was 80 years of age and living on her own means at Rose Mount, East Hoathly in Sussex, she had living with her, her unmarried niece Isabella Collett, the eldest child of her older brother George Collett (above).  She was also employing a cook and a housemaid.  Eighteen months later, Catherine Harbord died on 24th October 1892, her death recorded at Uckfield (Ref. 2b 81) when she was 82, after which she was buried at Minster on 28th October 1892.  Probate of the Will of Catherine Harbord, of Rose Mount, East Hoathly in Sussex, a widow, was grant at London on 30th December 1892 to the Reverend Harry Harbord, a clerk (in Holy Orders) when her estate was estimated to be worth £6,657 15 Shillings and 11 Pence

 

As regards her children, according to the census in 1871, Catherine’s son Harry Harbord, aged 27, was a lodger at Aylesford in Kent, while Collett Harbord, aged 24, was living at Alfold in Surrey where he employed a housekeeper and a servant girl.  By 1881 Harry was 37 and was the Reverend Harry Harbord, Curate in Charge of All Saints at Highgate Espennett House in Hawkhurst, Kent where he was supported by two domestic staff.  It was on 4th June 1882, at Goudhurst in Kent, that he married Ellen Jane Blair who was much younger than Harry, being only 24, the daughter of Harrison Blair.  By 1891 the marriage had produced the first three of their nine children and the family recorded at East Hoathly in Sussex comprised Harry who was 47, Ellen who was 33, Frances who was four, Kenneth who was two, and Stephen who was under one year old.  According to the next census in 1901 for East Hoathly, the couple’s oldest three children were away at boarding school, leaving Harry, aged 57, and Ellen Jane, aged 43, living there with their three youngest children at that time.  They were Geoffrey who was eight, Ellen who was six, and Arthur who was three

 

Mary Lynch Collett [18O10] was baptised at Walton in Felixstowe on 1st November 1807, the eldest child of Charles Collett and Charlotte Lynch.  The baptism was a joint ceremony with her possible twin sister Catherine (below).  Mary married Reverend Edward Raikes Edgar, the Rector of Trimley in Suffolk, at Walton Suffolk on 28th February 1832.  Edward Raikes Edgar of 24 Duke Street in Edinburgh died on 29th December 1861 at Aberdouar in Fife.  The later death of Mary Lynch Edgar of Wimbledon was recorded at Kingston-on-Thames (Ref. 2a 149) during the second quarter of 1874, when she was 67 years old.  She was buried at Wimbledon on 25th April 1874 and left an estate said to be under £1,000.  It was on 7th May 1874 that the Will of Mary Lynch Edgar, late of Maresfield in Sussex, widow, who died on 16th April 1874 at 23 Lingfield Road in Wimbledon, was proved at the Principal Registry by Charlotte Susanna Edgar, wife of the Reverend Thomas Richard Turner, a clerk (in Holy Orders), and Alice Maud Catherine Edgar, spinster, both of 23 Lingfield Road, the daughters of Mary Lynch Edgar, and George Josselyn of Ipswich, gentleman, the executors

 

Mary and Edward’s second son was Mileson Edgar who was born in 1855 and who later was known as Captain Mileson Edgar.  Captain Mileson Edgar, of Red House Park, married Elizabeth Schreiber on 28th October 1878.  She was the daughter of the Reverend Thomas Schreiber, Rector of Bradwell in Essex.  Two years before he was born, his father’s brother, the Reverend Mileson Gery Edgar, died in 1853 leaving Westerfield Manor with his second wife Elizabeth Arkell, who held Westerfield Manor until her death on 11th June 1890.  The Manor House had been purchased from the Collett family in the early 1800s, it having been originally inherited by Anthony Collett [18H8] from the Dameron family in 1600.  Upon the death of Elizabeth Edgar nee Arkell, Westerfield Manor was inherited by Captain Mileson Edgar of Red House Park and his wife Elizabeth Schreiber

 

Catherine Collett [18O11 was baptised at Walton on 1st November 1807 in a joint ceremony with her twin sister Mary Lynch Collett (above).  It is established that Catherine later married Henry Wilkin who was born on 21st June 1802 and baptised on 20th July that same year, the son of John and Elizabeth Wilkin of Inworth.  Henry Wilkin was a surgeon of 39 Connaught Terrace, Hyde Park, in London who, at the time of his death on 26th July 1864 was residing at 16 Pembridge Crescent in Bayswater.  His Will was proved at the Principal Registry on 2nd September 1864 by the oaths of John Elliot Snow of Walton in Suffolk, surgeon, and Herbert Charles Wilkin of Brown Hill, Millbrook near Southampton, Esquire, the son, the executors.  It was on the day of the census in 1851 when Henry and Catherine, and five children, were living at 39 Connaught Terrace within the London parish of Paddington.  Henry Wilkin of Bloor Hall in Essex was 48, Catherine Wilkin from Walton was 43, Henry John Wilkin was 22, Adelaide Wilkin was 20, Elizabeth Wilkin was 19, Frederick Wilkin was 15, and Edward Wilkin was 14

 

Charlotte Collett [18O12] was baptised at Walton in Felixstowe on 21st January 1809, the daughter of Charles and Charlotte Collett.  On the day of the Walton census of 1851, unmarried Charlotte Collett was 42 and a fund holder who, together with her unmarried sister Elizabeth (below), was living with their mother’s brother William Lynch at Upper Street

 

Elizabeth Collett [18O13] was baptised at Walton on 12th May 1810, the youngest of the four daughters of Charles Collett and his first wife Charlotte Lynch, who died around the end of 1813.  It is known that Elizabeth Collett, daughter of Charles Collett, married John Lynch Fletcher at Bletchley in Buckinghamshire on 5th December 1854.  John was born on 14th March 1828, and was baptised on 1st May 1828 at St Mary’s Church in Woodford in Suffolk, the son of William Fletcher and Mary Studd.  Three years before they were married Elizabeth and her older sister Charlotte (above) were recorded with their uncle William Lynch, their mother’s older brother, at Upper Street in Walton.  William was a retired mariner aged 77 from Ipswich, Charlotte Collett from Walton was 42 and a fund holder, while Elizabeth Collett also from Walton was 41 and another fund holder.  By 1861, John L Fletcher from Woodbridge was 32 and a farmer of 109 acres employing three men and one boy.  His older wife Elizabeth Fletcher was 50, when they were living in Streatley village.  After a further ten years they were living at Hardwick Hill in Chepstow and by then John Lynch Fletcher was 42 and Militia Office Estate Agent, and Elizabeth was 59.  Six years later the death of Elizabeth Fletcher was recorded at Chester (Ref. 8a 280) during the first three months of 1877, when she was 67, after which she was buried at the Church of St Bridget in Chester on 24th January 1877

 

Charles Lynch Collett [18O14] was born at Walton-cum-Felixstowe during 1811, the son of Charles Collett and his wife Charlotte Lynch.  It was in December two years that he died and was buried at Walton-cum-Felixstowe on 12th December 1813, with his mother dying just a few weeks later and also being buried there on 1st January 1814, following the birth of his brother Charles (below)

 

Charles Collett [18O15] was born at Walton-cum-Felixstowe during the first week of December in 1813, the last child born to Charles Collett by his first wife Charlotte Lynch, who was baptised at Walton on 16th December 1813.  Around the time that he was born, his older brother Charles Lynch Collett died at two years of age, and not long after that the boys’ mother died, possibly because she did not recover from the latest birth.  Nine months after he was born, he too died and was buried at Walton-cum-Felixstowe with his brother and his mother on 6th August 1814

 

William Collett [18O16] was born at Walton-cum-Felixstowe where he was baptised on 4th December 1818, the only child of Charles Collett and his second wife Elizabeth Harmsworth.  He was educated at Ipswich Grammar School under his cousin James Collett Ebden, where he matriculated when he was 19.  Later that same year he was accepted into Peterhouse College in Cambridge on 1st October 1838.  The university records show he was the son of Charles Collett of Walton near Ipswich, and that he received his BA in 1843.  It was during the previous year that he was ordained as a deacon, prior to which he had been the Curate of Belstead in Ipswich.  According to the census in 1841, William Collett, with a rounded age of 20, was still living with his parents at Woodbridge near Ipswich.  Six years later in 1847, and after he was married, he was appointed Curate of Chelsworth, which lies midway between Bury-St-Edmunds and Ipswich.  Four years earlier, at Walton-cum-Felixstowe, William married (1) Mary Cecil Augusta von Linsingen on 29th August 1843, which was recorded at Woodbridge (Ref. xii 707).  Mary was the daughter of Count William von Linsingen the Chamberlain to George V, King of Hanover and his wife Mary Ann, and was born in London on 15th March 1815, and was baptised at St Lukes in Chelsea on 9th April 1815

 

William von Linsingen, K.C.B, G.C.H, had been a distinguished officer in the German Legion and from the age of fourteen he had been present in all of the continental wars, including the Seven Years War, when he was on the staff of the Duke of Brunswick.  When only a Lieutenant Colonel in 1794, he commanded a considerable corps of British and Hanoverian troops during the eight weeks defence of Menin in Flanders, not long after which he was taken prisoner.  During the years following this, he came to England to reform his regiment, the 1st Hussars of the German Legion, and was appointed to the rank of Major General in the British Service.  It was during the early 1800s that he is likely to have built a friendship with the Duke of Cambridge (see below).  In 1811 he was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant General and received the Orders of the Bath and of the Guelphs from his late Majesty the King, with whom he was a great favourite.  William and Mary Ann von Linsingen were prominent figures in the Ipswich area at that time, and up until 1824 the Count and his family lived at Birkfield Lodge on Belstead Road in Ipswich, which he built in 1818 and which today is the boys’ school of St Joseph’s College.  However, due to financial difficulties, he was forced to sell the property in 1824

 

After their wedding, William Collett and Mary Cecil Augusta settled in Chelsworth, where their first three children were born, although shortly before the birth of the third child, William was offered the post of Chaplain to the Duke of Cambridge, possibly through a recommendation from his father-in-law, the Count von Linsingen.  His new job took William and his family to Bury-St-Edmunds, and it was while they were living there that the next three children were born into the family.  Also, during the years from 1849 through to 1852, when William was living at 1 Westend in Bury-St-Edmunds, from where he performed the role of Curate at nearby Stanningfield.  By the time of the next census in 1851, William Collett was 32, his wife Cecil Collett was 36, and their four daughters were Sophia Collett who was six, Emily Collett who was five, Augusta Collett who was three, and Mary Collett who was one year old.  Living with the family that day, was William’s elderly mother Elizabeth Collett from Newbury in Berkshire who, in the month of September that same year, was buried at Stanningfield.  During the following year, William was made Rector of Hawstead near Bury-St-Edmunds, to where the family moved between 1852 and 1855, and it was while the family was living at Hawstead that the couple’s last child was born in 1856.  By April 1861, the larger family was living within the parsonage at Hawstead, south of Bury-St-Edmunds.  At that time the family comprised William Collett was 42 and the Rector of Hawstead, Mary C A Collett was 46, and their seven children.  They were recorded as Sophie E Collett who was 16, Ellen M Collett who was 15, Augusta C Collett who was 13, Mary L Collett who was 11, William C Collett who was nine, Agnes M Collett who was six, and Frederick W Collett who was five years old.  It was just three years later that tragedy struck the family, when Mary Cecil Augusta Collett died at Hawstead during the first three months of 1864, aged 59, her death recorded at Thingoe (Ref. 4a 355).

 

Nearly four years later, William Collett, widower and clerk in Holy Orders from Hawstead and the son of Charles Collett Esquire, was married by licence to (2) Charlotte Johanna Caroline Stowiczek (1830-1926), a spinster from Hanover in Germany, but residing at Belgrave Square, at St Peter’s Church in Pimlico, London, on 19th May 1868.  Charlotte was baptised on 26th February 1830, the daughter of Joseph George and Eleanor Stowiczek.  Their wedding day was recorded at St George Hanover Square (Ref. 1a 566).  That second marriage for William produced another two children, both of them born after the next census in 1871.  According to the census return that year, William and part of his original family was still living at Hawstead within the Thingoe & Rougham area.  William was 52, and his wife Charlotte was 41.  Only five of his children from his first marriage were still living there with him, and they were Sophie E Collett 26, Augustus C Collett 23, Mary L Collett 21, William C Collett 19, and Agnes M Collett who was 16.  It seems highly likely that Charlotte was with-child on the day of the census, since later that same year she gave birth to a daughter.  At the end of 1873 Charlotte presented William with another son, and the second of their two children, both of whom were both born at Hawstead.  However, tragedy was to strike the family again, when Charlotte Collett nee Stowiczek died at Hawstead on 11th January 1874 at the age of 44, very likely during, or shortly after, the birth of her son child, her death recorded at Thingoe (Ref. 4a 341).  It was also at Hawstead that she was buried on 17th January 1874

 

The census of 1881 confirmed that widower William Collett, aged 62 and from Walton, was still the Rector of Hawstead and that he was still residing at The Rectory in Hawstead.  Still living there with him were his four unmarried daughters Ellen M Collett, aged 35, and Augusta Cecil Collett, aged 33, both born at Chelsworth, and Mary L Collett, aged 31, and Agnes M Collett, aged 26, who were both born at Bury-St-Edmunds.  In addition to the four older daughters from William’s first marriage, there was also Leonora J Collett who was nine years old, and John A Collett who was seven years of age, both of whom had been born at Hawstead, the two children from his second marriage.  The household was supported by three domestic servants, cook Priscilla Storey, 23 and from Norwich, housemaid Sally Coe, 21 and from Ixworth, and child’s nurse Clara Pettit, aged 19 from Hawstead

 

Sadly, for the two younger members of his family, William passed away just ten months after the census in 1881.  It is therefore assumed that those two children, aged just ten and eight years respectively, were subsequently brought up their four older half-sisters.  It was originally stated in error that the Reverend William Collett died on 21st November 1889.  However, new information supplied by Tony Copsey in January 2010, and confirmed by the records of the Cambridge Alumni, and the Suffolk burial records, places the death of William Collett at Hawstead as 1st February 1882, following which he was buried at Hawstead on 4th February 1882, aged 63.  It can now also be revealed that his death was reported in The Guardian Newspaper on 8th February 1882 and recorded at Thingoe (Ref. 4a 381).  In 2010 Tony Copsey was the owner of a property that was once part of the Westerfield Estate which, up to 1868, was in the ownership of the Collett family.  Tony is mapping the history of the property and all those who lived there and his finding so far using the deeds he holds reveal that the Colletts sold the property in 1868 to the aforementioned Edgar family, with whom it remained until 1935

 

18P18 – Sophia Elizabeth Collett was born in 1844 at Chelsworth

18P19 – Ellen Mary Collett was born in 1845 at Chelsworth

18P20 – Augusta Cecil Collett was born in 1847 at Chelsworth

18P21 – Mary Louisa Collett was born in 1849 at Bury St Edmund

18P22 – William Charles Collett was born in 1851 at Bury St Edmund

18P23 – Agnes Maria Collett was born in 1854 at Bury-St-Edmunds

18P24 – Frederick William Collett was born in 1856 at Hawstead

The children of William Collett by his second wife Charlotte Stowiczek:

18P25 – Leonora Julia Collett was born in 1871 at Hawstead

18P26 – John Anthony Collett was born in 1873 at Hawstead

 

Charles Collett [18O17] was born on 5th May 1823 at Beverley in the East Riding of Yorkshire, but was baptised six days later at Falkenham, near Felixstowe in Suffolk, on 11th May 1823, the first-born son of Cornelius Collett and Amelia Daniel from Falkenham.  The entry in the Falkenham parish register included the additional note that the child was “of Beverley, but at this time, in this parish”.  He had a rounded age of 15 in the Beverley census of 1841, when he was living with his widowed mother and two younger brothers at North Bar Street in Beverley.  Six years later, the death of Charles Collett was recorded at Beverley (Ref. i 23) during the third quarter of 1847

 

Samuel Collett [18O18] was born at Beverley during 1824, where he was baptised at the church of St Mary & St Nicholas on 21st November 1824, the second of the four sons of Cornelius and Amelia Collett.  His father died in 1840 so, in the census the following year, Samuel had a rounded age of 15, when he was living at North Bar Street in Beverley with his widowed mother and his brother Charles (above) and Daniel (below).  Where he was in 1851 has not yet been discovered, while ten years after that, Samuel Collett was again living at North Bar Street in 1861, when he described as a bachelor and a gentleman at the age of 36, by which time his mother was residing in London.  During the next decade, Samuel was reunited with his mother in West London, where they were recorded in the Heston area census, near Hounslow in Middlesex, in 1871.  In the census return that year, Samuel Collett was unmarried, was 43 years of age (sic), and was living off an annuity, at Clare Lodge in Spring Grove Road.  Staying with him and his mother, was cousin Charlotte E Sewell from Middlesex, who was 12 years old.  His mother also employed a servant, Martha A Buck who was 43.  Spring Grove Road runs through Hounslow, between Heston and Isleworth.  Although not proved, it is possible that the death of Samuel Collett, recorded at St Olave Southwark in South London (Ref. 1d 128) during the second quarter of 1893, and aged 68, was Samuel Collett from Beverley.  But where he was in 1881 and 1891 is still a mystery

 

Daniel Collett [18O19] was born at Beverley in 1828 and it was there that he was baptised at the church of St Mary & St Nicholas on 10th August 1828, another son of Cornelius and Amelia Collett.  By the time he was 12 years of age, and following the death of his father during the previous year, Daniel and his widowed mother and two older brothers were recorded in the June census of 1841 at North Bar Street, in Beverley.  On leaving school, and completing a qualification as an engineer, Daniel Collett from Beverley was living at Thetford Market Place, in 1852, where he was 22, unmarried, and an engineer, a visitor in the home of the Bailey family from Essex.  Five years later, Daniel Collett, a civil engineer, was married by licence at Hackney (Ref. 1b 470) during the fourth quarter of 1857 to (1) Elizabeth Pollard Canwell, who was known as Lizzie.  The marriage recorded at the parish church of West Hackney confirmed that their wedding took place on 15th December 1857 between Daniel Collett of full age, a bachelor and an engineer of Paddington, the son of Cornelius Collett gentleman, and Elizabeth Pollard Canwell of full age, spinster of West Hackney, the daughter of John Canwell, farmer

 

Once married, the couple settled at Melcombe Regis, in the Weymouth parish of Radipole where, in 1861, they were residing at 7 St Mary’s Street, where Daniel Collett from Beverley was 32 and an engineer in the census that year.  His wife was confirmed as Lizzie Collett from Brighton, who was 30, while living there with them was their two-year-old son Alfred M Collett, the family employing two servants, Ada Thomas and Sophie Butcher.  His wife is a bit of a mystery woman, in that Elizabeth Pollard Canwell was born in Northamptonshire, where she was baptised on 12th April 1829, the daughter of John and Elizabeth Canwell, so could they have moved to Brighton during the following years.  It is curious that there is no record of her or her parents in the census conducted in 1841 and 1851.  For the young Collett of Melcombe Regis, it was a similar situation in 1871, when the family of three was still living in the Melcombe Regis of Weymouth, but at 7 Grosvenor Road.  That census day Daniel Collett, aged 42 and from Beverley, was an engineer and an iron founder employing nine men and three boys.  His wife was listed as Lizzie P Collett, who was 40 and from Brighton, when their son was Alfred M Collett, aged 12 years, who had been born in Weymouth.  On that occasion Daniel and Lizzie were employing a general servant Sarah Seaward, who was 22

 

Over the next few years Daniel’s and Lizzie’s son Alfred attended Keble College in Oxford, where he matriculated on 15th October 1877 at the age of 18.  The record of his attendance confirmed that he was the only son of Daniel Collett of Melcombe Regis in Dorset.  However, it was two years earlier, while he was at university, that the death of Elizabeth Pollard Collett, nee Canwell, was recorded at Weymouth (Ref. 5a 189) during the third quarter of 1875, was she was 45 years old.  It was at Radipole in Dorse where Elizabeth was when she died on 17th July 1875, after which she was buried there on 21st July.  Administration of the effects of Elizabeth Pollard Collett wife of Daniel Collett and late of Weymouth, valued at under £200 was granted at the Principal Registry on 10th September 1875, to Daniel Collett, an engineer.  Around eighteen months after being widowed, the second marriage of Daniel Collett to (2) Mary Sherwood Ireland was recorded at Cheltenham (Ref. 6a 587) during the first three months of 1877.  That second wedding for Daniel was conducted at All Saints Church in Cheltenham on 13th February 1877 when he was a widower of 48 years, an engineer residing at Radipole.  His bride was recorded as a spinster aged 39 of 17 Albert Naa, daughter of John James Ireland, a surgeon

 

Mary was born at Cirencester in Gloucestershire on 11th March 1837, was baptised there on 23rd June and was living with her parents, surgeon John James Ireland and his wife Ann Fanny Ireland at New Quay in Dartmouth, Devon, in 1841 aged four years.  At the age of ten years, Mary Sherwood Ireland was living in the Devon village of Slapton with her family, the eldest of three children.  According to the next census in 1881, the family home was again at 7 Grosvenor Road in Melcombe Regis, although, on the day of the census that year, Daniel Collett from Beverley was 52 and a civil engineer, who was visiting his younger married brother Trusson Collett (below) at his home at 178 Gold Hawk Road in Hammersmith.  His new wife, and his son Alfred, were recorded at their home in Melcombe Regis where, head of the household Mary S Collett from Cirencester was 44, and her stepson Alfred M Collett from Weymouth, was 22 and was described as a BA student at Oxford.  Working for the family were two general servants, Eliza Tompkins who was 20, and Fanny Bascombe who was 17

 

It was almost exactly eight years later that Daniel Collett died at Weymouth on 17th April 1889, his death recorded at Weymouth register office (Ref. 5a 189), at the age of 60.  Three days later, he was buried at the Radipole Parish Church of St Ann on 20th April 1889.  After a further five weeks, the Will of Daniel Collett was proved on 28th May 1889 when the two main beneficiaries were Alfred Master Collett and Mary Sherwood Collett.  There was also an additional person named in the Will, and that was Benjamin Hopkins.  Following the death of her husband, Mary moved west along the south coast and, at the time of the census two years later, Mary Sherwood Collett, aged 54 and from Cirencester, was living on her own means at 2 Brooklin Villa in Cockington, near Torquay.  Visiting her on that occasion was 57 years old spinster Sara L Hargreaves from Kent, when Mary was still employing a servant, Elizabeth Reynolds from Hampshire who was 26.  Over the following ten years, Mary returned to the county of her birth where, on the day of the census in 1901, she was reunited with her unmarried stepson Alfred at Cheltenham.  The census that year recorded her as Mary S Collett from Cirencester who was 64 and again living on her own means, when Mary still had sufficient funds to continuing employing a servant, on that occasion, Rose Newman who was 20 and from Stow-on-the-Wold.  Whilst Alfred remained living in Cheltenham, by the time of the next census, conducted in April 1911, Mary Sherwood Collett from Cirencester was 74 years old when she was boarder at the Lambeth, London, home of the Harry William Woods and his family. Sometime after visiting London, Mary returned once more to Cheltenham, and it was there, just over ten years after that day, that the death of Mary Sherwood Collett was recorded (Ref. 6a 497) during the last three months of 1921, when she was 84

 

18P27 – Alfred Master Collett was born in 1858 at Weymouth, Dorset

 

Trusson Collett [18O20] was born at Beverley in 1832, the last of the four sons of Cornelius Collett and Amelia Daniel.  He was nine years old in the census of 1841, when he may have been attending school in Woodbridge.  He later married Elizabeth Charlotte Collett [18O49] who was born at Sweffling near Saxmundham in 1831.  She was the eldest daughter of the Reverend Woodthorpe Collett, of Brightwell in Suffolk, and Elizabeth Pyemont, and it was at Sweffling that she was baptised on 5th July 1833.  The wedding ceremony took place at Brightwell Church to the south-east of Ipswich on 5th September 1860 and was reported in The Times on 7th September and in the Ipswich Journal the following day.  As her father was the incumbent clergyman at Brightwell, he had called upon two family members to officiate on that special occasion.  The first of them was the Reverend James Collett Ebden [18M13], the Vicar of Great Stukeley in Huntingdon, who was assisted by Elizabeth’s brother, the Reverend Henry Pyemont Collett [18O47].  The wedding notice, on page one of the 7th September 1860 edition of The Times newspaper, stated that “On the fifth inst. at Brightwell Church by the Rev. J Collett Ebden Rector of Great Stukeley, Huntingdon, assisted by the Rev. H P Collett brother of the bride, Trusson youngest son of the late Cornelius Collett Esq. of Beverley, Yorkshire to Elizabeth Charlotte eldest daughter of the Rev. Woodthorpe Collett incumbent of Brightwell, Suffolk”

 

After they were married, and at the time of the census in 1861, Trusson and Elizabeth were both 28 when they were living at Newton Street in Paddington in London, from where Trusson (curiously named Giuseppe) was working as a clerk for a wine merchant.  Two other people were recorded at the same address and they were Amelia Collett (nee Daniel), Trusson’s elderly widowed mother from Falkenham, and Elizabeth’s sister Catherine Ann Collett [18O50] from Sweffling, who was 27.  It would appear that Elizabeth was probably with-child by that time, since their one and only child was born later that same year.  The birth took place at Beverley, where Trusson had been born.  Ten years later in 1871, the family was living at Maryland Villa in Hammersmith, although their daughter was absence on the day of the census.  Just Trusson and Elizabeth, both aged 38, were recorded there, with the third person being domestic servant Lane Gunter who was 26.  It was also in Hammersmith that they were still living in 1881, when the family was living at 178 Goldhawk Road (the A402 road in 2010), when Trusson’s occupation was still that of a clerk.  The census also confirmed he was 48 and that he had been born at Beverley.  His wife Elizabeth C Collett was also 48 and from Sweffling in Suffolk, and their daughter Emily Collett was in higher education at the age of 19, when her place of birth was confirmed as Beverley.  Visiting the family that day was Trusson’s older married brother and civil engineer Daniel Collett (above)

 

The family would appear to be fairly affluent, as the household also employed two female servants, who were Ellen M Podd who was 23 and from Holbrook in Suffolk, and Emma K Wort who was 18 and from Lyndhurst in Hampshire.  Ten years later, in 1891, Trusson was 58 and a merchant’s clerk, living at Willesden in North London with his wife Elizabeth, also 58, and unmarried daughter Emily Collett, aged 29, who was already looking forward to the days she would be married, later that same year.  Once again, the family was supported by two servants, Mary Adlam 51 and Emily Fiehlock 21.  By the time of the census in March 1901, Trusson and Elizabeth were both 68 and were still living in Willesden, at 21 Cavendish Road, just of the A5 Edgware Road between Brondesbury and Kilburn.  Trusson Collett was described as ‘living on his own means’.  Later that same year, and following the untimely death of their married, but widowed, daughter Emily Norton, Trusson and Elizabeth took over guardianship of their eight-year-old granddaughter Dorothy Annis Norton, whose father had died when the child was just two years old

 

According to the next census in 1911, Trusson Collett and Elizabeth Charlotte Collett were both 78 years old when, living with them at 21 Cavendish Road in Brondesbury was their granddaughter Dorothy Annis Norton who, at the age of 18, was still attending a school in Richmond.  The family of three was supported by two domestic servants Mary Emma Hodgson 53 and Ellen Jane Hobbs 39.  The photograph (above) of Trusson Collett was taken with his wife Elizabeth, most likely during 1912, just prior to her passing.  Elizabeth Charlotte Collett died at ‘Beaufort’ 21 Cavendish Road in Brondesbury on 9th March 1913, her death recorded at Willesden register office (Ref. 3a 369), when she was 80 years of age.  Five weeks later, her Will was proved at London on 15th April 1913 which named two beneficiaries, husband Trusson Collett and Charles Deighton-Brasher Esquires, her personal effects, valued at £1,264 14 Shillings and 2 Pence.  Trusson Collett was 90 years old when passed away, his death being recorded at Willesden register office (Ref. 3a 298) during the last three months of 1922.  His Will was proved in London on 29th January 1923, when the joint executors of his considerable estate of £7,421 6 Shillings and 7 Pence, equivalent to around £357K in 2013, were named as Walter Percy Norton, a solicitor, and Dorothy Annis Tallet, formerly Dorothy Annis Norton his granddaughter, and the wife of Frederick Paul Tallet.  The probate process also confirmed that Trusson Collett of 21 Cavendish Road in Brondesbury, died on 29th December 1922

 

18P28 – Emily Collett was born in 1861 at Beverley, Yorkshire

 

Frances Jane Collett [18O21] was born at Little Ilford in Essex on 8th November 1811, where she was also baptised, the eldest child of Robert Henry Collett and Frances Meyler Smith.  She never married and in 1861, at the age of 49, Frances J Collett was a fund holder residing at 44 St James Square in the Walcot area of Bath in Somerset, when her place of birth was confirmed as Little Iford, Essex.  Living with her that day was her brother John Collett from Westerham in Kent, who was also a fund holder aged 28.  Ten years after that siblings Frances 59 and John 38 were still together, when they were recorded at St Stephen’s Vicarage, Uxbridge Road in Hammersmith, the home of their brother William Lloyd Collett.  It was the same situation in 1881, when Frances J Collett was 70, brother John Collett was 48, at the home of William Lloyd Collett (below) the Vicar of St Stephen’s Church in Shepherd’s Bush, but when St Stephen’s Vicarage was on Coverdale Road in Hammersmith.  During the next decade Frances and brother John left London and retired to Brighton in Sussex

 

According to the Brighton census in 1891, Frances J Collett was 78 and she and her brother John Collett were residing at 10 Charlotte Street in Kemp Town district of Brighton, where they were both described as living on their own means.  Just less than two years later Frances Jane Collett was 81 when she died at her home at 10 Charlotte Street in Brighton, her death being recorded at Brighton register office (Ref. 2b 132) during the final three months of 1892.  The probate process for her Will stated that she passed away on 18th December 1892 when her estate, valued at £25,152 19 Shillings and 3 Pence, was executed by her brother (below) the Reverend William Lloyd Collett of St Stephen’s Church in Shepherds Bush.  In modern day terms the estate would have had an equivalent value of something like £2.7 million.  Ten years after her death her brother John Collett (below) was still living at 10 Charlotte Street in Brighton when he passed away

 

Mary Anne Collett [18O22] was born at Little Ilford on 27th November 1812, the daughter of Robert and Frances Collett.  She was only 24 years old when she died on 16th September 1837 and was buried at Westerham in Kent on 24th September 1837.  It took over twenty years to settle her estate, valued at under £1,500, through Letters of Administration signed off on 25th June 1858, granted at the Principal Registry to the Reverend William Lloyd Collett of Shepherd’s Bush, a clerk (in Holy Orders) one of the surviving executors of the Will of the Reverend Robert Collett, a clerk (in Holy Orders) the father of Mary Anne Collett, spinster, he having been first sworn 

 

Robert Henry Collett [18O23] was born at Little Ilford on 4th March 1814, where he was baptised a month later on 12th April 1814, the third child and eldest son of Robert Henry Collett and Frances Meyler Smith.  He was only seventeen years of age when he died and was buried at Westerham in Kent on 3rd December 1831, the son of Robert Collett

 

Caroline Collett [18O24] was born at Little Ilford in 1815 where she was baptised on 3rd August 1815, the fourth child of Robert and Frances Collett.  Six days later Caroline Collett was buried at Little Ilford on 9th August 1815

 

Helen Maria Collett [18O25] was born at Little Ilford on 10th April 1817 and it was there also that she was baptised on 8th May 1817, another daughter of Robert and Frances Collett

 

William Lloyd Collett [18O26] was born at Little Ilford on 23rd November 1818, and it was there also that he was baptised on 22nd December 1818, the son of Robert Henry Collett and Frances Meyler Smith.  He was educated at Queens College in Oxford where he was listed as William Lloyd Collett, the son of Henry Collett of Little Ilford in Essex.  He matriculated on 6th December 1838 when he was 20, and obtained a BA on 18th May 1842 and his MA on 14th May 1845.  It was between those two events that on 25th September 1843, at Gillingham in Dorset, William Lloyd Collett married Frances Harriett Smith, the daughter of Henry Smith of Morden College in Blackheath, and was recorded at Lewisham (Ref. v 315).  What is interesting is that William’s father Robert Henry Collett [18N13] also married a daughter of Henry Smith who might have been the father of that particular Henry Smith.  Frances was born on 1st September 1822 at Charlton in Kent, which lies between Greenwich and Woolwich, and just across the River Thames from Little Ilford where William was born although, in some later census records, she gave her place of birth as Blackheath.  It was also at Old Charlton, in the Church of St Luke, where she was baptised on 16th April 1823, the daughter of Henry William Smith and his wife Mary

 

The couple’s first three children were born at Gillingham in Dorset, with the baptism service for Frances Mary Collett conducted by William Lloyd Collett, a clerk in Holy Orders.  By the time of the census in 1851, William was 31 and Frances was 28, and living with them within the St Pancras & Kentish Town district of London were their two youngest children, Helen who was two years old, and Catherine who was under one year old.  By that time the couple’s three oldest children Frances, Anna and Mary were absence from the family home, due to them staying at Morden College with their grandparents Henry W Smith, aged 63 and Treasurer of Morden College, and his wife Susette Smith who was 47.  According to the Charlton census, Frances M Collett was six years old, Anna S Collett was five, and Mary Collett was three.  All three girls had been born at Gillingham near Shaftesbury in Dorset but, shortly after they were born, William and Frances left Gillingham and moved to Dover with their daughters, where their next child was born.  Just a year or so later the family was living in Winkfield near Bracknell in Berkshire, where the couple’s fifth child was born

 

Within a year of the census in 1851, William was appointed to the Church of St Stephen in Shepherd’s Bush, and with that post was accommodation for the family in Hammersmith.  During the next decade a further five children were added to the family while they were living at the St Stephen’s Church Parsonage in Hammersmith, where all of the five new children had been born.  The next census in 1861 confirmed that the family was living at the Parsonage and that William Lloyd Collett, aged 42 and from Little Ilford, was the perpetual curate of St Stephen’s Church.  The family was almost complete by then, except for the couple’s third and fourth child, daughters Mary and Helen Clara Collett, who were absence from the home on the day of the census.  It is likely that Mary had died during the previous decade, but that Helen, aged 12 years old, was probably attending boarding school.  The remainder of the family was listed as Frances H Collett, aged 38 from Charlton, Frances M Collett 16, Anna S Collett 15, Catherine H Collett 10, Robert W Collett who was eight, twins Alfred and Arthur Collett who were six, Isabella A Collett who was four, and Jessie S Collett who was just ten months old.  On that occasion the younger children had a French governess, 44 years old Elizabeth Masera, in addition to which they also had a nurse, Emily from Stepney who was 33

 

Sometime after 1861, William changed from being the perpetual curate of St Stephen’s, when he became the Vicar of St Stephen’s Church at Shepherd’s Bush, which was confirmed by the Hammersmith census of 1871.  Also, during that decade, the couple’s last child was added to their family and, although he was listed with the family in 1871, no record of him has been found after that time.  The census return for 1871 placed William Lloyd Collett, aged 52 and from Little Ilford, as living at St Stephen’s Vicarage on the Uxbridge Road in Hammersmith with his family, when his title was that of Vicar of St Stephen’s Church in Shepherds Bush.  With him was his wife Frances Harriet Collett who was 48 and from Charlton, and eight of their eleven children.  On that occasion it was the couple’s two eldest daughters who had left the family home by that time.  Anna would have been 25 and may have been married by then, whereas it is known that Frances never married and she would have been around 26 that year

 

The eight children living with their parents at St Stephen’s Vicarage on Uxbridge Road in Hammersmith in 1871 were Helen Clara Collett aged 22, Catherine Collett aged 20, Robert William Collett aged 18, the twins Alfred and Arthur Collett who were both 16, Isabel Augusta Collett who was 14, Jessie Susette Collett who was 10 and Bernard Brockwell Collett who was five years old.  In addition to the four servants employed at The Vicarage (cook, nurse, parlourmaid, housemaid), two other members of the Collett family were staying there on that day, and they were William’s eldest unmarried sister Frances Jane Collett (above) who was 59 and from Little Ilford in Essex, and his younger brother John Collett (below) who was 38 and from Westerham in Kent.  Neither of them was described as having any occupation

 

The two siblings were still living with the family ten years later according to the census in 1881.  William Lloyd Collett was 62 and was still the Vicar of Stephen’s Church in Shepherds Bush, even though the address was changed.  Living with him at The Vicarage in Coverdale Road in Hammersmith was his wife Frances Harriet, aged 58, who then said she was from Blackheath in Kent rather than Charlton, together with four of their unmarried children.  They were Helen C Collett, aged 32 who was born at Dover, Alfred Collett, aged 26 and a civil engineer, Isabel A Collett who was 24, and Jessie S Collett who was 20, all of whom were recorded as having been born at Shepherds Bush.  Neither of the couple’s two sons Arthur and Bernard were with the family that day, Arthur having already died by then, while it was Bernard was attending The Priory School on the High Street in Marlborough.  Again, listed with the family were William’s sister Frances J Collett and his brother John Collett.  The household was supported by five domestic servants, they being a cook, a lady’s maid, a housemaid, a kitchen maid, and a parlour maid.  In 1891 a much-reduced Collett family was still living at Hammersmith.  William L Collett was 72, his wife Frances H Collett was 68, and still living there with them was two of their unmarried daughters, Frances M Collett who was 47, and Catherine H Collett who was 40.  Towards the end of the following year the Reverend William Lloyd Collett of St Stephen’s Church in Shepherds Bush was named as the sole executor for the Will of his eldest sister Frances Jane Collett of Brighton.  It is also known that William and Frances retired to Brighton where the Reverend William Lloyd Collett died on 9th July 1896, where his death was recorded (Ref. 2b 126) during the third quarter of that year.  His address at that time in his life was 8 Marlborough Place in Brighton and the proving of his Will was placed in the hands of the Reverend George Booker, a clerk (in Holy Orders), Frances Mary Collett, a spinster, Edmund Vallack, Esquire, and the Reverend Alexander Keith Ramsey, another clerk (in Holy Orders).  His personal effects were valued at £16,697 5 shillings and 10 Pence

 

