Part 18 - The Suffolk Line - 1850 to 1890

PART EIGHTEEN

 

The Main Suffolk Line 1850 to 1890

 

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

 

Updated November 2024

 

 

Augusta Cecil Collett [18P20] was born at Chelsworth on 16th December 1847, and it was there also that she was baptised on 27th April 1848, the daughter of William and Mary Cecil Augusta Collett.  Her birth was recorded at Cosford (Ref. xii 315).  She never married and was still living with her two-times widowed father at Hawstead in 1881 at the age of 33.  Her father died ten months later and, by 1891, she was 44 and the only sibling living with her older sister Ellen (above) in Bury-St-Edmunds.  It was after that, when Augusta emigrated to North America, to where her younger brothers Frederick William Collett and John Anthony Collett (below) had already planned to live.  Although no record of her has so far been found in the US Census of 1900, it is established that she was living in Sonoma County near San Francisco in 1908.  In the years running up to then, Augusta was instrumental, with others, including Mrs Anna Finlaw, in forming the Saturday Afternoon Club, a local church group.  It was during 1908 that the ground-breaking ceremony took place to mark the commencement of the construction work on the clubhouse, as depicted in the photograph below.  Mrs Anna Finlaw is holding the shovel and Augusta Collett is one of the ladies to the left of her

 

 

Augusta was still living in Sonoma County of California in 1910 when she was listed in that year’s census.  Over the following years, it would appear that she devoted her life to the Church of the Incarnation in Santa Rosa, the history of which pays tribute to Augusta C Collett and Anna Finlaw for much of the carving within the church, including the altar, the choir stalls, the reredos (a screen behind the altar see below), and the litany desk.  The building today is the oldest church structure in Santa Rosa, having been built in 1873.  It suffered bulging walls during the earthquake of 1906, when it served as a morgue and a hospital for the devastated city of Santa Rosa.  However, the carvings are as beautiful today as they were when they were originally created by Augusta and Anna, as detailed here in the screen behind the altar

 

 

Augusta Cecil Collett never took up American citizenship, and was described as a resident alien in the census of 1930.  By that time in her life, she was 82 and had living with her at Santa Rosa, her widowed brother Frederick W Collett (below) who was 73, and who died there early in the following year.  All of the new information about Augusta and her brother Frederick was gratefully received in 2010 from Neil and Heidi Blazey of Santa Rosa, who currently live in the same house that was once occupied by Augusta Cecil Collett, albeit not at the same location, since it was moved to its present site in 1924.  It was on 2nd November 1935 that Augusta Cecil Collett was living at 576 Mendocino Avenue in Santa Rosa when she died, where a gravestone bearing her name also includes her date of birth and the date of her passing.  It simply reads ‘Augusta C Collett - Dec 16 1847 – Nov 2 1935’.  On the day after she died, an obituary appeared in the Santa Rosa newspaper Press Democrat, which read as follows, under the headline

Funeral services will be held Monday afternoon for aged woman

“Miss Augusta C Collett died yesterday in her little vine-covered Mendocino Avenue home surrounded in the summertime by its roses and other blooms of which she was fond, and in the fall and winter time with the vari-coloured foliage.  She lived and died in the atmosphere she loved the best.  Since childhood she was a devoted member of the Episcopal church and throughout her more than forty years’ residence in Santa Rosa she was constantly engaged in the activities of the Church of the Incarnation, which stands near her home.  Across the way from her home, in Tenth Street, is the clubhouse of the Saturday Afternoon Club, another environment in which she loved to linger.  She was a charter member of the Saturday Afternoon Club.  For many years Miss Collett was treasurer of the Church of the Incarnation, a member of the Vestry, president for a long period of the Altar Guild, and a member of the other guilds of the parish.  Up to within six months of her passing, Miss Collett seldom was absent from the services of the church.  Her childhood faith was long established.  Her father was a distinguished clergyman of the Church of England and at one time was rector of one of the most famous parishes in England, Bury-St-Edmunds in Suffolk.  More than half a century ago, Miss Collett and other members of her family came to this state.  During her long residence here, she made several journeys back to the old home land. 

 

She was a gifted woman, well-educated and particularly devoted to art work.  She did the principal carving of the beautiful reredos and altar in the Church of the Incarnation and statuary of the Angels at the entrance to the chancel.  She also carried out the carving of the choir stalls.  In this work she was assisted by a very warm friend, the late Mrs Anna Love Finlaw, who lived across the way from her in Mendocino Avenue.  Miss Collett was a native of England, where she was born more than 87 years ago.  A sister, Lenora Collett, still resides in England.  A brother, John Collett of Seattle, survives and was here with his sister at the time of her passing.  Her death yesterday was particularly reviewed by many of the older members of the local parish and it recounted among other traits her great and sincere devotion to her church and its activities.  The funeral rites will take place at 2 o’clock Monday afternoon from the Church of the incarnation, with the Rev. Egbert B Clark Jr. Officiating.  The choir of the church will sing.  Pallbearers will be R S Knight, Dawson Dixon, W W Shuhaw, Attorney Fred W McConnell, J Y Bittel, and John Lamb.  The body is at the Hampton- Burgen undertaking parlours.  It is thanks to Neil Blazey that we are able to publish this newspaper article.”

 

At the end of her life the Estate of Augusta Cecil Collett amounted to $14,827.98, and in her Will she left a substantial bequest to the Church of the Incarnation in Santa Rosa, and to her half-sister Leonora Julia Collett in Bury St Edmund, England and her half-brother John Anthony Collett in Vashon, Washington (both below).  Again, thanks to Neil Blazey we now have a copy of her Will, the Codicil, and the Petition for Probate.  Reproductions of each, extracted from the original document entitled “In the Matter of the Estate of Augusta Cecil Collett deceased”, can be found in Legal Documents under the headings ‘Will 1934 Augusta C Collett’, ‘Will 1934 Codicil for Augusta C Collett’, and ‘Will 1935 Petition for Probate Augusta C Collett’.

 

Mary Louisa Collett [18P21] was born at Bury-St-Edmunds late 1849, her birth recorded there (Ref. xiii 393) during the final quarter of that year, a daughter of William Collett and Mary Cecil Augusta von Linsingen.  Mary may have been born at 1 Westend in Bury-St-Edmunds, where she and her family was living in 1851 when she was one year old.  By 1861 the family living at the parsonage on Great Green in Hawstead, when Mary L Collett was 11 years old and at school.  Again, as Mary L Collett, she was 21 without an occupation in the Hawstead census of 1871 and also in 1881 when she was 31 and still a spinster living with her widowed father William at The Rectory in Hawstead.  Sometime, following the death of her father during February in 1882, Mary travelled to London and was living at Mandeville Street in Hackney in 1891, where she was described in that year’s census as Mary L Collett from Suffolk who was head of the household, unmarried, 40 years of age, and employed as a church worker.  After a further decade, Mary Collett from Bury-St-Edmunds was one of fourteen women living together in Hackney, by which time she was 51 and a Deaconess in the Church of England.  It was under her full name of Mary Louisa Collett, that she was a boarder in Hackney in 1911, when once again she was recorded as a Deaconess in the Church of England who was visiting a parish at the age of 61.  Nine years later, Mary Louisa Collett died in Hertfordshire on 25th December 1920 and her Will was proved there on 23rd July 1921, probate naming her younger half-sister Leonora Julia Collett (below) as the main beneficiary.  The death of Mary L Collett was recorded at Hitchin register office (Ref. 3a 772) during the fourth quarter of 1920 when she was 74

 

William Charles Collett [18P22] was born at Bury-St-Edmunds on 2nd August 1851, his birth recorded there (Ref. xiii 429), the son of William Collett and his first wife Mary.  He was nine years of age in the Hawstead (Suffolk) census of 1861, when he and his family were installed at the parsonage on Great Green in Hawstead.  He was 19 in the Hawstead census in 1871 and, by 1881, he was 29 and was a colonial managing clerk working in Wimbledon, where he was in lodgings at 13 Ridgeway, the home of master tailor William Kearns.  Following the death of his father in February 1882, William was in Herne Hill, South London, where he met and married Mary King.  Their wedding was conducted on 14th April 1883 at St Paul’s Church in the Parish of Herne Hill, when William Charles Collett was 31 and a clerk residing in Wimbledon, the son of William, a man in Holy Orders.  Mary was also 31 and a clerk, but of Herne Hill, the daughter of William King, a merchant.  Seven years later, the childless couple was recorded in the Wimbledon census of 1891 living at Homefield Road, where William C Collett from Suffolk was 39 and a mercantile clerk working in the fibre trade.  His wife Mary Collett from Warwickshire was also 39, and staying with them at that time was William’s younger half-brother John Anthony Collett (below).  That day William was employing a domestic servant, Esther Ledger from Surrey who was 26

 

Sometime after that, William’s half-brother emigrated to America, while William and Mary continued to living in the Wimbledon area, where William Charles Collett from Bury-St-Edmunds was 49 and a manager for a fibre merchant.  Mary Collett was also 49 and again stated that she had been born in Warwickshire within the census return in 1901.  That year the couple still employed a servant, twenty-three-year-old Sarah Holmes from Wiltshire.  Just under nine years after that day, William was widowed, when the death of Mary Collett was recorded at Kingston-on-Thames register office (Ref. 2a 317) during the first quarter of 1909.  Two years after losing his wife, William Charles Collett, aged 59 and from Bury-St-Edmunds, was confirmed as a widower who was still living in Wimbledon, where he was working as the office manager for a general merchant.  The only person living at the same address was his housekeeper, Kate Annie Murray from Surrey who was 36. It was nearly eighteen after that census day, when the death of William C Collett was recorded at Kingston-on-Thames (Ref. 2a 941) during the first three months of 1929, when he was 77.  The Will of William Charles Collett of 15 Homefield Road in Wimbledon who died there on 14th February 1929 was proved at London on 6th April 1929 to Ellen Mary Collett, spinster, when his estate was valued at £1,113 16 Shillings and 3 Pence

 

Agnes Maria Collett [18P23] was born at Bury-St-Edmunds in 1854, another daughter of the Rev William Collett and his wife Mary, whose birth was recorded at Bury (Ref. 4a 404) during the third quarter of that year.  By the time she was two years old, her family was living in the village of Hawstead, two miles south of Bury, where her younger brother Frederick (below) was born.  The Hawstead census returns for 1861, 1871 and 1881 recorded Agnes M Collett as being aged six years, 16 years and 26 years, respectively.  In each case, under occupation, was written ‘daughter’.  It was on 27th September 1886, at Axbridge in Somerset, that the marriage of Agnes Maria Collett and Alexander John Woodforde, the Vicar of Rodney Stoke within the Wells district of Somerset, took place and where it was recorded (Ref. 5c 799).  She was his second wife, and he already had a lot of children from his first marriage, five of whom were living at Rodney Stoke with Alexander aged 52 and Agnes aged 36 in 1891.  They had one child, Dorothy Cecil Woodforde who was born on 20th December 1888, but who died just nineteen days later on 8th January 1889

 

By 1901, her husband was the Vicar of Locking, near Weston-Super-Mare, where Alexander J Woodforde from Castle Cary in Somerset was 60 and Agnes M Woodforde from Bury-St-Edmunds was 46, and employed a male and a female servant.  Upon the death of her husband, two years prior to the next census, his widow was in Weston-super-Mare in 1911, where Agnes M Woodforde from Bury-St-Edmunds was 56 and a widow, living off her own small private means, when she was a visitor at the home of the Robinson from London.  Agnes continued to reside at Weston-super-Mare, where she died on 24th December 1920, when she was 66 years old.  Her death was recorded at Axbridge register office (Ref. 5c 540) during the last three months of 1920.  Probate was completed on 2nd April 1921, when the beneficiaries were named as Robert Edmond Heighes Woodforde and Richard Blackway Drewett.  Alexander John Woodforde was baptised at Castle Cary on 22nd November 1839, the son of George Augustus Woodforde and his wife Harriet Mary.  It was on 11th January 1870 at Castle Cary that he married 20-year-old Elizabeth Laishley, the daughter of George N Laishley.  The later death of Elizabeth Woodforde was recorded at Taunton (Ref. 5c 294) during the second quarter of 1885, following her demise at Lausanne in Switzerland on 5th February 1885.  Her Will was proved at the Principal Registry by her husband, when her estate was valued at £2,100. Upon the later death of Alexander John Woodforde at The Vicarage in Locking on 29th December 1909, his Will was proved on 14th May 1910, the sole beneficiary being his widow Agnes Maria Woodforde, nee Collett.  His passing was also recorded at Axbridge register office (Ref. 5c 311) when he was 70, when he was buried at Locking on 1st January 1910.  All of the previous burial services had been conducted by the Rev A J Woodforde

 

Frederick William Collett [18P24], who was born in 1856 at Hawstead, near Bury-St-Edmunds, and was the youngest child of the Reverend William Collett and his first wife Mary Cecil Augusta von Linsingen.  As Frederick W Collett he was five years old and already attending school when he and his family were still living at Great Green in Hawstead for the census in 1861.  Three years later, his mother died when Frederick was eight years old, and four years after being widowed his father was married for a second time.  Frederick was educated at Dedham Grammar School, where he was a pupil at the age of 14 in 1871.  Sometime after leaving school, and certainly prior to 1879, he emigrated to North America.  That was confirmed by the US Census in 1880 for Blue Rock Precinct, Mendocino County, California, when Frederick Collett from England was 25 and a sheep raiser who was living with Howard Till, a teacher, and his wife Elizabeth.  It was on 6th December 1881 when Frederick W Collett was accepted as a Citizen of the United States of America at the Open Court of the County of Mendocino in California.  A years later, at Benicia in California, on 25th December 1882, Frederick William Collett married Margaret Miller