Following the death of her husband, his widow continued to live at 8 Marlborough Place although, by that time, her son Alfred and her daughter Jessie, had already left England to seek a new life in Argentina, where they were both married.  That was confirmed in the next Bright census in 1901, when Frances H Collett, aged 78 and living on her own means, was head of the household residing at 8 Marlborough Place.  Once again, she gave her place of birth as Blackheath, about two miles from Charlton when her two unmarried daughters, Frances M Collett aged 56 from Gillingham, and Catherine E Collett who was 50 and from Winkfield, were still living with her also by their own means.  On that census day, the three elderly ladies employed a housemaid, a parlour maid and a cook.  Frances Harriett Collett nee Smith, from Charlton or Blackheath, died on 1st May 1909 when she was residing at 21 Clifton Terrace in Brighton with her two daughters Frances and Helen.  Her death was recorded at Brighton register office (Ref. 2b 138) at the age of 86 and her Will was proved in London on 5th June 1909.  It was her two daughters Frances Mary Collett and Helen Clara Collett who were named as the executors of her estate which was valued at £9,785 15 Shillings and 3 Pence.  Less than two years later, the census in 1911, recorded just the three unmarried daughters of William Lloyd Collett as still living in Brighton.  They were Frances Mary Collett who was 66, Helen Clara Collett who was 62, and Catherine Hester Collett who was 60.  Another source for this family includes a son Bernard Collett but, so far, no other reference to him has been found anywhere else to verify this so, for the time being, his name has been omitted from the list of children below

 

18P29 – Frances Mary Collett was born in 1844 at Gillingham, Dorset

18P30 – Anna Sophia Collett was born in 1845 at Gillingham, Dorset

18P31 – Mary Collett was born in 1847 at Gillingham, Dorset

18P32 – Helen Clara Mary Collett was born in 1848 at Dover, Kent

18P33 – Catherine Hester Collett was born in 1850 at Winkfield, Berkshire

18P34 – Robert William Collett was born in 1852 at Shepherds Bush, Middlesex

18P35 – Alfred Collett (twin) was born in 1854 at Shepherds Bush, Middlesex

18P36 – Arthur Collett (twin) was born in 1854 at Shepherds Bush, Middlesex

18P37 – Isabel Augusta Collett was born in 1856 at Shepherds Bush, Middlesex

18P38 – Jessie Susette Collett was born in 1860 at Shepherds Bush, Middlesex

18P39 – Bernard Stockwell Collett was born in 1866 at Shepherds Bush, Middlesex

 

Henry Gerard Collett [18O27] was born at Little Ilford on 12th August 1823, and it was there that he was baptised on 11th September 1823, the son of Robert and Frances Collett.  The premature death of Henry Gerard Collett was recorded at Newton Abbott in Devon (Ref. x 113) during the second quarter of 1845.  The Will of Henry Gerard Collett of Braddons, Tor House in Torquay was proved in London on 22nd April 1845, when William Lloyd Collett was named as the executrix

 

Christopher Theophilus Collett [18O28] was born at Little Ilford on 4th September 1825 and was baptised there on 5th October 1825, another son of Robert and Frances Collett.  He attended Magdalen College in Oxford, where he matriculated on 21st October 1841 and where he was recorded as the fourth son of Robert Collett of Ilford in Essex.  Curiously in this particular family tree he only has two known older brothers, so whether the college record was incorrect or one of his brothers had died prior to then, has not been determined at this time.  Just like his sister Mary and brother Henry (above), Christopher died when he was 22 years of age, when he died on 11th October 1847 at Leghorn in Tuscany Italy, following which he was buried at Leghorn on 14th October 1847.  Nearly eleven years after his passing, the Letters of Administration for the personal effects of Christopher Theophilus Collett formerly of Magdalen Hall of Oxford and late of San Marco Leghorn, a bachelor, were dated 7th July 1858, left unadministered by his widowed mother Frances Meylor Collett, his next-of-kin, was granted at the Principal Registry to the Reverend William Lloyd Collett of Shepherd’s Bush, a clerk (in Holy Orders) and the brother of the deceased having been first sworn.  Former Grant Prerogative Court of Canterbury September 1848.  The value of his personal effects was stated to be under £6,000

 

Jessie Collett [18O29] was born at Little Ilford on 25th September 1827 where she was baptised on 8th November 1827, the youngest daughter of Robert Henry Collett and Frances Meyler Smith.  The only other known detail regarding Jessie, is that she died at Torquay on 16th October 1848 when her age was incorrectly record as being only 18, instead of 21

 

Philip Morden Collett [18O30] was born at Speldhurst in Kent on 14th July 1829, and baptised there on 14th August 1829, the son of Robert Henry Collett and Frances Meyler Smith, but sadly he died at Tonbridge on 8th March 1830.  His second name may have been taken from Morden College which was attended by one of his older siblings

 

John James Collett [18O31] was born at Westerham near Sevenoaks in Kent on 17th June 1832, the youngest child of Robert Henry Collett and Frances Meyler Smith, who was baptised on the day he was born.  Although no positive record of John or his family has been found in 1841, when they are believed to have still been living at Westerham, by the time of the census in 1851, John Collett from Westerham was 18 and was living at Plympton St Mary in Devon.  He was the only Collett listed in that registration district at that time, which may be significant, since it was at Torquay in Devon three years earlier that his older sister Jessie Collett died in 1848 at the age of 18.  It is possible that he was on vacation in Devon, or visiting relatives, or even attending the grave of his sister.  Whatever the reason for him being there, it is known that he was educated at Wadham College in Oxford where he was listed as the son of Robert Henry Collett of Westerham in Kent.  And it was at Wadham that he matriculated that same year on 18th June 1851 when he was 19.  He never married and, in 1871, he and his eldest sister, spinster Frances Jane Collett (above), were staying with the family of their brother William Lloyd Collett (above) at St Stephen’s Vicarage on Uxbridge Road in Hammersmith, when John Collett from Westerham was 38 and a fund holder.  John and Frances were still living with their brother William in 1881

 

That year John Collett was 48 and with no stated occupation, when was again he and Frances were living at the Hammersmith home of William Lloyd Collett and his wife and family at St Stephen’s Vicarage on Coverdale Road.  During the years after that, John and his sister Frances left London, when they retired to Brighton.  That was confirmed in the census of 1891 when John Collett, aged 58, was living at 10 Charlotte Street in the Kemp Town district of the town, not far from Brighton Pier, with his sister Frances J Collett, who sadly died towards the end of 1892.  Both of them were described as living on their own means.  In March 1901, and following the death of his brother William Lloyd Collett (above) five years earlier, John Collett of Westerham was 68 when he was still living at 10 Charlotte Street in Brighton.  Living there with him was William’s widow Frances Harriet Collett and her two daughters Frances and Catherine.  All four of them, were described as living on their own means.  It was just eleven months later that John James Collett died at 10 Charlotte Street in Brighton on 17th February 1902 at the age of 69, his death recorded at Brighton register office (Ref. 2b 163)

 

In March 1901, and following the death of his brother William Lloyd Collett (above) five years earlier, John Collett of Westerham was 68 when he was still living at 10 Charlotte Street in Brighton.  Living there with him was William’s widow Frances Harriet Collett and her two daughters Frances and Catherine.  All four of them, were described as living on their own means.  It was just eleven months later that John James Collett died at 10 Charlotte Street in Brighton on 17th February 1902 at the age of 69, his death recorded at Brighton register office (Ref. 2b 163).  The Will of John Collett was originally settled in the sum of £23,115 13 Shillings and 5 Pence but was re-sworn in February 1903 when his estate was confirmed as £22,682 14 Shillings and 5 Pence.  During the probate process he was credited with property at 88 High Street in Sevenoaks, Kent, and at 10 Charlotte Street in Brighton where he died.  Probate was granted to his unmarried nieces Helen Clara Collett and Frances Mary Collett, two of the daughters of his live-in sister-in-law Frances Harriet Collett, and the Reverend Alexander Keith Ramsey and Edmund Vallak Esquire

 

Anna Collett [18O32] was born on 12th March 1822 at Bramerton, to the east of Norwich, where she was baptised the following day by her clergyman father William.  Following the death of her mother Phyllis Preston Reynolds in 1831, her father William Collett remarried in 1835, at which time the family was living at Bungay Road in Thetford where Anna had a rounded age of 15 in 1841 even though she was almost 20.  The subsequent census records revealed that she was not married during the following twenty years.  In 1851 and 1861 she was 29 and 39 respectively, when she was still living with her father and her stepmother at Thetford, where her father was the rector.  However, it was six weeks after the census day in 1861 that Anna Collett married John Michael Croker at Thetford on 28th May 1861, when her father was confirmed as William Collett, their wedding recorded at Thetford (Ref. 4b 650).  John was born in Ireland, where he was baptised on 6th August 1820 at Kilshannig-by-Mallow in Cork, the son of John Dillion Croker and his wife Eliza.  On the day of the census in 1861, widower John Michael Croker from Ireland, was a 40-year-old visitor at a dwelling on Bungay Road in Thetford, a holder of a debenture.  It was during the year after they were married that Anna presented John with a son at Norwich, where they were living in 1871 when John M Croker was 49, as was Anna, while their son John W Croker was nine years of age.  Eight years later on 29th May 1879 at 15 The Crescent in Norwich St Stephen, Anna was a widow following the death of John Michael Croker Esquire, which was recorded at Norwich (Ref. 4b 96), when he was 57.  His personal effects were valued at under £6,000 when his Will was proved at Norwich on 30th June 1879 by Anna Croker, the sole executor

 

Sometime after that Anna was made a widow with the death of her husband.  By 1881 she was head of the household at Cantley, a village lying midway between Norwich and Great Yarmouth.  Anna Croker from Bramerton was 59 and described as holding railway stocks and mortgage, which may suggest that John Michael Croker died from injuries he sustained while working on the railway.  Living there with Anna was her son John W Croker who was 19 with no stated occupation who had been born in Norwich.  Supporting the two of them were three servants, a housemaid, a cook and an errand boy.  Mother and son were still together ten years later, as confirmed by the census in 1891 when they were still residing in Cantley.  Anna Croker was 69 and her unmarried son was 29.  By that time, they had just two domestic servants working for them.  Just over seven years after that the death of Anna Croker nee Collett was recorded at Norwich (Ref. 4b 97) during the last three months of 1898 when she was 76.  The probate process stated that Anna Croker, a widow of Heighham Hall Asylum in Norwich died on 5th October 1898.  Probate of her personal effects amounting to £4,192 2 Shillings and 3 Pence was granted to John Brown Aldis, a bank inspector, and John Empson Toplis Pollard, a solicitor

 

William Reynolds Collett [18O33] was born at Bramerton on 20th May 1823, where he was baptised one week later on 28th May 1823, the eldest son of William Collett and Phyllis Preston Reynolds.  His early education was conducted at Yarmouth Proprietary School, where he matriculated in 1841.  It was then that he was accepted into Caius College in Cambridge on 25th March 1841 at the age of 18.  The college record also confirmed that he was born at Bramerton, the son of William Collett, former Cambridge scholar and Vicar of St Mary’s Church at Thetford.  He graduated from Caius College in Cambridge with a Bachelor of Arts (13th Wrangler) degree in 1845, obtained his Master of Arts degree in 1848, and was a Fellow of Caius College from 1845 to 1857.  He was ordained as a deacon at Ely in 1846, and became priest in 1849.  It was from around that time, and into the 1850s, that he was the librarian for both Gonville and Caius Colleges, which is acknowledged in the records at the British Library

 

He later married Mary Hoste by licence at Hethersett on 22nd July 1858, when William was a clergyman from Hethersett and the son of William Collett, clergyman.  Two of the four witnesses were William’s father and William’s stepmother, their wedding recorded at Henstead (Ref. 4b 329).  Mary was two years older than William, having been baptised on 21st March 1821 at St Peter’s Church in Hoveton, Norfolk, the daughter of Mary Burroughs and Colonel Sir George Charles Hoste, who fought at the Battle of Waterloo, with a painting of him in uniform on display at the National Portrait Gallery in London.  Sir George was later employed as a gentleman usher by Queen Adelaide, following the death of King William IV in 1837, and was also sent out to Canada to secretly investigate the state of defences of British North American Provinces.  From 1856 until 1902 William Reynolds Collett was the Rector of Hethersett with Canteloff in Norfolk, and lived at The Hethersett Rectory in Wymondham.  The next two census returns, for 1861 and 1871, placed William R Collett of Bramerton as living with his wife Mary within the census registration district of Henstead & Humbleyard, near Norwich.  Their ages were 37 and 40, and 47 and 50 respectively.  In 1871 William’s two sisters Sophia Norgate nee Collett, and Lucy Collett, were also living nearby in Hethersett

 

Ten years later in 1891, William Reynolds Collett from Bramerton, was 67 and Rector of the Parish of Hethersett living at The Rectory, with Mary Collett aged 70, a clergyman’s wife with parish duty to do.  At that time they had three servants.  Living nearby in Hethersett were two of William’s younger sisters; widow Sophia Norgate who had living with her unmarried Lucy Frances Collett.  It was during the following year that William was made the Honorary Canon of Norwich, a title that he held from 1892 until his death in 1902.   However, prior to his own death, the death of his wife Mary was recorded at Henstead register office (Ref. 4b 124) during the last three months on 1896, when she was 7, and to honour her memory, William organised the rebuilding of the chancel at Hethersett Church.  Following her passing, the body of Mary Collett was buried at Hethersett on 24th December 1896.  Letters of Administration for Mary Collett, who died on 21st December 1896, were granted at London on 22nd July 1897 to her husband the Reverend William Reynolds Collett, a clerk (in Holy Orders) , when her personal effects amounted to £670 5 Shillings and 8 Pence

 

Perhaps rather oddly, William W Collett, aged 77 and from Bramerton in Norfolk, was recorded at Hastings on the occasion of the March census in 1901, when he was described as a clerk in Holy Orders.  Apparently, it was following the death of his wife that William joined with other well-to-do individuals at the Alexandra Hotel in Hastings, where he was staying in 1901.  It was just over eighteen months later that William Reynolds Collett died at Hethersett on 11th October 1902, at the age of 79, his death recorded at Henstead register office (Ref. 4b 125).  His Will was proved in London on 6th April 1903 and confirmed that he left part of his estate, amounting to £946 9 Shillings and 3 Pence, to his half-brother Edward Collett of Thetford, which explains how Edward, at the age of 64, came to be married and how he managed to set up a new life for himself.  During his life William Reynolds Collett was the author of two books, and they were ‘A List of Early Printed Books’ (in the College Library) which was published in 1850, and ‘Women’s Work in the Church’ which was published during 1863

 

John Collett [18O34] was born at Bramerton on 10th July 1824 and was baptised there that same day by his father the Reverend William Collett by special arrangement, when he was confirmed as the son of William Collett clergyman and his wife Phyllis Preston Reynolds.  Tragically, John died at Thetford in 1831

 

Charles Preston Collett [18O35] was born at Bramerton on 25th April 1826 and was baptised there on during the following day by his father, clergyman William Collett, his mother being Phyllis Preston Reynolds.  He was called to the bar of the Inner Temple at Lincoln’s Inn during 1861 and from 1869 to 1871 he was the Puisne Judge of the High Court at Madras in India.  On 2nd April 1871 Charles was recorded in the census return for Great Britain as being aged 44 and boarding at 180 Piccadilly St James in Westminster, London, when he was described as not married and a judge at Madras who born in Bramerton.  It was following his return to England from India that he married Lucy Ellen Daniels, their wedding day recorded at Kensington (Ref. 1a 405) during the fourth quarter of 1872.  Lucy was born at Islington in 1843 (Ref. iii 220) and was baptised on 20th July 1843, the daughter of Arthur and Emma Daniels, being seventeen years younger than Charles.  So, at the time of their wedding, Charles would have been 46 compared to Lucy who would have been 29.  It was around that time in their lives that a letter, written by Eliza Ebden in November 1871 addressed to her sons, gave the place of residence of their cousin Charles Collett as being in Foxley Road in Kennington, not far from the Kennington Oval, the road still being there today

 

That may have been their address at the time of their wedding but, shortly after, the couple moved across the River Thames to initially settle in the Kensington area, where their first two children were born, before they made the bigger move to Devon.  The census in 1881 confirmed that Charles had lived and worked in India, since the census return described him as a ‘barrister at law (not in practice) – Madras Civil Service, retired’.  At that time, in early April 1881, Charles and Lucy were living at Highclere House on the Warberry Road in Tor-Moham, a parish of Torquay.  Charles was 54 and of Bramerton, while Lucy was 37 and of Islington in Middlesex.  The first two of their five children were recorded as having been born at St Mary Abbot in Kensington, while the remainder of their children were born after the family had settled in Torquay.  The five children were Phillis Carthew Collett who was seven, Margaret Morden Collett who was six, Charles M Collett who was four, Laura Leslie Collett who was two, and Arthur Preston Collett who was only seven months old

 

In addition to their five children, the family also had staying with them a visitor by the name of Lucy Frances Collett (below).  She was a spinster lady, aged 50, and had been born at Thetford and was one of Charles’ younger sisters.  Charles must have been fairly affluent, as his home was served by six domestic servants.  They were the cook Selina Heard, nurse Elizabeth Inkill, Elizabeth Martin the upper-housemaid, Clara Meinbery the parlour-maid, Elizabeth Dunstan the under-housemaid, and Louisa Spencer the under-nurse.  During his life Charles was the author of three books, they being ‘The Treaties on the Law of Injunctions and the Appointment of Receivers under the Code of Civil Procedures’ which was published in 1859, ‘The Manual of the Law Torts and the Measure of Damages’ published in 1866, and ‘The Law of Specific Relief in India’ published in 1882, which was based on the Community Act 1877

 

Charles Preston Collett died on 28th January 1891 at the age of 64, his death recorded at Newton Abbott (Ref. 5b 125).  Probate of the Will of Charles Collett Esq, late of Highclere House on Warberry Hill in Torquay was proved at the Principal Registry by Lucy Ellen Collett of Highclere House, his widow.  Two months after his death his widow was named as the head of the household at Highclere House in Tor-Moham.  Lucy E Collett was 47 and only had her two youngest children still living there with her and they were Laura L Collett who was 12, and Arthur P Collett who was 10 years old, both of them born at Torquay.  Also living with the family of three at that time, perhaps helping Lucy to cope with life after the recent loss of her husband, was her younger unmarried sister Ann E Daniels who was 34 and from Islington, where Lucy had also been born.  In addition to her sister, Lucy and her two children were supported by five servants, comprising two cooks, two housemaids, and one children’s maid

 

No record of Lucy or any of her children has been found in the 1901 Census although it is established that she never remarried.  Ten years later in 1911 her daughter Laura Collett had moved to London and was still a spinster living in the Lewisham area of the city.  No record of the other four children has been found in 1911.  However, Lucy Ellen Collett nee Daniels was a resident of Bath when she died on 28th November 1933, her death recorded at Bath register office 5c 619 at the age of 90.  Probate of the personal effects of Lucy Ellen Collett of Ormonde Lodge on Sion Hill in Bath valued at £5,466 13 Shillings and 6 Pence, was granted in London on 5th February 1934 to her two sons Charles Morden Collett and Arthur Preston Collett, neither having a stated occupation as they had both retired by then.  The amount of her estate was later re-sworn as £5,484 1 Shillings and 6 Pence

 

18P40 – Phillis Carthew Collett was born in 1873 at Kensington, London

18P41 – Margaret Morden Collett was born in 1875 at Kensington, London

18P42 – Charles Morden Collett was born in 1876 at Torquay, Devon

18P43 – Laura Lesley Collett was born in 1878 at Torquay, Devon

18P44 – Arthur Preston Collett was born in 1880 at Torquay, Devon

 

Sophia Collett [18O36] was born at Bramerton on 8th May 1827 and was baptised by her father at St Mary in the Marsh in Norwich on 13th May 1827, the daughter of William Collett and Phyllis Preston of the parish of St Mary-in-the-Marsh, her father being a clerk (in Holy Orders).  Her mother died when she was only three years old, and she was recorded as being aged 13 in the 1841 Census and was 22 years of age ten years later in 1851.  On both occasions she was living at Thetford with her father and his second wife.  It was at the end of the next decade, on 6th January 1859 that Sophia Collett was married by licence at St Mary Thetford to the much older Lieutenant Colonel Charles Norgate of the Bengal Army.  Sophia’s father was confirmed as William Collett, a clerk in Holy Orders, who also conducted the wedding service.  Three of the five witnesses were members of the Collett family; William, Anna, and Edward

 

Bachelor Charles had been baptised at Hethersett near Norwich on 3rd December 1805, the son of Thomas Starling Norgate and his wife Mary Susan Norgate.  At the time of the census in 1861, the childless couple was living at Humbleyard near Norwich, where Charles Norgate was 55, and his wife Sophia Norgate was 33.  However, during the next ten years Charles Norgate died, so by the time of the next census in 1871 widow Sophia Norgate from Norwich was 42 and a land owner, who was living at Turn Pike in Hethersett, when she had living there with her, her unmarried sister Lucy Frances Collett from Thetford who was 41 and described as a clergyman’s daughter.  At that time in her life Sophia was employing three female servants

 

The earlier death of Charles Norgate on 8th February 1864 had been recorded at Henstead (Ref. 4b 136) during the first three months of the year, after which he was buried at Hethersett on 13th February at the age of 58.  His Will was proved at Norwich on 30th April 1864, when his personal effects were valued at under £9,000, but was later re-sworn at the Stamp Office in June 1866 at under £6,000.  The Will was proved by the oaths of the Reverend Thomas Starling Norgate of Sparham in Norfolk, a clerk (in Holy Orders) and the Reverend Louis Augustus Norgate of Foxley in Norfolk, another clerk (in Holy Orders) and Frederick Norgate of Henrietta Street in Covent Garden, London, foreign book seller, the brothers, the executors

 

By 1881, widow Sophia Norgate, aged 52, was living in a private house at Turnpike Road in Hethersett where Sophia was an annuitant employing just two domestic servants.  They were Mary A Emms, aged 29 and a cook from nearby Ketteringham, and housemaid Maria Lightning, aged 25 from Hempnall.  Mary Emms’ younger sister Louisa Emms of Ketteringham was one of three servants at The Hethersett Rectory, the home of Sophia’s brother William Reynolds Collett (above).  Sophia was still living at Turn Pike, Hethersett in 1891 when she was 62 and, on that occasion, she had living there with her again, her unmarried sister Lucy Frances Collett (below) who was 61.  Looking after the two elderly sisters were two domestic servants Georgiana Brown and Alice Bennett.  It was the same situation again in March 1901 when Sophia Norgate was 72 and her sister Lucy Frances Collett was 71

 

It was at Woodbridge register office (Ref. 4a 502) during the second quarter of 1904 that the death of Sophia Norgate at Hethersett was recorded at the age of 75, followed four years later by her sister Lucy.  The Will of Sophia Norgate was proved at Norwich on 30th June 1904 by the oaths of Edward Collett Esquire and Charles Bladwell LeGrys Norgate, solicitor, when her personal effects were valued at £2,437 3 Shillings.  The documentation confirmed that Sophia of Hethersett died at Felixstowe on 7th May 1904

 

Lucy Frances Collett [18O37] was born at Thetford on 11th February 1830 where she was baptised at St Mary’s Church by her father on 27th February 1830, the last known child of the Reverend William Collett and his first wife Phyllis Preston Reynolds.  Lucy was just sixteen months old when her mother died, after which her father remarried.  Lucy was 11 years old in the June census in 1841, was 21 by March 1851 and was 31 in the April census of 1861.  On all three occasions she was living with her father and her stepmother at Thetford.  Following the death of her father in the late 1860s, Lucy moved to Humbleyard near Norwich, where she lived with her married sister Sophia Norgate (above).  Confirmation was provided by the census in 1871, when unmarried Lucy F Collett, aged 41, was living at Turn Pike in Hethersett, between Wymondham and Norwich, the home of her then widowed sister Sophia Norgate, nee Collett.  However, she never married and, ten years later in 1881, she was listed as a visitor at the Tormoham-with-Torquay home of her brother Charles Preston Collett (above).  The census recorded that she was 50 years old and that she was supported by ‘interest from private property’

 

During the next decade she left Devon, possibly following the death of her brother Charles, when she returned to live with her older widowed sister Sophia Norgate at Turn Pike in Hethersett, where she was recorded with Sophia in 1891, when sixty-one-year-old Lucy Frances Collett was living on her own means.  It was the same situation in 1901 when she was 71, with the sisters’ address being ‘by the Turnpike in Hethersett’.  Both of the sisters died during the first decade of the new century, with the death of Lucy Frances Collett being recorded at Norwich (Ref. 4b 76) during the last three months of 1909, when she was 79.  Probate states that spinster Lucy Frances Collett of St Clements Hostel in Norwich died on 27th December 1909 and that it was her married sister Sophia’s son Charles Bladwell le Grys Norgate, a solicitor, who administered her estate of £9,843 2 Shillings and 2 Pence

 

Henry Collett [18O38] was born at Thetford on 6th March 1836 where he was baptised on 27th May 1836, the eldest child of William Collett by his second wife Ellen Clarke Bidwell.  He was five years old in the 1841 Census for Thetford and, by the time he was 15 in 1851, he was being educated at Tonbridge School in Tunbridge Wells in Kent, when the census return also confirmed he was born at Thetford.  He later attended the Addiscombe Military Academy College in Croydon.  The property there was acquired by the British East India Company in 1809 when it was converted into a military academy.  The company imported tea, coffee, silk, cotton and spices, and maintained its own private army.  The officers of that army were trained at Addiscombe before setting off for India.  In 1858, after the India Rebellion of 1857, also referred to as the First War of Indian Independence, the British East India Company went out of existence.  The college closed in 1861 and was sold to developers in 1863 for £33,600. It was then razed to the ground with dynamite, and all that is left today are the two buildings 'Ashleigh' and 'India' on the corner of Clyde Road and Addiscombe Road, together with the former gymnasium on Havelock Road, now converted into private apartments

 

Following his graduation from the academy, Henry left England and sailed to India, where he joined the Bengal Indian Army in 1855, rising through the ranks to become Lieutenant-Colonel in 1879.  In the Second Anglo-Afghan War from 1878 to 1880, he acted as quartermaster-general on the staff of Frederick Roberts, First Earl Roberts.  He eventually reached the rank of Colonel in 1884 and was made KCB in 1891, and from 1892 to 1893 he commanded the Peshawar district with the rank of major-general.  He retired from the army in 1893 and was honoured by Queen Victoria, when he became General Sir Henry Collett Knight of the British Empire.  He returned to England before the end of the century and was recorded as being 65 years old, while living at Kensington at the time of the census of 1901.  His occupation was stated as being ‘Colonel retired from the Indian Army’.  Living with bachelor Henry in 1901 was his brother Edward Collett and sisters Mary and Ellen Collett (all below) and sadly, it was not long after the March census day, that Henry passed away at Kew in London on 21st December 1901, his death recorded at Kensington register office (Ref. 1a 146) when he was 65.  The Will of Sir Henry Collett KCB, a retired colonel in the British Army, of 21 Cranley Gardens in Kensington was proved in London on 27th January 1902.  Probate was granted to Henry’s brother Edward Collett, Esquire (below), who also appears to be the main beneficiary of his estate valued at £9,852 12 Shillings, which was re-sworn later that same year at £10,912 12 Shillings.  During his life Henry Collett was a keen botanist, collecting plants in Afghanistan, Algeria, Burma, the Canaries, Corsica, India, Java, and Spain.  He was made a fellow of the Linnean Society in 1879.  At his death he was working on a book on the flora of Simla, which was published posthumously as ‘Flora Simlensis’ in 1902.  In the photo below, he is studying his maps

 

 

Just over one hundred years later, as a tribute to his work in the field of botany, he was honoured by husband and wife rose breeders Viru and Girija Viraraghavan of Tamil Nadu in India by the naming of a white climber rose ‘Sir Henry Collett’ which has been registered with the International Rose Registration Authority based in the USA.  The story behind this is that Henry Collett found that species of rose in the 1880s when he was in the Shan Hills of Burma.  It is believed that he saw it through a pair of binoculars, as something bright white in the distance, when he was trekking in these hills.  He then collected material of the plant and sent it to a Monsieur Crepin, who was at that time the leading taxonomist based in Brussels.  It was Sir Henry Collett who suggested the name ‘rosa gigantea’.  His personal account of ‘the find’ was recorded in the Journal of the Linnean Society, which was reproduced many years later in Gardener’s Chronicle on 11th May 1912 and this read as follows:

 

“It was found on a plateau at 4-5,000 feet where the traveller was at once struck with the temperate character of the flora.  The trees were mostly Oaks and Pines, whilst the herbaceous plants were represented by species of Ranunculus, Viola, Hyperium, Clematis, etc.  Only two species of Rosa were seen, and both were new.  The beautiful R. Gigantean is particularly conspicuous, climbing over the tall forest trees, from the tops of which the long, pendulous branches, covered with very large white flowers, hang down in rich profusion.  The Rose, which has larger flowers probably than any other wild species, is seen from a considerable distance in the jungle, reminding one more of a large Clematis than of a rose.  It is only locally abundant, chiefly in dark shady valleys.”  The other rose referred to by Sir Henry Collett, in his statement above, was believed to be Rosa Collettiana, which had yet to be cultivated at that time

 

Edward Collett [18O39] was born at Thetford on 29th July 1837, his birth recorded at Thetford (Ref. xiii 200), and was baptised by his father the Rectory of St Mary’s Church in Thetford on 4th October 1837, the second son of William Collett and his second wife Ellen Clarke Bidwell.  He was three years of age at the time of the 1841 census for Thetford, and was still living with his family at Thetford in 1851 when he was 13.  Eight years later, Edward Collett was a witness at the January 1859 wedding of his older half-sister Sophia Collett (above).  He may have been out of the country in April 1861 but, with the death of his father in the late 1860s, he had returned to England by 1871 and, at the age of 33, Edward Collett was living at Winchester.  His place of birth was confirmed as Thetford, as it was in 1881 when he was 43 and living with his widowed mother Ellen and sister Ellen (below) at Trafford House in Ewell Road in Kingston-upon-Thames.  His occupation at that time was that of a duty office clerk with the Inland Revenue Legacy (C S C).  He was still living with his mother and sisters Mary and Ellen, at Trafford House in Kingston ten years later, by which time he was 53 and retired from civil service with the inland revenue.  ant but, following her death in the 1890s, he left Kingston and moved to Kensington, where he was living with three of his siblings by March 1901.  By then Edward was a retired civil servant at the age of 63, and his place of birth was once again confirmed as Thetford.  The house in which he was living was also home to his brother Henry Collett (above) and his sisters Mary and Ellen Collett (below).

 

Just nine months later Edward’s brother Henry passed away, and that appears to have resulted in Edward and his two sisters leaving London.  While his two sisters moved to Hampshire, the marriage of Edward Collett and Ada Rebecca Moore was recorded at the Strand register office (Ref. 1b 1346) during the third quarter of 1902, prior to his move to Surrey.  Ada was baptised at St Cuthbert’s Church in Thetford on 24th July 1856, the daughter of clergyman John Moore and Elizabeth Moore.  Under the terms of the Will of his older half-brother William Reynolds Collett (above) who died in 1902, Edward inherited nearly one thousand pounds which enabled him to marry Ada Rebecca Moore and establish a new life for himself.  Ada was born at Thetford in 1857 (Ref. 4b 425) and was around twenty years younger than Edward.  According to the information in the census return for 1911, the couple had been married for eight years, when they were living at ‘Moorside’ in Tilford Road in the village of Churt, in the parish of Frensham.  Edward Collett was 73 and from Thetford, and Ada Rebecca Collett was 53 and also from Thetford.  The elderly couple was supported by two domestic servants, housemaid Mabel Sexton 28, and Charlotte Ayling 24, who was the cook.  Once again Edward’s occupation was confirmed as a civil servant, when he was described as a retired civil servant.  The death of Edward Collett of Moorside, Tilford Road, Churt near Farnham in Surrey occurred on 13th December 1918 and probate of his estate of £15,712 12 shillings and 8 Pence was granted to the Public Trustee and Ada Rebecca Collett, his widow.  Just less than six years later his widow Ada Rebecca Collett nee Moore passed away on 5th June 1924 while living at 21 De Montfort Street in Leicester.  Her death was recorded at Leicester register office (Ref. 7a 290) at the age of 67.  Her Will was proved at London on 25th September 1924.  With no family to inherited her fortune of £25,831 19 Shillings and 8 Pence it passed into the hands of the Public Trustee

 

Ellen Collett [18O40] was born at Thetford on 21st July 1839 where her birth was recorded (Ref. xiii 275) and where she was baptised at St Mary’s Church on 9th December 1839 by her father the Rector of St Mary’s.  Tragically, she did not survive and was six months old when she died at Thetford, where she was buried on 22nd January 1840, the first daughter of that name born to William Collett and Ellen Clarke Bidwell.  The death of Ellen Collett was recorded at Thetford (Ref. xiii 234).  On that very sad occasion, it was not her father who conducted the church service, when the Reverend Thomas Sworde stood in for the bereaved father of the child

 

Mary Collett [18O41] was born at Thetford on 15th October 1840, her birth recorded there (Ref. xiii 275).  She was baptised there at St Mary’s Church by her father, the Rector of St Mary’s, on 2nd December 1840, the eldest surviving daughter of the Reverend William Collett and his second wife Ellen Clarke Bidwell.  She was under twelve months old for the Thetford census of 1841, and by the time of the next census in 1851 she was 10 years old.  In 1861, at the age of 20, Mary was still living at Thetford Rectory with her parents.  However, following the death of her father towards the end of the 1860s, Mary’s mother was forced to leave the Rectory in Thetford, where her father had been the rectory for many years.  That upheaval in their life, resulted in Mary, and her two younger sisters (below), accompanying their mother to Kingston-upon-Thames, where they were living in 1871.  On that occasion Mary Collett from Thetford was 30.  Ten years later, at the time of the 1881 census, Mary Collett, aged 40 and of Thetford, was still a spinster when she was living with her mother’s sister and her husband at Upper Beulah Hill Haddon in Croydon.  Her aunt was Lydia Grohawk, nee Bidwell, who was 55 and from St Lukes in Middlesex.  Lydia’s husband was retired farmer Francis W Grohawk, aged 62 of Letheringsett in Norfolk, and living with the couple was their four children, plus five servants.  In addition to Mary Collett, also living with the family was Lydia’s two older maiden sisters (and Mary’s aunts) Laura Bidwell, aged 60, and Octavia Bidwell, aged 59, both of them from Thetford and both living on independent means.  Forty-year old Mary Collett was also listed as being of independent means, indicating a degree of wealth and affluence.  How long Mary was living with her aunt has not been established, but on the death of her father in the 1870s, her mother Ellen Collett had moved Kingston-upon-Thames

 

Sometime during the next ten years Mary had left Croydon and moved the short distance to Kingston where she was living with her mother, her older brother Edward (above) and younger sister Ellen (below) in 1891 at the age of 50.  Upon the death of their mother, Mary and her sister Ellen moved into the centre of London and in 1901 the pair of them was living with their brothers Henry and Edward Collett (above) at Kensington.  By then Mary was 60 and the census record confirmed she had been born at Thetford and was living on her own means.  With the death of their brother Henry Collett in December 1901, the two sisters left London and moved to Hampshire, where in April 1911 they were still living together at Christchurch.  According to the census that year, Mary Collett from Thetford was 70 years old.  Less than six months later, spinster Mary Collett died at Swanton Morley Street off Valerie Road in Bournemouth on 23rd September 1911, with her death recorded at Christchurch register office (Ref. 2b 927) at the age of 70.  Probate for her Will was granted on 13th October 1911 to her sister Ellen Anna Collett (below) and Mary Catherine Bidwell, both spinsters, for her estate worth £18,575 13 Shillings and 3 Pence, which was later re-sworn at £19,268 8 Shillings and 11 Pence

 

Ellen Anna Collett [18O42] was born at Thetford on 21st October 1842, with her birth recorded there (Ref. xiii 276).  Just as with her older siblings, it was her father, the Rector of St Mary’s Church in Thetford, who performed at the ceremony of her baptism there on 27th October 1842.  She was the second daughter named Ellen of William Collett and his wife Ellen.  Daughter Ellen was still living at Thetford with her family in March 1851 at the age of eight years, and was still there in April 1861 when she was 18.  Following the death of her father in the late 1860s Ellen’s depleted family left Thetford and moved to Kingston-upon-Thames where she and her mother Ellen, and sisters Mary (above) and Laura (below) were living in 1871.  At that time in her life unmarried Ellen A Collett from Thetford was 28.  Ellen was still living with her mother ten years later in 1881, when also living with them at Trafford House in the Ewell Road in Kingston was Ellen’s brother Edward Collett (above).  Once again Ellen, aged 38, was not married, nor was she credited with having an occupation.  At that time the three members of the Collett family employed three domestic servants, Elizabeth J Hancock, aged 29 who was the cook, Emma A Gardiner, aged 38 who was a parlour maid, and Helen Mitchell, aged 16, who was an under-house maid

 

Over the following decade Ellen, her brother Edward, and her mother, were joined at Kingston by her older sister Mary (above) who was living there with them in 1891 when Ellen A Collett was then 48.  Once again the family had three domestic servants in their employ.  The next few years saw the sisters lose their mother, after which they moved to London and, in 1901, they were living in Kensington with their brothers Henry Collett (above), who had returned from India, and Edward Collett (above).  Just like her sister Mary, 58 years old Ellen was also listed in the census as living on her own means, while having been born at Thetford.  Sometime after the death of their brother Henry Collett in December 1901, the two sisters left London and moved to Hampshire, where in April 1911 they were still living together at Christchurch.  The census return for the Christchurch registration district listed Ellen Anna Collett from Thetford as being 68.  In October 1911, following the death of her sister Mary (above), Ellen Anna Collett inherited her sister’s home at Swanton Morley Street on Valerie Road in Bournemouth where she was living when she died on 12th June 1921.  The death of Ellen Anna Collett was recorded at Christchurch register office (Ref. 2b 750), when she was 78.  Probate of her personal effects valued at £16,337 14 Shillings and 9 Pence was granted to her niece Phillis Carthew Collett, a spinster, and Charles Alfred Morton Lightly, a solicitor

 