 

Seventeen years after their wedding day the childless couple was residing at Little Lake Township in Mendocino County, where Frederick W Collett from England, the son of an English father and a German mother, was 44 and a farmer who was born in July 1855, who had been living in America for twenty-four years.  His wife Margaret was 61 and born in Canada of English parents, who had lived in America for thirty-five years.  William was the only one who had not sought American citizenship, while the census record confirmed that the couple never had any children.  When the next census was conducted in 1910, the couple was living at 660 Robinson Street in Ophir Township, Butte County in California.  By then, Frederick W Collett was 58 and a driver with a transfer wagon, with Margaret being 64.  Just prior to that year, Frederick’s older unmarried sister Augusta Cecil Collett (above) had sailed from England to America, and had travelled across the country to live in California.  In 1910 she was recorded in the town of Sonoma, just north of San Francisco, while staying her twenty years later was her younger brother Frederick W Collett.  He was 73 and was with his sister on the day of the census in 1930 at the house owned by 82-year-old Augusta C Collett in Santa Rosa township in Sonoma County.  It was almost eleven months later that Frederick William Collett died at Santa Rosa on 28th February 1931

 

However, before that happened, Ophir was renamed Oroville, where Frederick (recorded as Frank) and Margaret were still living at Robinson Street in 1920, when they were 64 and 74 respectively.  Margaret Collett nee Miller died on 20th March 1923 and that was when Frederick when to live with his sister.  The couple’s gravestones carried the following information.  Margaret wife of F W Collett born March 22 1846, died March 20 1923 and F W Collett born July 1 1856, died February 27 1931 – a day earlier than that recorded in the California death records

 

Leonora Julia Collett [18P25] was born at Hawstead on 30th October 1871, her birth recorded at Thingoe (Ref. 4a 455) during the last three months of the year.  She was the eldest of the two children of the Reverend William Collett, Rector of Hawstead, and his second wife Charlotte Stowiczek.  And it was at The Rectory in Hawstead that she was living with her widowed father at the time of the census in 1881 when she was nine years old.  Ten months later her father died on the first day of February 1882, although it has not been determined exactly what happened to her following his death.  Ten years later, at the time of the census in 1891, Leonora J Collett of Hawstead was 19 and was living in the Brentford area of north London.  She later returned to Bury-St-Edmunds to live with her older half-sister Ellen Mary Collett, with whom she was living in March 1901 when she was recorded as Leonora Julia Collett, who was unmarried at the age of 29, and who was working as a daily governess. 

 

It can now be confirmed that she never married, firstly from the next census in 1911, when she was still unmarried and living at Bury-St-Edmunds at the age of 39 and then, following the probate process of the Will of her half-sister Mary Louisa Collett (above) in which Leonora Julia Collett was named as the main beneficiary in the summer of 1921.  The later Will and obituary for her half-sister Augusta Cecil Collett, (above) published in a Santa Rosa newspaper on 3rd November 1935, named Leonora J Collett of Bury-St-Edmunds, where she was still living with another half-sister Ellen Mary Collett (above).  She was also one of the main beneficiaries under the terms of Augusta C Collett’s Will made in 1934, together with her brother John Anthony (below), and the Church of the Incarnation in Santa Rosa.  See Legal Documents for precise details.  Five years later, the 1939 Registry included Leonora J Collett living in Bury-St-Edmunds, when she was described as a retired teacher.  New details discovered in 2014 reveal that spinster Leonora J Collett died at Bury-St-Edmunds, where her death was recorded (Ref. 4b 1205) during the second quarter of 1967, when she was 95 years of age.  During her life, she was known to have a keen interest in art, perhaps through her association with her half-sister Sophia Elizabeth Collett (above) and Alfred Master Collett (below), both established artists from Suffolk.  The Will of Leonora Julia Collett of The Planche, Thurston, Bury-St-Edmunds, who died on 29th April 1967, was proved at Ipswich on 21st June 1967 to Thomas Mason Ashton, solicitor, and Dorothy Alice Croaswell, spinster, when her personal effects were recorded as £11,400

 

John Anthony Collett [18P26], who was born at Hawstead on 11th January 1874, his birth recorded at Thingoe (Ref. 4a 507) during the first quarter of 1874.  He was the younger of the two children of the Reverend William Collett, Rector of Hawstead and his second wife Charlotte Stowiczek.  Tragically, his mother died shortly after he was born.  Subsequently he was recorded as John A Collett, who was seven years old, at the time of the census in 1881, when he was living at The Rectory in Hawstead with his widowed father, his sister Leonora (above), and his four much older half-sisters.  At the age of 17, and according to the census in 1891, John A Collett from Hawstead was living in the Wimbledon area of South London with his married older half-brother William Charles Collett (above), having been taken there following the death of their father in February 1882.  During the years after 1891, it would appear that John emigrated to North America, where he was known later to be living at Vashon in King County, Washington State.  It was at Vashon Precinct that he was recorded in the US Census of 1920, when he was described as John Collett from England, aged 45, single, and working as a labourer, who entered America in 1915.  He was still there, at 66 Vashon High Way in 1930, by which time he was 56 and a fruit farmer whose home carried a value of $2,500.  He was again living in Vashon in November 1935, when his older half-sister Augusta Cecil Collett (above) died when he was referred to in her obituary as John Collett of Seattle, and was one of the main beneficiaries under the terms of her Will, which revealed he was living in Vashon at that time.  See Legal Documents for precise details 

 

By the time of the next census in 1940, John A Collett from England was 66 and had retired, having no stated occupation, when he was still residing at Vashon in King County, at the same house as the previous census.  At the time of the First World War, the US Draft Registration Form provided the following details of John A Collett.  He was 44 years old, a British subject who had been born on 11th January 1874, with his permanent address stated to be 1019 Stanger Road in Seattle.  He was working as a labourer and employed by Bruce Nettleton of 2 Meridian Road, Seattle, when he said that his nearest relative was Augusta Collett of 576 Mendocino Drive, Santa Rosa, California.  Much later, when John Anthony Collett was 70 years of age, he died at Vashon on 25th May 1944

 

Alfred Master Collett [18P27] may have been born at the end of 1858 at Melcombe Regis, an area of Weymouth in the Parish of Radipole, his birth, under his full name, was recorded at Weymouth (Ref. 5a 334) during the first two months of 1859.  He was the only child of Daniel Collett and his first wife Elizabeth Lizzie Pollard, nee Canwell, and was baptised at Weymouth on 9th February 1859.  By the time of the census in 1861, Alfred M Collett was two years old and was living with his parents at 7 St Mary’s Street in Melcombe Regis.  Ten years later, in 1871, the family was still living in Melcombe Regis, but at 7 Grosvenor Road, when Alfred M Collett was 12.  His mother Lizzie P Collett was only 40 years old on that occasion, but died during the summer of 1875, after which his father was married for a second time.  During that same decade, Alfred was educated at Keble Collage in Oxford, where he matriculated on 15th October 1877, aged 18.  He came away from university with a Bachelor of Arts in 1880 and, later, obtained a Master of Arts in 1884.  By the time of the census in 1881, he was recorded again at the family home, 7 Grosvenor Road in Melcombe, with his stepmother Mary Sherwood Collett, when his father was working in London as a civil engineer that day.  Within the census return Alfred M Collett was 22 and described as a BA (Oxon) Student.  It was during the next year, that Alfred M Collett was ordained a deacon at Norwich, from where he was appointed as the priest at the Church of St Mary Stoke on the south bank of the River Orwell in Ipswich.  He was an accomplished artist and, as a member of the Ipswich Art Club from 1883 to 1885 he exhibited his work in each of those three years.  At the time of the exhibition in 1883, he was residing at Mill Cottage, Belstead Road in Ipswich, when he exhibited four monochromes: ‘Witney Church, Oxon’; ‘Manor House, Radipole, Weymouth’; ‘Wimborne Minster, Dorset’; and ‘Magdalen Bridge, Oxford'.  In 1884 he was living at Gipping House, Burrell Road in Ipswich and in 1885, from his home at St Mary Stoke, he entry two monochromes, ‘Sketch of Sproughton’ and ‘Bramford’

 

As the Reverend Alfred Master Collett, he was never married and, following the death of his father in 1889, the Will of Daniel Collett was proved on 28th May 1889 named Alfred Master Collett and his stepmother Mary Sherwood Collett as the main beneficiaries.  Also, during the latter years of the 1880s, Alfred was appointed to the post of Curate of St Mary’s Church in Dover.  That was confirmed in the census in 1891 when Alfred Master Collett from Weymouth was 32 and recorded at the Eastry (Kent) home of the Barton family.  After a further ten years, he was in Cheltenham, at the home of his stepmother Mary, at 5 Selkirk Parade in the town.  The census confirmed that the place of birth of Alfred M Collett was Weymouth and that he was 42, and living on his own means.  And it was a similar situation in 1911 when at the age of 52, Alfred Master Collett was still living in Cheltenham, but as a boarder at the home of elderly Caroline Osborn, by which time he was working as a private tutor.  Alfred survived for a further twenty-six years and was a patient at Cheltenham Infirmary when he died on 4th May 1937, at the age of 79, following which his death was recorded at Cheltenham register office (Ref. 6a 443).  His Will was proved at Gloucester just three weeks later on 27th May 1937.  During the probate process it was confirmed that Alfred Master Collett died in hospital in Cheltenham on 4th May and that his personal effects worth £641 19 Shillings and 2 Pence were handled by Henry Edwin Daniel, a retired bank official.  Daniel was the maiden-name of his maternal grandmother Amelia Daniel, the wife of Cornelius Collett, so it is likely that Henry Edwin Daniel was a member of Alfred’s extended family

 

Emily Collett [18P28] was born at Beverley in 1861, where her recently married parents Trusson Collett and Elizabeth Charlotte Collett, were living at that time.  While her birth was recorded at Beverley (Ref. 9d 91) during the third quarter of 1861, it was at Brightwell Church in Brightwell-cum-Foxhall, near Ipswich, that she was baptised on 18th August 1861, where her grandfather was the Reverend Woodthorpe Collett, the father of Emily’s mother Elizabeth.  The baptism record for Brightwell-cum-Foxhall confirmed that Emily was the daughter of Trusson and Elizabeth Charlotte Collett, Collett also being her mother’s maiden-name.  Emily and her parents continued to live in Beverley for a few more years, before they moved into London where they were living in 1881, although their whereabouts ten years earlier has not been determined

 

                                             Emily Collett                                         her daughter

 

However, it is known that in 1871 Emily Collett from Beverley was attending a boarding school at Bexley in Kent (South London) when she was ten years of age, the head of the school being James Newlone and his wife Eliza A Newlone.  Ten years later, the census in 1881 confirmed that Emily and her parents were living at 178 Goldhawk Road in Hammersmith, where her father Trusson’s occupation was that of a clerk.  Emily’s place of birth was Beverley and, although she was 19 years old, she was listed as a scholar which would indicate that she was participating in higher education.  After a further decade, Emily Collett was a spinster at 29, when she was still living with her parents on the day of the census in 1891.  Shortly thereafter, within the next three months, the marriage by the reading of banns of Emily Collett and Leopold Hapesburg Norton took place on 13th August 1891 at Christ Church in Brondesbury within the Middlesex parish of Willesden.  The event was recorded at Hendon (Ref. 3a 232) during the third quarter of 1891.  Leopold was 25, a bachelor and a clerk of 47 Cavendish Road in Brondesbury, the son of Robert Norton esquire (deceased).  Emily was a spinster at 30, whose abode was 21 Cavendish Road, the daughter of Trusson Collett, gentleman.  The marriage register was signed by the bride and groom in their own hand, when the witnesses were Trusson Collett and his wife Elizabeth Charlotte Collett, and Walter P Norton, with the wedding service conducted by the Reverend W M Collett, Rector of Cromhall.  He was William Michael Collett [18O53 1839-1902]

 

Leopold was an insurance clerk who had been born at Islington in London on 1st November 1865, (when his surname was recorded as Hansburg), the youngest son of Robert and Clara Norton, who was baptised at Old Church in St Pancras on 25th November 1865.  Tragically, Leopold Hapesburg Norton died after only being married to Emily for three years, but not before the marriage had produced a daughter for the couple.  He suffered with epilepsy and died of tubercular meningitis on 8th September 1894, his death recorded at Brentford register office (Ref. 8a 64) at the age of only 28.  His Will was proved in London on 5th November 1894, when the sole beneficiary was his wife Emily Norton.  The couple’s daughter, Dorothy Annis Norton, had been born in the family home at 37 Fairlawn Avenue, Acton Green in Chiswick, two years earlier on 6th September 1892, after which she was baptised at the Church of St Alban the Martyr in Acton Green on 2nd October 1892.  Such was the grief, that Emily felt following the loss of her young husband, that she never recovered and died on 9th July 1901 while staying with relatives in Suffolk.  The death of Emily Norton was recorded at Blything register office in Suffolk (Ref. 4a 639) when she was 40 years of age.  It was also in Suffolk where her Will was proved on 15th August 1901, when the sole beneficiary was her father Trusson Collett.  No obvious record of Emily Norton has been found within the census of 1901.  On the day, her daughter Dorothy A Norton, aged eight years and from London, was recorded as visiting the Rope family at Blaxhall, within the Blything area of Suffolk

 

Following the death of her mother, Dorothy was looked after by her elderly grandparents Trusson and Elizabeth Collett at their home in London.  That was confirmed in the census return for 1911, when eighteen years old Dorothy Annis Norton of Chiswick was living at 21 Cavendish Road, just of the A5 Edgware Road between Brondesbury and Kilburn.  Also living in the house was Trusson Collett and his wife Elizabeth Charlotte Collett, together with two domestic servants.  Dorothy was described as a scholar since, at that time, she was attending a boarding school in Richmond.  The photograph above, and to the right of her mother, was taken midway between the 1901 and 1911 Census years, when Dorothy Annis Norton was around thirteen years of age