Laura Collett [18O43] was born at Thetford on 29th October 1844, where her birth was recorded (Ref. xiii 329).  Laura was another child, and the youngest surviving child, of William Collett the Rector of St Mary’s Church in Thetford and his second wife Ellen Clarke Bidwell, whose baptism on 8th March 1845, was conducted by her father.  She was six years old in the census of 1851 and was 16 in 1861, while living at Thetford with her family.  Laura would have been in her early twenties when her father died and, upon that sad event, she and her family had to vacate the rectory at Thetford and seek alternative accommodation.  A few years later, according to the census in 1871, Laura and her mother, and her two older sisters, were living at Kingston-upon-Thames, when she was described as Laura Collett, aged 26, from Thetford.  Later that same year, the marriage of Laura Collett and Frederick Jeffries Crowder was recorded at Kingston-upon-Thames (Ref. 2a 421) during the third quarter of 1871.  Frederick was born on 15th June 1935 and was baptised at Chelsham in Surrey on 10th August that same year, the son of Frederick Robert Crowder, gentleman, and his wife Lucy, of Chelsham Lodge.  It was at Weybridge in Surrey where they settled and where they were living in 1881 at a property ‘St Andrews’, where Fredrick from Chelsham was 45 and a clerk in a Legacy Duties Office.  His wife Laura was 36, when they employed a cook and a housemaid.  After a further ten years, the couple was recorded at 14 Uxbridge Road in Kingston-upon-Thames, when Frederick J Crowder was 55 and was the Principal Clerk at the Legacy Duty Office in Somerset House, London, who was living at the home of his 93-year-old father Frederick R Crowder, a widower with no stated occupation.  Laura Crowder from Thetford was 46, while the other members of the household were two elderly couples, one with a 24-year-son who was a school master, they being a coachman and a housekeeper, and a butler and a cook

 

Eight years after that census day Laura Crowder died on 18th May 1909, her death recorded at Chertsey register office (Ref. 2a 49) at the age of 64, following which Laura of St Andrews, Weybridge was buried there on 21st May.  It was only after the death of her husband ten years after her demise that her own Will could be proved.  According to the census conducted in 1911 at Weybridge, Frederick Jeffries Crowder was 70 years old and a widower and a retired civil servant from Chelsham.  The other three occupants at the ten-roomed property were three domestic servants.  Eight year later Frederick Jeffries Crowder of St Andrews in Weybridge died on 19th January 1919 at the age of 83, and was buried there on 21st January.  His Will proved in London on 3rd April 1919 to Violet Ella Crowder, spinster, and George Bertram Crowder Esquire, the personal effects amounting to £10,671 18 Shillings and 7 Pence, which was later re-sworn as £10, 493 11 Shillings and 11 Pence.  Two days after his Will was proved was when the Will of his later wife was eventually proved in London on 5th April 1919 to the same Violet Ella Crowder for an estate valued at £4,417 6 Shillings and 5 Pence

 

Alfred Collett [18O44] was born at Thetford on 5th September 1848 and was baptised there on 31st October 1848 by his father when he would have been the youngest child of William Collett and Ellen Clarke Bidwell had he survived.  The death of infant Alfred Collett was recorded at Thetford (Ref. xiii 243) and was buried at St Mary’s Church in Thetford on 18th January 1849

 

Woodthorpe Schofield Collett [18O45] was born at Linwood, near Market Rasen in Lincolnshire at the end of 1826, the first-born child of Woodthorpe Collett and Elizabeth Pyemont.  It was at Market Rasen where he was baptised on 11th March 1827.  He was 14 at the time of the census in June 1841, when he was at school in Ipswich St Clement.  He later attended Clare College in Cambridge, which he entered on 2nd April 1846, having already completed his matriculation that same year.  While at Cambridge he was awarded a Browne Medal, and obtained his BA in 1850.  He was a Senior Fellow from 1851 onwards and achieved his MA in 1853.  He followed in his father’s footsteps by entering the church but, unlike his father Woodthorpe Collett, he never married.  In the census of 1851, he was a visitor at the home of the Quick family at Denmark Hill in Lambeth, where Woodthorpe Collett from Market Rasen was unmarried at 24, when he was said to be a tutor.  Three years later in 1854 he was ordained a deacon, and became a priest at Ely in 1855.  However, six years later the census in 1861 placed Woodthorpe S Collett from Market Rasen as being single, 34 years of age, and a patient in a Harpenden hospital, his occupation being that of a clergyman.  Just four years after that, according to Crockford’s Clerical Directory, Woodthorpe Schofield Collett was unbeneficed in 1865, which means that he no longer held a church office which provided an income, due to his failing mental health

 

It may have been that action, coupled with the death of his father in 1869, that resulted in Woodthorpe returning to the family home on White House Road in Trimley St Mary, Colneis, near Woodbridge, where he was living with his widowed mother Elizabeth Collett and his two unmarried siblings Catherine and William (below), plus the two young children of Woodthorpe’s youngest married sister Bertha Wright nee Collett (below).  Woodthorpe S Collett was 44 years old and a Fellow of Clare College in Cambridge, who was described as a lunatic.  Ten years later, in the census of 1881, and following the death of his mother, he was recorded as being 54 and a clergyman from Lincolnshire, who was living at 13 Windsor Road in Ealing, Middlesex, the home of his married brother Charles Keeling Collett (below).  By 1891, as only W S Collett from Ipswich, he was a boarder at 12 Preston Park Avenue in Brighton, when he was described as a rector clergyman aged 60.  He was again living in the Preston a sub-district of Brighton in Sussex, in 1901 where he was 73 and his place of birth was once again recorded incorrectly as Ipswich.  It was while he was still living in Brighton that he died on 26th January 1913, at the age of 85, the death of Woodthorpe Schofield Collett recorded at Steyning register office (Ref. 2b 349) which was also reported in The Times newspaper on 29th January 1913.  His Will was proved at Brighton on 19th April 1913, when the two main beneficiaries were named as Cathrine Anne Deighton Braysher (who died at Staines in 1917) and Charles Deighton Braysher (who also died at Staines but in 1915), who was a visitor at the home of Woodthorpe’s married sister, Bertha Wright in 1881

 

John Anthony Collett [18O46] was born at Wickenby in Lincolnshire on 1st June 1828, where he was baptised on 8th June 1828, another son of Woodthorpe Collett and Elizabeth Pyemont.  He was 13 years old in 1841 when he was living at Woodbridge with his parents and the rest of his family, but minus his older brother Woodthorpe (above).  It is established that John was later employed by the P & O Steam Ship Company, and on 18th January 1861 he submitted a Certificate of Competency as an Ordinary Master in the Foreign Trade to the Local Marine Board of the Port of London, when he was residing at the Brightwell Parsonage, Ipswich.  Tragically, only five years later, the death of John A Collett, aged only 36, was recorded at Woodbridge (Ref. 4a 426) during the first three months of 1866.  Being so young, John probably had no thought of making his Will therefore, following his premature death Letters of Administration were drawn up and dated 23rd March 1866 and granted at Ipswich to the Reverend Woodthorpe Collett of Brightwell, a clerk (in Holy Orders), father and next-of-kin of the deceased, who died at Brightwell 8th February 1866, a bachelor and a Captain in the service of the Peninsula & Oriental Steam Navigation Company

 

Henry Pyemont Collett [18O47] was born in 1829 at Little Glemham, where he was baptised on 18th October 1829, the son of Woodthorpe Collett and Elizabeth Pyemont.  He was 12 years old in the June census of 1841, and he later attended Trinity Hall at Cambridge University, which he entered on 4th July 1850, where he gained a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1854.  The record at Trinity Hall confirmed that he was the third son of Woodthorpe Collett, clerk of Hasketon, Woodbridge in Suffolk.  It was at Trinity Hall in Cambridge that he was simply recorded as Henry Collett from Glemham in Suffolk, aged 21, a scholar, in the census of 1851, while it was eight years later that he was ordained as a priest in 1859.  Two years after that, in the next census in 1861, he was still a bachelor when he was living with his parents at Woodbridge where he was recorded as Henry Pyemont Collett, aged 37, instead of Henry Pyemont Collett who was 31.  Later that same year, Henry was a priest in Norwich, which overlapped with his role of the Curate of Kesgrave in Suffolk.  It was during the following year when Henry Pyemont Collett married Isabella Lamb Cooper, their wedding day recorded at Bosmere (Ref. 4a 735) during the second of 1862, Bosmere being in the Needham Market area of Suffolk.  Isabella was the daughter of Edward and Phoebe Cooper and was baptised at St Peter’s Church in Wolverhampton on 12th April 1833, who was living with her widowed father and younger brother Edmund at Wolverhampton in 1841, aged eight.  Ten years later she was a student attending a girls’ school at Westbury-upon-Trym in Gloucestershire, when Isabella Lamb from Wolverhampton was 18.  Once she was married to Henry, Isabella gave birth to their first child in the Leicestershire village of Shenton but, within the following year, the family moved to Denver in Norfolk, just south of Downham Market, where their other two sons were born

 

Two years prior to the 1861 Census, Henry was ordained as a priest in 1859 and by 1861 he was a priest in Norwich.  Overlapping with that, from 1859 to 1862 he was the Curate of Kesgrave in Suffolk.  The four years from 1863 to 1867 he was the Perpetual Curate for the Parish of Fordham, where he baptised his two youngest sons.  From 1867 to 1874, he was appointed Vicar of St Mary’s Church at Tilney-cum-Islington in Norfolk, midway between Wisbech and King’s Lynn, which is where the family was living at the time of the census in 1871.  The details in the Wisbech & Terrington St Clement census listed the family as Henry Pyemont Collett, aged 41 from Little Glemham, his wife Isabella Lamb Collett, aged 38 and from Wolverhampton, and their three children Edward Pyemont Collett who was eight years old and born at Shenton to the north of Hinckley, Henry Francis Collett who was six, and John Anthony Collett who was four years old, both confirmed as having been born at Denver in Norfolk.  Also supporting the family on that occasion were two servants, Elizabeth Pitcher, aged 20 from Denver, and Ann Elizabeth Ebbeson who was 19 and from Fakenham

 

There appears to be a gap in the life of Edward Pyemont Collett from 1874 to 1876, but from then on, until 1878, he was the Vicar of Ixworth in Suffolk.  Sometime during the next year or two, the family left Suffolk and by the time of the next census in 1881 Henry, aged 51, was teaching at a school in Hasting, while he was living at 12 Springfield Road in Hastings St Leonard with his two oldest sons.  Edward P Collett was 18, and Henry F Collett was 16 and was still undertaking his education.  Although listed in the census return as a married man, neither his wife, nor his youngest son, were residing with Henry on the actual day of the census.  Instead, the household was completed by two servants, cook Emily Hoile, aged 21 and from Kent, and maid Elizabeth Woodland, aged 19 and from Ashford in Kent.  However, the wider census of 1881 revealed that Isabella L Collett was visiting her elderly mother, a clergyman’s widow, Phoebe A Frazer, at her home in Lower Green, Tettenhall in Staffordshire.  Isabella was 48 and her place of birth was Wolverhampton

 

At that same time, the couple’s missing youngest son, John A Collett, aged 13, was a pupil boarder at Norton House College in Luton, where, in error, his place of birth was given as Leicester, even though it is well established that he was born in Denver and baptised by his father in nearby Fordham.  Upon his retirement, Henry and Isabella moved north to the Lake District.  At the time of the census in 1891 Henry P Collett was 61, and his wife Isabella L Collett was 58, at a time in their lives when they were living in the Cartmel area, between Ulverston and Grange-over-Sands.  During that decade Henry and Isabella left the Lake District when they moved south to Dawlish on the south Devon coast.  And it was at Dawlish that Henry Pyemont Collett died on 29th March 1898, his death recorded at Newton Abbott register office (Ref. 5b 93) when he was 68.  According to a record within the Cambridge Alumni, he had been living at Dawlish where he ‘remained without a cure’.  Upon his death his body was taken to Brightwell in Suffolk, where he was buried near to his father on 1st April 1898.  His Will was proved at Exeter on 16th April 1898 to his widow Isabella Lamb Collett of Overcliff in Dawlish, when his personal effects amounted to £80 2 Shillings and 3 Pence.  Following his passing, Isabella was still living at East Cliff in East Dawlish in March 1901 where, according the census at the end of that month, she was a widow aged 68, from Wolverhampton who was living on her own means, who had living with her, her thirty-four-year-old unmarried son John A Collett, together with two female domestic servants.  It was nine years later that she died at Overcliff on 5th January 1910, when her personal effects were valued at £8,196 5 Shillings and 10 Pence, her Will proved in London on 25th February 1910 to Edward Pyemont Collett, surgeon dentist, and Arthur Forester Walker, solicitor

 

18P45 – Edward Pyemont Collett was born in 1863 at Shenton, Leicestershire

18P46 – Henry Francis Collett was born in 1865 at Denver, Norfolk

18P47 – John Anthony Collett was born in 1866 at Denver, Norfolk

 

Charles Keeling Collett [18O48] was born at Little Glemham in 1831, where he was baptised there on 21st August 1831, the son of Woodthorpe Collett and Elizabeth Pyemont.  He was listed with his family at Woodbridge in the census of 1841, when he was 10 years old and was 20 in 1851 when he and his family were residing in the village of Hasketon near Woodbridge.  It was on 9th October 1859, at Trinity Church in Paddington, London, that the marriage by licence of Charles Keeling Collett and Eliza Skinner Cole took place, the event recorded at Kensington (Ref. 1a 214).  Charles was 27, a bachelor and a banker residing at Bishop’s Road in Paddington, the son of Woodthorpe Collett, a clergyman.  Eliza was a widow at 29, residing at Queen’s Terrace, the daughter of John Robinson deceased, a Captain with the Bengal Army, the former wife of George Collett whom she married in India on 28th September 1847.  Eliza Skinner Robinson was born on 28Th August 1828 and was baptised at Futtehgurh, Bengal, on 28th September 1829, the daughter of John Brown Robinson and his wife Eliza.  Less than two years after their wedding day, the couple was recorded living at 3 Bishop’s Road (next to his younger unmarried brother Robert Ebden Collett (below), where Charles K Collett from Little Glemham was 30 and a banker’s clerk and his wife Eliza S Collett was 32 from Dacca in India.  Employed by them at that time was a 14-year-old housemaid.  It is unclear where Charles was ten years later in 1871, since Eliza S Collett was living at 3 Foxley Road in Kensington aged 42 and the wife of a banker’s clerk, who had living with her, her three children.  They were Mary E Collett who was 10 years old and incorrectly recorded as born at Paddington, as was Charles Collett who was eight, while Percy Collett aged five years had been born at Kensington, which was correct.  Completing the household was a domestic servant and a boarder, a retired lieutenant of the Jersey militia.  One year later, Eliza gave birth to a second daughter at 3 Foxley Road, but neither she or her older sister were living with their parents in 1881

 

Nine years later, according to the 1881 Census, Charles Keeling Collett, aged 50 of Little Glemham, and his wife Eliza Skinner Collett, aged 52 of Dacca, were living at 13 Windsor Road in Ealing.  Windsor Road today is adjacent to the Ealing Broadway Centre in London.  Living with them was their son Charles Hubert Edgar Collett, together with Charles Keeling’s older brother Woodthorpe Schofield Collett (above).  The family employed two domestic servants, and they were the cook Amelia Morton aged 24 of Stafford and housemaid Ann Williams aged 18 of Penryn Coch in Wales.  Although the census return gave their son’s place of birth as Paddington in London, it is known that Charles Hubert Edgar Collett was baptised at Brightwell-cum-Foxhall on 12th July 1863, the son of Charles and Eliza Collett, and that he was born there on 30th December 1862.  It was around twenty months after that census day when Charles Keeling Collett died on 15th December 1882 at the age of 51 when living in Ealing, with his death recorded at the Brentford (Ref. 3a 56) during the last three months of 1882.  It was on 18th November 1882 that he was buried at Perivale in Middlesex, London.  The Will of Charles Keeling Collett, formerly of 3 Foxley Road, Pembroke Square in Kensington, but later of Brightwell House, 15 Gordon Road in Ealing, was proved by Eliza Skinner Collett of Brightwell House, widow, the relict and sole executrix, his estate valued at £261 13 Shillings and 4 Pence

 

Eliza’s youngest daughter may well have been attending a private boarding school on 1881, hence the reason for her absence that census day.  However, at the age of 19 in 1891, Mabel C Collett was again living with her widowed mother Eliza S Collett on that census day at Kensington when she was 62 and living on her own means, when her place of birth was confirmed as Bengal, Dacca.  Once again Eliza was employing a domestic servant, while the fourth person at the property (no. 9) was a boarder.  During the next ten years Eliza moved from Kensington to Hammersmith, and daughter Mabel was married.  Both of those two events were confirmed by the Hammersmith census in 1901, when mother and married daughter were residing at 43 Richmond Gardens.  Eliza S Collett was 72 and again living on her own means, who had staying there with her, her daughter Mabel Laing-Meason aged 29 and her grandson George L Collett who was six and born at Clapton.  By 1911 Eliza Skinner Collett was 82 years old, had been married 56 years earlier, and had given birth to four children of whom three were still alive.  At that time in her life she was living at 30 South Place in Kensington (or maybe Kennington), when once again her married daughter Mabel Catharine Laing-Meason was living there with her, and with her two sons, Edward Hugh Gregor Laing-Meason and Gilbert George Nigel Laing-Meason.  Just over a year after that census day, the death of Eliza S Collett was recorded at Camberwell register office (Ref. 1d 777) during the second quarter of 1912, when she was 84 years old

 

18P48 – Mary Elizabeth Collett was born in 1861 at Brightwell

18P49 – Charles Hubert Edgar Collett was born in 1862 at Brightwell

18P50 – Percy Duque Collett was born in 1866 at Kensington

18P51 – Mabel Catharine Collett was born in 1872 at Kensington

 

Elizabeth Charlotte Collett [18O49] was born at Sweffling near Saxmundham in 1832, where she was baptised on 5th July 1833, the daughter of the Reverend Woodthorpe Collett.  She was nine years old in the census of 1841 and in 1851, at the age of 18, she and her family were living within the village of Hasketon near Woodbridge.  She later married Trusson Collett [18O20] the son of Cornelius Collett [18N6] of Beverley in Yorkshire on 5th September 1860, as reported in The Times and the Ipswich Journal.  For the continuation of this family go to Trusson Collett.  The photograph of Elizabeth (below) was possibly taken around 1913, the same year that she died, and also included in the picture with her was her husband Trusson Collett, whose photograph can be seen under his name above

 

Elizabeth Charlotte Collett of Beaufort House, 21 Cavendish Road in Brondesbury, Middlesex, the wife of Trusson Collett, died on 9th March 1913.  Her Will was subsequently proved at London 15th April 1913 to Trusson Collett Esquire and Charles Deighton Braysher Esquire, the executors of her personal effects valued at £1,264 14 Shillings and 2 Pence.  Charles Deighton Brayshaw was the husband of Elizabeth’s younger sister Catherine Ann Collett (below)

 

Catherine Ann Collett [18O50] was born either at the end of 1833 or early in 1834 most likely at Sweffling, where she was baptised on 20th January 1834, the daughter of the Reverend Woodthorpe Collett and his wife Elizabeth Pyemont.  Shortly after her baptism, she and her family moved to Woodbridge where they were living at the time of the census in 1841 when Catherine was recorded as being eight years old.  According to the next census in 1851 Catherine Collett from Sweffling was 16 when she was living with her large family at Hasketon near Woodbridge.  No record has so far been found of her in the census of 1861 although, following the death of her father in 1869, Catherine A Collett, aged 37 and unmarried, was once again living with her widowed mother and other members of the family at White House Road in Trimley St Mary, within the Colneis sub-district of Woodbridge in 1871, when she was described as having no occupation.  Four years later, and on the other side of the world, the marriage by licence of Catherine Ann Collett and Charles Deighton Brayshaw took place on 27th November 1875 at the British Consulate in Shanghai, China

 

Ten years earlier, Catherine’s younger sister Bertha (below) had also married at the Office of the British Consulate in Shanghai.  Charles was a widower aged 37 residing in Shanghai, whose occupation was that of assistant harbour master, the son of John Deighton, a publisher.  Catherine, the daughter of Woodthorpe Collett, a clergyman, also residing in Shanghai, whose age was incorrectly recorded as 33, when she was 37 in 1871.  Certainly, Catherine was older than Charles, who was born at Cambridge on 18th June 1838.  It was also there, that he was baptised on 15th October 1837, the son of John and Susanne Deighton.  On 15th July 1859, Charles submitted a Certificate of Competency to the Marine Board at Wills Street in London as a Second Mate Foreign Going Trade when he was living at 4 Earls Terrace in Kensington

 

When Catherine was in 1881 has not so far been discovered, when her husband Charles Deighton Brayshaw, aged 48 and from Cambridge, in the employ of the Customs Service, who was a visitor at Park Terrace, Fonnereau Road, Ipswich, the home of 81-year-old spinster Letitia Pyemont, an annuitant from Linwood in Lincolnshire.  Also living at the same address was Charles’ widowed sister-in-law Bertha Emily Wright, nee Collett, with her three children.  Bertha was Catherine Ann’s younger sister and was described as the niece of Letitia Pyemont, confirming her as the sister of his mother-in-law, Elizabeth Collett, nee Pyemont, Catherine Ann’s mother.  Thirty years later, the illusive couple was residing at Ragne, Braintree in Essex, when Charles was 73, a retired harbour master from Cambridge, and his wife of 36 years was Catherine Ann Brayshaw from Sweffling who was 77.  The couple’s two female domestic servants were both nineteen years of age, when the home was a ten-roomed property

 

Four years after that day, the death of Charles Deighton Brayshaw was recorded at Staines register office (Ref. 3a 8) during the first three months of 1915, at the age of 77.  The Will of Charles Deighton-Braysher (sic) of Carisbrooke, Stanwell Road in Ashford, Middlesex, was proved at London on 15th April 1915, following his death on 11th February 1915, to Trusson Collett and Charles Oswald Liddell, Esquires, for his personal effects valued at £6,057 8 Shillings and 11 Pence.  It seems curious that there was no reference to his wife who died two years after being made a widow, when she was still living at Carisbrooke, Stanwell Road in Ashford, where she died on 22nd March 1917.  The death of Catherine Ann Deighton-Braysher (sic) was recorded at Staines register office (Ref. 3a 16) at the age of 83.  Administration of her personal effects, reported to be worth £1,026 3 Shillings and 4 Pence, was certified with Will limited on 24th May 1917 to Walter Percy Norton the attorney of Anthony Keeling Collett, the eldest of the two sons of Catherine’s youngest brother William Michael Collett (below)

 

Robert Ebden Collett [18O51] was born at Ipswich St Peter on 17th June 1835, the son of Woodthorpe Collett and Elizabeth Pyemont, and was baptised at St Peter’s Church in Ipswich on 5th March 1836.  By June 1841 he and his family were living in Woodbridge, where Robert was recorded in error as being seven years old, whereas in 1851 he was 15 and still living with his family which was recorded in the village of Hasketon near Woodbridge.  A decade later, unmarried Robert E Collett from Ipswich was residing at 3 Bishop’s Road in Paddington where, at the age of 25 he was a clerk in the grand function (?).  Living at that same location, but in a separate dwelling or apartment was Robert’s older brother Charles Keeling Collett (above) and his wife Eliza Skinner Collett.  No record of Robert has been found in the census returns in 1871, 1881, 1891, or 1901.  By 1911 Robert was a married man living in Felixstowe where he was described as keeper of a boarding-house and an employer who said he was 63 (sic), instead of 76, most likely not wanting to admit that he was that much older than his wife.  She was Ellen Collett aged 52 and born in the London parish of St Pancras, who was his wife of seven years, who had not given birth to any children.  Two elderly spinsters were the only boarders on that census day, both living on independent means, while the only person employed by Robert at that time, for the nine-roomed property, was 21-year-old Angelina Mary Baker from Gosport who was a housemaid.  It was during the last three months of 1904 that the marriage of Robert Ebden Collett and Ellen Humphreys was recorded at Hastings register office (Ref. 2b 54).  Three years after the census day in 1911 Robert died, with the death of Robert E Collett, aged 78, recorded at the Suffolk Woodbridge register office (Ref. 4a 107) during the second quarter of 1914

 

Bertha Emily Collett [18O52] was born at Woodbridge in 1837 and was baptised there in St Mary’s Church on 11th October 1837, a daughter of Woodthorpe Collett and Elizabeth Pyemont.  It was also at Woodbridge that she was living with her family in 1841 at the age of five years.  On the day of the next census in 1851, Bertha Emily Collett aged 13 and from Woodbridge was a visitor and a pupil at the Ipswich home of forty-two-year-old Ann Sanderson who had living with her just her three children Ellen Agnes Sanderson 17, Annie Sanderson 11, and Keary Edgar Sanderson who was six.  At that time Bertha’s own family had settled in the village of Hasketon near Woodbridge which, on that occasion, had Bertha’s aunt Letitia Pyemont and her brother living with her family, with whom Bertha appears to have had a more permanent connection later in her life.  After a further ten years Bertha Emily Collett, aged 24, was back living with her family in the parish of Foxhall, as confirmed by the census in 1861.  It was within the next four years that Bertha Emily Collett married William Algernon Wright on 21st January 1865 at Holy Trinity Church in Shanghai, the marriage solemnised by the British Consulate there.  William was a bachelor and a mariner living in Shanghai, the son of William Wright, a clerk in Holy Orders.  Bertha was a single lady of 27 years, also residing in Shanghai, the daughter of Woodthorpe Collett, another clerk in Holy Orders. Curiously, ten years later, Bertha’s older sister Catherine was married in Shanghai.  By 1871, Bertha and William’s two eldest children were back in England, without their parents, when they were staying with Bertha’s recently widowed mother Elizabeth Collett at White House Road in Trimley St Mary, near Woodbridge.  On that census day, Bertha L P Wright was four years old and born at Aldeburgh in Suffolk, while William A C Wright was one year old and born at Trimley St Mary.  Following the subsequent birth of the couple’s third child, two years later, William A Wright, who was born on 3rd November 1835, died on 22nd December 1879 at Nagasaki in Japan, at the age of 45, the cause of death being disease of the lungs.  His obituary confirmed that he was the son of the late Reverend Doctor Wright, Headmaster of Colchester Grammar School.  His passing left Bertha a widow at the age of forty-two with three children to look after

 

William was born at Burton Street and baptised on 12th January 1836 at St Pancras, the son of William Wright, a private tutor, and his wife Nancy Goddard.  On 1st September 1855, William Algernon Wright of Lesden Road in Colchester, Essex, had submitted a Certificate of Competency to the Local Marine Board for the Port of London as a Second Mate, which he indicated should be forwarded on to the Shipping Office in Southampton.  And that was presumably how he ended up in China ten years later

 

The next census in 1881 revealed that Bertha Emily Wright from Woodbridge was 40 and was living with her elderly aunt and annuitant Letitia Pyemont aged 81 from Linwood in Lincolnshire, her mother’s unmarried sister, at 27 Park Terrace on Fonnereau Road in Ipswich St Margaret.  Bertha was described as the niece of Letitia Pyemont, a widow and an annuitant, while with her were her three children.  They were Bertha L P Wright who was 14 and born at Aldeburgh, William Algernon C Wright who was 11 and born at Trimley, and son Francis Wright who was seven years of age and born in Ipswich. The combined family was served by two domestic servants, Matilda Cann 31 and Lydia Harvey 29.  Visiting the families was Charles Deighton Braysher from Cambridge who was 43 and a beneficiary under the terms of the Will of Bertha’s eldest brother Woodthorpe Schofield Collett (above), following his death in 1913, Charles being the husband of Catherine Ann Collett (above), who were married in Shanghai.  It was a very similar situation in 1891, with Bertha E Wright aged 48 and a widow living on her own means at the Ipswich home of her maiden aunt Letitia Pyemont 27 Fonnereau Road with her 24-year-old daughter Bertha L Wright also living on her own means, and the great niece of Letitia Pyemont.  What happened to Bertha over the next twenty years is not yet known.  However, the census in 1911 did reveal some new details of her life.  On that day Bertha Emily Wright was a lodger at 29 Palmerston Road in Ipswich, when she was 74 and of private means, a widow from Woodbridge, who had been married for 46 years, during which time she had given birth to five children, only one of whom was still living.  Nine year later Bertha Emily Wright nee Collett died on 3rd February 1920 while at the Cottage Hospital in Felixstowe.  The death of Bertha E Wright was recorded at Woodbridge register office (Ref. 4a 1254) by someone who did not know her very well, as her age was said to be 76 instead of 82.  Her Will was proved in London on 12th May that same year, when probate of her personal effects of £273 5 Shillings and 3 Pence was granted to Anthony Keeling Collett, a journalist.  He was her nephew, the eldest son of Bertha’s brother William Michael Collett (below)

 

William Michael Collett [18PO53] was born at Woodbridge on 2nd April 1839, the youngest of the nine children of Woodthorpe Collett and Elizabeth Pyemont.  He was baptised at Woodbridge on 3rd April 1839, and it was also at Woodbridge that he was living with his family in 1841, when he was two years old.  The census in 1851 included William Collett, aged 12, was attending a national school at Lower Brook Street in the St Mary Quay district of Ipswich, which was attended by his eldest brother Woodthorpe in 1841.  He was later educated at Queen Elizabeth’s School in Ipswich which was an Endowed Grammar School and at which he matriculated on 31st October 1857, when he was 19.  He then secured an open scholarship at Trinity College, Oxford in 1858 and achieved a First-Class Classical Moderations degree in 1860.  That was followed two years later by a Second-Class Classical School degree and a Bachelor of Arts degree.  In the next census in 1861, William Michael Collett from Woodbridge was 23 and an undergraduate at Oxford, on that occasion, he was enjoying some time away from his studies, when he was recorded with his family at The Heath in Foxhall.  By the time of the next census in 1871, William M Collett from Woodbridge was 32 and described as a Fellow, Tutor and Dean of Oriel College in Oxford, who was living with his widowed mother Elizabeth and other members of the family at White House Road in Trimley St Mary, following the death of his father two years earlier

 

William obtained his Master of Arts in 1864 and, a year after that, he secured an open Fellowship at Oriel College Oxford and held the position of Fellow until 1874.  It was also in 1865 that he was a tutor and assistant master at Wellington College.  On 30th March 1874, the Reverend William Michael Collett of Oxford was named in the Letter of Administration following the death of his mother in Ipswich on 15th March that year.  Just after that he was appointed as The Rector of Cromhall in Gloucestershire, shortly after which he married Alice Burnett, who presented him with two sons.  The marriage of William and Alice was conducted at St Peter’s Church in Southampton on 23rd June 1874, when the groom was confirmed as the son of Woodthorpe Collett, and the bride’s father was named as Robert Edwin Burnett.  By the time of 1881 Census, William was living at The Rectory in Cromhall Lygon, which is near Wotton-under-Edge.  The census return confirmed that he was 42 and had been born at Woodbridge, and that he was the Rector of Cromhall.  His wife Alice, who was born at Paddington, was 33 years old.  Living with the couple were their two sons Anthony, who was three, and John who was seven months old, both of them having been born at Cromhall.  The family was supported by housemaid Rhoda Booth, aged 29 of Hatherley, and nursemaid Rosa Higgs aged 21 of Yate

 

In 1882 the Rev. W M Collett was represented at court by A H Turner solicitor, regarding the non-payment of rent charges amounting to £24 9 Shillings and 11 Pence that was owed to him by the occupier of Ashworth House near Wotton-under-Edge, the property of Henry Isaac Brown of Bristol.  Nine years later, William Michael Collett from Woodbridge was 52 and a married man, when he was the Rector of Cromhall and was living there in 1891, with just two domestic servants.  On that same day, his wife Alice Collett, then aged 42 and living on her own means, was residing at Claremont Crescent in Weston-super-Mare with her son Anthony Collett who was 13.  Boarding there with them was Sir Richard Musgrave, bart, who was eighteen and from Cumberland.  At the same time, absent son John was attending school in Oxford and at 10 years of age, he was a boarder at Bevington Road in the St Giles area of the city.  It is rather odd, that no recorded of William and Alice, either together or in a separated state, has been identified in the census of 1901.  That census day, the couple’s eldest son was living in Theale, Berkshire, having completed his university at Oriel College in Oxford, while their youngest son was a civil engineering student and a boarder at the Heysham home of the Elliott family near Lancaster

 

It was during the following year, that he died at Cromhall on 24th May 1902, a clerk (in Holy Orders).  The death of the Reverend William Michael Collett was recorded at Thornbury register office (Ref. 6a 162) during the second quarter of 1902, at the age of 63.  His Will was proved on 22nd November 1902 at London, when the sole beneficiary of his personal effects valued at £519 13 Shillings and 1 Penny was his widow Alice Collett.  His obituary was printed in the Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser on 29th May 1902, when he was referred to as the Reverend W Michael Collett.  By 1911, Alice Collett from London was 64 and a widow with private means, who was living in the Warwickshire town of Rugby with her youngest son John and two domestic servants.  During the next two decades, Alice Collett returned to Somerset, and it was at Bath register office that her death was recorded (Ref. 5c 720) during the first three months of 1931, when she was 83.  Alice Collett nee Burnett died on 24th January 1931 at the Lansdowne Hospital & Nursing home in Bath, when the Limited Administration of her personal estate was resolved at London on 5th August 1931 to Ronald Peake, solicitor and attorney of John Colet Collett in the sum of £1,438 3 Shillings and 4 Pence

 

18P52 – Anthony Keeling Collett was born in 1877 at Cromhall, Gloucestershire

18P53 – John Colet Collett was born in 1880 at Cromhall, Gloucestershire

 

Ebden Collett [18O55] was possibly born at Loddon in Norfolk around 1834.  He was the younger of the two children of James Collett and Sophia Ebden who both died in 1836.  What happened to two-year old Ebden and his sister Fanny, who was four, after those two tragic events, is not known.  What is known is that Ebden Collett was named on the passenger list of the ship ‘Doric’ which sailed out of Lyttelton in New Zealand on Thursday 5th April 1894 bound for London, England, as reported in the Christchurch Star newspaper.  It was reported later that same year that he returned to Auckland in New Zealand, when he departed from the Port of London on 27th December 1894 on board the ship Ionic when he was described as a labourer

 

William Collett [18O56] was born on 5th February at Great Poringland in Norfolk during the first months of 1838, the eldest son of William Collett and his second wife Mary Ann Dye.  His parents were married at Poringland on 19th December 1837, where William Collett was baptised on 11th March 1838, the son of labourer Willian Collett and Mary Ann Collett.  The birth therefore took place within three months of the couple’s wedding day and was immediately followed by their departure from Poringland and their arrival at Henstead in Suffolk, where the birth was registered during the first quarter of 1838.  After just a couple of years of living at Henstead, where his sister Honor (below) was born, the family of four moved the eight miles south to the town of Halesworth.  And it was there they were living at New Court in June 1841, when William was three years old and his place of birth being Porlan in Norfolk, a local reference to Poringland.  Ten years later in 1851 William was still living with his parents who were again living at New Court in Halesworth.  He was then 13 and was already working as a basket maker, and again his place of birth was recorded as Porlan

 

One possible record of him has been found within the census of 1861 when a William Collett was 22 and a Private (service no. 1964) with the Third Battalion Military Training School at Aldershot in Hampshire.  However, it was five years later that bachelor William Collett of Halesworth, a labourer and the son of William Collett, was married on 1st October 1866 to Eliza Whale, the event recorded at Blything (Ref. 4a 1517).  Eliza was the daughter of labourer Arthur Whale, a spinster of full age, while the two witnesses were named as John Alden and Maria Alden, the latter being William’s younger married sister (below).  In the earlier census of 1851, the Whale family had been residing at Hound, a village in Hampshire about two miles from Burlsedon and, in 1861, when Eliza Whale was working as a domestic servant, she gave her place of birth as Hound.  By early April in 1871, the childless couple was based in army barracks at St Germans & St Anthony, near Torpoint and Devonport in Cornwall, where William Collett was 32 and a Private in the 57th Battalion, while his wife Eliza was 29.  Again, on that occasion, William said his place of birth was Porlan and Eliza said hers was Burlsedon.  Tragically, not long after the census day that year William Collett either died or was killed in action because, on 24th July 1873, Eliza Collett, a widow, married bachelor George Turner, their wedding recorded at Stoke Damerel (Ref. 5b 595).  George was a Private with the 7th Company Royal Marines.  Eight years after they were married George and Eliza were living at 4 St Pauls Street, East Stonehouse in Plymouth, where George Turner from Bristol was 42 and still a Royal Marine, and Eliza Turner from Netley in Hampshire was 38

 

Honor Collett [18O57] was born at Poringland on 10th March 1840, although she was privately baptised at home on 15th March 1840, the daughter of labourer William Collett and his wife Mary of Poringland.  Her birth that was recorded at Henstead (Ref. xiii 168), previously referred to in error as her place of birth.  With the next twelve months her family moved the short distance to Halesworth, where they were living in June 1841.  On the occasion of the first national census Honor Collett was one year old when she and her family were living at New Court in Halesworth.  Sadly, Honor died when she was just 10 years old, following which she was buried in the graveyard of St Mary’s Church at Halesworth on 16th February 1850.  The death of Honor Collett was recorded at Blything (Ref. xiii 303).  It was on 12th February 1850 that she died at Halesworth, when the cause of her death was hydrocephalus and fever

 

Daniel Collett [18O58] was born at Halesworth on 14th June in 1842, the third child of William Collett by his third wife Mary Ann Dye, whose birth was recorded at Blything (Ref. xiii 377).  It was at Halesworth where he was baptised in 4th September 1842.  Tragically, he was only three months old when he died on 7th September 1842 and was buried at St Mary’s Parish Church in Halesworth four days after on 11th September.  The death of Daniel Collett was recorded at Blything (Ref. xiii 253) when the cause of death was recorded as inflammation

 

Maria Collett [18O59] was born at Halesworth on 17th October 1843, where she was baptised five years later on 3rd December 1848 in a joint ceremony with her sisters Susanna Eliza Collett and Fanny Collett (below), the daughters of William Collett and Mary Ann.  In 1851 she was seven years old and was living with her parents at 139 New Court in Halesworth.  Ten years later, when she was 18, she was working as a house servant at a private boys’ school at Belvedere Cottage on Bungay Road in Halesworth run by George and Mary Yallop.  The school house was brick built (in white bricks) and had symmetrical design with a centre door and chimneys at each gable end.  Apart from the time when Maria worked there, it has always been known as Belvedere House, but ceased to be a school sometime between 1861 and 1868, when a trade directory named the occupier as John Bayes, a farmer

 

It was on 20th April 1865 that Maria Collett was married by banns to (1) John Alden at St Nicholas’ Church in Great Yarmouth, with whom she had five children.  Their marriage certificate recorded that John was 29 and a fisherman, residing at The Row 112, the son of blacksmith John Alden senior, while Maria’s address was the Naval Asylum in Great Yarmouth, with her father confirmed as William Collett, a labourer.  It is assumed, since she was a house servant at her previous address, that she was also a live-in servant at the Naval Asylum.  Row 112 in Great Yarmouth was also previously known as Chambers the Sailmaker’s Row, when the premises were occupied by many trades folk and included public houses.  It was not until 1804 that the numbers were added.  Whilst Maria’s parents gave her correct age in the two censuses of 1851 and 1861, Maria constantly stated that she was younger than her actual age in all of the subsequent census records.  That was particularly noticeable after she married for a second time, when her new husband was her junior by fifteen years.  The figures in brackets [ ] represent her real age

 

John Alden was born in Yarmouth in 1835 and baptised on 19th July 1935.  His parents were John Alden a blacksmith and Mary Ann Barnaby and they were married on 24th October 1824, the witnesses being John Callow and Elizabeth Barnaby – who were later married.  John Alden and Mary Ann had 10 children and it is interesting that their second child was baptised as Elizabeth Callow Alden. The witnesses at the wedding of John Alden and Maria Collett included Mary Ann Collett.  One year after they were married, Maria and John were named as the witnesses at the wedding of her older brother William (above) to Eliza Whale.  After a further five years of married life with John, Maria had already presented her husband with their first two children, when the family was living at Raglan Street West in Lowestoft.  Maria was aged 25 [28], John was ten years older at 35 and their children were Louisa Alden who was four, and Anna M Alden who was two.  The census reference to Louisa was incorrect, as it should have been her daughter Lavinia Alden.  Maria was with child on the day of the 1871 Census and the couple’s only son John Frederick W Alden was born later that same year.  Over the next six years the marriage produced a further two children for Maria and John, they being Ellen Mary Alden who was born in 1874 when the family was still living at Raglan Street West, and Elizabeth Alden who was born on 16th March 1878

 

The family left Lowestoft around 1875 and set off north for a new life in East Yorkshire.  By the spring of the following year, they were living at 16 Temple Court on Cogan Street in Kingston-upon-Hull, where the first of two tragedies was to affect the family.  It was at that address that the death of two-year old Ellen Mary Alden was registered on 13th April 1876.  Some good news followed later during the next year, when Maria discovered she was once again with child, which would hopefully help to compensate for the loss of their daughter.  Sadly, for Maria it was during her pregnancy that she received the news of the death of her husband in 1877 at the age of 41.  As a fisherman it seems very likely that that he may have died during a fishing trip, as no registration of his death has so far been found in any records.  Maria’s new baby was born while she and her children were still living at 16 Temple Court, and the registration of the birth of daughter Elizabeth confirmed her father as John Alden deceased.  Sometime over the next year or so, Maria and her children left Temple Court and, by April 1881, part of the family was living at 2 Kings place in the Parish of Holy Trinity in Hull.  The census record stated that Maria of Halesworth was a widow aged 32 [38].  Her occupation was given as laundress and living with her was her son John who was 10 and daughter Elizabeth who was three.  Boarding with the family was dressmaker and 66 years old widow Sarah Johnston of Brixham in Devon.  Maria’s son John became a fisherman like his father and, just as his father did, he too died in the North Sea on 17th February 1906 at the age of 35

 

As she approached her fortieth birthday, Maria started a new life with (2) George William Wright with whom she had a further three children, all of them born at Hull.  George was fifteen years younger than Maria and, despite the best efforts by researchers, no record of a marriage for Maria and George has been found.  According to the 1891 Census, Maria aged 42 [48] was the wife of George Wright when they were living at 6 Liverpool Street in Newington Hull.  Living with them were Maria’s three children from her first marriage, Lavinia Alden, John Alden, and Elizabeth Alden, plus Lavinia’s daughter Edith Alden.  In addition, the house was also home to Maria and George’s two children, Ada Wright who was six, and William Wright who was three years old

 

It is known that Lavinia Alden was not married when Edith Alden was born but, although she was Ada Wright’s half-niece, she was brought up as her sister, being of a similar age.  Ada Wright was the grandmother of Liz Whittaker – who kindly provided details of her family, and it was Liz’s father, son of Ada who, together with his siblings, considered Edith to be their aunt.  Liz herself, actually met both Lavinia and Edith, her Aunt Vinnie and Aunt Edie, a few times and thought of them as lovely ladies despite both of them had suffered tragedies in their lives.  Aunt Vinnie’s husband, who was a widower with children when she married him in Leeds during 1899, committed suicide in 1910.  Aunt Edie was living with her mother during 1911 in Leeds and it was there that she was married in 1915.  Her husband, a Private in the Canadian Rifles (although not Canadian, but born in Leeds), died on 10 November 1918 from a gunshot wound to the head sustained over the night and morning of the first and second of October 1918

 

Three years later, in 1894, Maria’s two new children by George, had been joined by brother Ernest Wright so, by the turn of the century, the family comprised Maria 52 [58], George 43, and their children Ada Wright, William Wright and Ernest Wright.  Maria’s grand-daughter Edith Alden was still in the care of her grandmother, since the child’s mother (Lavinia) was then married and had moved away to make a fresh start in Leeds.  The 1901 Census also revealed that George Wright was a tobacconist, confectioner and baker, and that he and his extended family were living at 395 Hessle Road in Hull at that time

 

By the time of the next census in 1911, Maria was 61 and had been married to George for 28 years.  The couple was still living at 395 Hessle Road in Hull, where George's occupation was given as Tobacconist, with Maria being described as assisting in the business.  Living with them were their two sons William Henry Wright, aged 24, who was an unmarried labourer working at the Fish Dock, and Ernest Wright, aged 17, who was an engine cleaner on the railway.  Also living with them was widow Fanny Frost, nee Collett (below) who was Maria's younger sister.  William Henry Wright had been born at Hull in 1887, where his younger brother was also born in 1893.  The house at Hessle Road comprised seven rooms, including a kitchen, but excluding a scullery and a bathroom.  It was at that same address that Maria died nearly seventeen years later on 6th March 1928 at the age of 84, and was buried in Division Road Cemetery on Hessle Road, Hull, on that same day.  George Wright, being that much younger than his wife, survived for another seven years before he passed away on 10th June 1935 at 395 Hessle Road in Kingston-upon-Hull.  His Will was proved at York on 28th June 1859 in favour of Ernest Wright, heating engineer, for £111 3 Shillings and 5 Pence.  His youngest son Ernest Wright was born at Hull on 7th October 1893 and he later married Nellie Waslen

 

18P54 – Ada Wright was born in 1884 at Hull

 

Susanna Eliza Collett [18O60] was born at Halesworth on 16th June 1846, her birth recorded at Blything (Ref. xiii 410) during the second quarter of that year.  She was later baptised in a joint ceremony with her younger sister Fanny (below) and her older sister Maria Collett (above) on 3rd December 1848.  She was another child of William Collett and Mary Ann Dye who, despite being baptised as Susanna Eliza, used her second forename thereafter.  It was only at the registering of her death that she was named as Susanna Eliza.  As simply Eliza Collett aged four years, she was living with her family at 189 New Court Halesworth in 1851.  When she was 13 years old, she was living with her mother at Barrack Yard on Mill Hill Street in Halesworth.  To seek work, Eliza eventually moved to London where, in 1871, she was living at Queens Gate Place in Kensington, where she was employed as a cook.  Eliza was still a spinster ten years later and was still working as a cook, but in Sussex in 1881.  By then she was 32, living and working at the home of wealthy widow Gertrude Martyn at Roffey Lodge on the Crawley Road in Horsham, when Eliza’s place of birth was confirmed as Halesworth.  To say her employer, Gertrude Martyn, was a wealthy widow may be an understatement.  Three years earlier, she had financed the building of the 300-seat All Saints Church at Roffey in Horsham, in memory of her late husband.  As a direct result, the new parish of Roffey was also created in 1878 to coincide with the opening of the church

 

It was while she was in Sussex that Eliza met and marriage John Mann who was born in 1853 at Wisborough Green in Sussex, who was baptised there on 20th March 1853, the son of George and Sophia Mann.  The 1881 Census placed 28 years old John Mann as the gardener at the home of William Swift in Devonshire Road in Eltham in Kent.  William Swift, at 46, was also a gardener as was his brother George 38 who was also living at the home, along with John Mann’s older brother Jessie Mann, aged 33.  Fifteen months after the census day in 1881, Eliza Collett and John Mann were married at the aforementioned All Saints Church in Roffey, Sussex, on 10 June 1882.  Their marriage produced three children for the couple, two of them being John William Mann who was born at Mottingham in Kent in 1884, and Ruth Isabella Mann who was born at St Albans in 1886.  By 1891 the family of four was living at Sopwell Lodge in the Hertfordshire village of Sopwell, where John Mann was 38 and a gardener from Wisborough Green, his wife Eliza Mann was 41 and from Halesworth, John William Mann was seven, and Ruth Isabella Mann who was five, but over the following years the family moved north to Lancashire.  That was confirmed in the census of 1901, when the family was living in Ingol Lodge Cottage at Ashton-on-Riddle, where John Mann was 48 and a domestic gardener, Eliza Mann was 50, John William Mann was 17 and also a domestic gardener, and Ruth Isabella Mann was 14 and a dressmaker

 

The family was again residing in Ashton-on-Riddle in 1911, in a seven-roomed dwelling at 2 Grosvenor Place.  By then John was a jobbing gardener with his own account at the age of 58, and his wife of 28 years was Eliza who was 60 years of age who had given birth to three children, only two of whom were still living.  Their son and daughter aged 27 and 25 respectively still had the same occupations as in 1901, except Ruth was then working from home as a dressmaker with her own account.  Boarding with the family that day was Ethel Wise from Bishop’s Stortford who was the head teacher at a borough council elementary school.  Nearly twenty years later, Eliza died on 9th September 1930, when she was 83, and living at 2 Grosvenor Place in Preston.  The cause of death was heart failure, myocardial degeneration, and broncho pneumonia.  The death of Susanna Eliza Mann was recorded at the Lancashire Preston register office (Ref. 8e 483) during the third quarter of 1930, and that was only the second time in her life she was credited with the correct two forenames, and in the right order

 

Fanny Collett [18O61] was born at Halesworth on 10th November 1848, with her birth recorded at Blything (Ref. xiii 365), after which she was baptised at Halesworth on 3rd December 1848 in a joint ceremony with her two older sisters, Maria and Susanna Eliza (above).  Fanny was 11 years old in 1861 when she was living with her mother at Barrack Yard on Mill Hill Street in Halesworth.  Ten years later Fanny was working as a servant at the Sun Inn in the Thoroughfare at Woodbridge in Suffolk.  She later married mariner William Frost at St John’s Church in Woodbridge on 8th January 1874, when the witnesses were Charles Collett and Eliza Frost, and when Eliza’s father William was a gardener, who was regularly described as a labourer in census returns.  The wedding recorded at Woodbridge (Ref. 4a 863) during the first quarter of that year.  The birth of William Frost was recorded at Woodbridge (Ref. xii 507) in 1844, and it would appear from the next census in 1881 that they did not have any children.  The census return that year recorded William Frost, aged 36 of Woodbridge, as a mariner, and that he was living at New Street in Woodbridge with his wife Fanny who was 30 and from Halesworth.  Living with them was Fanny’s brother Frederick Collett (below) who was 25 and also of Halesworth

 

According to the next census in 1891, William Frost from Woodbridge was 45 and a mariner, when Fanny Frost from Halesworth was 41, when they were living at New Street in Woodbridge.  Ten years after that, in March 1901, Fanny Frost aged 50 was again living with her husband William Frost at 28 New Street in Woodbridge, from where 55-year-old William was employed as a canal porter.  Five years later, during the third quarter of 1906, the death of William Frost was recorded at Woodbridge register office (Ref. 4a 603) when he was 58.  Having lost her husband, Fanny Frost aged 59 and a widow, was living with her older married sister Maria Wright nee Collett (above) and her family, at 395 Hessle Road in Hull in 1911.  Sixteen years later, when she died on 10th March 1927, she was still living at 395 Hessle Road, Kingston-upon-Hull, the cause of death being chronic bronchitis and senile decay.  The death of Fanny Frost, nee Collett, was recorded at the Hull Sculcoates register office (Ref. 9d 236) during the first three months of 1927, when she was 78

 

John Collett [18O62] was born at Halesworth on 26th November 1850, with his birth recorded at Blything (Ref. xiii 391), the seventh child of William Collett and Mary Ann Dye.  John was four months old in the Halesworth census of 1851, but during the latter part of that decade the family must have encountered some difficulty which resulted in John’s father taking him and his younger brother Charles (below) to live at the Blything Union Workhouse in Bulcamp-with-Blythburgh.  And it was there that the three of them were recorded in 1861 when J C from Halesworth was eleven years old.  By 1871 John Collett from Suffolk said he was 22 when he was working as a live-in waiter at The Reform Club in Pall Mall, within the Westminster area of London while, not far away, in Kensington was his unmarried sister Eliza (above).  Not long after, John ceased being a waiter, when he joined the army and was sent to Curragh Camp in Ireland and, while he was there, he met his future wife.  The marriage of John Collett and (1) Susan Sullivan was conducted on 27th February 1873 at Dunmanway in County Cork, Ireland.  Susan was born during 1855 in County Cork and their first child, a son, was born at Kilcullen in County Kildare on 26th October 1873, following which he was baptised on 15th December 1873.  His birth was registered by his father John Collett on 3rd November 1873, when John was described as a drummer with the 57th Regiment, aka 57th (West Middlesex) Regiment of Foot

 

Whether John’s regiment was dispatched to America, or whether he completed his term of duty, he and Susan eventually settled in America, where Susan died on 7th January 1890 of pneumonia at the age of 34.  By then, it is established that their last six children had been born in America, which would indicate they had left Ireland between the birth of their first two children.  The known list of children was made up of John Collett (1873-1901), Charles Jeremiah Collett (1876-1899), Susan Mary Collett (born 1878), Henry Francis Collett (1881-1968), Elizabeth M Collett (1883-1967), George Edward Collett (1885-1974), and Helena Collett (1887-1969).  Two years after being widowed, John Collett married (2) Catherine (Kate) Swanick on 31st January 1892.  On that occasion he gave his age as 39, whereas in fact he had just celebrated his forty-second birthday.  He perhaps did that out of embarrassment because Kate was only 26 years old.  It is believed that, by that time in his life, he was living in or near Boston, Massachusetts, where he remained for the rest of his life

 

The USA census of 1910 for Boston, revealed that John Collett had arrived in America during 1875, although the 1930 US Federal Census shows he arrived in 1873, which is impossible.  By 1910, John and Catherine had given birth to four children, with only three still living, and they were Robert Collett aged 18, Fred Collett aged 14, and Ernest Collett who was eight years of age.  The same census return stated that Catherine had arrived in the USA during 1887.  John was a labourer working at a planing mill, while Catherine was a cook in a restaurant.  Their eldest son Robert was a messenger boy with the postal union.  The family rented their house and both John and Catherine were naturalised citizens.  Their marriage record confirmed that John’s parents were William and Mary and that it was his second marriage.  The 1920 census rather oddly states "does not live there", with similar comments next to most of the other names.  After a further decade, the US Federal Census for 1930, identified John Collett as widower who was living in Long Island Almshouse, Suffolk County in Massachusetts, his wife Catherine Collett having died on 17th July 1922 in Boston, where John Collett died on 29th October 1930

 

18P55 – John Collett was born in 1873, at Kilcullen, County Kildare, Ireland

18P56 – Charles Jeremiah Collett was born in 1876, in America

18P57 – Susan Mary Collett was born in 1878, in America

18P58 – Henry Francis Collett was born in 1881, in America

18P59 – Elizabeth M Collett was born in 1883, in America

18P60 – George Edward Collett was born in 1885, in America

18P61 – Helena Collett was born in 1887, in America

The following are the children of John Collett by his second wife Kate Swanick:

18P62 – Robert Collett was born in 1892, at Boston, Massachusetts

18P63 – Fred Collett was born in 1896, at Boston, Massachusetts

18P64 – Ernest Collett was born in 1902, at Boston, Massachusetts

 

Charles Collett [18O63] was born at Halesworth on 11th May 1853, another son of William and Mary Ann Collett, his birth recorded at Blything (Ref. 4a 643). and his third wife Mary Ann Dye.  When Charles was eight years of age, he and his father and his brother John (above) were staying at the Blything Union Workhouse in Bulcamp-with-Blythburgh in 1861, but on leaving school he became a blacksmith, which was his stated occupation in April 1871 when he was 17.  At that time in his life, he was living with his widowed father and brother Frederick Collett (below) at 112 New Court in Halesworth.  Three years after that census day, when Charles Collett was 21, he was married by banns to Elizabeth Alice Field, aged 20, at St Peter’s Church in Lowestoft on 29th March 1874, when the witnesses were George Drake and Ellen Ashby, with the event recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 995).  Both the bride and the groom were residing in Lowestoft, where Charles was a blacksmith and the son of gardener William Collett, while Elizabeth had no stated occupation and was the daughter of Frederick Field, a butcher.  Elizabeth Alice Field was born on 15th May 1855 at 200 Bridge Street in Ipswich, her mother being Priscilla Field nee Dodd.  Her birth was recorded at Ipswich (Ref. 4a 538) during the second quarter of 1855, but only as Elizabeth Field.  Although Elizabeth was recorded as 20 years of age on their wedding day, she was actually only eighteen years old, also confirmed by the census return in 1881.

 

Once they were married, Charles and Elizabeth moved to the north of England, with their first child born seven months later on 28th October 1874 at Edmondsley, Waldridge, near Chester-le-Street in County Durham.  As a result of Charles’ occupation as a journeyman blacksmith, the family was living in Sunderland at the time of the birth of the next two children, and at Kingston-upon-Hull when their fourth child was born.  By the time of the 1881 Census, the family was living at 4 Johnsons Place in the Holy Trinity district of Hull.  Charles Collett was confirmed as being 26 and born at Halesworth, while his wife Elizabeth was 24 and born at Ipswich.  Charles was still working as a blacksmith at that time, when the children were Florence M Collett who was six, Elizabeth H Collett who was four, and Charles F W Collett who was just one year old.  During that same year, while the family was still living in Hull, Charles’ third daughter Maria was born, but suffered a premature death before reaching full-age

 

Between 1881 and 1891 the family moved to Ipswich, to live at Vine Cottage on St Georges Street within the St Margaret district of the town.  Charles’ occupation on the occasion of the 1891 Census was that of a blacksmith and shopkeeper at the age of 37.  Elizabeth was 36, daughter Elizabeth was 14 and a mother’s helper, Charles was 12 and still attending school, as was Maria who was nine.  The couple’s eldest daughter Florence would have been 16, although no trace of her has been found.  Ten years later Charles Collett was 47, and Elizabeth Collett was 45, when they were still living in Ipswich in 1901, but at The Drift in Britannia Road in the St Margaret’s area of the town, from where Charles continued to work as a blacksmith, but with his own account.  The only child still living with the couple was Charles Collett junior aged 21 and a coach painter whose place of birth was said to be Sunderland rather than Hull.  Boarding with the family was another coach painter, Harry Smith who was 24 and from Royston in Hertfordshire

 

According to the next census in 1911, the couple was still living at The Drift in Britannia Road, Ipswich, by which time Charles Collett from Halesworth was 57 and a market gardener, while Elizabeth Collett from Ipswich was 56.  The census return confirmed that they had been married for thirty-six years and that during that time they had four children, three of whom were still alive and not living with them by then.  However, there were two other people staying at the house, and they were their granddaughter May Johnson who was ten years old and born at Chelmsford, the daughter of Florence May Collett.  The other was 22-year-old Walter Briggs from Kersey in Suffolk, who was described as a garden labourer and a servant, an employee of Charles Collett

 

18P65 – Florence Mary Collett was born in 1874 at Edmondsley

18P66 – Elizabeth Honor Collett was born in 1876 at Sunderland

18P67 – Charles Frederick W Collett was born in 1879 at Sunderland

18P68 – Maria Collett was born in 1881 at Kingston-upon-Hull

 

Frederick William Collett [18O64] was born on 2nd January 1856 at Barrack Yard in Halesworth, with his birth recorded at Blything (Ref. 4a 645), but only as Frederick Collett.  It was during the summer of the following year that Frederick William Collett was baptised at Halesworth on 4th August 1857, and confirmed as a son of William and Mary Collett.  At the age of five years, he was living with his mother and sisters Eliza and Fanny (above) at Barrack Yard on Mill Hill Street in Halesworth.  Ten years later at the age of 15 he had left school and was working in Halesworth as a baker, while still living with his widowed father and brother Charles (above) at 112 New Court.  The census of 1881 revealed that Frederick, then aged 25, was unmarried and was employed as a footman while living at the home of his married sister Fanny Frost (above) and her husband at New Street in Woodbridge.  It would appear that not long after April 1881 Frederick moved north, perhaps to Kingston-upon-Hull to be reunited with his sister Maria and brother Charles (both above).  It this is true, there is a possibility that while he was in Hull he somehow met or encountered the Mallinson family.  In 1881 Samuel Mallinson aged 30 was the store manager of J Shaws (Provisions) at 3 Livingstone Arcade on the Anlady Road in Hull.  Samuel John Mallinson had married Maria Alice Dibnah at York on 21st September 1875, when she was 19 and the daughter of Arthur Dibnah, their wedding recorded east of Hull, at Patrington (Ref. 9d 441).  Maria was six years younger than her husband and by whom she had had three children by 1881.  By April 1891 Samuel Mallinson was an inmate at the Borough Asylum in Hull, so had separated from his wife and family.  Maria and her children had left Hull and were living at Leeds with Frederick Collett

 

According to the 1891 Census, Frederick Collett from Suffolk was 38 and a waiter who, as head of the household, was living at 5 Clare Road in Leeds.  Also listed as living at the same address, but as boarders, were (Maria) Alice Mallinson aged 35 and a waitress from Patrington and her four children, the youngest of which was Frederick Mallinson aged one year, who was reputed to be the son of Frederick Collett.  By the turn of the century Frederick Collett from Halesworth was 42 and was still working as a waiter at a local inn on the day of the census in 1901.  As before, he was head of the household, but then at 1 Belmont Road in Harrogate, where his housekeeper was 44-year-old Maria Alice Mallinson from Patrington.  Also living at the same address was dressmaker Ellen E Mallinson who was 24, Henry Charles Mallinson who was 22, Samuel A Mallinson who was 17, Fred Mallinson who was 11, and Marjorie who was eleven months old, but with no surname, just ‘daughter’.  On the same day, Maria’s estranged husband Samuel Mallinson was 50 and an omnibus driver living at 19 Gibson Street in Sculcoates (Hull), but died six years later

 

It now transpires that the two younger children were indeed the children of Frederick William Collett, as revealed in the next census in 1911.  One unexplained curiosity is recorded in the Harrogate census of 1911 and that relates to the fact that Frederick William Collett aged 52, gave his place of birth as Woodbridge, rather than Halesworth some 20 miles away.  On that occasion he was residing at 3 Cheltenham Parade in Harrogate, a boarding house managed by him.  Living there with him was his wife Alice Maria Collett who was 54 and assisting with the business, and their two children Frederick William Collett who was 21, and Marjorie Collett who was 10.  The boarding house had six boarders on that day and they were William Henry Hartley who was 28, Arthur Andrew Dibnah who was 48 (a gentleman from Patrington and the brother Maria Alice Collett) with his wife Rose Anna Dibnah (47), Tamamoto (55) Chiyokicko with his wife Elizabeth Chiyokicko (40), plus Annie Long who was 21.  The death of Alice Maria Collett was recorded at Knaresborough register office (Ref. 9a 123) during the fourth quarter of 1921, when she was 65 years old.  Her Will was proved at London on 10th January 1922 to James Lomas Walker and James Wilkinson, solicitors, when her personal effects were valued at £1,088 15 Shillings and 4 Pence.  The document also confirmed that Maria Alice Collett, the wife of Frederick Collett who died at 3 Cheltenham Parade in Harrogate on 21st November 1921.  No record of the death of her husband has been found, although it is known that his son was still living in Harrogate in 1939

 

18P69 – Frederick William Collett was born in 1890 at Leeds

18P70 – Marjorie Collett was born in 1900 at Harrogate

 

William Collett [18O65] was born at Mettingham in 1822, where he was baptised on 14th April 1822, the eldest child of Henry Collett and Elizabeth Colls.  He had left the family home by June 1841, when he was 18 years old, although he was still living within the Wangford & Beccles registration district which included Mettingham.  He came from a farming background and was a farm labourer for most of his life.  It was five years later during the second quarter of 1846 that William Collett married Mary Ann Bradnum, their marriage recorded at Wangford (Ref. xiii 783).  Mary Ann was born on 26th March 1822 at Kirby Cane in Norfolk, midway between Bungay and Beccles, the daughter of gardener Joseph Bradnum and his wife Dinah.  According to the Mettingham census of 1851, William was 28 and an agricultural labourer, Mary was 29 and from Kirby Cane, and by then only two of their four surviving children were recorded with them, they being Matilda who was three, and Harriet who was not yet one year old.  Both girls had been born at Mettingham.  It is possible, following two child deaths in the family during the preceding years, the missing children Benjamin and Charlotte were elsewhere at that time, since both are known to have survived to adulthood.  Either side of the birth of their daughter Matilda, it is understood that a further two children were born to William and Mary Ann at Mettingham, neither of whom survived.  They were William who was born in 1847 and Emma who was born on 14th September 1848.  Emma only lived for a couple days and was buried at Mettingham on 17th September 1848, while William was buried there three months later on 24th December 1848

 

The Collett family was still living at Mettingham, in a dwelling on Great Road, at the time of the next census in 1861, when William, an agricultural labourer, and Mary Ann were both 39.  On that occasion they had eight children living there with them, although the eldest child was then Benjamin.  The eight children with William and Mary Ann in 1861 were Benjamin who was 11, Harriet who was 10, Joseph who was nine, William who was eight, Sarah who was six, Dinah who was five, George who was two, and James who was under one year old.  By that time, the couple’s eldest surviving daughter, Matilda, had left school and was a servant at Home Farm in Gorleston, the home of farmer James and Charlotte Boggis.  It may be of interest that the two eldest Boggis children had been born at Kirby Cane, and therefore it may have been through Matilda’s mother that her employment with the family had been arranged at Home Farm

 

The marriage of William and Mary Ann Collett produced a total of twelve surviving children, and all of them were born at Mettingham, where the births were also registered.  Sometime after their family was complete William and Mary Ann left Mettingham and moved north towards Great Yarmouth where they settled down to live at Burgh Castle, overlooking Breydon Water.  The reason for the move was a new job opportunity for William, as a labourer at the cement works, which also came with accommodation provided by his employer as confirmed in the census of 1871 when the family was residing at ‘the cement works’ in Burgh Castle.  On that occasion the family comprised William aged 48, Mary Ann aged 49, and their children William, aged 17, Dinah, aged 13, George, aged 12, James, aged 10, Jemima, who was eight, Cornelius, who was seven, and Henry who was five years.  Their eldest son Benjamin had already left the family home by that time, as had daughters Harriet and Sarah who were living and working in Yarmouth, and son Joseph who was living within the same area as his family.  Sometime before April in 1871 William’s and Mary Ann’s eldest surviving child, their daughter Matilda, had left Home Farm at Gorleston to seek work in London.  And it was there, in Islington, that she was recorded as living and working in the census of 1871, at the age of 23.  It was there also that later she secured work for two of her sisters, with all three of them working in London in 1881

 

According to the 1881 Census, only youngest son Henry aged 15 was still living with his parents at 14 Butt Way in Burgh Castle.  William was confirmed as being 58 and born at Mettingham, at a time in his life when he had returned to working as a farm labourer.  Mary Ann was also 58 and her place of birth was confirmed as Kirby Cane.  Farm labourer William and his wife Mary Ann were still living in Burgh Castle ten years later in 1891 when they were both 69.  Their address on that occasion was Porter’s Lane, and living there with them was their unmarried daughter Matilda, and their grandson George who was nine and attending school.  And it was there also that the couple was still living, after a further ten years in March 1901, when they were both 79.  During the following year Mary Ann Collett, aged 80, died at Burgh Castle and her death was recorded at Mutford R D (Ref. 4a 621) during the fourth quarter of 1902, and was buried there on 29th October.  William Collett was a widower for less than two years, when he died in 1904 and his death was also recorded at the Mutford Rural District register office (Ref. 4a 703) during the third quarter of that year at the age of 82.  It was also at Burgh Castle that he was buried with his wife on 12th September 1904

 

18P71 – William Collett was born in 1846 at Mettingham

18P72 – Maud Matilda Collett was born in 1848 at Mettingham

18P73 – Emma Collett was born in 1848 at Mettingham

18P74 – Charlotte Collett was born in 1849 at Mettingham

18P75 – Benjamin Collett was born in 1850 at Mettingham

18P76 – Harriet Collett was born in 1851 at Mettingham

18P77 – Joseph Collett was born in 1852 at Mettingham

18P78 – William Collett was born in 1854 at Mettingham

18P79 – Sarah Collett was born in 1855 at Mettingham

18P80 – Henry Collett was born in 1856 at Mettingham

18P81 – Dinah Collett was born in 1857 at Mettingham

18P82 – George Collett was born in 1858 at Mettingham

18P83 – James Collett was born in 1860 at Mettingham

18P84 – Jemima Collett was born in 1862 at Mettingham

18P85 – Cornelius Bradnum Collett was born in 1864 at Mettingham

18P86 – Henry Collett was born in 1865 at Mettingham

 

Henry Collett [18O66] was born at Mettingham on 6th March 1823 and was baptised there seventeen days later on 23rd March 1823, the second son of Henry and Elizabeth Collett.  He was a farm labourer at Mettingham for much of his life, and it was there that Henry Collett married (1) Maria Myall on 14th August 1842.  Maria was born on 20th March 1823 and was baptised at Metfield on 20th April 1923, the daughter of William and Anne Myall.  The marriage produced six known children for the couple while they were living at Mettingham, although only three survived before Maria died in February 1854.  Seven years earlier, and after Henry and Maria had been married for five years, Henry was caught red-handed stealing a pocket knife, for which he was sentenced to serve one month’s hard-labour in 1847.  In 1851 Henry and Maria were living at Low Road in Mettingham with their three surviving children, having already suffered the death of their second daughter.  Henry and Maria were both 28 and born at Mettingham, and their three children were Mary Ann (Marianne) Collett who was eight and born at Shipmeadow, Ellen who was four, and James who was one year old, both of them born at Mettingham.  Staying with the Collett family was Ellen Myall from Mettingham who was 21 and a silk winder, the younger sister of Henry’s wife.  Henry was an agricultural labourer, while Maria was pregnant with the couple’s fifth child on the day of the census and, after two months, their penultimate child was born, but sadly he did not survive, nor did their last child who was born three years later

 

Just over six months after the death of their last children, Henry’s younger unmarried sister, Susan Collett (below), was expecting the birth of a base-born child which Henry and Maria agreed to take into their family as their own.  Tragically, Maria did not live long enough to see her ‘adopted’ daughter baptised at Mettingham in April 1854, as she passed away two months before the event.  Maria Collett was buried at Mettingham on 7th February 1854, at the age of 30, her death recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 464).  Four months after the death of his wife, Henry Collett married (2) Catherine Ellis at Mettingham on 5th June 1854, their wedding recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 996).  Catherine was the former wife and widow of Richard Ellis, with whom she had had five children.  Catherine was many years older than Henry, although there was a wide variation in their ages in the subsequent census returns.  At the time of her death, it was revealed that she was born at Mettingham in 1809 as Catherine Brighton – see note below

 

By the time of the next census in 1861, the family living at Great Road in Mettingham comprised Henry Collett who was 39 and an agricultural labourer of Mettingham, his new wife Catherine Collett also of Mettingham who was 51, and Henry’s two children from his first marriage, Ellen who was recorded in error as Eleanor Collett who was 15, and James Collett who was 12, who was already working alongside his father.  Living with the family by then, was their granddaughter Emma Collett who was only five months old and born at Shipmeadow, south-east of Mettingham, the base-born child of Henry’s eldest daughter Mary Ann Collett.  Also living with the family were presumably two of Catherine’s children from her first marriage, and they were referred to as daughters-in-law, rather than stepdaughters, Jane Collett who was 17 and Emma Collett who was 15, both born at Mettingham and both working alongside Ellen Collett as silk weavers.  Ten years later, in the Mettingham census of 1871, Henry was 47 and Catherine was 60.  On that occasion Henry and Catherine’s children were no longer living with the couple

 

The couple was still residing in Mettingham by 1881, when they were living in a dwelling simply referred to as being on the High Road.  Henry was 56 and his wife Catherine was 70.  Less than thirty months after that census day, Henry Collett died at Mettingham, his death recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 462), after which he was buried at Mettingham on 16th August 1883 aged 63.  Catherine then had nearly eight years as a widow, during which time she left Mettingham, when she moved into the Union Workhouse in Shipmeadow, where she was confirmed to be an inmate and a widow aged 84 (sic) on the day of the census in 1891.  One months later she died there, when Catherine Collett of Shipmeadow, and late of Mettingham, was buried at Mettingham on 3rd May 1891, when she was 83, and recorded as the daughter of John Brighton.  It may be of interest that, Robert Collett [18O90] married Lydia Ann Brighton who was born in 1838, the daughter of Robert and Mary Brighton

 

18P87 – Mary Ann Collett was born in 1843 at Shipmeadow

18P88 – Maria Collett was born in 1844 at Mettingham

18P89 – Ellen Collett was born in 1846 at Mettingham

18P90 – James Collett was born in 1849 at Mettingham

18P91 – Walter Collett was born in 1851 at Mettingham

18P92 – George Collett was born in 1853 at Mettingham

 

Maria Elizabeth Collett [18O67] was born at Mettingham on 25th August 1825, and was baptised there on 4th September 1825, the eldest daughter of Henry Collett and Elizabeth Colls.  It would appear that an illness hit the family in 1834, because in December that year Maria Elizabeth, and her sister Rachel (below), both died while only nine and seven years old respectively.  Maria Elizabeth Collett was buried at Mettingham on 18th December 1834, just thirteen days after her younger sister

 

Samuel John Collett [18O68] was born at Mettingham on 23rd September 1826 where he was baptised on 15th October 1826, the son of Henry and Elizabeth Collett.  Tragically, he only survived for just over three months when he died at Mettingham, where he was buried on 3rd January 1827, aged 14 weeks

 

Rachel Collett [18O69] was born at Mettingham on 4th October 1827, where she was baptised on 4th November 1827, the second daughter and the fifth of the nine children of Henry and Elizabeth Collett.  Tragically, she died when she was seven years of age and was buried at Mettingham on 5th December 1834, just less than two weeks before her sister Maria Elizabeth Collett (above) also passed away

 

Mary Ann Collett [18O70] was born at Mettingham on 22nd February 1828, and it was there also that she was baptised on 28th March 1828, the daughter of Henry and Elizabeth Collett.  At the time of the census in 1841, Mary Collett was listed as being 12 years old, while living with her parents at their Mettingham home.  It was over eight years later, on 12th October 1849, that Mary Ann Collett married James Porter at Weybread, just south of Harleston, after the reading of banns.  Their wedding was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xii 1141).  James was baptised at Ellough near Beccles on 21st October 1821, the son of John and Charlotte Porter.  Once married, Mary Ann and James initially settled in the village of Weybread, where the first of their nine children was born in 1850.  However, by the end of March in 1851, James and Mary Ann, together with their daughter Ann Elizabeth, were living at Hoxne near Diss, before they moved to Ilketshall St Andrew, where the couple’s next six children were born.  By 1861 the family living at Tooks Common in Ilketshall St Andrew comprised, agricultural labourer James Porter who was 38, his wife Mary Ann of Mettingham who was 31, together with five of their children, they being Ann, John, Eliza, Emma, and William

 

Around 1865 the family moved again, when they travelled the two miles to Ringsfield to the west of Beccles, and it was there that Mary Ann’s last two children were born.  Just after the birth of the last child, the family moved once more, that time to 16 High Road in Worlingham near Beccles, where they were living at the time of the census of 1871, when James was 49 and Marian was 42.  The census that year listed the children as William who was 10 (born 1860), Alice who was eight, (born 1862), Dinah who was six (born 1864), Harry who was four (born 1866), and George who was two years old (1868-1872) who suffered an infant death during the following year.  The older children had already left the family home by then, and they were Anna (born 1850), John (born 1852), Eliza (born 1855), and Emma (born 1857).  By 1881 James Porter was 59 and he was living with his wife and their two youngest surviving sons at 7 Bull’s Green in the village of Toft Monks in Norfolk, just north of Beccles.  Mary Ann was 52, and both of their sons, William aged 20 and Harry at 14, were employed as agricultural labourers, like their father

 

The couple was still living at 7 Bull’s Green in Toft Monks in 1891 with their son Harry, when James was still employed as an agricultural labourer.  Mary Ann Porter passed away during the last three months of 1893, while the couple was still at Toft Monk, her death being registered at Loddon (Ref. 4b 150) at the age of 65.  And it was at Toft Monks that Mary Ann was buried on 21st December 1893.  James Porter continued to live there following the death of his wife, and it was there also that he died on 11th May 1900 and was buried at Toft Monks on 17th May 1900 when he was 78.  His death was also recorded at Loddon register office (Ref. 4b 143).  His Will was proved at Norwich on 8th June 1900 to William Maddle, a farmer, for his personal effects estimated to be worth £137 11 Shillings and 11 Pence.  Of the couple’s nine children, two are of particular interest since they both married their Collett cousins, and they are the couple’s fourth child Emma Porter, and their eighth child Harry Porter, both as listed below.  The third child listed below is also of interest, but for a different reason.  William Charles porter was the great grandfather of Robert Porter who, in September 2010, generously provided a great deal of new information about this particular Collett family, and that shown at the start of Part 19

 

18P93 – Emma Porter was born in 1857 at Ilketshall St Andrew

18P94 – William Charles Porter was born in 1860 at Ilketshall St Andrew

18P95 – Harry Porter was born in 1867 at Ringsfield

 