 

Nine years after the census day in 1911, Dorothy Annis Norton, aged 27, married widower Frederic Paul Marcel Tallet, aged 48, at Brondesbury on 2nd June 1920.  Frederic was of French parents and was born in 1872, and was therefore twenty years older than Dorothy.  Once married, the couple settled in Maida Vale, to the south of Brondesbury, and were living at 23 Bloomfield Court at the time of the birth of their two children.  It was also there that Dorothy and her family were living at the end of 1922, when her widowed grandfather Trusson Collett passed away and Dorothy Annis Talet was named as one of the joint executors of his Will.  It was during the previous year that her first child, Gerald Paul Marcel Tallet, was born in 1921 while his sister Margaret Pauline Tallet was born four years later in 1925.  The children’s father Frederic died in 1954 at the age of 82, while their mother Dorothy, who lived to be 97 when she died in 1989, continued to manage her own affairs right up to the end of her life.  Her son Gerald died two years later in 1991, while her daughter Margaret is married with a daughter of her own, who was born at Aylesbury in 1971.  This is Katerina Antalopoulos, and it is Katerina who kindly provided the information that has enabled the story of her mother and her grandparents to be told

 

Frances Mary Collett [18P29] was born at Gillingham in Dorset during 1844, with her birth recorded at Shaftesbury (Ref. viii 77) during the third quarter of the year.  It was at Gillingham where she was baptised on 1st September 1844, the eldest child of William Lloyd Collett, a clerk (in Holy Orders) from Little Ilford in Essex and Frances Harriet Smith of Charlton in Kent, when the baptism ceremony was conducted by her father Reverend W L Collett.  Possibly because of the birth of the family’s fifth child in 1850, Frances and her two younger sisters Anna and Mary were staying with their grandparents at Charlton in 1851, where they were six, five, and three years old respectively.  Frances M Collett of Gillingham was 16 in 1861 when she was living with her family at St Stephen’s Parsonage in Hammersmith, although it is not known where she was at the time of the census in 1871 at the age of 26.  She has also not been located in 1881, even though it is established that she never married.  By the time of the census in 1891 Frances M Collett, aged 47, was once again living with her parents in Hammersmith and, following the death of her father in 1896, Frances and her mother left London and retired to Brighton to live at 10 Charlotte Street, the home of her uncle John James Collett

 

That was confirmed by the Brighton census in March 1901 when Frances was 56.  In addition to her mother, Frances’ unmarried sister Catherine (below) was also living there with them, as was Frances’ uncle John Collett of Westerham, her father’s youngest brother.  Upon his death early in 1902 Frances Mary Collett was named as one of the executors of his Will with her sister Helen Clara Collett (below).  With the death of her mother sometime during the following decade, Frances Mary Collett, aged 66, was still living in Brighton in April 1911, and living with her at that time were her two unmarried sisters Helen Clara Collett and Catherine Hester Collett.  It was just over eleven years later that Frances Mary Collett passed away on 2nd August 1922, her death recorded at Ampthill register office in Bedfordshire (Ref. 3a 314), when she was 77 years old.  Her address by that time was The Hoo at Aspley Guise near Woburn in Bedfordshire.  It took eighteen months for her Will to pass through probate, when it was proved at Northampton on 19th January 1924.  By that time the value of her estate had been published at £8,832 7 Shillings and 2 Pence, while it was her unmarried sister Catherine Hester Collett who was named within the Will, together with spinster Eva Margaret Williams and her brother Edward Taunton Williams [solicitor]

 

Anna Sophia Collett [18P30] was born at Gillingham in Dorset in 1845, her birth recorded at Shaftesbury (Ref. viii 74) during the last three months of the year.  She was also baptised at Gillingham on 2nd November 1845, the daughter of William Lloyd Collett and his wife Frances.  At the age of five she was staying with her grandmother Susette Smith and her grandfather Henry Smith at Morden College, and with her were her two sisters Frances (above) and Mary (below).  In 1861 Anna S Collett was 15 and was attending school in Hammersmith, while she was living with her family at St Stephen’s Parsonage.  By the time of the next census in 1871, Anna would have been 25, and with no record of an Anna Sophia Collett in that census or any thereafter, it must be assumed that she had become a married lady by then

 

Mary Collett [18P31] was born at Gillingham in Dorset in 1847 and was baptised there on 1st August 1847, the daughter of William Lloyd and Frances Harriet Collett.  At the time of the census in 1851 Mary Collett, aged three years and from Gillingham, was staying with her grandparents Henry and Susette Smith at Morden College, where Henry was the college treasurer.  No further record of Mary has been found after that time, so it is assumed that she very likely suffered a childhood death

 

Helen Clara Collett [18P32] was born at Dover in 1848, where her birth was recorded (Ref. v 117) and where she was baptised on 11th April 1849, the daughter of William Lloyd Collett and his wife Frances Harriet Smith.  She was two years old at the time of the St Pancras & Kentish Town census of 1851, but was absent from the family in 1861 when they were living at St Stephen’s Parsonage in Hammersmith, when she would have been 12.  At the age of 22 she was once again living with her family in Hammersmith, but with no listed occupation, which probably suggests that she was supporting her mother.  By 1881 Helen was still a spinster at 32, and was still living with her parents in the vicarage on Coverdale Road in Hammersmith.  It is unsure where Helen was during the next three decades, but in 1911 she was living on her own means in Brighton with her sisters Frances (above) and Catherine (below), when she was described as unmarried Helen Clara Collett, aged 62.  Nine years prior to that Helen Clara Collett was named as one of the executors of the Will of her uncle John James Collett on 10 Charlotte Street in Brighton.  The death of Helen Clara Collett of the Hoo at Aspley Guise in Bedfordshire, the home she shared with her sister Catherine (below) was recorded at Leighton Buzzard register office (Ref. 3b 394) during the last quarter of 1927 at the age of 79.  It was on 19th November 1927 that she died at the Carlton Medical Home in Leighton Buzzard, Beds, following which probate of her personal effects of £10,034 5 Shillings and 7 Pence, save and except settled land, was granted in London on 1st February 1928 to Wilfred Godden, a solicitor

 

Catherine Hester Collett [18P33] was born at Winkfield in Berkshire on 8th October 1850, the fourth daughter of William and Harriet Collett and was under one year old in the St Pancras & Kentish Town census of 1851.  Over the following years her family settled in Hammersmith where she was 10 in 1861 and 20 in 1871.  According to the next census in 1881 Catherine H Collett from Winkfield in Berkshire was a certified schoolteacher.  On that occasion she was unmarried at the age of 30, and was a lodger at 7 Church Street in Farnworth, Lancashire, the home of coal agent William Farnworth and his wife Ellen.  In 1891 Catherine Collett, aged 40, was again living with her elderly parents at Hammersmith, where her sister Frances (above) was also living at that time.  With the passing of her father five years later, Catherine and her mother, together with her sister Frances Mary (above), moved to Brighton where all three were living on their own means in 1901 at 10 Charlotte Street the home of John James Collett.  Catherine E Collett was 50 and shortly after that Catherine’s mother passed away, at which time a third unmarried sister Helen joined Catherine and Frances at Brighton.  That was confirmed in the census of 1911 when Catherine Hester Collett was 60

 

It was just over eleven years later that Catherine’s eldest sister Frances Mary Collett died at Aspley Guise near Woburn on 2nd August 1922.  Her sister’s Will was eighteen months going through probate, and was eventually proved at Northampton on 19th January 1924, in which spinster Catherine Hester Collett was named as receiving some part of her sister’s estate of just over £8,832.  It was a similar situation in 1929 upon the death of her brother Robert William Collett (below), when his estate was inherited by Catherine Hester Collett.  Following the death of her older sister Helen Clara Collett (above), Catherine continued to live at the Hoo in Aspley Guise, Bedfordshire, the home that she had very likely shared with her sister until she passed away.  Certainly that situation was confirmed in the 1939 Register, which included an entry for Catherine Hester Collett living at The Hoo, where she was living on private means with two female domestic servants.  The register also confirmed that she had been born on 8th October 1850.  It was also at the Hoo in Aspley Guise that Catherine Hester Collett was living in 1940 when she died.  Her death on 24th June 1940 was recorded at Ampthill register office (Ref. 3b 878) at the age of 89.  Upon her death she left a considerable fortune amounting to £23,452 17 Shillings and 8 Pence, probate for which was handed to William Deacons Bank Ltd and Edgar Laurence Newall Tuck, a solicitor

 

Robert William Collett [18P34] was born at Cumberland Cottage in Shepherd’s Bush within the Parish of St Stephen Hammersmith in London on 5th June 1852, the eldest of the three sons, and the sixth child of William and Harriet Collett.  It was on 8th July 1852 that he was baptised at St Stephen’s Church, on Coverdale Road in Shepherds Bush by the Reverend William Cooke, who deputised for Robert’s father that day, William Lloyd Collett being a Minister in the Church of England and a Clerk in Holy Orders, who conducted most of the other services at St Stephen’s Church.  Robert W Collett, aged eight years, was living with his family in the Hammersmith census return for 1861.  He was still there ten years later when he was still attending school (medical college) at the age of 18.  He eventually qualified from medical college, when he became a physician and a surgeon with the following initials after his name M R C S L R C P.  After an initial spell working in London, Robert spent a short while at Wick near Bristol, before securing a position at Yarmouth Hospital in Deneside, Great Yarmouth, where he was working in 1881.  By that time, as Robert William Collett, he was described as being aged 28, from Hammersmith, unmarried, and employed as a House Surgeon.

 

It was three years later when bachelor Robert William Collett was married by licence to Emily Maria Saunders at the Parish Church in Bradford-on-Avon, Wiltshire, on 25th October 1884 (Ref. 5a 248).  The registration of their wedding recorded that Robert was 32 and a surgeon residing at St Stephen’s Vicarage in Shepherd’s Bush, the son of William Lloyd Collett, a Clerk in Holy Orders.  His bride was described as a 24-year-old spinster, residing at The Priory, the daughter of Thomas Bush Saunders, esquire.  The wedding ceremony was conducted by Robert’s father (Vicar of St Stephen’s Hammersmith), when the couple signed the register in their own hand, and when one of the witnesses was Emily’s father.  Emily was born at Brompton in London on 13th January 1860, her birth recorded at Dartford (Ref. 2a 261), who was baptised at Brompton on 9th May 1860, the daughter of barrister Thomas Saunders with whom she was living at the time of the census in 1891.  It seems rather strange that Emily remained living in Wiltshire after she married Robert, perhaps to look after her elderly widowed father.  The census in 1891 recorded her as Emily M Collett who was 31 and from Middlesex, a married lady living at Market Street in Bradford-on-Avon, the home of her father and head of the household Thomas Bush Saunders who was 83.  Completing the household were two domestic servants, Elizabeth Lye aged 27, and Adelaide King who was 17.  Staying with them on that day was their relative Beatrice C Riley who was 18.  On that same day, Robert Collett aged 38 and from Shepherd’s Bush, was married and a Doctor of Medicine (London), but on that occasion he was a lodger at a boarding house at 7 Lower Rock Gardens in the Kemp Town district of Brighton, not far from Brighton Pier.  Living with Robert’s parents at Hammersmith in 1881 was Robert’s aunt Frances Collett and her brother, uncle John Collett.  They were an older sister and a younger brother of Robert’s father, and by 1891 they too were living in the Kemp Town area of Brighton, so it is possible Robert was visiting them for health reasons

 

Why he and his wife continued to live apart from one another, remains a mystery, while it has been confirmed that Emily Collett aged 41 and from Brompton was still living in Bradford in 1901 and again in 1911, when she was recorded as Emily Maria Collett aged 51 and from Brompton.  The only other known fact about her is, that she died in Wiltshire during 1916, where the death of Emily Maria Collett, ‘the wife of Robert William Collett’ was recorded at Bradford-on-Avon register office (Ref. 5a 111) during the third quarter of 1916, when she was 56 years of age.  Her burial record at Christ Church in Bradford reveals that the entry was previously made using her maiden-name of Saunders, but was amended to Collett, which confirmed she was still residing at The Priory in Bradford when she died and that she was buried on 15th September 1916.  The Will of Emily Maria Collett of The Priory Bradford-on-Avon, wife of Robert William Collett, was the subject of limited administration in London on 4th February 1917 and granted to William Hawkins Herbert, solicitor and attorney, for Henry John Saunders in the sum of £13,101 7 Shillings and 3 Pence.  The documentation also confirmed that she died on 12th September 1916

 

It is now understood that shortly after 1891, Robert may have been become mentally ill and was possibly admitted into a home, hence the reason he has not been identified within the census conducted in 1901.  Certainly, that was the case ten years later, when R W Collett was a patient at St Andrew's Hospital for Mental Diseases on Billing Road in Northampton.  At the age of 59, he was described as being married and a former medical practitioner, who had been a lunatic for many years.  His place of birth was incorrectly stated as Sheffield, a mistake for Shepherds Bush one assumes.  It was also while he was still a patient at St Andrew’s Hospital that he died in 1929, that death was recorded at Bangor register office (Ref. 11b 485) during the third quarter of 1929, when he was 77.  The Will of Robert William Collett of St Andrew’s Hospital who died on 21st July 1929 while at Bryn-y-Nwadd Hall, Llanferfechan near Carnarvon, was proved at London on 14th November 1929 to Catherine Hester Collett, spinster, the estate valued at £2,885 19 Shillings and 1 Penny.  All previous reference to Robert possibly having fathered a son prior to his marriage to Emily has now been removed as incorrect