Susan Collett [18O71] was born at Mettingham on 6th July 1830, and was baptised there on 22nd August 1830, the daughter of Henry and Elizabeth Collett.  She was 10 years old in the Mettingham census of 1841 when she was living there with her family.  Ten years later in 1851 Susan was still living with her parents when she was 20, but three years later she gave birth to a base-born daughter, who was named in honour of her older sister Maria Elizabeth (above) who had died when Susan was only four years old.  Just over three years later at Mettingham, on 3rd October 1857, Susan Collett married Edward Mayes from Bungay, the son of labourer Edward Mayes.  Around that time in her life, Susan was employed as a silk winder, while the marriage resulted in the birth of a number of children for the couple.  By 1861 the Mayes family was residing at Low Road in Mettingham, when Edward Mayes was 42 and an agricultural, his wife Susan Mayes was 31 and a silk winder, her daughter Maria E Mayes was seven – formerly Maria Elizabeth Collett, Arthur Mayes was two years of age, and Eliza Mayes was only nine months old.  Completing the family group was Mary Ann Collett aged 11 years and from Shipmeadow, who had already finished her schooling and was working as another silk winder.  Who she was, has still to be determined.  Susan was made a widow during the next decade, as confirmed by the completed census return for 1871.  Having lost her husband Susan had fallen on hard time and, with no occupation and five children to look after, she was an inmate at the Shipmeadow Union Workhouse, where her youngest child had been born.  That fact possibly indicates Edward Mayes died around 1869/70.  Susan Mayes was 40 and a widow, Arthur Mayes was 12, Eliza Mayes was 10, Emma Mayes was eight, Minnie Mayes was six, and William Edgar Mayes was three months old

 

The family eventually managed to get away from the Union Workhouse in Shipmeadow, with them living at Turnpike Lane in Bungay by 1881.  Susan Mayes was 50, her occupation being that of a monthly nurse, when still living with her, were four of her children.  Arthur Mayes was an iron moulder at 22, Emma Mayes was 18 and a printer’s gatherer, Marian E Mayes was 16 and a silk winder, and William E Mayes was 10 years old and attending school.  After a further ten years, Susan was again residing in Bungay but at Gas House Lane, where she was 60 and a sick nurse.  The only member of her family still living with her, was her youngest child William Edgar Mayes who was 20 and a labourer.  She was still working as a monthly nurse in 1901 at the age of 70 at Popson Street in Bungay, while in 1911, she was an old age pensioner of 80 when she was living at Graves Lane in Bungay, the home of her married daughter Eliza Raven, aged 50, who had been married to Samuel Raven for 31 years, during which time she had given birth to two children, with only one of them still alive.  Within the next few months the death of Susan Mayes was recorded at Wangford register office (Ref. 4a 525) during the second quarter of 1911, at the age of 80

 

18P96 – Maria Elizabeth Collett was born in 1854 at Mettingham

 

Robert Collett [18O72] was born at Mettingham on 5th December 1831 and it was there also that he was baptised on 1st January 1832, the son of Henry and Elizabeth Collett.  Robert was nine years old, and 19 years old, in the two censuses carried out at Mettingham in 1841 and 1851.  On both occasions he was living there with his parents, and for the latter he was working as an agricultural labourer.  It was at Mettingham on 24th May 1857 that Robert married (1) Eliza Barber who was born in 1836 at St Michael South Elham, the daughter of Robert and Mary Ann Barber.  Their wedding was recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 1069).  By the time of the 1861 Census, the marriage had produced just one child for Robert and Eliza.  The census record for Mettingham revealed that Robert was 29 and an agricultural labourer, and that Eliza was 24, and that they were living in Castle Road.  Their son Henry, who was born at Mettingham, was one year old and was later referred to as Harry Collett in the census of 1871, and subsequent records

 

A second child for the couple was born at Mettingham eight years after their first, but tragically Eliza died at Mettingham shortly after on 16th December 1868, and was buried at Mettingham on 20th December 1868 aged just 32.  The death of Eliza Collett was recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4a 156).  It is therefore conceivable, although not proved, that Robert and Eliza may have had other children between 1859 and 1867 who did not survive.  An obituary was printed in the East Suffolk Gazette which said “COLLETT - On the 16th December, at Mettingham, greatly lamented, aged 32, Eliza, the wife of Mr Robert Collett, of Mettingham”.  It was nine months after the death of his wife that Robert married (2) Ellen Beckett who was many years younger, having been born at nearby Bungay, where she was baptised at St Mary’s Church on 23rd August 1846.  They were married by banns at the Parish Church of St Mary the Virgin in the village of Denton, to the west of Bungay, on 14th September 1869.  Robert was a widower aged 36 who was an inn keeper of Mettingham, and the son of Henry Collett a labourer, who signed the register with the mark of a cross.  Ellen signed the register in her own hand, was 24 and a spinster of Earsham, the daughter of William Beckett a publican. The record of that second marriage for Robert was recorded at Depwade (Ref. 4b 382).  Ellen Beckett was the daughter of William Beckett and his wife Susannah (Susan) Godbold and, in 1871 at Halesworth, Maria Godbold from Beccles was 18 and the niece of cabinet market George Collett from Newington in Surrey, who was working with her uncle as a cabinet maker’s assistant.  She had been baptised at Beccles on 20th June 1852, the youngest daughter of William and Mary Ann Godbold, who were living at Blyburgate in Beccles in 1861

 

Once married, the couple left Mettingham and moved the one mile across the county boundary to the village of Broome in Norfolk, just a short distance from Bungay, where Robert’s and Ellen’s first three children were born.  The move to Broome was the result of Robert taking over the beer house in Broome.  According to the 1871 Census, Robert Collett from Mettingham was 38 and a beer seller, whose wife was Ellen Collett from Bungay who was 25.  At that time, they were listed as living at the Beer House in Broome within the Loddon registration district with their four children, Harry who was 11, Alice who was three, Clara who was two, and new arrival Elizabeth who was not yet one year old.  A new job opportunity arose in 1872 which resulted in another family move, on that occasion to the adjoining village of Ditchingham, just to the north of Bungay, where Robert took over the running of the Black Horse Inn.  It was at Ditchingham that they were living when their next four children were born.  And the family was still there in the spring of 1881.  The census recorded that Robert was 47 and of Mettingham and was working as a beer retailer at the Black Horse Inn on the Loddon Road in Ditchingham

 

His wife was Ellen, aged 36 from Bungay, and their eight children were Alice who was 13, Clara who was 12, Elizabeth who was 10, Horace who was nine, Florence who was eight, Kate who was seven, Robert who was six, and daughter Jessie who was three years old.  The two oldest girls were listed as silk winders, although Clara was also listed as still being at school so was probably a part-time silk winder.  Robert and Ellen added to their family in the 1880s with two more children, the first of which was born at Ditchingham, while the later arrival was born after the family had moved back to Broome, where Robert resumed work as an agricultural labourer.  And it was from that time onwards that the family lived at Yarmouth Road in Broome.  According to the census of 1891 the family was recorded as Robert of Mettingham aged 57, an agricultural labourer, his wife Ellen (the first time in her life that she was recorded as Eleanor Collett) from Bungay was 45, while the five children still living with them were Ellen E Collett who was 20 and Robert Collett who was 16, Jessie Collett who was 13, Arthur Collett who was seven and Sidney W Collett who was two years of age.  All of the children were simply recorded as having been in Norfolk.  On that day, Robert and Ellen’s daughter Florence had already left the family home, and was preparing for her marriage to Henry Bird, with whom she had three children before 1901.  Tragically, just over two years after the day of the census in 1891, Robert and Ellen’s daughter Ellen Elizabeth Collett died at Broome on 2nd August 1893 at the age of 23.  Four years later, Robert and Ellen were still living in Broome, when Robert Collett died at Yarmouth Road near the end of September 1897, at the age of 64, and was buried at Broome on 1st October 1897.  His death was recorded at Loddon register office (Ref. 4b 149)

 

By the time of the census in 1901, Ellen Collett was widow at the age of 54.  At that time, all of her children, with the exception of the two youngest, had left the family home.  The census for Broome listed the family as Ellen Collett from Bungay 56, and her sons Arthur Collett 17 and from Ditchingham, and Sidney who was 12 and from Broome.  Curiously her sons’ ages did not correspond with their ages in 1891.  The family also had living with them at that time, Ellen’s granddaughter Ellen Bird aged three years, who was also born at Broome and who was the youngest of the three children of Ellen’s daughter Florence Collett and her husband Henry Bird.  Rather oddly though, in 1901 Florence Bird of Broome was aged 29 and was recorded as living in the London Borough of West Ham with her ‘brother-in-law’ George Bird of Ditchingham aged 31 who was a carpenter’s labourer.  Ten years later Florence and George Bird had five children and were living in Lambeth.  By April 1911, Ellen Collett of Bungay was 64 and was no longer living in Broome, but instead, was living in the Ipswich area of Suffolk with her three unmarried sons and a grandson.  They were Horace Collett, Arthur Collett, Sidney Collett, and Harold Elden who was 16 and born at Broome, the son of Clara Elizabeth Elden, nee Collett, her eldest child who already had a large family and was expecting the birth of her last child.  The census return also stated that Ellen had given birth to ten children, only four of whom were still alive in 1911.  It was many years later, that the death of Eleanor Collett was recorded at Ipswich register office (Ref. 4a 1170) during the last three months of 1933, when she was 87 years old

 

18P97 – Albert Collett was born in 1857 at Mettingham

18P98 – Henry Collett was born in 1859 at Mettingham

18P99 – Alice Collett was born in 1867 at Mettingham

The children of Robert Collett and his second wife Ellen Beckett:

18P100 – Clara Elizabeth Collett was born in 1869 at Broome, Norfolk

18P101 – Ellen Elizabeth Collett was born in 1870 at Broome, Norfolk

18P102 – Horace Collett was born in 1871 at Broome, Norfolk

18P103 – Florence Collett was born in 1873 at Ditchingham, Norfolk

18P104 – Kate Collett was born in 1874 at Ditchingham, Norfolk

18P105 – Robert Collett was born in 1876 at Ditchingham, Norfolk

18P106 – Jessie L Collett was born in 1877 at Ditchingham, Norfolk

18P107 – Arthur Collett was born in 1883 at Ditchingham, Norfolk

18P108 – Sidney W Collett was born in 1888 at Broome, Norfolk

 

Christopher Collett [18O73] was born at Mettingham in 1836 and was baptised there on 25th February 1836, the son of Henry and Elizabeth Collett.  It was at Mettingham where his parents are known to have lived for part of their life together and where Christopher was recorded as being 15 in 1851.  He married Lucy Sones at Chediston, near Halesworth on 16th October 1858, where she had been baptised on 6th August 1837, the daughter of labourer Thomas Sones and his wife Myra.  The wedding of Christopher Collett and Lucy Sones was recorded at Blything (Ref. 4a 1513), the birth of Lucy Sones recorded at Blything (Ref. xiii 273) during the third quarter 1837.  It was during the year following their wedding day that Lucy presented Christopher with their first child, who was born at Mettingham.  By the time of the census in 1861, the family of three was living by The Green in Chediston, where Christopher Collett, aged 25, was working as an agricultural labourer, Lucy Collett was 23, and their son George Collett was one year old.  Curiously, the three of them were lodgers at the home of Thomas and Mary Sones, although Lucy was not described as their daughter, nor Christopher and their son-in-law.  During the following year the couple’s second child was born while the family was still living at Chediston, before the family made a more permanent move to Wrentham, four miles north of Southwold

 

Four of Christopher’s and Lucy’s remaining five children were all born while the family was living at Wrentham.  According to the census in 1871, the family was living at Cuckholds Green in Wrentham and comprised Christopher Collett, aged 34 and from Mettingham, who was an agricultural labourer, his wife Lucy Collett, who was 33 and from Chediston, and with them were their five children.  The three oldest children, who were all attending the village school, were George Collett, aged 11 who was born at Mettingham, Ann L Collett, who was nine and born at Chediston, and Frederick C Collett, who was four and born at Wrentham.  The two younger Wrentham born children were Walter H Collett who was two, and Alfred Collett who was one year old.  One more child was born to the Christopher and Lucy while they were still living at Wrentham, but shortly after, around 1873, a major family move took place which resulted in them leaving Suffolk and heading north to Lancashire.  It was at Winton, in Eccles, where Christopher and Lucy set up their new home, and it was there also that their final child was born in 1874.  Less than two years later the first of three tragedies hit the family with the death of their son Walter Harry, whose death was reported to the registrar at Barton-upon-Irwell, which today is a district within the town on Eccles

 

It was in the next census in 1881 that the family was confirmed as living at 33 King Street in Barton-upon-Irwell.  Christopher Collett from Mettingham was 44 and was working as a farm labourer.  Lucy Collett from Chediston was 42, and the children still living in the family home with them were Catherine Collett 19 of Chediston, Fred C Collett 14, Alfred Collett 11, Henry Collett who was eight, and Walter Collett who was six years old.  The youngest son was confirmed as having been born at Winton in Lancashire, but the place of birth of his three older brothers was incorrectly recorded as Rendham in Suffolk, rather than Wrentham.  It was at the end of the following year that Christopher Collett, aged 44, died at Barton-upon-Irwell, his death being recorded at Barton register office (Ref. 8c 381) during the last quarter of 1882.  At some time in his life, in addition to being an agricultural labourer, Christopher also worked as a coachman.  The third tragedy to strike the family was the likely death of son Alfred, for whom there is no record after 1881.  Nearly six years after the death of her husband, the widow Lucy Collett married Samuel Bower, 54-year-old son of William Bower, at Christ Church in Patricroft, Lancashire on 4th August 1888, the event recorded at Barton-upon-Irwell (Ref. 8c 840).  Samuel was a general labourer and was born at Wilmslow in Cheshire in 1834.  By the time of the census in 1891, Samuel, aged 56, and Lucy, aged 52, were residing at 9 Elizabeth Street in Barton-upon-Irwell, with just Lucy’s youngest son William Collett, aged 16, still living with her, while her two unmarried sons, Christopher (Frederick) and Henry, were living nearby Barton-upon-Irwell

 

It was a similar situation in 1901 except that by Samuel and Lucy were listed as living at 23 Ellesmere Street in Eccles, where general labourer Samuel Bower from Wilmslow was 66, and his wife was Lucy Bower from Chediston in Suffolk, who was 61.  Lucy Bower, formerly Lucy Collett nee Sones, died ten years later during the first three months of 1911, with her death recorded at Barton-upon-Irwell register office (Ref. 8c 413), when she was 72.  Just after she passed away, Samuel was recorded in the census of 1911 living at 5 Byron Street in Patricroft, the home of William Collett and his wife Eda, his late wife’s youngest son Walter William Collett

 

18P109 – George Collett was born in 1859 at Mettingham

18P110 – Ann Catherine Collett was born in 1862 at Chediston

18P111 – Frederick Christopher Collett was born in 1866 at Wrentham

18P112 – Walter Henry Collett was born in 1869 at Wrentham

18P113 – Alfred Collett was born in 1870 at Wrentham

18P114 – Henry Collett was born in 1872 at Wrentham

18P115 – Walter William Collett was born in 1874 at Winton, Eccles

 

Charles Collett [18O74] was born at Earsham, near Bungay, around six to seven months after his parents were married there.  He was baptised at Earsham on 8th June 1827, the only known son of Samuel Collett and his wife Marianne Read.  In 1841, when he was 13, Charles was still living with his parents at Earsham, although he had left the family home there by 1851, when he was 22 and living and working as a domestic groom, just six miles away at Loddon, at the home of elderly couple George and Mart Kett.  Two years after that Charles Collett aged 24 married Ellen Rix aged 26 at All Saint’s Church in Norwich (Ref. 4b 195) on 9th May 1853.  Charles was a servant and the son of labourer Samuel Collett, Ellen was the daughter of George Rix, another labourer, while the witnesses were James and Sarah Dickenson.  Ellen was born on 8th August and was baptised at Brooke in Norfolk on 6th September, the daughter of farmer and carter George Rix and Maria Harvey

 

Their first child was born at Brooke, near Loddon, with further children added to the family over the following years, the second and third being born at Hampstead in London, the next being born after the family had returned to Brooke, with the last two being born following the family’s move to Norwich.  Sadly, either during, or not long after the birth of their last child, Ellen died around 1868 or 1869.  At the time of the census in 1861 Charles and Ellen and their young family were living in Hampstead, where Charles, aged 32 and from Earsham, was employed as a servant.  Living near to where Charles was working was Ellen Collett, who was 33, with her three children, Alfred A A Collett who was six, Charles G Collett who was three, and Henry C Collett who was under one year old.  By the time of the next census in 1871, Charles Collett from Earsham was 42 and was living with his six children in the Parish of St Margaret in the West Wymer district of Norwich.  His children were recorded as Alfred Collett, aged 17 from Brooke, Charles Collett, aged 14 from London, Henry Collett, aged 10 also from London, Herbert Collett who was seven and born at Brooke, George Collett who was four and Eliza Collett who was two, both of them born in Norwich

 

What happen to four of the children after 1871 is not known at this time but, in 1881, Charles and two of his sons were agricultural labourers, living as lodgers at the Jolly Butchers Inn on Ber Street in Norwich.  Charles Collett senior was 52 and from Earsham, Charles junior was 21, while Herbert was 16 and from Hampstead (sic).  So far, Charles’ son Henry has not been located after 1871, nor has a record of his birth been located in London.  It is also established that Charles Collett senior died at the end of 1883, his death recorded at Norwich (Ref. 4b 91) during the first three months of that year when he was 55 years of age.  It was in the grounds of the Church of St Andrew in Eaton that Charles Collett was buried on 7th January 1884.  He was followed a year later by his fourth son, Herbert who died in Norwich during 1885.  That leaves unanswered questions regarding Charles’ two youngest children, George and Eliza, who were placed with other families sometime after 1871, whilst his two eldest sons were married during the 1880s

 

18P116 – Alfred Ernest Collett was born in 1854 at Brooke, near Loddon

18P117 – Charles George Collett was born in 1858 at Hampstead, London

18P118 – Henry C Collett was born in 1860 at Hampstead, London

18P119 – Herbert Albert Collett was born in 1863 at Brooke, near Loddon

18P120 – George Collett was born in 1866 at Norwich

18P121 – Eliza Collett was born in 1868 at Norwich

 

Benjamin Anthony Collett [18O75] may have been born at Fressingfield, but was baptised at nearby Cratfield.  He was born on 31st August 1824, just six months after his parents were married at Fressingfield, and was baptised at Cratfield on 22nd September 1824, less than a month after he was born.  He was the eldest son of Benjamin Collett and Bertha Philpot, but sadly around the time he was ten years old his mother died, possibly during the birth of his brother Isaac (below).  He was nearly 16 years old when his father remarried and by the time of the first national census at Fressingfield in June 1841 Benjamin was 17.  Just over two years later Benjamin married Sarah Ann Spalding at Fressingfield on 26th December 1843.  Sarah Ann Spalding was born at Earl Soham in 1819, where she was baptised on 14th July 1819, the daughter of James Spalding and Hannah Rose, making her four years older than Benjamin.  One year before they were married Sarah gave birth to a base-born child Sarah Ann Spalding who was born at Fressingfield, where she was baptised on 23rd December 1842, the child of Sarah Ann Spalding.  Young Sarah may, or may not, have been fathered by Benjamin Collett, but once married she too adopted the Collett name.  During the remaining years of that decade the couple had a further six children, although only two of them survived and were living with Benjamin and Sarah at Fressingfield by the time of the census in 1851

 

The census return that year listed the family living in New Street in Fressingfield as sawyer Benjamin Collett, who was 28, his wife Sarah Ann Collett, who was 31 and from Earl Soham, their daughter Sarah A Collett, who was eight, and their son Harry Collett who was not yet one year old, both of them born at Fressingfield.  Also living nearby in New Street was Benjamin’s father Benjamin Collett with his second wife Sarah Collett nee Vincent.  During the 1850s Sarah presented Benjamin with three more children as confirmed in the Fressingfield census of 1861.  The census return listed Benjamin Collett, aged 37, and Sarah Collett, aged 40, with their three most recent children, Jane who was seven, Keziah who was four, and Anthony who was two years old.  All of them having been born at Fressingfield.  Their eldest daughter Sarah would have been eighteen years old and may have already been married to William Brundish by that time.  The photograph below, taken on glass and damaged over time, shows the ‘1861 family’ of Keziah, Benjamin, Sarah holding Anthony, and Jane, just prior to Benjamin’s death.  The group is standing outside a house that is today the Fox & Goose public house in Fressingfield

 

It was during December 1861 that Sarah’s daughter Keziah died and, just nine months after losing her daughter, Sarah was made a widow by the death of her husband.  It was in the first week of September that Benjamin Anthony Collett died at Fressingfield, where he was buried on 6th September 1862.  His passing was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 303). The cause of death was given as phthisis which was a wasting disease usually contracted by those working with cattle or leather and commonly referred to as the cobbler’s illness.  It was the same form of tuberculosis that also killed Benjamin’s father at Fressingfield earlier that same year.  It is possible that Benjamin was buried in a family grave with his father at St Peter’s & St Paul’s Church in Fressingfield.  It was also in June 1862 that Sarah Ann Collett nee Spalding produced the last of her children, who was only three months old when her father passed away.  Nine years later Sarah, aged 52, was a widow still living at Fressingfield with just two of her children.  They were Jane who was 19 and Anthony who was 12

 

What happened to the family during the next decade is not known for sure, but around 1875 Sarah left Fressingfield, when she moved to Kent to be with her daughter Sarah Ann Collett (formerly Spalding) who was the wife of William Brundish of Fressingfield by then.  Sarah Ann Collett and William Brundish were married around 1863 and their first five children had been born while they were still in Suffolk, while two further children were born after the family had moved to Erith in Kent.  According to the 1881 Census Sarah Collett of Fressingfield, aged 62, was a washerwoman and mother-in-law to head of the household William Brundish, a general labourer who was 39.  At that time, he and his wife and family were living at 25 Bottle Road in Erith.  Eight years after that census day, the death of Sarah Collett was recorded at Dartford in Kent (Ref. 2a 252) during the last three months of 1889, when she was 69 years old.  She was subsequently buried at Erith on 12th November 1889, the burial record stated she had been living at Belvedere in Erith

 

18P122 – Sarah Ann Collett (formerly Spalding) was born in 1842 at Fressingfield

18P123 – Samuel Collett was born in 1844 at Fressingfield

18P124 – Jane Collett was born in 1845 at Fressingfield

18P125 – Sam Collett was born in 1846 at Fressingfield

18P126 – Matilda Collett was born in 1847 at Fressingfield

18P127 – Edward Collett was born in 1849 at Fressingfield

18P128 – Harry James Collett was born in 1850 at Fressingfield

18P129 – Jane Collett was born in 1852 at Fressingfield

18P130 – Keziah Collett was born in 1856 at Fressingfield

18P131 – Anthony Harry Collett was born in 1858 at Fressingfield

18P132 – William Collett was born in 186244 at Fressingfield

 

William Collett [18O76] was born at Fressingfield in 1826, where he was baptised on 12th October 1826, the second son of Benjamin and Bertha Collett.  At the time of the census in 1841 William was 15 and was still living with his family at Fressingfield, by which time his father Benjamin was then married to Sarah, following the death of William’s mother in 1834.  William was a soldier in the army and it is established that he married Ann Vernon from Ravenglass in Cumberland around 1847, their wedding recorded at Whitehaven (Ref. xxv 202), following which the couple lived in Ireland for the first three years of their life.  In the spring of 1851, William Collett, aged 24, was a private with the 4th Dragoon Guards based at Brecon Barracks.  His family was billeted at Brecon St Mary, where his wife Ann, aged 21, was living with the couple’s first two children, Henry Collett who was two, and Bethiah Collett who was one year old

 

Ann may have been expecting the couple’s third child on the day of the census in 1851 and, by the time it was born, the family was living at Dartmoor in Devon.  Two further children were added to the family during the following six years, the first born at Fressingfield and the last at Whitehaven.  And it was at Scotch Street in St Bees near Whitehaven that the family was living at the time of the census in 1861.  By that time William Collett from Fressingfield had retired from the army, when he was described as an outdoor Chelsea Pensioner at the age of 34.  His wife Ann was 31 and from Ravenglass, and completing the family were their five children and Ann’s elderly mother Ann Vernon who was 64.  The five children were Henry Collett who was 12, Bethia Ann Collett who was 10, both born in Ireland, John Collett who was nine and born at Dartmoor, William Collett who was five and born at Fressingfield, and Elizabeth Collett who was three years old and had been born at Whitehaven.  It was sometime during the next decade that William Collett died, perhaps from an injury sustained while he was in the guards.  According to the census return for 1871 his widow and four of his five children were living at 103 Scotch Street, a lodging house in St Bees.  Ann Collett, at 41 was a housekeeper, and the children with her on that occasion were, Bethia Ann Collett who was 21, John Collett who was 19, William Collett who was 15, and Elizabeth Collett who was 13

 

Ten years later in 1881, the widow Ann Collett from Ravenglass was 52 and was a laundress living at 41 Hawke Street in Barrow-in-Furness.  The only one of her children still living with her by then, was her son William Collett who was 25 and who had been born at Fressingfield, like his late father.  Four other people were listed at the address, and the first of these was Ann’s grandson William Collett who was five and who had been born at Berwick-on-Tweed.  It has been assumed that he was the son of William Collett whose wife, and the mother of son William, had died possibly during a subsequent childbirth.  Three of the other four children of Ann were married by then, although no record married daughter Bertha, or bachelor son John, has been located in the census at that time.  The other three people residing at 41 Hawke Street in 1881 were all boarders, and they were Job Roberts aged 45 from Liverpool, Charles Littlewood aged 27 from Crewe, both of them boiler makers, and 21-year-old Agnes Irving a jute weaver from Ireland.  It was during the last three of that same year when the death of Ann Collett was recorded at Barrow-in-Furness (Ref. 8e 517) at the age of 52

 

18P133 – Henry Collett was born in 1848 at County Mayo, Ireland

18P134 – Bethia Ann Collett was born in 1850 at Mullingar, Ireland

18P135 – John Collett was born in 1851 at Dartmoor, Devon

18P136 – William Collett was born in 1855 at Fressingfield

18P137 – Elizabeth Collett was born in 1857 at Whitehaven, Cumberland (Cumbria)

 

John Collett [18O77] was born at Fressingfield on 19th May 1828, and was baptised there on 26th May 1828, the third son of Benjamin Collett and Bertha Philpot.  Tragically he died almost immediately after his baptism and was buried at Fressingfield on 31st May 1828 at the age of just twelve days

 

Charles Collett [18O78] was born at Fressingfield in 1829 and it was there that he was baptised on 2nd August 1829, the fourth son of Benjamin Collett and Bertha Philpot.  Like his brother John (above), Charles also died very young, when he was buried at Fressingfield on 14th August 1831, and was followed by his mother who was buried there in 1834

 

Keziah Collett [18O79] was born at Fressingfield in 1832 with her birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 350), following which she was baptised at Fressingfield on 12th August 1832.  The baptism record confirmed that her parents were Benjamin and Bertha Collett.  According to the Fressingfield census in 1841, Keziah Collett was eight years old when she was living there with her father and his second wife Sarah.  According to the census in 1851 Keziah Collett of Fressingfield was 18 years old and was living and working in the South Ockendon & Orsett area of Essex. Although unlike her brother John and Charles (above) who died in infancy, Keziah Collett did reach adulthood before she died in 1854, when she was buried at Fressingfield on 3rd December 1854 at the age of 22

 

Elizabeth Collett [18O80] was born at Fressingfield in 1833.  According to the Fressingfield census in 1841, Elizabeth was seven years old when she was living there with her parents Benjamin and Bertha Collett, her brother Isaac (below), and her two half-brothers Charles and George (below)

 

Isaac Collett [18O81] was born at Fressingfield in 1834 the same year that his mother Bertha died.  The birth of Isaac Collett was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 337) and the fact that no baptism record for Isaac has been found may indicate that his father Benjamin took the death of his wife badly and could not bring himself to baptise the child, which he may have blamed for the death of Bertha.  By the time of the Fressingfield census in 1841 Isaac was six years old and was living with his father, who by then had remarried, his sister Elizabeth (above), and his two half-brothers Charles and George (below).  Ten years after that Isaac was recorded as being 15, by which time he had moved out of his father’s house and had started work, while still living nearby in Fressingfield.  Isaac Collett died at Fressingfield during the first week of 1852, where he was buried on 9th January 1852, aged just 16

 

Charles Collett [18O82] was born at Fressingfield in 1839, his birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 441).  He was baptised at Fressingfield on 26th April 1840, when the record of his baptism confirmed that he was the son of Benjamin Collett and his second wife Sarah Vincent.  They were married at Fressingfield on 21st May 1839, making Charles their first child.  It was the Fressingfield census in June 1841 that placed Charles’ birth towards the end of 1839, when his age was stated as being two years old, the argument being that had he been born during the first four months of 1840 he would have only been one year old.  For the next census in 1851 Charles Collett was 11 years old which would fix his birth around the end of 1839 or very early in 1840.  At that time, he was living at New Street in Fressingfield with his parents and his two younger siblings George and Sarah (below).  On leaving school he took up working on the land, but by the time of the census in 1861, at the age of 21, Charles Collett from Fressingfield was a gunner in the Royal Artillery and was base at Fort Monkton in Alverstoke in Hampshire.  No later record of Charles has been discovered, which might indicate that he was killed in action

 

George Collett [18O83] was born at Fressingfield where he was baptised on 18th April 1841, when his parents were confirmed as Benjamin and Sarah Collett.  His birth was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 436) during the first quarter of 1841 and, according to the June census that year, he was three months old, meaning that he was born during March that year.  He was 10 years old in the census of 1851 when he was living with his family at New Street in Fressingfield.  Shortly after the start of the next decade, the marriage of George Collett and Harriet Cracknell took place at Fressingfield on 13th November 1860 and was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 1137).  Harriet was the daughter of labourer Benjamin Cracknell and his wife Mary, and was born at Saxtead when her birth was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 1129) just after the start of 1842.  It was also at Saxtead that she was baptised on 8th February 1842.  Four months after their wedding day, and at the aged 20, agricultural labourer George was confirmed as a married man and head of the household at Fressingfield.  Living there with him was his wife Harriet Collett who was 19 and from Saxtead, and George’s parents Benjamin Collett who was 61 and Sarah Collett who was 56.  Over the following eighteen years the marriage produced nine children for George and Harriet, with all of them born at Fressingfield.  The Fressingfield census of 1871 listed the family as George Collett was 30 and still working as an agricultural labour, his Saxtead born wife Harriet who was 29, and their children Harry Collett who was eight, Mary Ann Collett who was six, Benjamin Collett who was five, Keziah Collett who was two, and George Collett junior who was under one year old

 

During the next decade more children were added to the family, which also had to suffer the tragic loss of eldest daughter Mary Ann and son William.  And it was at Fressingfield that the family was still living ten years later in 1881.  Their place of residence was listed as Catchpool Gardens where agricultural labourer George was 40, the same age as his wife Harriet.  The only children that were missing that day were the two eldest sons who had left home to seek work elsewhere.  The remaining children still living at the address were Benjamin who was 15, Keziah who was 12, George who was 10, Esau who was six, William who was five, and Sarah who was two years old, the only one not attending school.  Son Benjamin had left school and was employed was as an agricultural labourer like his father.  Later that same year, in 1881, the family moved the three miles east to Cratfield where, towards the end of the year, son James was born.  Another move quickly followed, since by the time of the birth of their ninth and last child, George and Harriet were living at Cratfield around the mid-1880s.  However, by the time of the next census in 1891, George and Harriet and some of their family were recorded living at St Cross South Elmham near Harleston, within the Wangford & Bungay registration district of north Suffolk.  George and Harriet were both 50, while living with them were William 15, Sarah 12, James who was nine, and May who was five years old

 

According to the 1901 Census, George Collett, aged 60, was a stockman on a farm at Pixey Green near Stradbroke.  Living with him was his wife Harriet also 60 who gave her place of birth as Saxtead.  The only members of the family still living with them were three of their youngest four children.  They were William Collett, aged 25 and a non-domestic groom, Sarah Collett, aged 22 and a domestic housemaid, and James Collett, aged 19 who was an ordinary farm labourer.  The couple’s youngest child, May Collett, was 15 and was a general domestic servant living and working with a family at Fressingfield-cum-Withersdale.  Her place of birth was confirmed as being Cratfield.  Ten years later George Collett was 70 and Harriet his wife was 69, and at that time the couple was still living at Stradbroke, although no other member of the family was living with them by then.  George Collett survived for another thirteen years after that day, when his death was recorded at Hartismere register office (Ref. 4a 879) in Suffolk during the second quarter of 1924 when he was 83.  It was ten years after being widowed that the death of Harriet Collett was recorded at Hartismere (Ref. 4a 1046) during the last three months of 1934, at the age of 93

 

18P138 – Henry Collett was born in 1862 at Fressingfield

18P139 – Mary Ann Collett was born in 1864 at Fressingfield

18P140 – Benjamin Collett was born in 1866 at Fressingfield

18P141 – Keziah Collett was born in 1868 at Fressingfield

18P142 – George Collett was born in 1870 at Fressingfield

18P143 – William Collett was born in 1872 at Fressingfield

18P144 – Esau Collett was born in 1874 at Fressingfield

18P145 – William Collett was born in 1875 at Fressingfield

18P146 – Sarah Collett was born in 1878 at Fressingfield

18P147 – James George Collett was born in 1881 at Cratfield

18P148 – May Collett was born in 1885 at Cratfield

 

Sarah Anne Collett [18O84] was born at Fressingfield in 1843, the youngest child of Benjamin Collett and Sarah Vincent, and was baptised there on 9th July 1843, being birth having been recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 462).  At the time of the census in 1851 Sarah was seven years old when she was living at New Street in Fressingfield with her parents and older brothers Charles and George (above).  She was eight years old when she died at Fressingfield, where she was buried on 7th September 1851

 

Sarah Collett [18O85] was born at Ilketshall St Andrew in 1826, and may have been the eldest child of John Collett of Fressingfield and Catherine Baldwin of St James South Elmham.  However, no record of her baptism has been found, nor was she recorded with her family at Ilketshall St Andrew in the census of 1841.  Sarah Collett of Ilketshall St Andrew was 26 in the census of 1851, when she was living and working at Henstead near Kessingland.  Towards the end of the next decade, Sarah took up employment as housekeeper to widower Nathan Rumsby and his four young children at their home in Broad Street in Bungay.  That would have taken place around 1858 when Nathan Rumsby’s wife had passed away.  That situation was confirmed by the census in 1861 in which Sarah Collett from (Ilketshall) St Andrew was unmarried at the age of 34 and was working as a housekeeper for 31-year-old Nathan Rumsby, a fitter in Smith’s shop, and his four children aged two to eight years.  Also listed in the same census, as a visitor at the same address, was Catherine Collett from St James (South Elmham), a labourer’s wife aged 56, who was the mother of Sarah Collett.  With no record of Sarah Collett found after that time, it may be assumed that she was married during the 1860s

 

John Collett [18O86] was born at Ilketshall St Andrew on 1st January 1829, where he was baptised on 22nd February 1829, the eldest son of John Collett and Catherine Baldwin.  At the time of the first national census in June 1841, John was 12 years old and was living with his family at Ilketshall St Andrew.  A few years later he left school, having obtained his School Certificate.  He joined the army at Halesworth when he was seventeen years and nine months.  He was initially with the 16th Regiment, but later transferred to the 54th Regiment.  John spent a total of twenty years and two days with the army, of which eight years and eight months was spent in India.  The records also confirm that he held the rank of a private with the 54th Regiment.  He married (1) Mary Penney on 8th April 1857 at Stoke Damerel, a parish in Devonport, where their wedding was recorded (Ref. 5b 527).  Within a few years the couple was living in India, where their two daughters were born.  The first child was born at Cawnpore, and the second one at Maradabad in Calcutta.  Within two years of the birth of their second child the family was extended by the addition of a son, who was also born while John and Mary were still living in Calcutta.  John finally retired from the army in May 1873 and was the recipient of the Indian Mutiny Medal and Good Conduct Medal.  He also received two good conduct awards from the army

 

Upon leaving the army John and Mary returned to Ilketshall St Andrew, where he took up work as a labourer.  Sadly, Mary Collett nee Penney died during the first week of April in 1874 from cancer of the womb, her death recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 455).  It was on 7th April 1874 that Mary was buried at Ilketshall St Lawrence at the age of 40.  Presented with being a widower with three young children to support, in addition for the need to keep working, John placed his three children with the family of his younger married brother William Collett (below).  Not long after the passing of his wife, John met and married (2) Charlotte Mary Carver on 23rd July 1875, their wedding recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 935).  Charlotte was the daughter of John and Charlotte Carver, and was ten years younger than John and had been born on 13th January 1840 at Homersfield, which lies between Harleston and Bungay, and was baptised at Attleburgh on 14th January 1840.  Tragically, the marriage lasted only six weeks when John Collett died from a stroke on 5th September 1875.  His death certificate incorrectly gave his age as 43, whereas he was actually 46 years old on the first of January that year.  Following his passing, John Collett was buried that same day with his first wife Mary in the churchyard at Ilketshall St Lawrence, on the outskirts of Ilketshall St Andrew.  The burial record gave his age as 42

 

In the eighteen months after the death of her husband, John’s widow had a liaison with another man which resulted in the birth of a base-born daughter for Charlotte, almost two years after John Collett had died.  The child was baptised at Ilketshall St Andrew in August 1877, when she was described as the illegitimate child of Charlotte Collett.  It was perhaps for that reason that Charlotte then gave up the child, when she passed her daughter into the care of farm labourer William Howlett, with whose family the child was living in 1881.  By that time, the widow Charlotte Collett, aged 41 and from Homersfield, had left Ilketshall St Andrew and was working twenty-five miles away, as a cook at the home of farmer John Read at Gosling Hall Farm in Debenham, between Stowmarket and Framlingham.  However, during the next decade Charlotte returned to Ilketshall St Andrew where she met Frederick Barber, whose wife had recently died.  Frederick was born at Bungay in 1845 and was therefore five years younger than Charlotte Collett.  Perhaps it was more to help look after his six children that Charlotte married Frederick, and by 1891 the couple was still living at Ilketshall St Andrew

 