 

Alfred Collett [18P35] was born at Shepherds Bush in 1854 and was a twin with his brother Arthur.  The birth of Alfred Collett was recorded at Kensington (Ref. 1a 103).  The baptism of both sons was conducted at St Stephen’s Church in Shepherd’s Bush (in the London Parish of St Stephen’s Hammersmith) by their father the Reverend William Lloyd Collett, the Clerk in Holy Orders at St Stephen’s, on 17th May 1854, following their birth earlier that same day at Cumberland Cottage in Shepherd’s Bush.  In the Hammersmith census of 1861 Alfred and Arthur were both six years old when living with their family at St Stephen’s Parsonage.  Ten years later they were both still living with their family when they were 16, at a time when the family was then living in St Stephen’s Vicarage in Hammersmith.  By the time of the next census in 1881 Alfred Collett, aged 26, was listed as a civil engineer who was still living at the home of his father the Reverend William Lloyd Collett at the vicarage in Coverdale Road in Shepherd’s Bush, Hammersmith.  It is not known at this time, as to the whereabouts of his twin brother Arthur Collett, of whom no records have been found in any of the British census records after 1871

 

Alfred Collett was a Member of the Institute of Civil Engineers (M.I.C.E.) and it may have been his work that resulted in him sailing to South America in the early 1880s, where he was later joined by his sister Jessie Susette Collett (below).  And it was in Argentina at St John’s Anglican Cathedral in Buenos Aires on 29th April 1886, that Alfred married Ida May Wilkinson, following the reading of banns at that church.  Ida was the daughter of James Wilkinson.  The witnesses at the wedding did not include Alfred’s sister Jessie, suggesting that she had travelled to South America after that time.  The cathedral record confirmed that Alfred and Ida were both from England, that they were both residents of Buenos Aires at the time of their marriage, and that the witnesses were W. Tudor, John Joseph Bithell, Mary Tudor, Agnes Woodhouse, Catherine Tudor, Augusta Lennox Robertson, Henry Dickinson, and Chas. B. Wilkinson, with the service being conducted by the officiating minister Arthur George Lennox Robertson, assistant chaplain.  Alfred Collett was only married for nine years when he died at Natal Rio Grande Norte in Brazil on 29th June 1895, following which his Will was proved in London on 26th March 1896 to Alfred Sturton Pinn and Edgar Ford, esquires, for his personal effects of £592 11 Shillings and 7 Pence

 

The birth of Ida May Wilkinson was recorded at Hampstead (Ref. 1a 595) during the second quarter of 1868, and was baptised at All Soul’s Church in West Hampstead on 16th May 1868, the daughter of James John Wilkinson, a civil engineer, and Eliza Hackett of 31 Springfield Road.  Four years prior to the death of her husband, the wife of Alfred Collett was residing at 96 Addison Road in Kensington, London.  Ida M Collett from St John’s Wood in London, was 23 and with her was her son Reginald A Collett who was two years of age and a British Subject born in South American.  That day, in 1891 also confirmed that Ida was employing two female domestic servants, while ten years later her son was attending a private boarding school at Standon in Hertfordshire.  The 1901 census confirmed that Reginald Alfred Collett from Buenos Aires, Argentina, was 12 years of age, a student at the all-boys school, and the son of an English mother.  After a further ten years, widow Ida May Collett, a widow aged 41 and born in the Marylebone area of London, was living on private means in the five-roomed property that was 57 Carlton Mansions, Portsdown Road in Paddington.  With her that day was widower John Pearce, a 73-year-old boarder from Kensington, also living on private means

 

18Q13 – Reginald Alfred Collett was born after 1886 in Argentina

 

Isabel Augusta Collett [18P37] was born at St Stephen’s Parsonage in Shepherd’s Bush on 30th 1856, the nineth child of William Lloyd Collett and Frances Harriet Smith.  It was her father, who conducted her baptism at St Stephen’s Church on 3rd May 1856, where he was the Perpetual Curate of St Stephen’s Hammersmith.  She was four years old in the Hammersmith census of 1861, when she was living at St Stephen’s Parsonage with her family.  On that occasion she was listed as Isabella A Collett.  It was ten years later that she was recorded as Isabel Augusta Collett, aged 14, who was living with her family at St Stephen’s Vicarage in Hammersmith.  By 1881 Isabel A Collett, aged 24 and unmarried with no stated occupation, was still living with her parents at the vicarage in Coverdale Road in Hammersmith.  However, sometime after that she headed north to Oxford where, in 1891, she was listed as Isabel A Collett, aged 34 and from Shepherd’s Bush, living within the St Clement & Headington census registration district.  It would appear that, like three of her sisters, she never married and by 1901 she was still living in Oxford St Giles when, as Isabel A Collett, she was 44 and from Shepherd’s Bush with no stated occupation

 

During the first decade of the new century Isabel left Oxford and retired to Devon, where she was living in 1911.  The census that year recorded Isabel Augusta Collett, aged 54 and from Shepherd’s Bush, living alone in Newton Abbot on the south coast of the county.  It was over twenty-five years later that Isabel Augusta Collett, spinster of East Wyke, South Zeal near Okehampton in Devon died on 24th August 1935 when administration of her personal effects of £14,367 14 Shillings and 3 Pence was granted to her sister, the widow Jessie Suzette Collett- Mason, on 23rd October that same year.  It would appear that, like three of her sisters, she never married and by 1901 she was still living in Oxford St Giles when, as Isabel A Collett, she was 44 and from Shepherd’s Bush with no stated occupation.  During the first decade of the new century Isabel left Oxford and retired to Devon, where she was living in 1911.  The census that year recorded Isabel Augusta Collett, aged 54 and from Shepherd’s Bush, living alone in Newton Abbot on the south coast of the county.  It was over twenty-five years later that Isabel Augusta Collett, spinster of East Wyke, South Zeal near Okehampton in Devon, died on 24th August 1935 when administration of her personal effects of £14,367 14 Shillings and 3 Pence was granted to her sister, the widow Jessie Suzette Collett-Mason, on 23rd October that same year.  The death of Isabel A Collett was recorded at Okehampton register office (Ref. 5b 425) during the third quarter of 1935, at the age of 78

 

Jessie Susette Collett [18P38] was born at St Stephen’s Parsonage in Shepherds Bush on 18th June 1860, her birth recorded at Kensington (Ref. 1a 110) during the third quarter of 1860.  It was at St Stephen’s Church that she was baptised on 17th July 1860, the last child born to William Lloyd Collett, a Clerk in Holy Orders, and the Vicar of St Stephen’s Church in Shepherd’s Bush, and his wife Frances Harriet Smith.  Jessie was ten months old in the Shepherd’s Bush census of 1861, and ten years later, in the census of 1871, when she would have been 10 years old, she was missing from the family home at St Stephen’s Vicarage on Coverdale Road in Shepherd’s Bush.  However, ten years after that in 1881, she was one of four children still living with her parents at the vicarage on Coverdale Road, when she was 20 years of age.  It would appear that, before the next census in 1891, Jessie may have been persuaded to leave England for South America by her brother Alfred (above), who had already travelled to that distant continent sometime before 1886.  However, she was not a witness at Alfred’s wedding in April that year, perhaps indicating that she had arrived in the country after 1886.  What is known though is that she married James Collett Mason by the publishing of banns at St John’s Anglican Cathedral in Buenos Aires on 20th August 1887, and that her married brother Alfred Collett (above) was a witness at the ceremony.  James was born on 7th June 1853 at Chorlton in Manchester, where his birth was recorded (Ref. 8c 426), and was baptised on 27th October 1853, the youngest child of William Wallis Mason (born in 1806), a chemist and a druggist, and his wife Mary Anne Poole, and the great grandson of William Wallis Mason and his first wife Mary Collett of Eyke [18M7].  Jessie’s great grandfather was Robert Collett of Eyke [18M9], the brother of Mary Collett, thus confirming that Jessie and James were in fact distant cousins. 

 

On 17th March 1896, James Collett Mason, a farmer, sailed out of Southampton on board the SS Clyde bound for Buenos Aires in Argentina, when he was 43 years of age.  Ten years later, at the age of 53, James made the return journey, arriving at Southampton on 4th August 1906 on board the SS Amazon.  He made the same homeward bound journey, on the same ship, two years later, arriving at Southampton on 18th July 1908, when he was 55, and again on board the SS Aron (Royal Mail Steam Ship) from which James stepped ashore at Southampton on 31st July 1909.  His wife Jessie had also made the sea journey on at least two occasions, the first time being on board the SS Amazon of The Royal Mail Steam Packet Company, arriving in Southampton from Buenos Aires on 4th January 1908, when Jessie Susette Collett Mason was 43 and accompanied by her daughter Margaret Marion Collett Mason who was 19.  On what might appear to be her final return journey to England, Jessie was accompanied by her husband and her three daughters.  Unfortunately, the passenger list for the SS Aragon, which arrived at Southampton on 2nd July 1910, did not include their ages.  The family was simply listed as James Collett Mason, Jessie Collett Mason, Margaret Collett Mason, Frances Collett Mason, and Kathleen Collett Mason.  All of the sea journeys were undertaken in first class cabins

 

The cathedral record confirmed that Jessie Susette Collett from England was a resident in the Belgrano district of the city, while James Collett Mason, who was also from England, was living in Santa Fe Province.  The witnesses at the service were recorded as J. Palmer Smythies, Alfred Collett, John Joseph Bithell, O. P. S. Nancy, J. G. Russell, and T. W. Hubbard.  The officiating minister at the ceremony was Waite Hockin Stirling, the Bishop of the Falkland Islands.  It may be of interest that James Collett Mason is credited as having an estancia (farm) called ‘Santa Micaela’ in San José de la Esquina in the Province of Santa Fe.  Jessie and James’ first child, their daughter Margaret Marion Collett-Mason, was born while the couple was living in Buenos Aires, while their next four children were born at Rosario in Argentina.  It was the couple’s youngest child, William Collett Mason, who inherited everything from his father to the detriment of his siblings.  It was sometime after the birth of the couple’s last child that James Collett Mason and his family returned to England where he became a Justice of the Peace.  Burkes Landed Gentry [2001] states that he lived at Nieuport Hall in Eardisley in the County of Herefordshire, whereas the 1963 version of Debrett when listing his daughter Ascelin Frances Collett Mason, referred to him as the late James Collett Mason JP of Ashurst Place, Langton Green in Kent.  It was also at the time of the marriage of his eldest daughter in 1918 that his address was given as Nieuport Hall, Eardisley

 

In early 1911, prior to the census that year, James sought official approval to incorporate Collett as part of the family’s surname.  This was granted and was in evidence by the end of March 1911 when the census was conducted that year.  From the date of approval, the name was hyphenated as Collett-Mason, so James became James Collett Collett-Mason and Jessie became Jessie Susette Collett-Mason.  Certainly, at the time of the census in Great Britain in 1911, Jessie was recorded as Jessie Susette Collett-Mason, head of the household at The Hoo in Aspley Guise in Bedfordshire.  She was 50, living on private means, and had been born at St Stephens, Uxbridge Road in London.  The census return also described Jessie as having been married for 23 years, and had given birth to four children, all of whom were still alive.  That statement seems no to have taken account of daughter Augusta, about whom nothing is known, and who presumably suffered an infant death.  However, living at The Hoo with Jessie were her two daughters Ascelin Francis who was 20 and Kathleen Lucy who was 19 and both of them born in Argentina and both described as British subjects by parentage.  That day Jessie employed four domestic servants at the seventeen-roomed accommodation that was The Hoo.  At that same time Jessie’s youngest son William, aged 15, was attending a school in Kent.  Where James was on that day has not been determined.  It was on Saturday 14th December 1929 that Jessie’s husband died while the couple was living at Ashurst Place, Langton Green to the west of Tunbridge Wells.  The death of James Collett Collett-Mason was recorded at Tonbridge register office (Ref. 2a 999) at the age of 76.  The following announcement of his passing was printed in The Times newspaper on Tuesday 17th December 1929.  “On December 14, 1929 at Ashurst Place, near Tunbridge Wells, of pneumonia, James Collett Mason, loved husband of Jessie Collett-Mason, aged 76.  Funeral service today (Tuesday) at Langton Green Church, Kent at 2.30 p.m.”

 

His widow Jessie was still alive in 1935 when she was given the estate of Isabel Augusta Collett, her older sister (above), to administer.  However, it was towards the end of the following year that Jessie S Collett-Mason died on 15th December 1936 when she was 76.  Her death was recorded at Upton-on-Severn in Worcestershire (Ref. 6c 183) during the last quarter of that year.  The Will of Jessie Susette Mason-Collett was proved in London on 29th April 1937 and this confirmed that she had been living at Melton Lodge in Malvern at the time of her death and that probate was granted to her son William Wallace Collett Collett-Mason, of no occupation, and Paul Braddon a solicitor.  Her personal effects amounted to £8,823 14 Shillings and 6 Pence.  While James’ second daughter was Ascelin, his uncle Henry Ward Mason (born at Beverley in 1812) had a son Asline Collett Mason who was born at East Barnet in 1858 who later died in Australia during 1921.  Details about him can be found under James’ daughter Ascelin Frances Collett Mason, after whom she was presumably named

 

New information unearthed in 2021 by Roger Collett of Elgin County, Ontario, reveals an interesting snap-shot of the family immediately prior to the birth of the son William.  The document was a page from the Argentina census conducted in 1895.  That placed the family at an estancia, where Santiago Collett Mason was 41, Jessie Collett Mason was 28, Daisy Marion Collett Mason was seven, Ascelin Frances Collett Mason was five, and Kathleen Lucy Collett Mason was three years of age

 

18Q14 – Margaret Marion Collett Mason was born in 1888 in Argentina

18Q15 – Ascelin Frances Collett Mason was born in 1890 in Argentina

18Q16 – Kathleen Lucy Collett Mason was born in 1892 in Argentina

18Q17 – Augusta F Collett Mason was born in 1893/4 in Argentina

18Q18 – William Wallis Collett Mason was born in 1895 in Argentina

 

Bernard Stockwell Collett [18P39] was born at St Stephen’s Parsonage in Shepherd’s Bush on 1st February 1866 and was baptised on 3rd March 1866 at St Stephen’s Church where his father William Lloyd Collett was the vicar.  He was five years old in the census of 1871 when he and his family were still residing at The Vicarage in Shepherd’s Bush, and ten years later in 1881 he was 15 years of age when he was a boarder at The Priory School, High Street in Marlborough, Wiltshire.  It was around two and a half years later that his death was recorded at Fulham (Ref. 1a 124) during the third quarter of 1883 when he was 17

 

Phillis Carthew Collett [18P40] was born at St Mary Abbot in Kensington, London in 1873, the eldest child of Charles Preston Collett and Lucy Ellen Daniels, her birth recorded at Kensington (Ref. 1a 131) during the last three months of the year.  Around 1875 her family left London and moved to Devon where in 1881, they were living at Highclere House on the Warberry Road in Tor-Moham, a parish of Torquay, where Phillis Carthew Collett was seven years old.  Following the death of her father during at the start of 1891, Phillis and her sister Margaret (below) were attending an all girls’ boarding school at Royal Parade in Cheltenham, where student Phillis Collett from London was 17 years old on the day of the census in 1891.  It is curious that in the next census of 1901 Phillis C Collett, aged 26, and her brother Arthur P Collett, aged 20, were staying with the Borthwick family at 35 Palmerston Place in Edinburgh, while it was twenty-one years after that when their brother Charles Morden Collett (below) married the eldest daughter of Alexander and Katherine Borthwick.  After a further ten years Phillis Carthew Collett from London was described as being 37 and a spinster living on private means in the census of 1911, when she was recorded as a boarder at 3 The Grove in Westward Ho, North Devon.  Staying at the same address was her unmarried sister Margaret Morden Collett who was 36.  The boarding house was managed by widow Susan Pennington, who was 55, and her two adult children

 

Following the death of her aunt Ellen Anna Collett of Swanton Morley Street, off Valerie Road in Bournemouth, on 12th June 1921, probate of her estate worth £16,337 14 Shillings and 9 Pence was granted to Phillis Carthew Collett, a spinster, and Charles Alfred Morton Lightly, a solicitor.  Thirteen years after inheriting that vast sum of money, Phillis and her younger unmarried sister Margaret (below) were living at The Cove at Torcross near Kingsbridge in South Devon.  From there the sisters boarded the vessel Johan Oldenbarnevelt of the Netherland Royal Dutch Mail Line at Southampton on 11th January 1935 which bound for Batavia in Dutch East Indies. Part way along the ship’s sea route, the couple disembarked at Genoa, when Phillis was 60 and Margaret was 59, having travelled there in a second-class cabin.  The pair of them made the return journey from Genoa later that same year, arriving back at Southampton, on the same ship, on 18th March 1935.  Three years later, it was also as Phillis Carthew Collett that she died at the Forbes Fraser Hospital in Bath on 20th April 1938, her passing recorded at Bath register office (Ref. 5c 560), when she was 64.  Her Will was proved in London on 23rd June 1938 when her brothers Charles Morden Collett and Arthur Preston Collett, both retired Indian Civil Servants, were granted administration of her personal estate of £7,891 8 Shillings and 9 Pence.  The probate document revealed that her home address was Heatherlands, Ilsington near Newton Abbot in Devon

 

Margaret Morden Collett [18P41] was born on 20th January 1875 at Kensington in London, with her birth recorded at Kensington (Ref. 1a 135) during the first quarter of 1875, another child of Charles and Lucy Collett.  Just after she was born, her family move to Torquay where Margaret Morden was six years old in 1881.  Ten years later, Margaret as Maggie Collett from London was 16 and a student at a girls’ boarding school on Royal Parade in Cheltenham.  A student and boarder at the same school was Maggie’s sister Phillis Collett (above).  No record of Margaret has been found within the 1901 Census, while in 1911, and living on private means, Margaret Morden Collett was 36 and a boarder at 3 The Grove, Westward Ho, within the Northam district of North Devon, where her sister Phillis was also boarding at the same property.  On 11th January 1935 the sisters sailed from Southampton to Genoa in Italy, maybe as a holiday, from where they return to England two months later, arriving at Southampton on 18th March 1935.  The passenger list of the J V Johan Oldenbarnevelt recorded them in second-class at the age of 60 and 95, when their home address was The Cove at Torcross near Kingsbridge in South Devon.  Four years after that trip to Italy, and following the death of her sister Phillis in 1938, the 1939 Registry included details of Margaret Morden Collett who was living at Hookhills, Paignton in South Devon, where she was living on private means.  Margaret was 73, where her death was recorded at Newton Abbott register office (Ref. 7a 607) during the first quarter of 1949.  By that time in her life, she was residing at Woodhaye, Torwood Road in Torquay, where she died on 3rd January.  Her Will was proved in London on 25th March 1949 to Lloyds Bank Limited, her estate valued at £16,266 4 Shillings and 1 Penny

 

Charles Morden Collett [18P42] was born in 1876 at Torquay, just after his parents arrived there from London.  His birth was recorded at Newton Abbott (Ref. 5a 142) during the last quarter of that year.  At the age of four years, Charles M Collett was living with his family at Highclere House, Warberry Road in Tor-Moham in 1881.  His father died when Charles was around ten or eleven years of age, and by the time of the census in 1891 he was being educated at Upton-on-Severn in Gloucestershire when he was 14.  It is unclear what happened to Charles after 1891, with no record of him located within either of the census returns from 1901 and 1911.  However, it was while he was in Bombay, on 21st October 1922, that he married Evelyn Grace Stanhope Borthwick who was born at Winchester on 27th October 1878, where her birth was recorded (Ref. 2c 124).  Evelyn S Borthwick was 22 at the time of the census in 1901 when she was living with her parents at 35 Palmerston Place in Edinburgh.  Her father Alexander Borthwick was 62 and the Chief Constable of Police, his wife being the much young Katherine Borthwick who was 45.  Coincidentally on that occasion, staying with the family that day, were two of Charles’ siblings, Phillis C Collett (above) and Arthur P Collett (below), so the two families were known to each other well before Charles married the Borthwick’s eldest daughter.  Charles and Evelyn remained in India after they were married, but just for the next nine months.  It is now known that on 29th September 1922 sailed out of the Port of London on board the P &O liner China bound for Bombay, when she was described on the passenger list as Miss Evelyn Borthwick of Southwick, Fareham in Hampshire, a spinster of 43 years who was travelling first-class, on her where in India to be married

 

After that they then sailed back to England on board the ship Matiana which sailed out Calcutta and into the Port of London, arriving on 26th August 1923.  The passenger list confirmed that Charles was 47 and that the couple’s temporary address in England was the East India United Services Club at 16 St James Square in Seething Wells, Surbiton.  In 1934 and following the death of his mother during the previous year, Charles Morden Collett of no occupation was named with his brother Arthur Preston Collett (below) as the joint executors of her estate.  The same pair was also named in their sister’s Will of 1938, following the death of Phillis Carthew Collett (above) in April that year.  Charles Morden Collett was residing at 15 Wellswood Park in Wellswood, Torquay when he passed away on 31st January 1946, his death recorded at Newton Abbott register office (Ref. 5b 199) when he was 69.  Five months later his Will was proved in London.  Probate of his personal effects amounting to £10,489 11 Shillings and 10 Pence was granted jointly to his widow Evelyn Stanhope Grace Collett, his unmarried sister Laura Lesley Collett (below) and William Stanley Richards, a solicitor.  His wife survived him by thirteen years and at the time of the death of Evelyn Stanhope Grace Collett on 15th April 1959 she was living in Flat 3 at Bourne House, 189 Sloane Street in London SW1.  Her death was recorded at Chelsea register office (Ref. 5c 249), when she was 81.  Following her passing her considerable estate of £91,397 13 Shillings and 7 Pence was proved in London on 26th June 1959 and placed in the hands of Martins Bank Limited and David Henry Fitzroy Somerset, a private secretary

 

Laura Lesley Collett [18P43] was born at Torquay on 11th October 1878, her birth recorded at Newton Abbott (Ref. 5b 164).  She was two years old at the time of the census in 1881 when she was living with her family at Warberry Road in Tor-Moham in Torquay.  Almost ten years later her father Charles Preston Collett died and so by April 1891 Laura was 12 and was living with her widowed mother and younger brother Arthur (below) at Highclere in Tor-Moham, Torquay.  No trace has been found of her mother, but by April 1911 Laura Lesley Collett was 32 and was living at Lewisham in London when her occupation was that of a teacher of Swedish gymnastics.  By 1935, when Laura was 56 and still a spinster, she was living in Mozambique but returned to England on board the Union Castle mail steamship Dunbar Castle which sailed from Beira in Mozambique via Durban and Cape Town, arriving at Southampton on 12th August 1935.  Many years later, Laura Lesley Collett passed away at the age of ninety, when her death was recorded at register office Stroud register office (Ref. 7b 1313) during the second quarter of 1969.  By that time she was a very wealthy lady, with her estate valued at £59,851, and her Will proved in London on 18th July 1969.  The probate document confirmed that she had died on 20th April 1969 when she was residing at Nibley House, North Nibley, in the Dursley district of Gloucestershire

 

Arthur Preston Collett [18P44] was born at Torquay on 10th September 1880, his birth recorded at Newton Abbott (Ref. 5b 139), another son of Charles Preston Collett and his wife Lucy Ellen Daniels.  He was seven months old on 3rd April 1881 when he was living with his family in Warberry Road at Tor-Moham in Torquay.  Ten years later, and following the death of his father, Arthur was recorded as being 10 years old when he was still living with his widowed mother and sister Laura (above) at Highclere in Tor-Moham, Torquay.  Around the time he was 19, Arthur Preston Collett was admitted as a scholar into Queens College in Cambridge, when he was confirmed as the son of high court judge Charles Collett of Madras.  Prior to going to Cambridge, Arthur had attended Malvern College, from where he matriculated.  In March 1901 he and his sister Phillis C Collett (above) were recorded in the census that month with the Borthwick family at 35 Palmerston Place in Edinburgh, their eldest daughter Evelyn becoming Evelyn Collett through her married to Charles Morden Collett (above) in 1922

 

Arthur entered the India Civil Service during 1903 and served in the United Provinces as Magistrate and Collector.  By 1911 he was Deputy Commissioner, and in 1914 was Joint Magistrate.  In 1913 Arthur disembarked from the P&O ship India at Plymouth on its passage from Bombay to the Port of London, where it arrived on 19th July that year.  The passenger list identified him as Mr Arthur Collett aged 33 of the India Civil Service.  Two year later Arthur was appointed Private Secretary to the Lieutenant-Governor in 1915, and was on military service during the Great War from 1916 to 1919.  On leaving the army he continued to work as Magistrate and Collector (of Taxes) in 1920, a post he held until 1827.  During the years from 1928 to 1932 he was the Opium Agent and Commissioner of Income Tax in the United Provinces, after which he retired and resided at The Lodge in Hollesley, near Woodbridge in Suffolk.  Following the death of his mother in 1933, Arthur Preston Collett was named, with his brother Charles Morden Collett (above), as the joint executors of her estate

 

In addition to all of this, it is known that Arthur Preston Collett married Sheila MacKinnon at Gorakhpur, Bengal in India on 2nd February 1921, when he was 40 years old.  All three of their children were born in India, the family travelling between England and India on a fairly regular basis.  Two years after they were married and just after the birth of the first of their three children, the family visited England, and it was on 8th June 1923 that the three of them sailed back to Bombay, out of the Port of London on board the ship Narkunda of the P&O Line in a second-class cabin.  Arthur Preston Collett of the ICS was 43, whose home was The Lodge at Hollesley, Woodbridge.  His wife Sheila was 26, and their daughter Phillis was eight months old.  Back in India, the couple’s remaining two children were born and, also most immediately after the birth of the third child, the family sailed from Bombay to London on 1st April 1926.  The passenger list named the family as Arthur P Collett, aged 45, Sheila Collett, aged 28, Phillis Anne Collett who was three, Anthony F Collett who was one, and Sheila C Collett who was just three months old.  Six months later the whole family made the return journey back to Bombay on board the P&O liner Rajputana, leaving the Port of London on 29th October 1926 in second-class.  On that occasion they had been staying at the Tilbury Hotel in Tilbury, Essex, Arthur being employed by the India Civil Service aged 46, Sheila being 30, Phillis being four, Anthony being two, and Sheila being nine months old

 

In 1929 Arthur made the same journey from Calcutta, but alone, on board the ‘Mulbera’, a ship of the British India Steam Navigation Company when he travelled first-class at the age of 49.  Once again, he disembarked at Plymouth, his forward address being Court House in Ash Priors, Taunton, Somerset, most likely a business trip to do with his work with the ICS.  The Mulbera eventually arrived at the Port of London on 13th December 1929.  The family’s time together in India ended in 1931, when Sheila and her three children travelled on board the TSS Exeter of the Ellerman Line back to England, arriving at the Port of London on 30th April 1931.  For that final journey they travelled in first-class accommodation, when they were recorded as Mrs S Collett aged 31, Miss P A Collett was seven, Master A P Collett was five, and Miss S C Collett was four years of age.  The passenger list also confirmed that their ultimate destination was The Lodge at Hollesley, Woodbridge in Suffolk