Charlotte Barber was 51, Frederick was 46 and an agricultural labourer, and only three of his six children were still living with their father and stepmother.  They were Rosa Barber aged 19 and a general servant, William Barber who was 12, and Charles Barber who was 11.  It was a similar situation in 1901, except by then, Frederick’s daughter had left, presumably to be married, with the remainder of the family residing on the High Street in Ilketshall St Margaret.  The census that year revealed that Frederick from Bungay was 56, Charlotte from Homersfield was 60, William was 21 and from Ilketshall St Lawrence, and Charles was 20 from Ilketshall St Andrew, both men agricultural labourers like their father.  By April 1911, the census that year confirmed exactly the same situation.  Still living at Ilketshall St Andrew was Charlotte Barber, aged 71, together with Frederick Barber, aged 66, and his son Charles Barber who was unmarried and 30 by then.  John Collett’s two daughters from his first marriage, Elizabeth and Sarah, were both living and working in London by that time, see their separate entries for more details.  Only his son John was still living with his brother’s family at that time.  Nearly four years later the death of Charlotte Barber was recorded at Wangford register office (Ref. 4a 1709) during the first three months of 1915, when she was 76, where the death of Frederick Barber’s passing was recorded during the last three months of 1919 (Ref. 4a 1125) at the age of 74

 

18P149 – Elizabeth Collett was born in 1861 at Cawnpore, India

18P150 – Sarah Collett was born in 1862 at Maradabad, India

18P151 – John Christian George Collett was born in 1864 at Fort William (Calcutta), India

The base-born child of Charlotte Collett nee Carver, the widow of John Collett:

18P152 – Harriet Collett was born in 1877 at Ilketshall St Andrew

 

Charles Collett [18O87] was born at Ilketshall St Andrew on 19th March 1831, and was baptised there on 24th April 1831, the second of the four sons of John and Catherine Collett.  In 1841 Charles Collett, aged nine years, was living with his family at Ilketshall St Andrew, and he was still living there with his family ten years later in 1851, when he was 19.  It was on 31st August 1857 at Carlton Colville, near Pakefield, that the marriage by banns of Charles Collett and Mary Ann Ellis took place and was recorded Mutford (Ref. 4a 995).  Both were of full age, not previously married, and were residing in Carlton Colville, where Charles was a labourer and the son of labourer John Collett, while Mary was recorded as the daughter of John Ellis, which we know she was not.  In fact, Mary Ann Ellis was born on 23rd October 1825 at Thurlton in Norfolk, between Beecles and Great Yarmouth, where she was baptised on 13th November 1825, the base-born daughter of Charlotte Ellis.  It was at Reedham, on the River Yare, that the couple initially settled, and it was there that their first son was born and baptised in 1858, after which the family moved to Oulton where they were living in 1861.  It was also at Oulton where their second son was born three years later.  The census return for 1861 recorded the family as agricultural labourer Charles Collett aged 30 from Ilketshall St Andrew, his wife Mary who was 34 and from Thurlton, and their Oulton born son George who was three years old.  Visiting the family that day was Mary’s mother Charlotte Ellis who was 60 and from Beccles who, curious was described as a widow.  Also living nearby in Oulton was Charles’ younger brother Robert Collett (below).  During the previous year, Charles Collett at the age of 31 was baptised at Oulton on 10th June 1860, and that event may have coincided with a change in his religious beliefs.  It has also been noted that his eldest son was baptised for a second time at Oulton in 1864 in a joint ceremony with his younger brother, again perhaps indicating a change of faith

 

By early April in 1871, Charles and Mary were recorded with their two sons in the census for Gorleston living at 4 Common Lane in Southtown, from where Charles was an agricultural labourer.  Charles Collett was 40, his wife Mary A Collett was 44, and their children were listed as George Collett, who was 13, and Charles Collett who was seven years old.  Charles’ eldest son George had left home by the time of the census in 1881, leaving the family of three still living at 4 Common Lane.  Charles was 50 and was employed as a dock labourer, while Mary was 54, and Charles junior was 16 and his place of birth was confirmed as Oulton.  In 1891 the couple was living at East Marsh Road in Burgh Castle, where Charles, aged 60 was a farm labourer, and his wife Mary was 64.  Living with them on that occasion was their grandson George L Collett, aged five years, the eldest son of Charles George Collett.  Just after the start of the new century, in March 1901, Charles Collett was 70 years of age and a dairyman who was also an employer, when he was living at 11 Common Road in Gorleston with his wife Mary who was 74 and from Thurlton.  As an employer, Charles had two grandsons living with him and Mary, the first of them being Lionel Collett who was 15 and a cattleman from Gorleston, the other being Bertie Collett who was 13 and had left school and was learning the trade of a cowman, although that was not mentioned in 1901, but was his occupation shortly thereafter, as confirmed by the census in 1911, when he and his brother Lionel were working together on the same farm.  The two boys were the sons of Charles younger son Charles George Collett.  Completing the household was a mystery character who was described as follows.  Clement Burton from West Caistor, Norfolk, was a widower aged 80, who was a retired carter, who was recorded as the father of the head of the household, which we know cannot be true with just ten years difference in their ages. Ten months after that census day, the death of Charles Collett was recorded at Great Yarmouth register office (Ref. 4b 25) during the first quarter of 1902, after which he was buried at Gorleston-with-Southtown 27th February 1902 at the age of 70.  The burial record stated that he had died as a patient at the Cottage Hospital in Gorleston.  During the following days, the death of Mary Collett aged 74 was also recorded at Great Yarmouth register office and was the very next entry after her husband (Ref. 4b 26), with whom she was buried on 7th March 1902, having died at home at 24 High Road in Southtown

 

18P153 – George Collett was born in 1858 at Reedham, Norfolk

18P154 – Charles George Collett was born in 1864 at Oulton, near Lowestoft

 

Lucy Collett [18O88] was born at Ilketshall St Andrew in 1835 and where baptised there on 18th December 1836, the daughter of John Collett and Catherine Baldwin.  In 1841, at the age of four years, Lucy was living with her family at Ilketshall St Andrew.  At the time of the next census in 1851, her age was given as 16, when she was still living with her family at Ilketshall St Andrew, where she was also living in 1861 when she was recorded as being 24 and hay trusser, like her father and her brother William (below).  It was during the following year that Lucy Collett, aged 26, married George Gowing at Wangford on 22nd March 1862, their wedding day recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 873).  George, who was 22, was born at Wrentham near Wangford, when his birth was recorded at Blything (Ref. xiii 349).  He was then baptised at Wrentham on 19th July 1840, the son of William and Sarah Anne Gowing.  He was later known as George Gowing of Ringsfield, the next village to Ilketshall St Andrew.  Immediately after the wedding, Lucy returned to Ilketshall St Andrew with her husband, where they lived for the remainder of their lives and where they raised three sons and four daughters, they being Harry Gowing, Emma Gowing, Charles Gowing, Julia Gowing, Ellen Gowing, Sarah Gowing, and James Gowing.  Three of the couple’s first four children were recorded with them at Great Common in Ilketshall St Andrew in the census of 1871.  Absent was their first-born child Harry who was nearby in Ilketshall St Andrew at the home of Lucy’s parents, John and Catherine Collett.   The children listed with George and Lucy were Emma who was six, Charles who was five years, and Julia who was three years of age.  George Gowing was 30 and an agricultural labourer from Redisham and Lucy Gowing was 35

 

The next census in 1881 confirmed the family was living in a dwelling house at Great Common in Ilketshall St Andrew, where George Gowing, aged 41, was employed as an agricultural labourer and hay cutter, while his wife Lucy was 45 years old.  By that time their eldest son Harry, aged 17, was working as an indoor farm servant at nearby Shipmeadow at Codfish Hall Farm, the home of bachelor farmer John Riches.  Lucy and George’s eldest daughter Emma, who would have been 16, has not been located in 1881 and may have died during the 1870s.  Of the remaining children Charles was 15 and working with his father as an agricultural labourer and hay cutter, while the four younger children were still attending school.  They were Julia who was 13, Ellen who was 10, Sarah who was six, and James who was five years old.  By the start of the next decade, their son James was the only child still loving with the couple, when George was 50 and a hay cutter and a thatcher, Lucy was 54, and James was 15 and a hay cutter’s assistant

 

Ten years later in 1901, the completed census return was a repeat of the previous one, with the same three members of the family again residing at the family home in Ilketshall St Andrew.  George Gowing was 60 years old with the occupation of a thatcher, Lucy Gowing was 64 and son James Gowing was 25 and employed as a thatcher’s assistant, again working with his father.  Of the other members of the family, sons Harry aged 37 and Charles aged 34 were also still living in Ilketshall St Andrew.  Harry was married to Mary Ann aged 37 of Rumburgh by whom he had two children these being Herbert aged 10 and Edith aged 8.  Both children had been born at Ilketshall St Andrew where Harry was employed as an agricultural labourer.  Son Charles was also working as an agricultural labourer and was married to Elizabeth aged 38 of Reydon in Suffolk with whom he had six children.  They were all born at Ilketshall St Andrew and were Harriet aged 12, George aged 10, Ellen who was eight, Hubert who was seven, Laura who was four, and baby Ernest who was not yet one year old.  There is still a strong presence of Gowing family members living in that area of Suffolk in 2008

 

It was around six months prior to the next census in 1911, the death of George Gowing was recorded at Wangford register office (Ref. 4a 571) during the last quarter of 1910, when he was 70 years old.  His Will was proved in London on 28 October 1910 to Lucy Gowing, widow, in the sum of £251 19 Shillings 8 Pence.  The document also confirmed that he died at Ilketshall St Andrew on 13th October 1910.  The loss of her husband was confirmed in the census of 1911, when Lucy Gowing, aged 76 and the head of the household at 20 Hungate Lane in Beccles, a two-roomed dwelling, was described as a labourer’s widow, having given birth to a total of 10 children, of which three had not survived.  Nearly fourteen years later the death of Lucy Gowing was recorded at Wangford register office (Ref. 4a 1261) during the first quarter of 1925, when she was 88 years old.  It was also at Ilketshall St Andrew where Lucy died on 9th February 1925, her Will proved at London on 6th March 1925 when her personal effects valued at £243 5 Shillings and 11 Pence to Sheba Scarle Gowing, the wife of James Gowing

 

William Collett [18O89] was born at Ilketshall St Andrew on 17th October 1838, the son of John Collett and Catherine Baldwin.  Her birth was recorded a month later on 16th November at Wangford (Ref. xii 433), when William’s father was named as John Collett, an agricultural labourer, and his mother was recorded as Catherine Collett, formerly Baldwin.  William was two years old in the June census of 1841, and was 11 at the time of the census in 1851 when, on both occasions, he was living with his family in Ilketshall St Andrew, within the Wangford & Beccles registration district of North Suffolk.  Ten years later, in 1861, he was one of only two children still living in the family home in Ilketshall St Andrew when, at the age of 22, he was employed as a hay trusser, working alongside his father and his sister Lucy (above).  Ten months earlier, when William was 21 years old, he received an adult baptism at Ilketshall St Andrew on 11th June 1860, perhaps with view to being married in church.  Three and a half years after the day of the census in 1861, William Collett a labourer married Emma Rackham on 19th November 1864 at Ellingham near Bungay.  The witness's where Rachel Words, Rose Wilson and Mary A Cobb or Lobb.  Emma was born at Heckingham in Norfolk on 19th July 1836 and was baptised on 31st July that same year, the daughter of John Rackham and his wife Elizabeth Balls although, by the time of the census in 1841, Emma Rackham, who was four years old, was living at Heckingham with the family of Samuel and Elizabeth Thompson, and their three-month-old daughter Elizabeth.  With Emma were her two old siblings, a brother aged 13 and sister Sarah Rackman who was 10.  It is therefore highly likely that Emma’s father had died, allowing Elizabeth Rackham to marry Samuel Thompson who was some years older that Elizabeth.  Ten years later she was 14 and was living and working in the Norwich Mancroft registration district and, after a further ten years when she was 24 in 1861, she was living and working as a domestic servant within the Wangford & Beccles registration area

 

Eighteen months prior to their wedding day William Collett and Emma Rackham were both named as the witnesses at the wedding of William’s brother Robert (below) at Ilketshall St Andrew.  It would appear that William and Emma spent their early years together in the village of Ilketshall St Andrew where their three children were born, the first two children being baptised at the Church of St Andrew, with the third being baptised at the Church of St John the Baptist.  The little village of Ilketshall St Andrew has three churches within one kilometre of the village centre, and they are the two churches mentioned above, plus the Church of Ilketshall St Lawrence which also serves the village of that name to the south of St Andrew.  By 1871 William and Emma had suffered the loss of their third child, who died at three weeks just two years earlier.  The census that year recorded the family as living at Great Common in Ilketshall St Andrew when William Collett was 33, his wife Emma was 34, and their three children were Sarah Collett who was five, John Collett who was three, and new baby William Collett who was only two months old.  Tragically, like the first William born into the family, that second William also died before reaching his second birthday.  Upon the death of his sister-in-law, Mary Collett nee Penney in 1874, William and Emma took into their family the three children of John Collett (above), they being Elizabeth who was 13, Sarah who was 12, and John who was 10 [18P138, 18P139, 18P140]

 

By 1881 two of their own children had left the home of William and Emma, so they and their family were recorded as follows, where they were living in Ilketshall St Andrew but near the church of St John the Baptist.  William was an agricultural labourer at the age of 43.  His wife Emma was 44 and the only one of their children still living with the couple, was their son John who was 13.  Also living with the family in 1881, and working with son John, was the boy’s cousin John Collett, who was 16 and who had been born in India.  His relationship to head of the house William was nephew, and he was the son of William’s older brother John (above) who spent some time in India with the British Army, but who had died in 1875, following the death of his wife in 1874.  At that time William’s and Emma’s daughter Sarah was working within the village, at The Rectory attached to the Church of St John the Baptist

 

Sometime during the next decade William was offered a new job that took him and his family from Ilketshall St Andrew to the village of Reydon Smear, just outside Southwold.  The move, and the change of career, was confirmed by the census in 1891, when William Collett was 52 and a farm bailiff at Easton Farm, his wife Emma was 53, and their son John Collett was 23.  Also living within the same registration district, but not with the family by that time, was John Collett aged 26 and from India.  Another family move happened during the 1890s which took William and Emma the few miles north to Lowestoft, which is where they were living at the time of the census in 1901.  By that time William was employed as a general labourer at the age of 60, while Emma was 61, and their address was 3 Waterloo Terrace on the Beccles Road, in the St Peter’s Street district of the town.  Emma Collett nee Rackham died on 25th May 1908 at the age of 72, her death recorded at Mutford register office (Ref. 4a 589).  Emma Collett of Ashby Dell was buried at Thurlton on 29th May 1908.  Three years later in the census of 1911 William Collett, a widower of 73, was working as a labourer at a market garden while lodging at the White Horse Inn in Lower Thurlton, between Beccles and Loddon.  Charles Prime aged 48, the publican at the White Horse was also a market gardener.  William Collett was 76 when his died, his death recorded at Loddon register office (Ref. 4b 249) during the fourth quarter of 1914.  He was living in Thurlton where he was buried with his wife on 24th November 1914

 

18P155 – Sarah Collett was born in 1865 at Ilketshall St Andrew

18P156 – John Collett was born in 1867 at Ilketshall St Andrew

18P157 – William Collett was born in 1869 at Ilketshall St Andrew

18P158 – William Collett was born in 1871 at Ilketshall St Andrew

 

Robert Collett [18O90] was born at Ilketshall St Andrew where he was baptised on 9th August 1840, the youngest child of John Collett and Catherine Baldwin and his birth was recorded at Wangford (Ref. xiii 453).  It was at Ilketshall St Andrew that he was living with his family in June 1841, when he was recorded as being one year old.  By the time of the next census in 1851, Robert Collett was 10, when he was confirmed as the youngest member of his family, which was still living at Ilketshall St Andrew.  However, by the time of the census in 1861, Robert Collett from Ilketshall St Andrew, aged 22, was a fisherman on board the boat ‘Glance’ out of Lowestoft harbour, and was very likely living with his married brother Charles (above) and his family.  It was just over two years later, on 7th May 1863 at Ilketshall St Andrew, that Robert Collett married fieldworker Lydia Ann Brighton, the daughter of agricultural labourer and husbandman Robert Brighton and his wife Mary, who was baptised at Ilketshall St Andrew on 6th January 1839.  The witnesses at the wedding ceremony were William Collett and Emma Rackham, Robert’s older brother (above) and his future wife, whom he married six months later.  The wedding of Robert and Lydia was recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 1003), and the birth of Lydia Ann Brighton was recorded at Wangford (Ref. xiii 434).  After they were married Robert and Lydia settled in Ilketshall St Andrew where their only known children were born, although their daughter died only eight months after she had been born

 

Furthermore, the death of the child may also have coincided with the death of Robert Collett sometime after 1866 and before 1871, although it is more than likely that he died as a result of an accident while at sea.  The absence of both of them was confirmed by the details in the census of 1871, which placed Lydia Ann Collett as a widow at the age of 31, who was employed as a field worker.  Living with her at ‘by the Common’ in Ilketshall St Andrew was her son Robert who was seven years old, and Lydia’s widowed mother Mary Brighton who was 77, on parish relief and an agricultural labourer working in doors.  All three members of the household were recorded as having been born at Ilketshall St Andrew.  At that time, their dwelling was four doors along from the Hare & Hounds Inn

 

It was seven years later on 2nd March 1878 that Lydia Ann Collett married widower William Artis at Ilketshall St Andrew where they were both living at that time, their wedding recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 951).  William Artis was born at Ilketshall St Lawrence on 25th March 1829 and was baptised there on 5th April 1829, the son of William and Hannah Artis.  It was at Wangford (Ref. 4a 949) in 1855, that he had first married Amy Girling, who had been born there on 26th January 1831 and baptised there on 6th February 1831, the daughter of William and Mary Girling.  The marriage of William and Amy produced four daughters and a son.  His first daughter, Sofia Artis, was born at Wangford on 19th June 1856 but, shortly after, the family moved to Ilketshall St Andrew where the next three children were born.  They were Sarah Artis born in 1860, Alfred Artis born in 1864, and Matilda Artis born in 1872.  In 1871 William Artis, aged 42, and his wife Amy, aged 40, were living at Ilketshall St Andrew when eldest daughter Sofia was missing.  It was during the second quarter of 1874, just after the birth of Alfred, that the death of Amy Artis was recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 460) at the age of 43.  Also, during that decade, her three youngest children also died, possibly by the same cause or illness

 

Three years after being widowed in 1874, Julia Artis was born in 1877 but did not survive, and she may have been a child of William Artis and his future wife Lydia Ann Collett.  During 1880 Lydia gave birth to a son, George Artis, who was baptised at Carlton Colville on 25th August, who was buried there on 1st September 1880.  By the time of the census in 1881, Lydia Ann Artis, and her second husband William Artis, were living at Carlton Colville, just south of Lowestoft.  William was employed as a farm labourer and his place of birth was confirmed at Ilketshall St Lawrence, while Lydia Ann’s place of birth was confirmed as Ilketshall St Andrew.  Rather oddly William gave his age as 49, when he was actually 51, and his wife was recorded as Lydia Ann Artis aged 37 (sic).  By that time Lydia’s son Robert Collett was working as a fisherman on board the boat ‘Au Revoir’ which had sailed out of nearby Pakefield, bound for Falmouth, earlier that year.  So, the only person living with Lydia and William in 1881 was William’s daughter, Sarah Artis, who was 21, when son Alfred was 17 and a boy onboard the vessel ‘Chance’ and it was three later he died, possibly at sea.  Ten years later in 1891, the couple was still living at Carlton Colville, where William Artis was recorded as 56 (instead of 61), and Lydia Artis was 52.  It was only in March 1901 that William admitted that he was older than he had previously stated.  According to that census, William was 71, and an agricultural labourer, living at Gisleham to the south of Carlton Colville, with his wife Lydia who was 61 and from Ilketshall St Andrew.  Staying with the couple at Rushmere Road was Lydia’s granddaughter Norah Collett who was eight years old and born in Suffolk, the eldest daughter of her son Robert Collett

 

Following the death of her second husband, during the first ten years of the new century, in 1911 Lydia Artis was living in the village of Rushmere, just south of where she was living in 1901.  She was described as being 71 and a widow and an old age pensioner from Ilketshall St Andrew.  Living there with her were two of her grandchildren from the family of her son Robert Collett, who had died at Liverpool in 1903, where the two girls had been born.  In addition to her two granddaughters, Norah Collett from Wavertree aged 18, and Florence Collett from Garston who was 10, also living with Lydia as a lodger, was Robert Lydamore who was 73 and a farm labourer from Rushmere.  Lydia Ann Artis died at the age of 79, her death recorded at Mutford register office (Ref. 4a 2331) during the last three months of 1919

 

18P159 – Robert Collett was born in 1863 at Ilketshall St Andrew

18P160 – Mary Anne Collett was born in 1866 at Ilketshall St Andrew

 

Dinah Collett [18O91] was born at Wilby in 1850, her birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 485) during the second quarter of the year, the daughter of John and Mary Ann Collett.  She was one year old in the Wilby census of 1851, and was 10 years of age in the 1861 census.  After a further ten years, Dinah Collett from Wilby was 21 and a domestic servant at 2 Hermitage Villa, St Ann’s Road, in the Tottenham area of London, Middlesex.  That was the home of John Barker, a coffee merchant, and his large family.  It was nine years later that Dinah Collett married Henry George Brunning of Horham (Suffolk) who was a few years younger than Dinah having been born near the end of 1855 (Ref. 4a 431).  Their wedding was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 803) during the second quarter of 1880.  By the time of the census conducted in the following year the marriage had not produced any children for the couple, but Dinah was expecting the birth of their first child.  On the census day in 1881 Dinah Brunning of Wilby was 30 and her agricultural labourer husband Henry was 25, with his birth also recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 431), during the last three months of 1855, when they were living with Dinah’s widowed father John Collett at Cole Street in Wilby, where her younger brother James Collett, aged 18, was still living.  Not long after that day, Dinah gave birth to a daughter at Wilby, where their son was born, before the family of four settled in Palgrave, near Diss, where they were residing in 1891.  Henry G Brunning was 35, Dinah Brunning was 37 (sic), Helen Jane Brunning was 10, and William George Brunning was six years of age.  It was in 1893 that their son died aged eight years

 

Sometime after that day the family crossed over the River Waveney into Norfolk to make their new home in the town of Diss.  By 1901 they were recorded at 10 Stanley Villas when Henry was a carter for a brewery at 45, Dinah was 51, and daughter Helen was 19 and a dressmaker having her own account at home.  The years later, at the age of 58 (sic), Henry Brunning was again living in Diss, where his occupation was that of a brewery’s carman, and his wife Dinah from Wilby was 61.  The only child still living with them was unmarried Helen Brunning who was 29 and a dressmaker.  Tragically, it was towards the end of that year when the death of Dinah Brunning was recorded at Diss register office (Ref. 4b 274) during the last quarter of 1911, when she was 62.  Henry George Brunning was 77 years old when he died many years after being widowed, when his death was recorded at Norwich register office (Ref. 4b 142) during the second quarter of 1933

 

William Collett [18O92] was born at Wilby in 1852, the second child and eldest son of John and Mary Ann Collett.  William was eight years old in the Wilby census of 1861, and was 18 years of age in 1871, when William Collett from Wilby was groom and a boarder at Merstham near Ashford in Kent.  During the fourth quarter of 1875, William Collett married Jane Brunning from Horham, whose brother Henry George Brunning married William’s sister Dinah (above) in 1880.  William and Jane’s wedding day was recorded at Hoxne (Ref.  4a 1246a), while her earlier birth was also recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 483) during the first quarter of 1854.  By 1881 the childless couple was living at Cole Street in Wilby, close by his widowed father and his sister married Dinah (above) and his brother James (below), all of them living together at Cole Street.  William, aged 27, was an agricultural labourer, and his wife Jane was 26.  The couple was still residing in Wilby ten years later when William was 39 and Jane was 38, and they were still there in March 1901.  William Collett, aged 47 and from Wilby, was employed as a horseman working on a local farm, and his wife Jane from Horham was 46.  At the end of the decade, William was 60 and a labourer on a farm and Jane was 58, when they were living at Saxtead in Suffolk, when the completed census return recorded that they had been married for 35, but had had no children, while they were living at Cole Street in Wilby, Eye.  Looking after the elderly couple was 29-year-old live-in sick nurse Blanche Louisa Brockwell.  Jane became a widow sometime after that day and was later staying at Stow Lodge in Gipping, north of Stowmarket, where she was described as being incapacitated, a widow born on 26th December 1853.  The death of Jane Collett was recorded at Gipping register office (Ref. 4a 2333) during the last three months of 1940, when she was nearly 87

 

James Collett [18O94] was born at Wilby in 1861 with his birth recorded during the second quarter of that year (Ref. 4a 599), the last child of John Collett and Mary Ann Sharman.  As Jimmy Collett age nine, he was the only child still living with his parents in 1871, while it was eight years after that day, that his mother died.  James was 18 years old at the time of the Wilby census of 1881, when he was an agricultural labourer working with his widowed father John Collett, the pair of them living at Cole Street in Wilby.  On that same day, James’ older married sister Dinah Brunning (above) was still living with them, having married Henry Brunning during the previous year.  Possibly upon the death of his father, James headed for London, where James Collett of the same age was living in 1891 and 1911, who was died there in 1917.  The details within the census of 1911 certainly relate to James Collett from Wilby, so it is most likely that the other two do as well.  According to the census in 1891, unmarried James Collett from Suffolk was 27 and a tram driver living in London and boarding at 22 Cross Street in Clapham, the home of widow Maria Lowing.  By 1911 James was 47 and a tram regulator and time keeper employed by Wandsworth Council, when he was still single, living at 189 Wirtemburgh Street in Clapham, when he confirmed that he had been born at Wilby in Suffolk.  The later death of James Collett was recorded at Clapham register office (Ref.1b 366) during the first three months of 1917, at the age of 55, placing his year of birth early in the 1860s

 

Martha Collett [18O95] was born at Wilby on 13th July 1841 and was the eldest child of James Collett and Lucy Mutimer.  In 1845 Martha and her family left Suffolk when they moved over the county boundary into Norfolk and settled in the village of Needham where, in 1851 Martha was nine years old.  It was in the village of Wissett, near Halesworth, on 12th December 1860 that Martha, aged 19, married Joseph Peck who was 23, the wedding recorded (Ref. 4a 1504).  Joseph was born at Westhall near Halesworth on 16th September 1837, and was baptised at Westhall on 12th November 1837, the son of Samuel Peck and Susan Gipson.  In total, Martha gave birth to thirteen children, the first being her base-born daughter Eliza Collett by an unnamed father, whose birth was recorded at Depwade (Ref. 4b 218) during the fourth quarter of 1857, who was baptised at the Church of St Mary Magdalene in Pulham Market on 3rd December 1857.  There were five illegitimate babies baptised there in a joint ceremony that day, when each of the five mothers were individually recorded as living in the Union House, presumably for wayward girls.  Three months after Martha had married Joseph, she discovered she was expecting the first of her twelve children with him and, in the census of 1861 agricultural labourer Joseph Peck was 25 and from Chediston, Martha Peck was 20 and from Wilby, and Eliza Collett was three years old and had been born at Pulham Market, when they were living at Goodwins Cottages

 

Ten years later, the census in 1871 listed the family at Spexhall, north of Halesworth, as labourer Joseph Peck 32, Martha Peck 29, Eliza Peck 13, Samuel Peck nine and born at Spexhall, William Peck seven, Joseph Peck two, and Catherine Peck who was ten months, all of them except Samuel had been born at Chediston, less than a mile south of Wissett.  The twelve Peck children were: Samuel Peck (born 06.09.1861); William Peck (born 01.12.1863); James Peck (born 24.08.1865, who died 27.08.1865); Susan Peck (born 07.06.1867, who died 05.07.1868); Joseph Peck (born 23.03.1869); Catherine Peck (born 13.05.1870, who died 12.11.1926); George James Peck (born 28.01.1872); Lucy Mary Peck (born 10.06.1873); Charles Peck (born 19.02.1876); Rachel Peck (born 07.09.1877); Harry Peck (born 10.12.1879); and Amy Peck (born 02.04.1882).  After the birth of the last child, Joseph and Martha Peck lived at Mendham, where they were recorded in 1891, 1901 and 1911.  The aforementioned daughter Catherine Peck later married Frederick John Godfrey, the son of Martha’s younger married sister Emma Godfrey nee Collett (below)

 

Mary Collett [18O96] was born at Wilby during 1842, the daughter of James Collett and Lucy Mutimer.  When she was around three years of age her family left Wilby went they settled in the village of Needham near Harleston in Norfolk.  And it was there that she was living with her parents in 1851, at the age of eight, and again in 1861 when she 18.  Another ten years later Mary Collett was 28 and working as servant for Christopher Cadge at Stubbs Green in Loddon, Norfolk

 

Emma Collett [18O97] was born at Wilby on 19th March 1844, the daughter of James and Lucy Collett, her birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 439) during the second quarter of the year.  but very soon after, her family settled in Needham near Harleston, where she was seven years old in 1851.  Emma was not living with her family at Needham in 1861, instead she was 17 years old and working as a general servant at the home of 71-year-old Stephen Laidler, an independent chapel minister, in Redenhall-with-Harleston.  Seven years later she married Henry Godfrey at Needham on 2nd March 1868, both were of full age and not married before and residing in Needham, with Henry’s occupation being that of a husbandman.  His father was Henry Godfrey, husbandman, the same occupation as Emma’s father James Collett.  The two witnesses appear to be Emma’s father James Collett and her older sister Mary Collett (above).  Tragically, the marriage only lasted for four years, when Emma Godfrey died at Rushall in Suffolk on 6th February 1872, and was buried there three days later on 9th February.  Her death was recorded at Depwade (Ref. 4b 181).  One year earlier, the Needham census in 1871 placed the family at Harleston Road in Rushall and revealed that ag lab Henry Godfrey was 24, Emma Godfrey was 26, and their son Fred Godfrey was two years of age and born at Needham.  It is very interesting that Fred was Frederick John Godfrey who married Catherine Peck around 1889, Catherine being the daughter of Martha Collett and Joseph Peck, Martha being Emma’s old married sister (above)

 

William Collett [18O98] was born at Needham on 3rd August 1846, his birth recorded at Depwade (Ref. xiii 43), the son of James and Lucy Collett.  At the age of four years and 14 years he was living with his family at Needham.  William Collett from Needham was 24 and working as a miller at Meadham in Suffolk in 1871, while it was just a few weeks later that the marriage of William Collett and (1) Martha Freeston was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 825) during the second quarter of 1871.  By 1881, the couple was living at Mill Lane in Attleborough where 34-year-old William Collett from Needham was employed as a corn miller, when his wife Martha Collett from Alburgh, near Harleston, was 44 years of age.  After a further ten years the census in 1891 recorded the pair of them residing at Maudon Road in Barnham Broom in Norfolk, where William was 44 and a miller from Needham and Martha was 55 and from Alburgh.  The death of Martha Collett Freeston was recorded during the last three months of 1898 (Ref. 4b 126) at the Norfolk Forehoe register office.  That loss for William was confirmed in the census of 1901 when he was a widower staying at a boarding house on Low Street in Hardingham, Norfolk, at the home of Thomas and Zillah Pearce.  On that day William’s was incorrectly recorded as being 50, when his occupation was again that of a miller.  Six months after that census day, widower William Collett married (2) Annie Wiles on 29th September 1901 at Hardingham, their wedding recorded at Mitford register office (Ref. 4b 759) for a second time, as reflected in the next census of 1911.  William from Needham was 64 and a grist miller at Hardingham Mills, when Annie Collett from Suffolk was 75.  It was three years later that the death of William Collett was recorded at the Norfolk Mitford register office (Ref. 4b 293) during the last quarter of 1914, when he was 67

 

Dinah Elizabeth Collett [18O99] was born at Needham on 20th July 1849, the daughter of James Collett and Lucy Mutimer, whose birth was recorded at Depwade (Ref. xiii 43).  She was one year old in the Needham census of 1851, but her absence from the family home in 1861, may suggest that she suffered an infant death

 

Eliza Collett [18O100] was born at Needham on 9th February 1851, with her birth recorded at Depwade (Ref. xiii 49), and was just two months old in the census for Needham in 1851.  She was also listed as living there with her family in 1861 when she was 10 years old.  Eliza was married twice in her life, the first time was with (1) Alexander Carter, when the event was recorded just prior to the next census at Depwade (Ref. 4b 369) during the first quarter of 1871.  A few weeks after, railway porter Alexander Carter from Fressingfield was 21 and Eliza Carter from Needham was 20 when they were living at Pulham St Mary in Norfolk.  Their three children were born within the next six years; Lucy Emma Carter was born at the end of 1872, with her birth recorded at Norwich (Ref. 4b 124) during the first three months of 1873,  Alexander Adolphus Carter was born at Thorpe-next-Norwich in 1874, the birth recorded at Norwich (Ref. 4b 116) during the last quarter of that year, and the birth of James Edward Carter was recorded at Norwich (Ref. 4b 123) during the third quarter of 1877.  The Norwich census in 1881 revealed that Eliza from Needham was a widow aged 30 when she was earning a living as a tailoress and having a boarding house.  With her were here three children Lucy who was seven, Alexander who was five, and James who was three, all born in Norwich.  It is interesting that one of the three men boarding with the family that day was James Giles from Ipswich who was single and a railway porter, to whom Eliza married in 1883.  The marriage of Eliza Carter and James Wilkinson Giles was recorded at Norwich (Ref. 4b 240) during the third quarter of the year, and with whom she had another son.  The birth of Robert James Giles was recorded at Norwich (Ref. 4b 121) during the second quarter of 1884

 

In 1891 James was a railway porter aged 37 and from Ipswich, and Eliza was 39 and from Needham, when they were residing at Rosary Road in Norwich with their son Robert Giles who was seven and born at Norwich.  Also living with the three of them were two stepsons and a niece.  The stepsons were Alexander Carter who was 16 and a brewer’s clerk, and James Carter who was 13 and a draper’s assistant, both of them both in Norwich.  The niece was two-year-old Naomi Collett, the youngest child of Eliza’s brother George Collett (below), following the premature death of his first wife Amy London.  By 1901, the family was still residing at Rosary Road in Norwich where James was 46 and working with Robert who was 17, both of them employed at the local railway station when James was still a porter, Robert was a clerk, and Eliza had no stated occupation at the age of 45.  According to the next census in 1911, James Giles from Ipswich was 53 and a railway porter, when his unmarried son Robert was 27 and a railway clerk.  Eliza Giles from Needham was 58 and completing the household was John Clarke from Cromer who was 25 and another railway clerk, who was a boarder with the Giles family.  Fifteen years later the marriage of Robert James Giles and Evelyne Lucy Burrells was recorded at Mitford register office (Ref. 4b 589) during the second quarter of 1926.  He was 62 years old when he died on 22nd July 1946, the death of Robert James Giles recorded at Norfolk register office (Ref. 4b 405).  His Will was proved at Norwich on 10th August 1946, when the sole beneficiary was his widow Evelyn Lucy Giles

 

James Collett [18O101] was born at Needham on 23rd August 1852, the son of James and Lucy Collett, his birth recorded at Depwade (Ref. 4b 192), and he was eight years old in the Needham census of 1861.  On leaving school he entered into an apprenticeship, which was how he was described in the Stradbroke census of 1871, when 18-year-old James was an apprentice blacksmith and a boarder at the Queen’s Head Street home of blacksmith John Davy, aged 58, and his wife Susan.  It would appear that he was married in the late 1870s, but tragically, shortly after they were married his wife died, possibly during childbirth.  By April 1881 James was a childless widower at only 28 years of age.  The census for that year placed him as a visitor at 7 Cox Buildings, George Street in Great Yarmouth the home of his married sister Rachel French nee Collett (below).  James’ birthplace was stated as being Needham and his occupation was that of a blacksmith journeyman.  No further record of James has been discovered in Great Britain after that time

 

Rachel Collett [18O102] was born at Needham on 24th April 1855, the daughter of James and Lucy Collett, her birth recorded at Depwade (Ref. 4b 205).  Rachel was five years old by the time of the Needham census in 1861, when she was living there with her parents.  After another ten years she had finish with her schooling and was already working as a nursemaid at the age of 15 in 1871.  At that time in her life, she was employed at the Norfolk Redenhall-with-Harleston home of grocer Thomas J Weavers and his wife Alice and their large family.  Exactly seven years later, when she was incorrectly recorded as being only 20 years of age, the marriage of Rachel Collett and William French, a boiler maker, who was also 20 years of age, took place at St Matthew’s Church in Thorpe-next-Norwich on 8th April 1878.  The event was recorded at Norwich (Ref. 4b 243) when the bride’s father was confirmed as James Collett, and the groom’s father as Thomas French.  The birth of William French was recorded at Norwich (Ref. 4b 117) during the third quarter of 1859, after he had been born on 30th June and was baptised at St Matthew’s Church in the village of Thorpe on 7th August 1859.  By 1881 the couple was living at 7 Cox Buildings on George Street in Great Yarmouth.  William was 22 and employed as a boiler-maker journeyman, with Rachel being 25 on that census day, by which time she may have been with-child for the first time.  Staying with the couple that same day was Rachel’s widowed brother James Collett (above), a boarder Charles Collerson, who was 18 and a railway engine cleaner from Norwich, and visitor Emma Langton, a dressmaker aged 22 of Great Yarmouth

 

The couple’s first child Arthur may have suffered an infant death because, by the time of the Southtown, Great Yarmouth census in 1891, William French was 31 and an engine fitter, Rachel French from Needham was 32, and the three children living with them at 3 Queen’s Place were Lottie Annie French who was seven (born in 1884), William Charles French who was three (born in 1888), and Rachel Emily French who was six months old (born in 1890).  It was at 3 High Mill Road in the Gorleston area of Great Yarmouth that the same family group was living in 1901, when William French was 40 and an engine fitter, Rachel French was 40 (sic), and their three surviving children were Annie French who was 17 and a milliner at home, Charles French who was 13, and Emily French who was 10, all three children having been born at Southtown in Great Yarmouth.  Ten years later in April 1911 the family was still together and living in the Gorleston area, when William French was 51, Rachel French was 53, William Charles French was 23, and Emily Rachel French was 20.  The census that year recorded that they had given birth to nine children, with only three of them identified above, with a fourth being their first child Arthur Bertie French (born in 1881).  Rachel and William eventually passed away within five months of each other in the middle of the 1930s.  The death of William French was recorded during the first quarter of 1935 (Ref. 4b 25), following which he was buried at Great Yarmouth on 7th March that year.  He and his wife died at 150a Caister Road in Great Yarmouth, when the death of his widow was recorded during the third quarter of that year (Ref. 4b 11), when she was buried with her husband on 25th July 1935

 