 

Eight years after that, the 1939 Registry included Arthur and Sheila who were residing at The Lodge in Hollesley within the Deben Rural District Council area on the banks of the River Deben, where Arthur P Collett was a retired Indian civil servant.  His wife was simply described as Sheila Collett who was performing unpaid domestic duties, whose date of birth was recorded 19th February 1897.  Six years later the couple was living in Felixstowe in 1945 when they receive the sad news that their daughter, Petty Officer Wren Phillis Anne Collett of the Royal Navy, had been killed during the Second World War.  Arthur Preston Collett of Brackenbury Lodge on Cliff Road in Felixstowe died on 25th March 1954 at the age of 73, his death recorded at Samford register office (Ref. 4b 1064).  Probate of his personal effects of £5,719 1 Shilling and 11 Pence was granted to Sheila Collett, widow, to Geoffrey Barham Sankey and James Gutch Swift, solicitors.  His widow was stilling living at Brackenbury Lodge in 1957, when her married daughter Sheila Candace Austin and her husband Philip John Austin, brought their baby daughter Sheila from Singapore to see her grandmother for the first time at the age of just two-months.  With Philip having to return to Singapore for business reasons, his wife and daughter died not make their return until June in 1958.  Twenty-three years later, Sheila Collett, nee MacKinnon died at the start of 1981, when her death was recorded at Gipping register office (Ref. 10 2706).  Gipping was just north of Stowmarket, while it was at her home, at Cedar Cottage, Debenham Road, in Crowfield, just east of Stowmarket, that she died on 13th February 1981, six days before her eighty-fourth birthday.  Her Will was proved at London on 28th April 1981, when her estate was £60,107

 

18Q19 – Phillis Anne Collett was born in 1922 in India

18Q20 – Anthony Farquar Charles MacKinnon Collett was born in 1924 in India

18Q21 – Sheila Candace Collett was born in 1926 in India

 

Edward Pyemont Collett [18P45] was born in 1863 at Shenton, two miles from Market Bosworth in Leicestershire, with his birth recorded at Market Bosworth (Ref. 7a 70) during the first three months of that year.  He was the eldest of three sons of Henry Pyemont Collett of Suffolk and Isabella Lamb Frazer of Wolverhampton.  Shortly after he was born his parents moved to Norfolk, and in 1871 they were living within the Wisbech & Terrington St Clement district of the county when Edward was eight years old, but was listed in the census as Edward Pyewood Collett.  Ten years later, at the age of 18, Edward from Leicester, was a medical student studying dentistry at Hastings, where he was living with his family at 12 Springfield Road.  On that occasion his mother and youngest brother were both absent, so it was just his father and his brother Henry (below) who were there at that time.  It was five years later that Edward Pyemont Collett was married by banns to Aurora Beatrice Landi from London at St Ann’s Church in Westminster on 23rd October 1886.  The wedding ceremony was performed by Edward’s father Henry Pyemont Collett, a Clerk in Holy Orders.  The entry for the marriage in the church register was signed by the hand of each of them, when Edward and Aurora were both 23, Edward being a dental surgeon residing in Chorlton-cum-Hardy, Manchester, with Aurora living at 67 Putt Street in Westminster, the daughter of Romolo Landi, a sculptor.  The event was recorded at Westminster (Ref. 1a 945), while the birth of Aurora was recorded at The Strand, London (Ref. 1b 502) during the third quarter of 1863.  Once married, it was at Chorlton-cum-Hardy where the couple settled, and where Edward continued his career as a dentist.  It was while they were living there that Aurora presented Edward with two children, when they were living at Keppell Road in Chorlton-cum-Hardy. 

 

In 1891 the family of four living at Chorlton-cum-Hardy was recorded in the census return as follows.  Edward P Collett was 28, his wife Aurora B Collett was 27, and their two children were Nora Collett who was three, and Henry R P Collett who was under one-year-old.  Both of the children were sent to private schools, so in March 1901, it was only Edward and Aurora that were recorded as living at Chorlton-cum-Hardy.  Edward P Collett, aged 38, from Hinckley in Leicestershire was a dentist, while his wife Aurora B Collett from London was 37.  Their daughter Nora Collett, aged 13, was attending a school in Sussex, with her brother Robert at a school in Harrogate at the age of ten.  Both children were confirmed as having been born at Chorlton-cum-Hardy.  By the time of the next census in April 1911, the family had moved to Bucklow near Knutsford in Cheshire, and also by that time, Edward’s daughter Nora was married to John Cooke and they were living at Tynemouth in Northumberland.  Living at Bucklow were Edward Pyemont Collett 48, Aurora Beatrice Collett 47, and their son Henry Robert Pyemont Collett who was 20

 

The later death of Edward Pyemont Collett was recorded at the Lancashire Salford register office (Ref. 8d 519) during the first quarter of 1937, when he was 73.  It was at Salford Royal Hospital that he died on January 1937, when his home address was 8 St John’s Street in the Deansgate area of Manchester.  His Will was proved at Manchester on 19th March 1937 to William Herbert Foyster, solicitor, and Annie Christine Osterstock, spinster, his estate valued at £1,487 7 Shillings and 11 Pence.  Four year earlier he had been widowed, with the death of Aurora Beatrice Collett recorded at Bucklow (Ref. 6a 220) during the second quarter of 1933, when she was 69 years of age, Bucklow being south-west of Manchester

 

18Q22 – Nora Collett was born in 1887 at Chorlton-cum-Hardy, Manchester

18Q23 – Henry Robert Pyemont Collett was born in 1890 at Chorlton-cum-Hardy

 

Henry Francis Collett [18P46] was born at Denver in 1865 after his parents, Henry Pyemont Collett and Isabella Lamb Frazer had moved to Norfolk from Leicestershire, his birth recorded at Downham (Market) (Ref. 4b 372) during the second quarter of 1865.  Just two miles south of Downham Market is the village of Fordham where Henry’s father was the Perpetual Curate of the Parish of Fordham, who performed the baptism service for his son Henry on 9th April 1865.  The entry in the parish register stated that Henry Francis Collett had been born on 12th March 1865, and that the family abode was at Denver, midway between Downham and Fordham.  In his father’s own handwriting, at the bottom of the same page, was the following note.  “I, Henry Pyemont Collett, Perpetual Curate of the Parish of Fordham in the County of Norfolk, do hereby solemnly declare that the several writings hereto annexed purporting to be copies of the several entries contained in the several Register Books of Baptisms and Burials of the Parish aforesaid from the first day of January 1865 to the thirty-first day of December 1865, are true copies of all the several entries in the said several Register Books respectively, from the said first day of January 1865 to the thirty-first day of December 1865, and that no other entry during such period is contained in any such Books respectively, which entries are truly made according to the best of my knowledge and belief.”  Signed by H P Collett and counter-signed by Jermyn Pratt, Church Warden – The only church warden

 

In the census of 1871, the family was recorded as living within the Wisbech & Terrington St Clement registration district, where Henry Francis Collett was six years old.  However, during the next few years the family moved to Hastings on the south coast.  By 1881 Henry F Collett from Norfolk was still attending school at the age of 16, while he was living at the family home at 12 Springfield Road in Hastings St Leonards.  What happened to Henry after that time has not yet been discovered, but no record of him has been found in the census returns for 1891, 1901, and 1911.  His absence may be a result of the fact that he spent some time in his life living in America and may have been a frequent traveller across the Atlantic Ocean.  Certainly, in 1890 he sailed from New York to Liverpool on board the SS Servia, when the passenger list described him as Henry F Collett, aged 25 and an estate agent, a visitor to England.  Two years later he made the same crossing, when Henry F Collett aged 27 was a passenger on the SS Etruria from New York which arrived at Liverpool during February 1892.  On that passenger list his occupation was stated as being involved in mining

 

Many years later, the marriage by banns of Henry Francis Collett and Metabella Robinson Holyoake was recorded at Brentford register office (Ref. 3a 453) during the quarter of 1925, when there was a twenty-three difference in their ages, although Henry did not admit that when providing the details for the wedding register.  It was at Holy Trinity Church in Twickenham that their wedding was conducted on 21st July 1925, when Henry was a bachelor of 46 (sic) and a (men’s) outfitter of 47 Southwood Road in New Eltham (within the London Borough of Greenwich), the son of Henry Collett deceased.  His bride was a spinster of 37 and a civil servant residing at 14 Holmes Road in Twickenham, the daughter of William Holyoake, a manufacturing stationer.  The birth of Metabella was recorded at Birkenhead (Ref. 8a 506) during the second quarter of 1888, after which she was baptised at St James’ Church in Birkenhead on 29th June 1888, the daughter of William and Sarah Holyoake.  The 1939 Register identified the couple residing at 47 Southwood Road in Woolwich, where Henry F Collett as the proprietor of a drapery store, and Metabella R Collett had been born on 4th May 1888 and was undertaking unpaid domestic duties.  Once again the stated that he was younger than his real age, when he said he had been born on 5th April 1879.  After a marriage lasting nearly twenty years, Henry Francis Collett died on 2nd May 1945, when he was described as being of 47 Southwood Road in Eltham – his primary address, but also of 387 and 389 Footscray Road in Eltham, possibly the work double-fronted premises for his drapery store.  However, on the day he passed, he was at 25 Egerton Drive, Hale in Cheshire.  His Will was proved at Llandudno on 24th January 1946 to Metabella Robinson Collett, widow, when his estate was valued at £30,194 9 Shillings and 4 Pence

 

John Anthony Collett [18P47] was born at Denver, near Downham on 15th September 1866, the youngest of the three sons of Henry Pyemont Collett and Isabella Lamb Frazer.  It was at Downham Market, just north of Denver, where his birth was recorded (Ref. 4b 346) during the last three months of 1866.  He was five weeks old when he was baptised at Fordham, a mile south of Denver, on 21st October 1866 by his father, the Perpetual Curate of Fordham.  The entry in the parish register also confirmed his date of birth and the place when the family was living.  Once again, the same note written by his father at the foot of the page for the year 1865, covering the baptism of his older brother Henry (above), was repeated for the year 1866 – see above.  However, during the following year, his father ended his term of office as the curate for Fordham when, in 1867 he was attached to the Church of St Mary in Tilney-cum-Islington near King’s Lynn, where the family was still living in 1871 when, as John Anthony Collett, he was four years old.  It is curious, that within the next census of 1881, when John A Collett was 13 and attending Norton House College at Luton in Bedfordshire, that his place of birth was recorded as Leicester, where certainly his oldest brother had been born.  That would simply appear to be an error made on the part of the college, since his brother Henry was certainly born at Denver during the previous year and where he was also baptised by his father. 

 

Perhaps for reasons of military service, no record of John has been located within the census of 1891, but in March 1901 he was still a bachelor at 34, when living at East Cliff in East Dawlish, Devon at the home of his widowed mother Isabella, following the death of his father in 1898.  On that occasion his mother was living on her own means, while John from Denver in Norfolk had no stated occupation but, following the death of his mother at the start of 1910, it was only John’s eldest brother Edward, together with an unrelated solicitor who were charged with managing her estate.  Now on his own, John left Dawlish and moved to Bristol, where he was recorded in April 1911, in the Clifton district of the city.  John Anthony Collett from Fordham in Norfolk, was unmarried at the age of 44 and living on private means, which may indicate that he was perhaps a beneficiary under the terms of his father’s Will, and maybe even his late mother’s Will.  Visiting John that day was Edward Beales from Cambridge who was 41, single, and also living on private means.  Ten years later, at the age of 53, the marriage of John Anthony Collett and Annie Maud Waghorn was recorded at Willesden register office (Ref. 3a 601) during the second quarter of 1921.  Annie was fourteen years younger than John, her birth recorded at Lewisham in London (Ref. 1d 1138) early in 1881.  The couple was still together at the time the 1939 Register was compiled, which stated that John and Annie were living at 57 Egerton Gardens in Hendon, where John was again living on private means, when Annie was undertaking unpaid domestic duties.  It was during the following year, when he was 73, that the death of John Anthony Collett was recorded at the Middlesex Hendon register office (Ref. 3a 906) during the second quarter of that year.  His Will was proved at Llandudno on 2nd October 1940 to Annie Maud Collett, widow.  His personal effects were estimated to be worth £3,309 18 Shillings and 8 Pence, and the probate document confirmed that he died on 6th June 1940, when he was residing at 57 Egerton Gardens in Hendon

 

Mary Elizabeth Collett [18P48] was born at Brightwell-cum-Foxhall in Suffolk in 1861 and was baptised there on 19th May 1861, the eldest of the four children of Charles Keeling Collett and Eliza Skinner Cole formerly Robinson.  Just like her younger siblings, the birth of Mary Elizabeth Collett was also recorded at Kensington (Ref. 1a 6) during the first three months of 1861.  After the birth of her brother Charles at Brightwell, the family of four moved to London, firstly settling in Paddington before living in Kensington, where Mary’s youngest brother was born.  On the occasion of the census in 1871 the three siblings, together with their mother were recorded at 3 Foxley Road in Kensington, when Mary E Collett was ten years of age and still attending school.  Tragically, she was only 18 years of age, when the death of Mary Elizabeth Collett was recorded at Brentford (Ref. 3a 64) during the first quarter of 1879.  She was subsequently buried at Perivale on 27th January 1879 when her abode was recorded as Ealing.  It was at 13 Windsor Road in Ealing-with-old-Brentford that her family was living in 1881, having moved there during the 1870s

 