George Collett [18O103] was born at Needham on 10th February 1858, the youngest child of James Collett and Lucy Lutimer, whose birth was recorded at Depwade (Ref. 4b 224).  He was three years old and 13 years old in the Needham census returns for 1861 and 1871 when he was still living with his parents and was already working as an agricultural labourer in 1871, by which time he was the only child still living with his parents.  However, with the death of his father during the 1870s, George was the only child still living with his widowed mother Lucy in 1881.  On that occasion George was 23, unmarried, and was employed as a plate-layer working on the railway, while living at Lakenham in Norwich at a dwelling described as ‘opposite 21 Row’.  George was married by banns to (1) Amy London, a domestic servant, aged 26 and the daughter of James London, a labourer, the wedding ceremony conducted on 14th October 1882 at Christ Church in Eaton-St-Andrew, Norfolk, when George labourer was 24 and the son of James Collett, a labourer.  The marriage was recorded at Norwich (Ref. 4b 285) and produced four children for the couple while they were living in Norwich.  However, tragically Amy died either during or not long after the possible birth of a fifth child who also did not survive. The death of Amy Collett, of Mill Street, was recorded at Norwich (Ref. 4b 86), after which she was buried at St Mark’s Church in Lakenham on 9th September 1890, aged 36.  She was baptised at Barnworth in Norfolk on 3rd May 1854, when her father James was a maltster.  Her birth, together with that of her twin brother Charles Timothy London, was recorded at Blofield (Ref. 4b 198).  George was a widower at 33, by the time of the census in 1891, when he was living at 43 Mill Street in Norwich.  With four young children and no wife, George had living there with him, his mother Lucy Collett at 43 Mill Street within the Lakenham district of Norwich in 1891, with two-year-old Naomi Collett temporarily living with George’s older married sister Eliza Giles (above).  By that time George Collett, aged 33 and from Norfolk, was working as a labourer, while his mother Lucy Collett, aged 73 and from Suffolk, was acting as his housekeeper and was described simply as his relative.  George’s three children were recorded as scholars Ruth Collett who was seven, and David Collett who was six, and Philip Collett who was three years old.  Curiously the children’s place of birth was ditto-ed under their father’s place of birth, indicating that they were simply born in the County of Norfolk.  At the end of the next decade George’s mother passed away

 

Just over a year after the day of the census in 1891, the second marriage of George Collett and (2) Catherine Ann Donnelly, a widow, formerly Trinder, took place during the third quarter of 1892 and was recorded at Norwich (Ref. 4b 275).  That was then confirmed in the census of 1901, when the couple was living at 24 Gordon Road in Norwich, where George Collett from Needham was working as a labourer and a plate-layer at the age of 43.  His younger wife was Catherine A Collett who was 32, his daughter Ruth Collett was 17 was listed as having no occupation, and his sons David Collett was 16, Philip Collett was 13, and Naomi Collett who was 12 years old.  On that occasion the children’s place of birth was recorded correctly as Norwich.  Completing the household was Catherine’s unmarried daughter Margaret A Donnelly aged 31 and a wages clerk.  After a further four years George was widowed for a second and was married for a third time.  The death of Catherine Ann Collett was recorded at Norwich register office (Ref. 4a 107) during the last quarter of 1902, when she was 52.  So, the 1911 Census recorded the family still living at 24 Gordon Road in Lakenham (Norwich) as George Collett from Needham who was 53 and a painter working for the Great Eastern Railway, and his older wife was described as Hannah Collett aged 56 and from Norwich.  Still living with the couple, were George’s two sons David Collett who was 26 and a labourer, and Philip Collett who was 23 and a plate-layer with the Great Eastern Railway, together with the two youngest children from Hannah’s previous marriage.  They were Albert Kett who was 18 and Percy Kett who was 14, both boys employed as labourers in the mustard department of Colmans of Norwich.  By that time George’s daughter Ruth was living and working in Hackney, London.  The earlier marriage of George Collett and (3) Esther Hannah Kett, a widow, was recorded at Norwich register office (Ref. 4b 249) during the first three months of 1905.  The birth of Esther Hannah Cupper was recorded in Norwich (Ref. 4b 110) during the third quarter of 1854, her baptism then delayed until she was baptised at Thorpe in Norfolk on 10th March 1861.  It was near the end of 1876 when Esther Hannah Cupper married Thomas Kett at Norwich (Ref. 4b 345).  In October 1914 George and Hannah were still living in the Lakeham district of Norwich City Centre, at 40 Harford Street which runs between Hall Road and City Road, when George learned of the death of his son David Collett at the Battle of Loos.  The death of George Collett was recorded in Norfolk (Ref. 4b 171) during the last three months of 1937.  Eight after being widowed, the death of Esther Hannah Collett was recorded at Acle register office (Ref. 4b 39) during the fourth quarter of 1945, when she was 91 years old

 

18P161 – Ruth Collett was born in 1883 at Norwich

18P162 – David Collett was born in 1884 at Norwich

18P163 – Philip Collett was born in 1888 at Norwich

18P164 – Naomi Collett was born in 1889 at Norwich

 

Elizabeth Collett [18O104] was born at Wilby in 1837 and was the first child born to Robert Collett by his wife Dinah Lockwood, whose birth was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 320) during the fourth quarter of the year.  Unlike her younger siblings, Elizabeth was not baptised at Wilby, with her baptism delayed until 28th July 1839 at Brundish in Suffolk, the ceremony conducted only three days before her brother Hammond (below) was baptised at Wilby.  She was living with her parents at the time of the subsequent census days in Wilby, first in 1841 when she was three years old, and then at 13 years of age in 1851 when she was with her mother who was living separately from Elizabeth’s father who had fallen on hard times.  Upon leaving school Elizabeth secured work in London, and according to the census in 1861 Elizabeth Collett from Wilby was living and working in the Kentish Town area of London at the age of 22.  Sometime after that, Elizabeth Collett married Elijah Pipe whose birth was recorded in Suffolk (Ref. xiii 390) during the third quarter of 1839, when their wedding was recorded at Chelsea (Ref 1a 358) during the third quarter of 1863, the marriage by the reading of banns having taken place on 27th September 1863 at St Lukes Church in Chelsea.  Both the bride and grooms were recorded as residing at 36 Regent Street, Elizabeth aged 25 and the daughter of Robert Collett, a bricklayer, who signed the register in her own hand, with Elijah making the mark of a cross, being 24 and a labourer, the son of Jeremiah Pipe.  Elijah’s birth was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 390), following by his baptism at Brundish on 28th July 1839, the child of Jeremiah and Emma Pipe

 

HAMMOND COLLETT [18O105] was born at Wilby, his birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 407) during the first quarter of 1839, and was baptised at Wilby on 31st March 1839, the eldest son of Robert Collett and Dinah Lockwood.  He was born into a poverty-stricken family, although their ancestors had been extremely wealthy.  In the June census of 1841 Hammond Collett was two years old when he was living at Wilby with his family.  At the age of 11, in 1850, Hammond and his siblings were living with his mother Dinah at the Hoxne Union Workhouse, while his father served a two-week sentence in Ipswich prison.  However, by the time of the census on 30th March 1851 Hammond was still living at the Hoxne Union Workhouse, but on that occasion, he was with his father Robert, his sister Susan (below), and his brother John (below), while his mother and his others siblings were elsewhere.  It was around the time of the 1861 Census that Hammond was working as a carter for a local farmer in Wilby, when he was dismissed from the job.  In 1863 he was a witness at the wedding of his sister Susan Collett (below).  It is interesting to note that both signed their names in the marriage register which, despite coming from an impoverished family, indicates the educated status of the family from the previous wealthier generations.  A little while later he moved to Brentford to seek work where, in 1864 he secured employment as a malt-man working for one of the many breweries that flanked the River Thames within the Brentford area.  It was through his work that he met Isaac Bradford a maltster at the brewery and through whom he was introduced to his daughter Mary Bradford

 

Hammond married Mary Bradford on 17th December 1865 at Turnham Green in Middlesex, the event recorded at Brentford (Ref. 3a 85) during the fourth quarter of 1865, Mary having been born on 6th December 1840 at Kingston-upon-Thames, where her birth was recorded (Ref. iv 199) early in 1841, and where she was baptised on 24th January 1841, her father being Isaac Bradford and her mother being Hannah Joles, who were married at Long Ditton in Surrey on 6th September 1835.  The wedding register confirmed that Hammond was a maltster residing at Turnham Green, the son of bricklayer Robert Collett, while Mary was the daughter of malt-man Isaac Bradford, when one of the witnesses was John Collett, Hammond’s younger brother (below).  The first child born to Hammond and Mary was a daughter, who sadly did not survive, although two further children were born to the couple prior to the census in 1871.  On that occasion that family of four was living in the Chiswick area of Brentford, where Hammond was 31, Mary was 30, son Hammond I Collett was two, and daughter Mary A Collett was one year old.  By the time of the next census in 1881, a further four children had been added to the family, with a final child born during the following year.  The census return for 1881 recorded the family residing at Back Lane in Chiswick where they were listed as Hammond Collett, aged 41 and from Wilby, his wife Mary Collett, aged 40 and from Kingston-on-Thames, and their six surviving children.  They were Hammond Collett, aged 12, Mary A Collett, aged 11, Alfred Lewis Collett, who was nine; Robert Collett, who was five; Ada E Collett, who was three; and John Collett who was just six months old.  Curiously the place of birth for the two youngest children was given as being Brentford, while all of the other children had been born at Chiswick

 

After another ten years the family was complete when it was still living in the Chiswick area in 1891.  Hammond was 51, Mary was 50, Mary A Collett was 21, Alfred L Collett was 19, Robert Collett was 15, Ada E Collett was 12, John Collett was 10, and the last child Rosetta Collett, was eight years old.  Just after the turn of the century Hammond Collett of Suffolk, aged 62, was working as a general labourer at Chiswick, when he and his family were living at 4 Woodings Cottages, Back Lane.  His wife Mary Collett who was 63 had been born at Kingston-upon-Thames, and their daughter Ada Emily Collett who was 23 had been born at Chiswick.  Living nearby with his own family was their married son Hammond.  Eight years later Hammond (senior) died in 1909 at 70 years of age, his death recorded in Middlesex (Ref. 3a 82) during the last three months of the year.  His wife lived on for a few more years and in April 1911 she was living with her son Robert and his family in Chiswick, where she was described as widow Mary Collett aged 70.  The later death of Mary Collett was recorded at Richmond register office in Surrey (Ref. 2a 475) during the third quarter of 1923 when she was 82

 

18P165 – Annie Collett was born in 1866 at Brentford, London

18P166 – Hammond Isaac Collett was born in 1868 at Chiswick, London

18P167 – Mary Ann Collett was born in 1870 at Chiswick, London

18P168 – Alfred Lewis Collett was born in 1872 at Chiswick, London

18P169 – ROBERT COLLETT was born in 1875 at Chiswick, London

18P170 – Ada Emily Collett was born in 1877 at Chiswick, London

18P171 – John Collett was born in 1880 at Chiswick, London

18P172 – Rosetta Collett was born in 1883 at Chiswick, London

 

Susan Collett [18O106] was born at Wilby where she was baptised on 28th February 1841, the eldest daughter of Robert Collett and Dinah Lockwood.  Her birth was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 424) during the first two months of 1841.  She was just a few months old at the time of the Wilby census in June 1841, and ten years later in 1851, when Susan was 10 years old, she was living at the Hoxne Union Workhouse with her father, and her brothers Hammond and John.  Ten years later, and after leaving school and entering domestic service, Susan Collett from Wilby was 20 and working as a cook at a school in Bury-St-Edmunds.  It was also at Wilby that she married Amos Sharman of Brundish on 30th April 1863.  Their wedding was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 781) during the second quarter of 1863, while the previous entry for Hoxne was that of the marriage of Susan Collett nee Vincent [18N30] who married James Wright during the same quarter of 1863.  Both Susan and her brother Hammond Collett (above), who was a witness at the wedding ceremony, signed the register in their own hand.  Amos Sharman was a labourer like his father David Sharman, and was a widower when he married Susan.  Sophia Harvey was the first wife of David Sharman, whose daughter Mary Ann Sharman (the sister of Amos) became the wife of John Collett [18N46].  In 1871 the family at Wilby comprised Amos aged 35, Susan aged 30, William Sharman aged 12, Annie Sharman who was seven, Elijah who was three, and Georgiana who was one year old.   By 1881 Susan and Amos and their family were still residents of Wilby, living at Wilby Green.  Their children were Elijah Sharman aged 13; Georgiana Sharman aged 11; David Sharman who was nine; Alvina Sharman who was seven; and Arthur J Sharman who was five, and all of them born at Wilby

 

The family continued to live in Wilby where they were in 1891, at The Green, and again in 1901.  For the former census return, Amos was 54, Susan was 50, their unmarried son Elijah was 33, and grandson Charles Sharman who was 12.  Staying with the family that day was Amos’ grandson Charles Sharman who was 12 years of age and the son of William Sharman (born 1858), who was the son from the first marriage of Amos Sharman and Elizabeth Allum who did not have survive the ordeal of birth of their son.  By 1901 Amos Sharman was 65 and a horseman on a farm, and Susan Sharman was 60 when they were still living at Wilby Green.  Seven years later, Susan Sharman nee Collett died at Wilby, with her death recorded at Hartismere register office (Ref. 4a 497) during the fourth quarter of 1908 at the age of 67.  After a further three years her widowed husband Amos was living alone at Wilby Green when he was 77 and a farm labourer and after another four years the death of Amos Sharman was recorded at Hartismere register office (Ref. 4a 1066) during the second quarter of 1915, when he was 82

 

John Collett [18O107] was born at Wilby and baptised there on 2nd July 1843, the son of Robert and Dinah Collett, his birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 401).  He married Sarah Mallett of Pimlico by banns at Chelsea on 30th July 1866, the wedding recorded there (Ref. 1a 433) seven months after John had signed the register at Turnham Green (Brentford) as a witness to the marriage of his eldest brother Hammond (above).  The wedding register stated that bricklayer John Collett, was 23 and the son of Robert Collett, also a bricklayer, when he was residing at 5 Stratham Place, Stewart’s Grove in Chelsea, while Sarah Mallett was 22, daughter of Ephraim Mallett, a gardener, and residing at 55 Arthur Street in Chelsea.  The couple’s first two children were born at Chelsea with the remainder being born and baptised at Wilby, and buried there as well.  On the day of the next census in 1871, the family living at Wilby comprised bricklayer John Collett who was 27 and born at Wilby, Sarah Collett who was 26 and born at Pimlico, John Collett junior was three and born at Chelsea, and Ephraim Collett was one-year-old, also born at Pimlico.  Staying with the family that day was Sarah’s younger brother, 19-year-old Ephraim Mallett, also born at Pimlico.  In 1881 the family was living at Framlingham Road in Wilby.  John was a 34 years old bricklayer and his wife Sarah was aged 36.  With them were their children, John aged 13, Ephraim aged 11, Robert who was nine, Alfred who was eight, James who was five, Charles who was four, Sarah who was three, and Emily aged six months.  The first two children had been born at Chelsea, with the rest born after the family returned to Wilby.  Also living at Framlingham Road in Wilby at that time was John’s brother Alfred Collett (below) and his family who were near next-door neighbours, with just one property in between them.  John and his family were still living there in 1891 when he was 48 and Sarah was 47.  The children still living with them on that occasion were John Collett aged 23, Robert Collett aged 19, Alfred Collett aged 18, James Collett aged 16, Charles Collett aged 15, Sarah Collett aged 13, and Emily Collett who was 10 years old, with the couple’s three youngest children having died in infancy some years before

 

Just after the turn of the century John Collett was 57 and still earning a living as a bricklayer, and Sarah Collett was 56, when they were still living in Wilby between The Lodge and Stone House, with just their unmarried son Alfred Louis Collett living with them who was 28.  Sarah’s place of birth was confirmed as Pimlico while John occupation was that of a bricklayer.  Following the death of his wife Sarah, which was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 463) during the second quarter of 1906, John left Wilby and moved the five miles south-east to Dennington north of Framlingham, to live with his married son Alfred Louis Collett and his family, where bricklayer John was 67 in the Dennington census of 1911.  That day John’s younger son Charles was also living there at the home of his older married brother Alfred, together with John’s granddaughter Emily Emiliea Collett who was eight years old and born at Wilby.  It seems very likely that John Collett was the last member of the family to live in Wilby after many centuries of continuous residency, since no one of the Collett name was living there in April 1911.  The death of John Collett at Dennington was recorded at Hartismere (Ref. 4a 1020) during the fourth quarter of the following year, when he was 69

 

18P173 – John Collett was born in 1866 at Chelsea, London

18P174 – Ephraim George Collett was born in 1870 at Chelsea, London

18P175 – Robert Collett was born in 1871 at Wilby

18P176 – Alfred Louis Collett was born in 1873 at Wilby

18P177 – Harry Collett was born in 1874 at Wilby

18P178 – James Collett was born in 1875 at Wilby

18P179 – Charles Collett was born in 1876 at Wilby

18P180 – Sarah Ann Collett was born in 1878 at Wilby

18P181 – Amelia Betsy Collett was born in 1879 at Wilby

18P182 – Emily Collett was born in 1880 at Wilby

18P183 – Mary Ann Collett was born in 1882 at Wilby

18P184 – Ernest Collett was born in 1884 at Wilby

18P185 – Arthur Collett was born in 1885 at Wilby

 

Robert Collett [18O108] was born at Wilby, with his birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 460) during the second quarter of the year, who was then baptised at Wilby on 11th May 1845.  He died when he was one year and six months old and was buried at Wilby on 11th December 1846, the son of Robert and Dinah Collett, his death recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 337)

 

Ann Collett [18O109] was born at Wilby in 1849, her birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 432) during the third quarter of the year, following which she was baptised there on 5th August 1849.  The baptism record confirmed that she was the daughter of Robert Collett and his wife Dinah.  At the age of 21 Ann Collett from Wilby was working as servant for draper Frederick Fletcher and his school teacher wife Emma at Ealing Lane in Brentford, Middlesex.  She later married David Bridges at Wilby on 31st December 1873, the event recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 1259) during the first month of 1874.  David was a labourer of Tannington and was the son of Israel Bridges, himself a labourer.  Seven years after their wedding day, David Bridges was 30 and an agricultural labourer, and Ann Bridges was 31 and living in a tied dwelling on Hall Farm in Framlingham, Suffolk, with three children in 1881.  The children were Mary Elizbeth Bridges (born 1875) who was six, Eliza Bridges (born in 1876) who was four, David Bridges (born 1878) was three, and Dinah Matilda Bridges (born 1880, died 1885) was one-year-old.  The first three children had been born at Dennington.  It seems highly likely that the youngest child did not survive, simply because the next daughter added to the family was given the name Dinah.  The family was living at College Road in Framlingham by 1891, where David was 41 and a farm labourer, Ann was 42, Eliza was 14 and a domestic servant, David junior was 13 and a smith, and the new arrival Dinah Matilda Bridges (born 1886) was only five years of age from Langham.  It was at the same address that the family was living 1901, when it was only Dinah aged 14 a domestic nurse, who was living with her parents at College Road Framlingham in 1901.  By then David was 51 was a slaughterman, butcher, and pig killer, having his own account, when his wife Ann was 52.  After a further ten years, and still residing in Framlingham, David Bridges was 61 and a pig butcher and his Annie Bridges was 62.  The 1911 census return stated that David and Ann had been married for 37 years during which time they had given birth to a total of eight children, of which only four were still alive that day.  It was during the last three months of 1911 when the death of Annie Bridges was recorded at Plomesgate register office (Ref. 4a 1076) at the age of 62.  Eleven years after her passing the death of David Bridges was recorded at Hartismere register office (Ref.4a 907) during the quarter of 1932 when he was 72

 

Alfred Collett [18O110] was born in the Hoxne Union Workhouse in Stradbroke near Wilby early in 1851, the last child of Robert Collett and Dinah Lockwood whose birth was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 306) during the first three months of that year.  He was under one year old in the Wilby census of 1851 when he and his mother and two older siblings were living at London Road in Wilby, when his place of birth was recorded as Stradbroke.  On the same census day, his father, and another three older siblings, were living at the Hoxne Union Workhouse in Stradbroke.  Alfred was 10 years old in the Wilby census of 1861, when he and his reunited family were still living in Wilby, where it was said he had been born.  No record so far has been found for Alfred in 1871, but just over three years later he became a married man.  It was also at Wilby that he married Caroline Smith on 14th June 1874, the event recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 837), the daughter of labourer John Smith who was born at Brundish with her birth recorded at Bosmere during the fourth quarter of 1853 (Ref. 4a 429).  All of the early children of Alfred and Caroline were born and baptised at Wilby, while the later children were born at nearby Stradbroke.  According to the 1881 Census, Alfred, aged 30 and from Wilby, was a cattle drover living at Framlingham Road in Wilby.  Living with him was his family, comprising his wife Caroline, aged 27 of Brundish, sons Cornelius and David, who were six and five, and daughters Elizabeth and Anna, aged three years and ten months respectively.  Also living with them was Alfred’s widowed mother Dinah Collett.  Living at the next house but one from Alfred and his family in Framlingham Road in Wilby, was his brother John Collett (above) with his family

 

Ten years later, at the time of the census in 1891, Alfred and his family were residing at Laxfield Road in Stradbroke.  Alfred and Caroline were both 40, when Alfred was working as a drover, while their children were Cornelius 17, David 15, Elizabeth 14, Anne 12, and Katy who was seven years old.  With no reference to daughter Dinah, it may be assumed that she had died by then.  Sometime during the last decade of the century, Alfred found himself in some sort of trouble since, within the census of 1901, he was described as an inmate and a prisoner in Ipswich, where he was confirmed as Alfred Collett from Stradbroke who was 52 and a cattle drover.  On that same day, his wife Caroline Collett was living at Wootten Green in Stradbroke with her youngest surviving daughter Kate Collett, aged 18, and a granddaughter Ethel Minnie Collett from Stradbroke who was three years old.  Head of the household Caroline was 48 and a general domestic servant from Brundish.  However, the couple was eventually reunited and was residing at Wootten Green by the time of the next census in 1911.  Alfred Collett of Wilby was 60 and again working as a cattle drover, while his wife Caroline Collett of Brundish was 58.  Still living with the couple was their granddaughter Ethel Collett, aged 13 and from Stradbroke.  It therefore seems likely, in the absence of any better information, that granddaughter Ethel Minnie Collett was the base-born child of their daughter Annie who would have been around 17 years when she became with-child.  This would rule out her mother being Kate Collett who would have been 13 or 14

 

The couple’s older daughter Elizabeth became a married woman in 1898, her marriage and the birth of Ethel Minnie both recorded at Hoxne during the same three months in 1898.  Subsequently, Elizabeth appears with her husband and children in the census of 1901 and again in 1911.  Furthermore, no record of daughter Annie Collett has been discovered in either of the census returns for 1901 and 1911, which may indicate she died during the birth of Ethel Minnie Collett or shortly thereafter.  Less than two years later Alfred Collett died at Wootten Green, when his death at the age of 62 was recorded at Hartismere register office (Ref. 4a 1159) during the first three months of 1913.  In the 1939 Register, especially produced with war looming in Europe, widow Caroline Collett was undertaking domestic duties at 21 Baker Street in Doncaster.  The register recorded her date of birth as 4th October 1853.  Four other people were living at that address, and they farm labourer Lewin Pybus born on 24th August 1901, his wife Florence E Pybus born on 10th December 1906, a housewife, and their two sons, Horace Collett born on 18th October 1925, and Charles Collett born on 28th November 1928, both of them attending school.  Florence E Pybus was formerly Florence Elizabeth Collett the youngest child of Caroline’s eldest son Cornelius Collett.  Caroline survived her husband Alfred by twenty-eight years, when her death was recorded at Doncaster register office (Ref. 9c 1622) during the first quarter of 1941, at the age of 87

 

18P186 – Cornelius Collett was born in 1874 at Wilby

18P187 – David Collett was born in 1876 at Wilby

18P188 – Elizabeth Collett was born in 1877 at Wilby

18P189 – Annie Collett was born in 1880 at Wilby

18P190 – Dinah Collett was born in 1882 at Stradbroke

18P191 – Kate Collett was born in 1884 at Stradbroke

 

Harriet Anne Collett [18P1] was born at Ubbeston in 1829 and was baptised at Heveningham on 9th August 1829, the eldest of the four children of Anthony Collett and Harriet Pett Hannam.  The village of Ubbeston in Suffolk lies midway between Framlingham and Halesworth.  By 1841 Harriet was 11 years old and was still living at Ubbeston with her family.  Not long after that, the family moved to Bury-St-Edmunds, where Harriet was 21 and under occupation in 1851, she was simply described as ‘at home’.  She later married the considerably older, Reverend John Ley, Rector of Waldron in Sussex, and the couple initial settled in Devon.  Their wedding day was recorded at Bury-St-Edmunds (Ref. 4a 707) during the second quarter of 1857.  John Ley is reputed to have owned land in Canada, although that has not been verified.  On the day of the census in 1861 the Reverend John Ley aged 56 and the Rector of Waldron, Sussex, was at All Saints Church Rectory, where he had a groom and a charwoman in his employment, when his wife was at the Dover home of John’s married brother.  Harriet Anne Ley from Ubbeston was 31 and the sister-in-law to the head of household.  It was also at Waldron in Sussex that married Harriet Anne Ley was recorded in 1871 at the age of 41, when John was 66.  Although her husband was absent that day, Harriet had living with her, her sister Frances Ellen Collett, aged 22 and from Bury-St-Edmunds, two cousins, and a domestic cook.  The first of the two cousins was William Hannan Henderson, a clergyman aged 25, the other being Andrew Hannan who was 29, who may have been related to her mother’s Hannam family

 

According to the Torquay census of 1881, John Ley, aged 76, was Clerk in Holy Orders for the Care of Souls who had been born at Ashprington near Totnes in Devon.  His wife was described as Harriet Anne Ley, aged 51, a clergyman’s wife from Ubbeston in Suffolk.  The couple’s address was given as Tor Church, Beechcroft Road in Tormoham, where they employed two female domestic servants.  Just prior to the day of the census in 1891, the death of John Ley was recorded at Newton Abbott in Devon (Ref. 5b 136) during the first three months of 1891 at the age of 86.  At the time of the census in 1881, Harriet’s unmarried sister Maria (below) was still living with their mother at Dover.  However, upon being made a widow, and also following the death of her mother, the two sisters lived together at Tor Church Road in Torquay, as confirmed by the census in 1891, when Harriet A Ley was 61, her sister Maria Collett was 57, when living with them was Harriet’s sister-in-law Mary S Ley from Somerset who was 60, when all three ladies were living on their own means.  Looking after the needs of the three elderly ladies were three domestic servants, including a cook and a nurse.  That arrangement continued for a further three years, until 1894 when Maria died.  Following the death of her sister, Harriet left Devon when she moved to Dallington Lodge on Maori Road in Stoke-next-Guildford in Surrey, where she spent the remainder of her years.  That was confirmed by the census returns in 1901 and 1911, in the first of which she was listed as Harriet Anne Ley, aged 71 and from Ubbeston, who was living on her own means, employing a cook and a housemaid.  It was at Dallington Lodge in Guildford that she was residing in 1911 when she was 81, having private means, and three domestic members of staff by then, including a cook, a housemaid, and a parlourmaid

 

Two years after that census day, Harriet Anne Ley, nee Collett, passed away at Dallington Lodge, Maori Road in Guildford on 25th January 1913, at the age of 83, her death recorded at Guildford register office (Ref. 2a 159).  Her Will was proved at Guildford on 11th March 1913, when the first beneficiary was Harriet’s unmarried younger sister Frances Ellen Collett, the second was Harriet’s nephew Jacob Ley, the third being spinster Janet Emily Tatham from Dallington in Sussex, a professional milliner who was 45 and living with Harriet in 1911 as a boarder, so presumably caring for Harriet during her last two years.  The earlier death of her late husband took place on 26th March 1891 at Beechcroft Road in Torquay, following which his Will, and a codicil, valued at £7,452 0 Shillings and 10 Pence, was proved at Exeter on 29th May 1891 by the Reverend Anthony Collett of Elmsted Vicarage at Ashford in Kent, a clerk (in Holy Orders) and William John Woolcombe of Plymouth, solicitor, and Jacob Ley of Holmleigh, Kingskerwell, Devon, Esquire, nephew, the three executors.  By the time of Harriet’s death in 1913, her estate was estimated to be worth £4,374 19 Shillings and 4 Pence

 

Maria Collett [18P2] was born at Ubbeston in late 1833 and was baptised there on 11th January 1834, the second child of Anthony and Harriet Collett.  She was seven years old in the Ubbeston census of 1841.  Over the following years her family went to live in Bury-St-Edmunds where she was living with them in 1851 at the age of 17.  With the death of her father during the 1850s, Maria’s mother moved to Dover St James where the family was recorded in 1861 and 1871, when Maria Collett was 27 and 37 respectively.  She never married and in 1881 she was still living with her widowed mother Harriet Pett Collett and her sister Frances Ellen Collett (below) at 6 Camden Crescent in Dover St James.  Her place of birth in the census that year was given as Ubbeston Green.  After the death of her mother during the 1880s, Maria moved to Torquay to live with her widowed sister Harriet (above).  It was there in 1891, at the age of 57, that Maria was living within the Newton Abbot & Torquay census registration district with her sister.  Also staying nearby at a lodging house in Torquay at that time was her brother Anthony (below).  It was just three years later that Maria Collett of Ubbeston died on 12th November 1894 at the age of 60, her death recorded at Elham in Kent (Ref. 2a 566), after which she was buried at Elmstone, Kent, on 16th November 1894.  Her Will was proved in London on 5th January 1895 by the Reverend Anthony Collett, a clerk (in Holy Orders), her brother, when the estate of Maria Collett, spinster of Elmsted Vicarage, Elmsted in Kent, was valued at £4,010 17 Shillings and 11 Pence

 

Anthony Collett [18P3] was born at Ubbeston in 1835, where he was baptised on 13th November 1835, the only son of Anthony Collett and Harriet Pett Hannam.  He was five years old in the Ubbeston census of 1841, but shortly after his family moved to Bury-St-Edmunds, where he was still living with his family in 1851 aged 15.  He was initially educated at Bury School under Doctor Donaldson, and then on 3rd March 1854 Anthony Collett from Ubbeston entered Trinity College in Cambridge.  He was 18 years old and the son of Anthony Collett of Bury-St-Edmunds.  He gained his Bachelor’s degree in 1859 and his Master’s degree in 1869.  Upon completion of his BA, Anthony was ordained as a deacon at Canterbury, and in 1860 he was ordained a priest.  From 1859 until 1874 he was the curate at St Mary’s Church in Dover.  It was after the death of his father during the late 1850s, that Anthony and his sisters Maria (above) and Frances (below), travelled with their mother to Dover St James where they were living in 1861, when Anthony was 25.  Anthony and Maria were still living with their mother at Dover St James ten years later in 1871, when Anthony was 35.  After 1874 and up to 1880 Anthony was the Curate of Hastingleigh, where he assisting the frail Gostwyck Prideaux who had suffered a stroke.  From 1880 to 1895 Anthony Collett was Rector of Hastingleigh with Elmsted, and Vicar of Bredhurst from 1895 to 1905.  Hastingleigh and Elmsted are adjacent villages to the east of Ashford in Kent.  By the time of the census in 1881, bachelor Anthony was 45 and was living at The Rectory in Hastingleigh, when his place of birth was recorded as Ubbeston in Suffolk.  With him at The Rectory, he had two servants, housekeeper Mary A Hedge aged 30, and George Wyborn, groom and gardener aged 24

 

Whether because of the recent death of his eldest sister’s husband, Anthony Collett was temporarily staying at Endsleigh House, a lodging house in Church Road, Torquay in 1891, not far from where his eldest sister Harriet Anne Ley was living, and with her their sister Maria.  The census that year also confirmed that Anthony was 55 and from Ubbeston, and that he was Rectory of Hastingleigh.  Three years later his sister Maria died at Torquay, and by March 1901 Anthony was living at Boxley near Maidstone in Kent with his youngest sister Frances.  Anthony Collett, aged 65 and from Ubbeston, was a Church of England clergyman, while his sister Frances E Collett from Bury-St-Edmunds was 52.  The two siblings were still living together ten years later, but by then they were living at Canterbury.  Anthony was 75, and his sister was 61.  Towards the end of his life Anthony resided at Barton Fields in Canterbury, and it was there also that he suffered a tragic end to his life, when he was found dead in his bath on 10th December 1924.  And it was at Elmsted Church that he was buried with two of his sisters on 15th December 1924.  The following obituary appeared in the Kentish Express newspaper two days after the discovery.  “The Reverend Anthony Collett, aged 89, was found dead in the bath at his Canterbury residence.  At the inquest a verdict of natural causes was returned. The reverend gentleman was formerly Curate at St Marys Dover, Rector of Hastingleigh, and Vicar of Bredhurst.”  The death of Anthony Collett was recorded at Canterbury register office (Ref. 2a 1035) and his Will was proved at Canterbury on 21st January 1925 to Philip James Hannam, a retired civil servant.  The personal effects of Anthony Collett of Ellerslie, Barton Fields, east of Canterbury, was reported to be £29,602 0 Shillings and 7 Pence

 

Eight days later the same newspaper ran the following article on 20th December regarding his funeral at Elmsted:  As briefly announced in our last issue, the Rev. A. Collett M.A. of Ellerslie, New Dover Road, Canterbury was found dead under tragic circumstances at his residence on Thursday week.  The deceased gentleman, who was 89 years of age, was apparently in his usual health considering his advanced years and had walked into the town with Miss Blofield who was staying with him.  They subsequently had dinner and prayers and after, saying Good Night, Mr Collett went to his bath.  About midnight Miss Wilson, a maid, not having heard Mr Collett leave the bath room, became anxious, woke up the other maid and they went to the housekeeper’s room.  The housekeeper receiving no response to her knock at the door, called Miss Blofield, who called in Mr Simmons living nearby.  He, bursting open the door, found Mr Collett lying face downwards in the bath with his head covered with water.  The bath was emptied, the deceased gentleman removed, and Dr Stewart Wacher sent for, who on arrival found that death had taken place an hour or so earlier.  At the inquest at which a verdict of Death by Natural Causes was returned, Dr Wacher said death might have been due to accidental drowning or a heart attack before falling into the water. He had attended Mr Collett for the past three years for giddiness due to a weak heart action.  The late Mr Collett, who was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, and ordained in 1859, had spent the whole of his active ministry (over 47years) in Kent.  He was Curate of St Marys Dover until 1874, Curate of Hastingleigh with Elmsted 1874-1880, Rector of Hastingleigh with Elmsted 1880-1895 and Vicar of Bredhurst 1895-1906.  Since his retirement he had resided at Canterbury, where he had frequently assisted at church services.  He was a member of several societies and took a keen interest in the Kent and Canterbury Hospital and other charitable institutions; he was highly respected and beloved by many

 

During the time he was at Elmsted, the reverend gentleman was instrumental in carrying out many much-needed improvements to the churches.  In the years 1877 and 1879 both the Elmsted and Hastingleigh churches were completely restored and re-seated, and later a new organ was installed at Elmsted.  Mr Collett was responsible for the erection of the new Elmsted Vicarage, at Bodsham, and presented the village with the splendid Parish Hall at the Parish Room, Tamley Lane in Hastingleigh.  The funeral took place on Monday at the little church on the hill at Elmsted.  The service, which was of a very simple nature as befitted a man of such unostentatious character, was conducted by the Rev. H Hammond of Elmsted and the Rev. G.C. Clairmonte of Petham.  The hymn ‘On the Resurrection Morning’ was sung and as the cortege left the church for the graveside while Miss Emily Hayward, the organist, played the Dead March in Saul.  The coffin was of plain unpolished oak, with a small brass plate and a large wooden cross on the cover.  The immediate followers were Mr and Mrs Hamman, Mrs J Harvey, Mr J D Harvey, Miss Blofield, Mr and Mrs Collett Mason, Mr and Mrs J Reeves, and the household servants, while those present in church and at the graveside included Colonel Irby, Messrs CF Tappenden (Cubison Tappenden), S Hopkins, J Taylor, W Wetherell, the school master of Bodsham, and H Hopkins, the Misses Kirke-Smith, Mrs Spicer and Mrs M Hopkins

 

Floral tributes were received from Mr and Mrs Reginald Collett, Tony and Bernard, LCAJ and MC Blofield, Mr J S and Mr J D Harvey, Mr and Mrs F M Furley and Mr Walter Furley, Mrs C H Wilkie, Mrs Rogers, Misses Helen and Catherine Collett, Mr and Mrs Collett Mason, Miss Upton, A H Garnon-Williams and Lottie, G J Thompson, Mr and Mrs Reeves, Mr Ley, Mr and Mrs P J Hannam, Ellen and Winifred the housekeepers, managers of St Paul’s Church Schools, Samaritans Committee of the Kent and Canterbury Hospital, and scholars and teachers of St Paul’s School in Canterbury.  At the same hour, a short service was held at St Alphege Church in Canterbury, where the late Mr Collett was a regular worshipper.  The Rev. A A Carter (Rector) officiated, and the lesson was read by the Rural Dean (the Rev E L Ridge).  Among those present were the following ladies of the Samaritan Fund Committee of the Kent and Canterbury Hospital, Mrs G K A Bell (president), Mrs E L Holland, Mrs Brunker, Mrs Williams, Mrs Rogers, and Miss Edwards.  Others present included Admiral Sir R Henderson and Lady Henderson, with Admiral Sir W Henderson, Canon T G Gardiner, Rev. J T Hales, Rev. J G Kemp, Rev. C H Barton, Miss Wilkie, Miss Blomfield, Mrs Graham Wills, Mrs R G Hodgson, Mrs Skinner, Mr F P Carroll (secretary of the Kent and Canterbury Hospital), Miss Purchas (matron at the Kent and Canterbury Hospital), Mr T A Bowen, Mr R Stanbridge and others.  The Reverend Collett’s elder sister Maria is also buried the graveyard of St James Church at Elmsted, together with his other sister Frances Ellen, both not far from his own grave which lies under the shade of an ancient Yew tree to the left of the main entrance to St James Church.  Inside the church, affixed to a wall, is the commemorative brass plate, the inscription on which is reproduced below

 

“In Memory of Rev. Anthony Collett, M.A., Camb. Who for 20 years was in Spiritual Charge of the parishes of Elmsted and Hastingleigh and by whose efforts both these churches were restored.  He died at Canterbury on 10th Dec 1924 aged 89 years and was buried in this churchyard”.  Immediately below the brass plaque is another plaque in remembrance of his mother Harriet Pett Collett.  In 2011 the former home of Anthony Collett at 54 New Dover Road in Canterbury was being used by the Youth Hostel Association.  In addition to all of this, Collett Close, in the neighbouring hamlet of Bodsham in Kent, is named in his honour, following his creation of a school there and the building of the Bodsham Vicarage

 

Frances Ellen Collett [18P4] was born at Bury-St-Edmunds in 1848, her birth recorded there (Ref. xiii 387), the youngest of the four children of Anthony Collett and Harriet Pett Hannam.  It is curious that, unlike her three older siblings, no baptism record for her has been found, particular bearing in mind the family’s close connection with the church.  It was as Frances Collett age two years that she was listed with her family in the Bury-St-Edmunds’ census of 1851.  With the death of her father sometime in the following decade, the remainder of Frances’ family moved to Dover St James, where Frances, aged 12, was living with her mother Harriet, her brother Anthony, and one of her sisters, Maria, in the census of 1861.  It has not been determined where Frances was ten years later in 1871, but after a further ten years, and at the age of 30 (rather than 32), she was still not married and was living with her widowed mother Harriet Pett Collett and her sister Maria Collett at 6 Camden Crescent, Dover St James in Kent.  Following the death of her mother during the 1880s, Frances E Collett, aged 42 was living at Elham in Kent, five miles inland from Folkestone.  During the next decade she was reunited with her brother Anthony, and by March 1901 the siblings were living together at Boxley near Maidstone in Kent, when Frances E Collett from Bury-St-Edmunds was 52.  The April census of 1911 listed Frances under her full name of Frances Ellen Collett from Bury-St-Edmunds, by which time she was 61.  On that occasion she was still living with her brother Anthony but, by that time, the two of them had left Boxley and instead were living in Canterbury.  It was at the end of 1915 that Frances Ellen Collett passed away on 3rd December, having spent the previous twenty years acting as the housekeeper for her brother Anthony who died nine years later.  The Will of Frances Ellen Collett of Ellerslie Barton Fields near Canterbury, was proved at Canterbury on 14th February 1916 to Anthony Collett, her brother and a clerk (in Holy Orders), in the sum of £6,854 13 Shillings

 

Thomas Trusson Collett [18P5] of Ringleton House, a farm in Woodnesborough, where he was born in 1840 and where his father had an extensive acreage, with his birth recorded at Eastry (Ref. v 143) during the first quarter of the year.  It was also at Woodnesborough that he was baptised on 8th April 1840, the first-born child of Thomas Collett and Jane Tomlin.  Fourteen months later, the family of three was living at Ringleton Farm in Woodnesborough, where his father was a farmer at 35 years of age, his mother was 25, and Thomas junior was one year old in the census of 1841.  Ten years later Thomas Collett from Woodnesborough was 11 and attending a private school on Oaten Hill within the Canterbury parish of St Mary Bredin.  On completing his education, Thomas T Collett was living with his widowed father at Ringleton House in Woodnesborough on the day of the census in 1861, when he was 21 but with no stated occupation and together with his sister Ann (below).  Four years after that he married his cousin Georgiana Collett (below) by licence at the Parish Church in Monkton, Kent, on 11th July 1865, their wedding recorded at Thanet (Ref. 2a 1674).  Thomas was 25, a bachelor and an esquire from St Johns Hackney in Middlesex, the son of Thomas Collett esquire, whereas Georgiana was a minor of Monkton and the daughter of George Collett esquire, who was born at Monkton in either 1836 or 1837.  Four members from the combined Collett families were the witnesses, and they were Ann Friend Collett and George Collett, and Sarah Collett and Thomas Collett.  It would appear that, following their wedding, the couple initially settled down to live at Upper Clapton in London Borough of Hackney, where their first five children were born, although the first one suffered an infant death.  Two of those four children were confirmed in the Hackney census of 1871, when the young family was residing at Clapton Road, where Thomas was 31 and a landowner and an oil merchant and a dry salter from Woodnesborough, and Georgiana was 24 and from Monkton.  Their two Hackney born children that day were Thomas Collett who was three and William George Collett who was one year old.  Employed by the family were three domestic servants, a cook, a housemaid and a nursemaid.  Within the next six months, Georgiana gave birth to a daughter who was also born at Upper Clapton and baptised at Hackney.  Sometime after the birth of the couple’s fifth child the family then moved to Kent, where they lived in the village of Woodnesborough, where their three youngest children were born.  It was at Eastry in Kent, that the death of their fifth child was recorded during the last three months of 1875.  Surprisingly a search of the 1881 Census has so far not revealed the whereabouts of Thomas or Georgiana and the three youngest members of their family, although it is known that their children were educated in England and lived and died there.  What the census does reveal was that their eldest son, Thomas Collett aged 13, was attending The Lines Private School at Sutton Valence in Kent as a boarder.  That may be a reference to Sutton Valence Grammar School, which was later attended by Thomas’ younger brother Charles Collett, prior to going to Cambridge University

 

Their father, Thomas Trusson Collett, sadly died just over four months after the national census day that year, when he passed away on 19th August 1881, aged just 41, when Thomas and Charles were only 13 and 5 years old respectively.  The death of Thomas Trusson Collett was recorded at Eastry in Kent (Ref. 2a 467).  Five days later, Thomas Trusson Collett was buried at Woodnesborough on 24th August 1881.  His Will and a codicil were proved on 10th December 1881 at the Principal Registry by the Reverend George Collett of 5 St Mary’s Road in Peckham, Surrey, a clerk (in Holy Orders), his brother, George Alfred Collett of 7 Westcliff Terrace, Ramsgate in Kent, gentleman, and Georgiana Collett of Ringleton House, widow and relict, the executors.  George Alfred was Georgiana’s brother, and the documentation stated that Thomas was late of Ringleton, Woodnesborough, Sandwich, Kent, whose estate was valued at £30,974 15 Shillings and 9 Pence, a very very considerable sum of money for that time.  According to the next census in 1891, widow Georgiana was still living at Woodnesborough within the Eastry & Sandwich registration district in Kent.  Georgiana Collett was 44, and living there with her were all four of her children.  Thomas Collett was 23, William G Collett was 21, Charles Collett was 15, and Katharine Collett was 12 years old.  During the next ten years Georgiana’s three sons left the family home at Woodnesborough so, by the time of the census in March 1901, it was just her daughter who was still living there with her.  Georgiana Collett from Monkton was 54, while Katharine Collett of Woodnesborough was 22.  Neither lady was credited with an occupation.  It was the same situation ten years later in April 1911, when Georgina Collett was 64 and living on private means, when she was still living at Woodnesborough with her unmarried daughter Katharine Collett who was 32.  By that time Georgiana’s son Charles had died from injuries he sustained in a cycling accident in 1903.  Thirty years after losing her youngest son, the death of Georgiana Collett was recorded at Eastry register office (Ref. 2a 1951) during the first three months of 1933, when she was 86 years old.  It was at Wellesley House Nursing Home in Walmer, Kent, that she died on 20th February 1933, following which her Will amounting to £4,297 4 Shillings was proved in London on 28th April 1933 to her son William George Collett, a retired schoolmaster

 

18Q0 – Thomas Tomlin Collett was born in 1866 at Upper Clapton, Hackney (London)

18Q1 – Thomas Collett was born in 1867 at Upper Clapton, Hackney

18Q2 – William George Collett was born in 1869 at Upper Clapton, Hackney

18Q3 – Caroline Collett was born in 1871 at Upper Clapton, Hackney

18Q4 – Francis Collett was born in 1873 at Upper Clapton, Hackney

18Q5 – Charles Collett was born in 1875 at Woodnesborough, Kent

18Q6 – Katherine Collett was born in 1878 at Woodnesborough, Kent

18Q7 – Trusson Collett was born in 1881 at Woodnesborough, Kent

 

Ann Friend Collett [18P6] was born at Woodnesborough on 13th June 1841, where she was baptised as Ann Friend Collett on 31st August 1841, the second child of Thomas and Jane Collett.  It is established that she never married.  Like her older brother Thomas (above), Ann also privately education, in her case attending an all-girls’ school in at St Lawrence (Isle of Thanet) where, in 1851, she was a 10-year-old pupil.  By 1861, and at the age of 19, Ann Friend Collett was living with her widowed father, and older brother Thomas, at Ringleton Farm in Woodnesborough.  Her father retired from farming during the following decade, when her youngest brother George took on management of the farm.  All of that was confirmed in the census of 1871 when Ann F Collett from Woodnesborough was 29 and living at Ringleton House with her widowed father, and her brother George who had taken over the running of the family farm.  However, it would appear that the family eventually gave up the farm when Ann’s father died and her brother George took up his chosen occupation as clergyman.  By 1881 the two unmarried siblings were living at 5 St Mary’s Road in the Camberwell area of South London, in Surrey, where Ann F Collett was 39 and head of the household was George Collett (below) who was 37 and a clergyman M A for the Diocesan of Rochester.  On that census day they employed four domestic servants, a cook, a housemaid, a gardener, and a general servant

 

The pair of them was still living on St Mary’s Road in Camberwell in 1891, by which time George was 47 and Ann was 49 and living on her own means.  Both of them were confirmed as having been born at Woodnesborough, while that year their three domestics servant were a housemaid, an under-housemaid, and a cook.  It was at Main Road in Basildon, Berkshire, that brother and sister were still living together in 1901, when Ann F Collett was 59 and George Collett was 57.  Visiting the couple was 56-year-old Minna King from Camberwell, when they continued to employ three servants.  According to the census in 1911, both Ann and George were residing at Dane Park House in Ramsgate where on for the third time in her life Ann was recorded as Ann Friend Collett who was described as sharing the role of head of the household with her brother who was 67.  Once again, they had a cook, a housemaid, and a parlourmaid.  Seven years later, Ann Friend Collett, spinster, was named as the first executor of the Will of her brother George who died at Dane Park House on 8th May 1918, the second executor being William George Collett, her nephew, who was one of the two executors for her own Will twenty-three years later

 

The 1939 Register, prepared in the United Kingdom with the Second World War looming, included Ann F Collett who was living on private means at Dane Park House on Dane Park Road in Ramsgate with her younger companion and secretary Dora M Potts.  Ann lived a very long life and was ninety-nine years old when she died, her death recorded at Wokingham register office (Ref. 2c 929) during the second quarter of 1941.  The death notice published in the newspaper on 2nd June 1941 read as follows: “COLLETT, on Saturday May 31 1941, Ann Friend Collett, (born June 14 1841), only daughter of the late Thomas Collett of Ringleton, Woodnesborough, Kent.  Funeral at Finchampstead, Wednesday June 4 at 12 noon.  No flowers.”  The Will of Ann Friend Collett of Dane Park House, who died at ‘Kenilworth’ in Crowthorne, Berkshire, was proved at Llandudno on 20th October 1941 to William George Collett, retired schoolmaster, and Evelyn Margaret Collett, spinster, when her personal effects were valued at £20,352 8 Shillings and 3 Pence.  William George Collett (her nephew) was the second son of Ann’s older brother Thomas Trusson Collett (above), while Evelyn Margaret Collett was the youngest grandchild of the aforesaid Thomas Trusson Collett, the last child of his eldest son Thomas Tomlin Collett

 

James Tomlin Collett [18P7] was born at Woodnesborough in 1843, the son of Thomas Collett and Jane Tomlin, his birth recorded at Eastry (Ref. v 145).  He was baptised at Woodnesborough on 26th April 1843, but tragically it was during the first three months of 1844 that his death was recorded at Eastry (Ref. v 127) before he reached his first birthday.  The body of baby James Tomlin Collett was buried at Woodnesborough on 13th February 1844

 

George Collett [18P8] was born at Woodnesborough in 1844, the son of Thomas and Jane Collett.  According to the census in 1861, 17-year-old George Collett from Ringleton (House) in Woodnesborough was a scholar at Henwick House School, within the Parish of Hallow and two miles north of the City of Worcester.  He matriculated in 1862, following which he was accepted at Corpus Christi College in Cambridge on 26th May 1862, when he was confirmed as the second son of Thomas of Ringleton (House), Woodnesborough in Kent.  After four years he obtained his Bachelor of arts degree in 1866 and his Master’s degree after a further three years in 1869.  By 1871 George Collett, a curate, had returned to the family home in Woodnesborough, when the head of the household was his widowed father, a retired yeoman, with George having taken over management of Ringleton Farm at the age of 27.  The farm was described as being 300 and 400 acres, on which was employed 17 men and 5 boys.  Three years later, George was ordained as a deacon and the following year (in 1875) he became a priest in the City of Worcester.  In addition to that, he was the Curate of Lozells in Birmingham up to 1876, when he was appointed the Curate at Redhill in Surrey from 1876 to 1878.  He never married and, at the time of the census in 1881, George Collett was 37 and a Rochester Diocesan clergyman with a Master of Arts degree, living at 5 St Mary’s Road, Camberwell in Peckham.  Listed at the house with him, was his older sister Ann F Collett (above), aged 39, plus four servants.  There then followed a four-year-term up to 1884, when he was the Curate at Peckham, after which he was the Vicar at Peckham until 1892. 

 

That situation was confirmed in the next census of 1891, when George Collett from Woodnesborough was 47 and the Vicar of St Marks Church in Peckham when he was living 5 St Mary’s Road in Camberwell, within the Peckham district of London.  Still living there with him was his unmarried sister Ann F Collett who was 49 and living on her own means.  Completing the household were three domestic servants.  From 1892 he was the Vicar of Basildon in Berkshire, up until 1910, as confirmed in the Basildon census of 1901.  Again, it was George and his sister Ann who were still living together at the vicarage on Main Road in the town, but by then they were employing four domestic servants.  George Collett was a clergyman of the Church of England at the age of 57, when his sister Ann was 59, both born at Woodnesborough.  On completing his term of office as the Vicar of Basildon in 1910, George and sister retired and spent the latter years of their life together at Dane Park House on Dane Park Road in Ramsgate, where they were recorded in the census of 1911.  The census return that year indicated the George and Ann were sharing the role of head of the household, when George was 67 and a pensioner and a clergyman with the Church of England, and Ann Friend Collett was 69.  Once again, they had three domestic servants, a cook, a parlourmaid, and a young housemaid.  It was also at Dane Park House where George Collett died on 8th May 1918, at the age of 74, his death recorded at Thanet register office (Ref. 2a 1261).  His Will was proved in London on 10th June 1918 to Ann Friend Collett, spinster, and William George Collett, schoolmaster, the two executors of his estate valued at £9,195 11 Shillings and 1 Penny

 

Catharine Collett [18P9] was born at Monkton in Kent in 1835, where she was baptised on 30th November 1835, the eldest child of George Collett and his first wife Sarah Crofts King.  By the time she was 16, Catharine Collett from Monkton was attending Mount Albion School for Girls in St Lawrence-in-Thanet, and was back living at Monkton with her father and stepmother in 1861 when she was 25 and a farmer’s daughter.  It was shortly after that when she married Benjamin Thomas Whittington from the City of London, their wedding recorded at Thanet (Ref. 2a 1001), with older Benjamin baptised at St Botolph’s Church in Bishopsgate on 13th June 1823, the son of Benjamin Whittington and Elizabeth Bonaker.  Catharine gave birth to four children during the years leading up to the next census in 1871, by which time the family of six was residing at 6 Oxney Villas in Islington, within the Finsbury area of London.  Benjamin T Whittington was 48 and a commercial clerk from London, Catharine from Monkton was 36, when the four children were recorded as Georgiana E Whittington aged seven, Benjamin George Collett Whittington aged six, Catharine E Whittington aged four, and Richard Whittington who was two years old.  On that census day, Catherine may well have already been expecting the birth of her fifth child, with the eventually arrival of Collett Ashmore Whittington.  All of the children had been born at Islington.  Ten years later in 1881, the family was still living in Islington, at 19 St John’s Road, but with only four of their children, daughter Catharine being absent on that day.  Benjamin T Whittington was 58 whose occupation was that of a cashier in the wine trade, his wife Catharine was 45, Georgiana was 17, Benjamin was 16 and a solicitor’s clerk, Richard was 12 and still at school, and Collett A Whittington was nine years of age.

 

Three years later the death of Catharine Whittington was recorded at Islington (Ref. 1b 197) during the third quarter of 1884 at the age of 49.  The Will of Catharine Whittington was proved at the Principal Registry on 11th February 1885 by her husband, who was described as Benjamin Thomas Whittington of Rosemount, gentleman and sole executor.  It is interesting to note that probate was granted under certain limitations.  The personal effects of Catharine Whittington, who died on 19th September 1884, was assessed at £737 6 Shillings and 7 Pence, when she was described as being formerly of 19 St John’s Road, Upper Holloway, but late of Rosemount, 36 Hazelville Road in Hornsey Lane, Middlesex.  After losing his wife, widower Benjamin was still living at 36 Hazelville Road in 1891, when he was 68 and a cashier and a book-keeper.  Again, living there with him, were four of his five child; they were Georgiana aged 27, Catharine aged 24, Richard aged 22 and a student at Oxford, and Collett A Whittington who was 19 and a bank clerk.  By 1901 the family’s home address was 100 Hazelville Road in Islington, where Benjamin was 78 and a retired mercantile clerk, Georgiana was 37, Catharine was 34 – both of them living on private means, and Collett A Whittington who was 29 and employed as a clerk for a City of London Financial Merchant.  Eight years after that day, the death of Benjamin Thomas Whittington was recorded at Edmonton register office (Ref. 3a 198) during the last three months of 1909, when he was 86.  It was at 33 Woodland Gardens in Muswell Hill, London, that he passed away on 26th October 1909, following which on 23rd March 1910, the Will for his estate of £750 12 Shillings and 5 Pence was proved to Collett Ashmore Whittington, a cashier

 

George Collett [18P10] was born at Walter’s Hall in Monkton in 1838, the second child and eldest son of George Collett and Sarah Crofts King, whose birth was recorded at the Isle of Thanet (Ref. v 438) during the second quarter of that year.  It was also at Monkton where he was baptised on 25th June 1838 and where his parents were confirmed as George Collett and Sarah Crofts Collett.  Tragically he died in 1844 aged just six years

 

Georgiana Collett [18P11] was born at Monkton in 1846, her birth recorded at the Isle of Thanet (Ref. x 304), and was baptised at Monkton on 9th July 1846, the daughter of George and Sarah Crofts Collett.  Following the death of her mother in 1850, she was four years old in the census of 1851, when she was living at Walter’s Hall in Monkton with her widowed father and younger brother George (below).  Ten years later, Georgiana Collett from Monkton was 14 and a scholar at 58 Avenue Park in Hampstead. After a further four years, when she was under full age, she was married by licence to her cousin Thomas Trusson Collett (above) of Ringleton House, Woodnesborough on 19th August 1865.  For more details of Thomas and Georgiana and their family, go to Thomas Trusson [18P5]

 

George Alfred Collett [18P12] was born at Walter’s Hall, Monkton in 1848 and was baptised at Monkton on 29th May 1848, another son of George and Sarah Crofts Collett.  His birth was recorded at the Isle of Thanet (Ref. v 517) during the first three months of the year.  George was only two years old when his mother died in March 1850, and was three years old in the census of 1851, when he was living at Walter’s Hall with his father and sister Georgiana (above).  Ten years later George Alfred Collett from Monkton was a 13-year-old pupil at Henwick House School in the Parish of Hallow, just north of Worcester, where his cousin and namesake George Collett (above) was another pupil there in 1861, aged seventeen years.  By 1871, George A Collett was 23 and a farmer’s son, who was again living and working with his father at Monkton.  At the time of the next census in 1881, unmarried George was 33, when he was preparing for his forthcoming wedding in two-months-time, whilst he was still living with his father George Collett, his half-brother Cornelius Collett, and his half-sister Isabella Collett (below) at Walter’s Hall on Main Road in Monkton.  The census returned stated that he earned his income from land.  It was at St John’s Church in Brixton, South London, on 11th June 1881 that George Alfred Collett was married by licence to Georgina Ching Clemson who was born at Camberwell in 1850, her birth recorded at Lambeth (Ref. iv 272).  She was then baptised at St Mary’s Church in Lambeth on 14th June 1850, a daughter of George and Georgina Clemson.  Their entry in the marriage register confirmed that George was 33, a bachelor and a gentleman from Walter’s Hall in Monkton, the son of George Collett, a gentleman.  Likewise, Georgina was described as a spinster at 31, residing at 353 Brixton Road, and the daughter of gentleman George Clemson, deceased.  The wedding was recorded at Lambeth (Ref. 1d 463).  The couple’s first son was also born at Camberwell, whereas their next two children were born at Ramsgate, and the last two at Monkton, where the family had settled by 1887.  The Monkton census in 1891 listed the family as George A Collett who was 43 and living on private means at Monkton Road, Georgina C Collett who was 40, George C Collett who was eight, Alfred Collett who was seven, Dorothy Collett who was five, Harold W Collett who was four and Percy S Collett who was two years old.  On that occasion the family was employing four female domestic servants: a cook; a housemaid; and two domestic nurses

 

By the turn of the century, George and Georgina were still living at Monkton and, according to the census in 1901, George Alfred Collett was 53 and he, and his eldest son George Clemson Collett aged 18, were both listed as being farmers.  George’s wife was recorded as Georgina Ching Collett, who was 50 and from Camberwell in London, and their daughter Dorothy was 15 and her place of birth was given as St Laurence Ramsgate.  The couple’s three sons, who were absent from the family home on that occasion, were Alfred who was 17, Harold aged 14, and Percy aged 12, who were all recorded as living at Edgar Road in Margate, where they were attending the same boarding school.  With the death of both parents occurring during the following decade, three of the children of George and Georgina were the only members of his family for whom a record has been found in the census of 1911, and they were their sons George and Harold, and daughter Dorothy.  It is now known that sons Alfred and Harold both sailed to Canada in 1906, with Harold returning on the death of his father the following year, after which it was Percy who joined Alfred in Canada, where they made their permanent home.  George Alfred Collett died on 16th May 1907 at Monkton, his death recorded at Thanet register office (Ref. 2a 577) when he was 59.  Five days later he was buried at Minster-in-Thanet on 21st May 1907.  The Will of George Alfred Collett was proved at Canterbury on 29th June 1907, when Georgina Ching Collett was named as sole executor of his estate.  It was just three years after his passing, that his widow died on 2nd June 1910, her death recorded at the Kent Eastry register office (Ref. 2a 569) during the second quarter of 1910, at the age of 60 years.  Her Will was proved in London on 30th June 1910 when her estate was assessed to be £6,723 0 Shillings and 8 Pence and the two executors were George Clemson Collett, gentleman and Roddom William Burn, a solicitor.  The probate process confirmed that the home address for Georgina Ching Collett was 33 Kildare Terrace in Bayswater, London, while it was when she was with relatives in Woodnesborough that she died at Ringleton House

 

18Q8 – George Clemson Collett was born in 1882 at Camberwell, London

18Q9 – Alfred Collett was born in 1883 at Ramsgate, Kent

18Q10 – Dorothy Collett was born in 1885 at Ramsgate, Kent

18Q11 – Harold Willis Collett was born in 1887 at Monkton, Kent

18Q12 – Percy Stapleton Collett was born in 1888 at Monkton, Kent

 

Cornelius Collett [18P13] was born at Walter’s Hall in Monkton on 26th December 1857, his birth recorded at Thanet (Ref. 2a 613).  He was the first child of George Collett by his second wife Elizabeth Smith, and was baptised at Monkton on 10th January 1858.  Cornelius was three years old in the census of 1861 when he was one of three children living with his parents at Monkton.  He attended The Grange School at Ewell in Surrey, where he was 13-year-old pupil in 1871, and from where he matriculated in 1878.  Later that same year, on 1st October 1878, he commenced his higher education at Corpus Christi College in Cambridge.  Upon entry he was referred to as Cornelius Collett of Canterbury, the son of George Collett of Walter’s Hall, Monkton, Ramsgate in Kent.  According to the census in 1881, Cornelius Collett, aged 23, was unmarried and described as a Cambridge undergraduate while he was living with his father George Collett and his brother George Alfred Collett (above) at Walter’s Hall on Main Road in Monkton.  It was just over one year later when Cornelius Collett was married by licence to Edith Mary Solly at St Mary’s Church in Lewisham in London on 26th April 1882, the event recorded at Lewisham (Ref. 1d 1362).  He was a bachelor of 24 whose rank or profession was simply recorded as gentleman who was residing at 4 Selby Villas in Penge, the son of gentleman George Collett deceased who had only passed away three months earlier.  His bride Edith was only 19 and was described as a spinster of 3 Esmonde Villas in Lewisham, the daughter of gentleman George Bushell Solly, her birth recorded at Thanet (Ref. 2a 714) during the first quarter of 1863.  Upon being baptised at Monkton on 5th April 1863 her parents were confirmed as George Bushell Solly and Eliza Harriet Georgina Solly.  The witnesses at the wedding were Edith’s father and Reginald M Mortimer

 

However, it was in July of the following year that Cornelius is alleged to have beaten his wife, who subsequently commenced divorce proceedings, the detailed papers for which are re-produced here.  “It was on 12th September 1884 that the humble petitioner Edith Mary Collett of 4 Selby Road in Anerley near Croydon in Surrey the lawful wife of Cornelius Collett showeth that after the said marriage (as detailed above) your petitioner lived and cohabited with her said husband at Anerley and that there is no issue of the marriage.  That the said Cornelius Collett has treated your petitioner with great unkindness and cruelty and has frequently struck beat and otherwise assaulted her.  On or about the tenth day of July 1883 the said Cornelius Collett abused and struck your petitioner on the neck several blows violently and behaved cruelly towards her.  In or about the month of August 1883 the said Cornelius Collett turned your petitioner out of the house at midnight in her nightdress and made her stand bare-footed outside the street door for about half an hour and would not allow her to re-enter the house.  On 28th February 1884 the said Cornelius Collett struck your petitioner leaving the marks of his finger and causing her face to swell.  That the said Cornelius Collett is in the habit of getting drunk and whilst in that state abuses and cruelly illuses your petitioner.  That on or about June 14th 1884 the said Cornelius Collett committed adultery with some woman whose name is unknown to your petitioner and thereby contracted a venereal disease.  That on or about the month of June 1884 the said Cornelius Collett wilfully communicated to your petitioner a venereal disease.  That the said Cornelius Collett has frequently committed adultery with diverse other women.  Wherefore your petitioner prays that her said married may be dissolved and that she may have such further and other relief in the premises as to this honourable court may seem fit.  Signed Edith M Collett”

 

On 18th September, Edith applied to the High Court of Justice for recovery of money for lodging and physician expenses, stating that her husband had since emptied their home at Anerley and had sold all the furniture, a sum of £1,200 being stated.  She continued that Cornelius was intending to dispose of his milk farm in Beckenham and on realising the whole of his estate was planning to move abroad.  In a rebuttal received by the High Court, Cornelius stated that the proceeds from the sale of the milk farm at Beckenham will not exceed £250 and that he still had considerable outstanding debts to settle, while the money from the sale of the furniture had already been used to pay off some of those debts.  He continued by saying that in order to save costs he had moved to Stone Farm, the weekly rent for which does not exceed £2 10 Shillings.  He also denied that he was intending to move abroad and stated that he had already paid his wife the sum of £15 on 15th October, that being £3 per week, and could afford to pay no more.  Then, on 14th Day of November 1884, Edith made a sworn signed statement at 78 Vincent Square in London regarding additional information relating to the contents of the petition of 12th September (above).  This stated that in London on 14th June, her husband had been with a known prostitute by the name of Lily and that, on other unknown dates, he had been with another prostitute known as Kate.  That was accepted by the High Court of Justice

 

Charles Trusson Collett [18P14] was born at Walter’s Hall in Monkton near the end of 1859, with his birth recorded at Thanet (Ref. 2a 662) during the first quarter of 1860.  He was baptised at Monkton on 27th January 1860, another child of George and Elizabeth Collett, who as Charles T Collett was one year old in the Monkton census of 1861 when living at Walter’s Hall.  Sadly, he was just ten years old when he died and was buried at Minster on 7th June 1870 using his full name

 

Isabella Collett [18P15] was born at Walter’s Hall in Monkton on the last day of 1860 when she was confirmed as the daughter of George Collett and Elizabeth Smith, her birth recorded at Thanet (Ref. 2a 649) during the first month of 1861.  Shortly after she was baptised at Monkton on 30th January 1861, when her parents were once again named as George and Elizabeth Collett, with whom she was living at Monkton in the census of 1861 when she was still under one year of age.  Where Isabella was at the time of the next census in 1871 is not known, but ten years after that Isabella Collett, aged 20, was living with her father, a retired farmer, at Walter’s Hall on the Main Road in Monkton.  As the senior lady in the house, she had no occupation, instead it seems likely that she managed the two female servants on behalf of her elderly father and her old half-brother George Alfred Collett and her brother Cornelius Collett (above).  The two servants supporting the family were Harriet Gilham who was 30 and the family’s cook, and Sarah Setterfield, aged 24, who was a maid.  By 1891, and at the age of 30, Isabella Collett was living on her own means at the East Hoathly, Sussex, home of her very elderly widowed aunt Catherine Harbord, within the Uckfield & Framfield registration district of the county.  Catherine Collett, as she was born, was the widow of Henry Gordon Harbord and the younger sister of Isabella’s father, and died at East Hoathly just over eighteen months after the census day in 1891

 

Following the death of her aunt, Isabella left Kent and moved into London where, in March 1901, she was recorded as being 40 years of age and residing at 3 Colville Square in Kensington.  On that occasion the census confirmed that her place of birth was Monkton, and that she was again living on her own means.  Visiting her that day was her eleven-year-old niece Emily Alice Tidmarsh from Appleford in Berkshire, and completing the people at the address was a general domestic servant.  Emily was the child of Alice Maud Tidmarsh, nee Collett (below), Isabella’s younger sister.  Ten years later Isabella Collett from Monkton, at the age of 50 and living on private means, was still living in the Kensington a 3 Colville Square, where she had widow Edith Harriet Caldicott and her three children living with her.  That situation was also confirmed in the electoral roll for Kensington from 1910 through to 1912.  After a further twenty-eight years, Isabella Collett was recorded at 8 Colville Gardens in Bayswater on the occasion that the 1939 Register was compiled.  The entry confirmed that she was born on 31st December 1860 and was living on private means.  Six years later, the death of Isabella Collett was recorded at Kensington register office (Ref. 1a 131) during the first three months of 1945.  It was at Flat 2, 8 Colville Gardens in Bayswater, that she died on 18th January 1945, when administration of her estate of £1,129 2 Shillings and 4 Pence was granted at Llandudno on 21st March 1945 to Roland Thomas Collett Tidmarsh, a bank official.  Roland was the brother of the aforementioned Emily Alice Tidmarsh and was therefore a nephew of Isabella

 

Alice Maud Collett [18P16] was born at Walter’s Hall in Monkton towards the end of 1862, her birth recorded at Thanet (Ref. 2a 711) during the first three months of 1863.  She was baptised at Monkton on 16th January 1863, another daughter of George and Elizabeth Collett.    Alice Maud Collett later married the Reverend Thomas William Tidmarsh, the Rector of Slapton, their wedding recorded at Abingdon-on-Thames (Ref. 2c 461) during the third quarter of 1888.  Thomas William was born in Buckinghamshire, where his birth was recorded (Ref. 3a 492).  Three years after their wedding day, the couple was recorded a 5 Barringdon Villas in Plympton St Mary, where Thomas W Tidmarsh from Steeple Clayton, near Buckingham, was 32 and the Curate of St Mary’s Church, and Alice M Tidmarsh from Monkton was 29.  Their two children were Emily A Tidmarsh who was one year old (approaching her second birthday), and Frederic A C Tidmarsh who was nine months.  Helping Alice was a nurse, a cook, and a housemaid.  More children were added to the family, although none of them accompanied Thomas and Alice to Bury Farm at Slapton in Buckinghamshire when they were visitors at the home of farmer Albert Buckmaster, when Church of England clergyman Thomas Tidmarsh was 41 and his wife Alice was 38.  Regarding the whereas of their children in 1901, eldest daughter Emily was 11 and a visitor at the home of her aunt, Isabella Collett (above) at 3 Colville Square in Kensington, and sons Frederic Collett Tidmarsh aged ten, Charles Collett Tidmarsh aged nine, and Roland Collett Tidmarsh aged eight, were being cared for by governess Marian Hutton at 8 Ash Green, Copford in Essex on that census day

 

That visit to Slapton in 1901 may have helped to secure a new position for Thomas since, by 1911 he and his family were residing at the twelve-roomed Slapton Rectory in Leighton Buzzard.  The very detailed census return listed the couple who had been married for twenty-two years, during with time they had given birth to nine children, all of them still alive, but with only seven of them living with their parents.  Thomas was 52 and a clerk in Holy Orders, Alice was 48, with their seven children being Emily Alice Tidmarsh aged 21 and born at Appleford near Abingdon, Frederic Arthur Collett Tidmarsh aged 20 and born at Longdon, Lichfield, an undergraduate at Oxford, Roland Thomas Collett Tidmarsh aged 18 and a bank clerk who was born at Frome in Somerset, Dorothy May Tidmarsh aged 16 and born at Harbridge, Ringwood in Hampshire, as was Marguerite Winifred Maud Tidmarsh aged 15, Fabian William Collett Tidmarsh aged nine, and Lionel George Collett Tidmarsh who was seven years of age.  The two youngest children had been born after the family had arrived in Slapton.  The death of Thomas William Tidmarsh was recorded at the Lancashire Lunesdale register office (Ref. 8e 873) during the last quarter of 1934, at the age of 75.  The Will of the Reverend Thomas William Tidmarsh of Gressingham Vicarage in Lancaster, who died there on 28th November 1934, was proved in London on 31st January 1935 to the Reverend Frederic Arthur Collett Tidmarsh and Dorothy May Tidmarsh, in the sum of £313 6 Shillings and 6 Pence

 

Emily Collett [18P17] was born at Walter’s Hall, Monkton in 1868, the nineth and last child of George Collett, and the fifth child by his second wife Elizabeth Smith.  Her birth was recorded at Thanet (Ref. 2a 815) during the first three months of that year.  It was at Monkton that she baptised on 4th March 1868.  In 1881, Emily and her mother were lodgers at Hawthorne Villa, the Ventor, Isle of Wight lodging house of Frederick and Sarah Marks, maybe on holiday there.  Emily Collett from Monkton was 13 and a scholar, and Elizabeth Collett from Manchester was 55.  By 1891 the two of them were still together, but on that census day, they and their three domestic servants were recorded at 70 Belvedere Road in Penge, London, where Emily was 23 and living on her own means, as was her mother Elizabeth who was recorded as being 68.  It was at 5 Streathbourne Road in Streatham, South London, that Emily Collett was 33 and head of the household, who was again living on her own means in 1901, while by 1911 she and a companion and two domestic servants were residing at 25 Manville Road in Balham.  The property had seven rooms to accommodate the four ladies, when unmarried Emily Collett from Monkton, Thanet, Kent, was 43 having private means, and her companion was Anne Darby from Thanet St Lawrence aged 72.  The later death of Emily Collett was recorded at Wandsworth register office (Ref. 1d 723) during the first quarter of 1936 when she was 68.  With no family, the proving of her Will at London on 25th March 1936 named Arnold Francis Steele, a solicitor, as the sole beneficiary of her estate valued at £6,878 7 Shillings and 1 Penny.  The probate process also confirmed that Emily was still living at 25 Manville Road in the Upper Tooting area of Surrey, where she passed away on 16th February 1936

 

Sophia Elizabeth Collett [18P18] was born at Chelsworth on 28th October 1844 and was baptised there on 12th November 1844, the eldest child of William Collett and Mary Cecil Augusta von Linsingen.  Her birth was recorded at Cosford in Suffolk (Ref. xii 333).  From 1851 through to 1856, she was living with her family at Chelsworth, after which her father became the Vicar at Hawstead, where she was still unmarried and living with her family in 1871.  She was recorded as being 26, but with no occupation. Sophia never married and, in 1881 at the age of 36, she was a visitor at the home of Richard D Gough, an 81-year-old Magistrate for Brecon, at Yniscedwyn House in Lower Ystradgynlais in Brecon.  She was living in a flat at 15 Oakley Street in Chelsea, London, during the summer of 1899, and it was there, as Sophia Elizabeth Collett, aged 54, that she died on 15th August 1899.  Her death was recorded at Chelsea register office (Ref. 1a 309).  Following her passing, her body was taken to Hawstead where her father had been the Rector of Hawstead, and where she was buried with her parents on 18th August 1899.  Sophia was an acclaimed painter of miniature portraits and exhibited six works at the Royal Academy between 1889 and 1893 when living in Chelsea, and the Walker Gallery in Liverpool during 1888 from her home at Chapel House, Eastgate Street in Bury, and in 1892 when she was living at Mustow House on Mustow Street in Bury-St-Edmunds, the home of her two sisters Ellen and Augusta (below).  Her cousin, one-step-moved at Alfred Master Collett (below), was also an accomplished artist, as was Sophia’s half-sister Leonora Collett (below)

 

Ellen Mary Collett [18P19] was born at Chelsworth on 5th March 1846, where she was baptised on 1st June 1846, the daughter of William and Mary Cecil Augusta Collett.  Her mother died in 1864, following which her father married for a second time, but that was short-lived, since his second wife died in 1874.  So, by 1881, Ellen M Collett from Chelsworth was 35 and was the eldest child still living with her widowed father at the Rectory in Hawstead, just ten months before he died.  Later in her life she was referred to as Ellen Mary Collett of Bury-St-Edmunds, and it was there that she was living in 1891 at the age of 45, when she was recorded as Ellen M Collett from Chelsworth and had living there with her, her younger sister Augustus C Collett (below).  Just like her older sister, Ellen never married and was still residing in Bury in both 1901 and 1911.  For the census conducted in the first of these years, Ellen Mary Collett of Chelsworth was 55 and living on her own needs when living with her was her younger half-sister Leonora Julia Collett (below).  It was the same situation ten years later in April 1911, when Ellen Mary Collett, aged 65 and from Chelsworth, was again living there with Leonora Julia Collett.  Nearly twenty years later, the death of Ellen M Collett was recorded at Bury-St-Edmunds register office (Ref. 4a 1079) during the first three months of 1930, when she was 84.  Her Will was proved at Ipswich on 12th April 1930 to Leonora Julie Collett, a spinster, in the sum of £3,568 11 Shillings.  The probate document also stated that Ellen Mary was residing at 10 Hospital Road in Bury-St-Edmunds when she passed away on 17th March 1930