Charles Hubert Edgar Collett [18P49] was born at Brightwell-cum-Foxhall on 30th December 1862, and was baptised there on 12th July 1863, the son of Charles and Eliza Collett, although his birth was recorded at Kensington in London (Ref. 1a 18).  According to the census in 1881 Charles Hubert Edgar Collett was born at Paddington in London in 1862.  The census return also indicated that he had followed his father into the world of finance and that, at the age of 18 years, he was a stockbroker’s clerk working in London while living at the family home in 13 Windsor Road in Ealing.  Nine years later Charles was in Toronto, where he married widow Mary A Cutting nee Houghton on 22nd June 1889.  She was 35 and the daughter of Cedrus and Marianne Houghton, who was born at Toledo, Ohio.  Charles was described as Charles H E Collett who was 27, born in England, and intending to live in Toronto after becoming a married man.  He was recorded as being a mechanic and the son of Charles K Collett and his wife E S Collett.  When the Voters Registration document was compiled on 8th June 1896, Charles Hubert Edgar Collett from England was 35 and residing at 1512 South Grand Avenue in Los Angeles, California.  Just two years later, Charles was reunited with his brother Percy (below) but unfortunately the two of them ended up in trouble in Los Angeles when they were charged with burglary (2nd degree) on 14th January 1898 and sentenced to two years in the California State Prison.  The crime record named them both with the Collette spelling of their surname and, while Charles’ age was correct, his brother was said the be eight years younger, rather than the actual four years between them.  Charles’ occupation was that of an artisan at the age of 37.  As convict 17587, Charles was discharged early, on 14th September 1899, the same day as his brother

 

Charles Hubert Collett, the son of Charles K Collett, both born in England, mother’s maiden-name unknown, died on 9th July 1949 at 122 Madison, San Antonio, Bexar County in Texas, where he had lived for the previous thirteen years.  He was a white, married, male who had been born in London, whose occupation had something to do with pipe organs and pianos.  The information of his death was recorded as Mrs Virginia Collett, who gave his date of birth incorrectly as 31st December 1861, when the cause of death was a haemorrhage of the brain

 

Percy Duque Collett [18P50] was born at Kensington in London on 31st December 1865, possibly at 3 Foxley Road, after moving there from Brightwell-cum-Foxhall, where his two older siblings were born.  His birth was recorded at Kensington (Ref. 1a 87) as simply Percy Collett, during the first three months of 1866.  It was at St Philip’s Church in Kensington where he was baptised on 15th August 1866, the youngest son and penultimate child of Charles Keeling Collett, gentleman, and his wife Eliza Skinner Cole of 3 Foxley Road in Kensington.  At the age of five years, and again simply as Percy Collett, he and his siblings were still living at 3 Foxley Road in Kensington, with his father absent that day for some reason.  His older brother Charles (above) was married in Toronto in the summer of 1889 and five years later Percy sailed across the Atlantic to join his brother in America.  From London, he first travelled north to Liverpool where he went on board the sailing ship Umbria on 13th October 1894 for the 32-day journey to New York.  It was as Percy D Collett that his name was on the passenger list when he gave an incorrect age and occupation, which was recorded as 31 and a farmer.  The two brothers were reunited in Los Angeles where they were later charged with burglary and sentenced to two years in the California State Prison commencing on 14th January 1898.  On being sentenced, Percy Collette (sic) from England said he was twenty-nine instead of 32, and a salesman.  In the end the brothers were released three months early, being discharged on 14th September 1899

 

The 12th June 1900 was the US Census day, which recorded Percy Collett residing in Los Angeles where he was a servant employed as a coachman, whose date of birth was 31st December 1865.  The same census return stated that he had been living in America for three years, during which he had not had one month when he was unemployed

 

Mabel Catharine Collett [18P51] was born at 3 Foxley Road in Kensington in 1871, where she was baptised at St Matthew’s Church on 31st July 1871, the last child born to Charles and Eliza Collett.  As with all of her three older siblings, her birth was also recorded at Kensington (Ref. 1a 117) during the second quarter of 1871.  Ten years later neither Mabel or her older sister Mary (above) were living with their parents.  Instead, nine-year-old Mabel Collett from Kensington was a boarder at 41 Breakspear Road in St Paul Deptford, South London, the home of Fanny B MacLean, a 65-year-old spinster and a school mistress from London.  Mabel was one of just three girls at the property where, presumably, they were being educated.  Mabel’s father died in 1882 and after a further nine years, she living with her widowed mother at Kensington in 1891, at the age of 19.  Just over two years after that census day, the marriage of Mabel Catharine Collett and Edward Laing-Meason was recorded at Paddington (Ref. 1a 163) during the last three months of 1893.  Edward was 23 years old, his birth recorded at Poplar (Ref. 1c 695) during the last quarter of 1870.  By 1901, Mabel was again living with her mother but at 43 Richmond Gardens in Hammersmith.  On that day she was recorded as Mabel Laing-Meason from Kensington who was married and 29 years old, the mother of Gregor Laing-Meason from Clapton who was six years of age.  Where her younger son was that day remains a mystery.  It was a similar situation in 1911, except that Mabel had both sons with her who, with her mother Eliza, had moved to South Place in Kensington, when the four members of the family were recorded in the census that year.  Her widowed mother was the head of the household, when Mabel Catharine Laing-Meason was 39 and had been married for 17 years, during which time she had given birth to two sons who were living with her that day.  They were Edward Hugh Gregor Laing-Meason born at Clapton, and Gilbert George Nigel Laing-Meason born at West Kensington, both of them employed as pages at a local London hotel

 

It was in September the following year that Mabel and her youngest son travel from London to Southampton, where they boarded the American Line ship the SS Philadelphia bound for New York.  The seventeen-day journey start on 14th September 1912, the passenger list including Mabel Laing-Meason who was 41 and a wife, and Gilbert Laing-Meason who was 16 and a porter.  On arrival in New York, the Manifest of Alien Passengers recorded a slightly different picture, insofar as placing a W in the column for marital status against Mabel’s name, rather than M, and under occupation she was described as a housekeeper.  The pair of them were from London England, while the name and full address of the nearest relative or friend, in their home country, was Mrs Collett, an aunt, of 21 Cavendish Place, Brondesbury, North-West London.  Two months later, Mabel’s eldest son was on the SS Philadelphia sailing out of Southampton, to be reunited in America with his mother and brother.  The passenger list recorded Edward Laing-Meason as being 19 and a clerk, with the corresponding Alien Manifest saying that he was a lift attendant, whose ultimate destination was Tracy City, San Joaquin County, California, the same place as his mother and brother.  The name and full address of a relative or friend in England was Mrs Laing-Meason, Harleyford Road, Vauxhall, South-East London

 

Anthony Keeling Collett [18P52] was born at Cromhall near Wootton-under-Edge on 22nd August 1877, the eldest son of the Reverend William Michael Collett and Alice Burnett.  His birth was recorded at Thornbury (Ref. 6a 217).  At the age of two months, he was baptised at Cromhall on 28th October 1877, the service conducted by his father, the Rector of Cromhall.  He was three years old in the census of 1881 when he was living with his family at The Rectory in Cromhall.  Ten years later, and following the apparent separation of his parents, Anthony was 13 years of age when he was living with his married mother at Claremont Crescent in Weston-sure-Mare.  He was educated at Bradfield College in Berkshire and, on 26th January 1896, was an elected scholar at Oriel College in Oxford on payment of £10.  It was at Oriel College where he matriculated on 22nd October 1896.  Two years later in 1898, he obtained a Third Class in Classical Moderations and, after a further two years, a Second Class in Final Classical School in 1900.  1900 was also the year he was made Bishop Fraser’s Scholar.  During that period in his life, he also attended the University of Berlin.  The following year Anthony was 23 and was living at Theale in Berkshire where he was working as a journalist.  Following that he worked for The Globe and, four years later in 1905, he was on the staff of the St James’ Gazette.  He was later employed by the magazine County Gentleman and that was followed by over twenty years writing for The Times.  He was initially a writer on nature, but held the position of leader writer from 1908 to 1922.  According to the London census conducted in 1911, Anthony Collett was 33, single, and a journalist, who was living as a boarder in the Lincoln’s Inn area of the city

 

He lived most of his adult life in London, but travelled to Italy, Wales and Scotland.  During the First World War he enlisted as a private with the Post Office Rifles.  After gaining a commission, Anthony saw active service in France where he was involved in the battle at Vimy Ridge.  Following an injury, he was invalided back to England and spent the last part of the war in the Historical Section of the War Office.  His love of nature lead to him writing a number of books on the subject.  In May 1920 Anthony Keeling Collett, a journalist, was granted permission through the probate service to settle the Will of his aunt Bertha Emily Wright near Collett, the older sister of his father, who died in hospital in Felixstowe earlier that year.  He never married and it was on 22nd August 1929 that Anthony Keeling Collett died of a wasting illness, while attending a London nursing home.  The death of Anthony K Collett was recorded at Kensington register office (Ref. 1a 121) at the age of 52.  The proving of his Will contained the following details; that he was Anthony Keeling Collett of The Oxford & Cambridge Club in Pall Mall, London, whose place of residence was 5 Collingham Gardens in Earls Court, London.  Probate was granted in London on 3rd October 1929 to Christopher Edward Nicholl, a schoolmaster, and George Sidney Freeman, a journalist, the executors of his estate of £3,074 10 Shillings and 9 Pence

 

John Colet Collett [18P53] was born at Cromhall on 30th August 1880, the youngest of the two sons of the Reverend William Michael Collett and Alice Burnett, His birth was recorded at Thornbury (Ref. 6a 212).  In 1891, at the age of ten years, John C Collett was at school in Oxford, where he was a boarder at Bevington Road.  From 1893 to 1897 he was educated at Rossall School in Fleetwood, near Blackpool, following which he became a student studying civil engineering at Heysham.  That situation was confirmed in the census of 1901, in which he was listed as being from Cromhall, aged 20 years, and a civil engineering student, whilst being a boarder at the home of the Elliott family in Heysham, near Lancaster.  Ten years later, he was again living with his mother, but at Rugby in Warwickshire, when John Colet Collett from Cromhall was 30 and a civil engineer.  He was known within the family as Jack Collett and worked as a railway engineer, his work taking him to Russia and China in the early years of the twentieth century.  It was during the first three months of 1914 that the marriage of John Colet Collett and Ellen O’Brien, was recorded at Kensington register office (Ref. 1a 202), although they never had any children.  On one of his many overseas outings, the passenger list named his travelling companion as Ellen Collett.  On that occasion in 1931, John Collett, an engineer of 51, and Ellen Collett who was 46, arrived in the Port of London on the ship Highland Chief, which had sailed from River Plate in South America.  Their intended forward address was given as 49 Grosvenor Street in London W1, while their last country of permanent residence was given as Uruguay.  Their long sea voyage had been in a First-Class cabin.  Eight years later, the 1939 Register included John and Ellen living at Leigh Court, Sans Lane, within the Tisbury & Mere district of Wiltshire.  John C Collett was a civil engineer at the age of 59, when Ellen Collett was 54, her date of birth confirmed as 25th March 1885.  On that day, the couple’s domestic cook was originally named as Maud H Collett born on 22nd March 1881 and a married, which has been amended to Maud H Ceaton, a widow

 

At some time in their life, John (Jack) Collett purchased a villa at Rapallo in Italy, and he and his wife spent much of the latter part of their life together.  The property was also part of his estate at the time he passed away.  John Colet Collett died on 24th July 1960 at Via Privata Ghizolfo, 22 Rapallo in Italy, his wife having already died by then.  Probate of his personal effects amounting to £46,958 4 Shillings and 8 Pence was handled by the National Provincial Bank Limited at their Lincolns Inn Branch in Carey Street, London WC2.  His Will was proved at Bristol on 10th October at which time the executors of his estate were named as Francis Stephen Perry, a medical practitioner, and Margaret Clare Monk, the wife of Christopher William Monk.  Under the terms of his Will his estate was divided between just three individuals, one of them being his nephew, the aforementioned Francis Stephen Perry.  As a result, many of the antiques and personal possessions of John Colet Collett were passed to his nephew, one of which was an embroidered silk wallet containing his passport and the visiting card of the Viceroy of Canton.  The passport was issued by the Foreign Office in London on 25th January 1912, at which time John Colet Collett was 31 and a civil engineer travelling to Russia.  The many different hand stamps clearly demonstrate that he travelled a great deal during 1912 and 1913

 

Ada Wright [18P54] was born on 8th August 1884 at 2 Craven’s Terrace off Albert Street in Kingston-upon-Hull, her birth recorded at Sculcoates (Hull) during the third quarter of that year (Ref. 9d 161).  She married Walter Benson on 27th July 1907, the event recorded at the Monmouthshire Newport register office (Ref. 11a 468).  Walter was the son of Thomas Boulton Benson and Selina Stanton Mumby and was born on 29th November 1885.  Once they were married Ada and Walter moved to Scotland and it was while they were in Glasgow that their first child was born.  Shortly after the family of three moved to 11 Walton Road in Blackley, just north of Manchester, where they were living in 1911.  By the time three of their children were baptised together on 21st August 1912, the family of musician Walter Benson, and his wife Ada, were living at 34 Turkey Lane, Queens Park in Manchester, where the couple’s last two children were born.  It was Walter’s work as a musician that eventually was the cause of his death.  Tragically, on 6th October 1926, while working as a musical director for the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), he was killed in a motorcycle accident in Aberdeen where he was buried.  Ada remained living in the Harpurhey area of Manchester, just north-east of Queens Park, after her husband’s death and, twenty-five years later, it was there that she passed away on 18th May 1951 aged 66

 

18Q24 – Selina Benson was born in 1908 at Glasgow

18Q25 – Ernest Walter Benson was born in 1910 at Blackley, Manchester

18Q26 – Francis William Benson (twin) was born in 1912 at Queens Park, Manchester

18Q27 – Edna Maria Benson was born in 1912 at Queens Park, Manchester

18Q28 – Hector Benson was born in 1913 at Queens Park, Manchester

18Q29 – Myra Benson was born in 1917 at Queens Park, Manchester

 

Florence Mary Collett [18P65] was born at Edmondsley near Chester-le-Street in County Durham on 28th October 1874, the eldest child of Charles Collett and Elizabeth Alice Field who were married in Lowestoft, Suffolk, during the first three months of that same year.  The birth of Florence Mary Collett was recorded at Chester-le-Street (Ref. 10a 596) during the last three months of 1874.  Not long after she was born her parents moved to Sunderland, but by 1881 the family was living at 4 Johnsons Place in the Holy Trinity district of Hull, where Florence was recorded as being six years old.  They were only at Hull for a short while, as the family finally settled in Ipswich where they were living at the time of the census in 1891.  However, by that time Florence had already left the family home and was living at 53 Lordship Park in Stoke Newington, where she was employed as a general servant to Otto Schallert, a journalist editor who was born in Germany, and his wife Barbara from Essex.  Five years later, on 1st July 1896, the marriage of Florence Mary Collett and widower James Johnson, aged 35, took place at St Giles Church in Mountnessing in Essex, within the Borough of Brentwood, when Florence was 23 and confirmed as the daughter of Charles Collett.  It was at Billericay register office in Essex that the event was recorded (Ref. 4a 697), following which Florence gave birth to six children up to 1910, who were all born at Chelmsford in Essex, and they were Charles Thomas Johnson (born 1898), Frederick Edward Johnson (born 1899), Annie May Johnson (born 1901), William Henry Johnson (born 1904), Elizabeth Mabel Johnson (born 1907), and Florence Lydia Johnson who was born in 1910. 

 

By the time of the census in 1901 Florence and her husband James were living at Friars Place in New London, within the Moulsham area of Chelmsford, with four children; Albert Ernest Johnson, aged 14 who was James’ son by his first wife Annie Sophie Jacobs (1863-1893), Charles Johnson who was three, Frederick Johnson who was two, and Annie Johnson who was just five months old.  Both James and his eldest son were coach painters.  It would appear that, after the birth of their sixth child, the family moved the very short distance to 4 Spains Croft, The Chase in Widford, just outside Chelmsford, where they were living in April 1911.  With Florence and James on that occasion were five of their six.  They were Charles who was 13, Frederick who was 12, William who was seven, Elizabeth Mabel who was four, and Florence Lydia who was one year old.  James Johnson was still a coach painter, but by that time, he was working on his own account.  Their missing eldest daughter Annie May was staying at her grandparents' house in Ipswich, where she was recorded simply as May Johnson, who was ten years old

 

According to the 1939 Register, James Johnson was an old-age pensioner aged 78, and his wife Florence Mary Johnson was 64 and undertaking unpaid domestic duties, when they were living at 3 Queen Street in Chelmsford.  James’ date of birth was recorded as 27th August 1861, recorded at Chelmsford (Ref. 4a 146), and Florence’s as 28th October 1875 (sic).  Staying with the couple was a childless young married couple, Edward Ratcliffe who was 28 and a master motor engineer, and Ratcliffe who was 25 and undertaking unpaid domestic duties.  Three years later, the death of James Johnson was recorded at Chelmsford register office (Ref. 4a 481) during the second quarter of 1942, at the age of 80.  Many years later, the death of Florence Mary Johnson, nee Collett, was recorded at Epping register office (Ref. 4a 1641) during the third quarter of 1971, when she was 96, her date of birth confirmed (correctly) as 28th October 1874

 

Elizabeth Honor Collett [18P66] was born at Sunderland in 1876, where her birth was recorded (Ref. 10a 614) during the fourth quarter of that year.  By 1881 Elizabeth H Collett from Sunderland was four years old when she and her family were living at 4 Johnsons Place in the Holy Trinity district of Hull, before the family moved to Ipswich, where they were living in 1891, at Vine Cottage on St Georges Street.  At that time in her life, she had left school and was 14 and a mother’s helper.  It was nine years later that she married William Hallows at Islington in London, William having been born at Romford in Essex (Ref. 4a 194) during the fourth quarter of 1877, their wedding day recorded at Islington register office (Ref. 1b 621) during the third quarter of 1899.  The wedding ceremony was conducted at Islington’s St Andrew’s Church on 27th August 1899, following the reading of banns, when the groom was 21, a coach painter, living at 82 Offord Road, and the son of William Hallows deceased, a former cellarman.  The bride was 22 and of 44 Elkington Street, the daughter of Charles Collett, a blacksmith.  In March 1901 Elizabeth and her husband were living in Romford with their first child, William Henry Hallows, who was only two months old, his birth recorded at Romford register office (Ref. 4a 553).  Three weeks prior to that census day, William Henry Hallows was baptised at St Edward the Confessor Church in Romford on 10th March 1901.  Five years after that happy day, the death of William Henry Hallows was recorded at Camberwell register office (Ref. 1d 490) during the last three months of 1906.  Over the next decade Elizabeth presented William with three more children, but sadly only one of their four children survived.  By March 1911 Elizabeth, aged 34, and her husband William, aged 33, were still living in the Camberwell area of London.  They were described as having been married for twelve years, during which time they had given birth to four children although only one of them was still alive.  That was Walter Hallows who was two years old, who had been born at Camberwell. 

 

The next of their children not to survive was Cyril Joseph Hallows, who was born at Romford during the first quarter of 1903 (Ref. 4a 583), whose death was recorded there (Ref. 4a 261) during that same quarter of 1903, after which he was buried at the Church of St-Mary-the-Virgin in Great Ilford on 21st January 1903.  Nearly two years later the couple’s fourth was born, with the birth of Charles Frederick Hallows recorded at Camberwell register office (Ref. 1d 846) during the last three months of 1904, who was baptised at St Edward the Confessor in Romford on 21st April 1905 and confirmed as another child of William and Elizabeth Honor Hallows.  He was two years of age when he died, his death recorded at Camberwell  (Ref. 1d 498) during the last quarter of 1906.  Despite what was recorded in the census return for 1911, the couple’s fifth child Irene Elizabeth Hallows was born at Romford in 1908.  It was on 7th December 1937 in his home at Maple View, 25 Beech Street, Romford in Essex, that William Hallows died at the age of 60, following which probate was granted in favour of his widow Elizabeth Honor Hallows for his personal effects valued at £913 17 Shillings and 3 Pence.  Elizabeth Honor Hallows nee Collett outlived her husband by twenty-seven years, when she passed away on 24th August 1964, her death recorded at Romford register office (Ref. 5a 319).  At the time of her death Elizabeth’s home was at 11 Vine Street in Romford, although it was at Hainault Lodge in Hainault, Essex where she died.  Administration of her personal effects of £3,360 was granted to her son Walter Hallows, a sign writer

 

The birth of the only surviving child, Walter Hallows, was recorded at Camberwell register office (Ref. 1d 838) during the first quarter of 1909, and was baptised at Camden Church in Camberwell on 24th March 1909.  The parish register also confirmed that he was born on 28th February 1909 and was the son of coach painter William Hallows and his wife Elizabeth Hallows of 7 Wells Place in Camberwell.  Five years before his father passed away Walter Hallows married Ann Charlotte Stanton, their wedding recorded at Romford register office (Ref. 4a 1112) during the fourth quarter of 1932, with whom he had three children who were all born at Romford.  They were Brian D Hallows (born 1933), Ann Hallows (born 1935) and Patrick Hallows (born 1939).  Walter Hallows was 88 when died, with his death recorded at Thurrock register office in Essex (Ref. a29a 167) during January 1998

 

Charles Frederick W Collett [18P67] was born at Sunderland on 10th May 1879, with his birth recorded after his parents had settled in Kingston-upon-Hull (Ref. 9d 283) during the second quarter of that year.  Two years later he and his family were living in the Holy Trinity district of Hull at 4 Johnsons Place.  In 1890 the family had returned to their Suffolk roots and was living at Vine Cottage in St George’s Ipswich.  Ten years later Charles, at the age of 21, was still living with his family in the St Margaret’s area of Ipswich where he was working as a coach painter.  It was just over two years after that census day when the marriage of Charles Frederick W Collett and Emma Matilda Woodward was recorded at Ipswich register office (Ref. 4a 1987) during the final quarter of 1903.  His wife Emma was born at Sproughton, to the west of Ipswich, on 30th April 1878, her birth recorded at Samford (Ref. 4a 680).  After they were married, the couple lived at 316 Foxhall Road in Ipswich, where their only known child was born, and where the family of three was residing in April 1911.  By that time in his life Charles from Sunderland was 31 and a coach builder and a blacksmith.  His wife of seven years Emma from Sproughton was 32, while their daughter Elizabeth Collett was only seven months old, described as the couple’s only child.  However, Elizabeth was not their only child, with two more children added to the family at Ipswich over the next four years, although the first of them died shortly after he was born

 

The birth of the couple’s first son was recorded at Ipswich register office (Ref. 4a 1922) during the four quarter of 1912, when the mother’s maiden-name was confirmed as Woodward.  The subsequent death of Charles Frederick Collett was also recorded there during that same three-month period (Ref. 4a 1074).  A little over two years after suffering that loss, Emma gave birth to another son, whose birth was also recorded at Ipswich register office (Ref. 4a 1915) during the second quarter of 1915, when the mother’s maiden-name was confirmed as Woodward.  The registering o his birth happened after he was baptised at Ipswich on 4th March 1915.  With their daughter married during the mid-1930s, the 1939 Register recorded the three remaining members of the family living at 654 Woodbridge Road in Ipswich.  They were Charles F Collett who said he was 62 (when he was actually 60) and still working as a painter, Emma Collett who was 61 and undertaking unpaid duties, and Temple C Collett who was 24 and a hospital porter, who was shown to have been born on the same day that he was baptised.  The later death of Charles F Collett was recorded at Ipswich register office (Ref. 4b 827) during the third quarter of 1966, when his age was incorrectly recorded as 89

 

18Q30 – Elizabeth May Collett was born in 1910 at Ipswich

18Q31 – Charles Frederick Collett was born in 1912 at Ipswich; died there in 1912

18Q32 – Temple Charles Collett was born in 1915 at Ipswich

 

Maria Collett [18P68] was born at 4 Johnsons Place in Kingston-upon-Hull in 1881, her birth recorded at Hull (Ref. 9d 256) during the fourth quarter of the year, following which she was baptised at the Church of St Luke in Hull on 9th October 1881.  She was the youngest of the four children of Charles Collett of Halesworth and his wife Elizabeth Alice Field.  Not long after she was born her parents left Hull and returned to Suffolk and by 1891, the family was residing at Vine Cottage, St Georges Street in Ipswich, where Maria Collett was nine years old.  Tragically, Maria Collett was just 19 years old when she died at Britannia Road in Ipswich on 15th November 1900, following which she was buried at St Margaret’s Church in Ipswich on 20th November 1900.  Her death was record at Ipswich register office (Ref. 4a 532)

 

Frederick William Collett [18P69] was born at Leeds in 1890, where his birth was recorded as Frederick William Collett Mallinson (Ref. 9b 553) during the first three months of the year.  His mother was Maria Alice Mallinson, a waitress and a married lady who was separated from her husband, and bachelor William Collett a waiter from Halesworth in Suffolk.  He was one year old in the census of 1891 when he was at the home of William Collett at 5 Clare Road in Leeds together with his mother and his three older Mallinson half-siblings, Ellen, Henry and Samuel.  After a further ten years, and as Fred Mallinson, he was 11 years of age and still living at the home of waiter William Collett which, by 1901 was at 1 Belmont Road in Harrogate where Fred then had an eleven-month-old baby sister Marjorie Collett (below).  Following the death of his mother’s estranged husband Samuel Mallinson in 1907, his father married his mother, and it was with them at 3 Cheltenham Parade in Lower Harrogate that 21-year-old Frederick William Collett was living in 1911, when he was described as a musical student from Leeds.  No further record of Frederick William Collett has been found after 1911

 

Marjorie Collett [18P70] was born at Harrogate in 1900, the daughter of Mrs Maria Alice Mallinson and bachelor Frederick Collett, and was eleven months old in the Harrogate census of 1901.  Her mother was made a widow in 1907, from when she was known as Maria Alice Collett, with whom she was living with her father and older brother Fred (above) at 3 Cheltenham Parade in Harrogate in 1911, where her father died in 1921.  Whether a coincidence or not, a married woman by the name of Marjorie Mallinson, a house wife who was born in England in 1900 and was 47 years old on 31st July 1947 when she sailed from Southampton on board HMS Queen Mary of the Cunard White Star Line bound for New York

 

William Collett [18P71] was born at Mettingham towards the end of 1846 and within six months of the marriage of his parents.  The birth of William Collett was recorded at Wangford (Ref. xiii 329) during the last year of the year.  No baptism has been found but tragically he died when he was two years old and was buried at Mettingham on 24th December 1848, the eldest child of William Collett and his wife Mary Ann Bradnum

 

Maud Matilda Collett [18P72] was born at Mettingham at the end of 1847, her birth being recorded at Wangford (Ref. xiii 520) as simply Matilda Collett during the first quarter of the following year.  She was the eldest surviving child of William Collett of Mettingham and Mary Ann Bradnum of Kirby Cane.  She was three years old in the census of 1851 when she was one of only two children living at Mettingham with her parents.  The second child was her sister Harriet (below), and not her brother Benjamin who was older than Harriet.  Upon leaving the village school in Mettingham it would appear that it was arranged for Matilda to enter domestic service with the Boggis family at Home Farm in Gorleston.  That was confirmed by the census in 1861 which placed Matilda Collett, aged 13 and from Mettingham, as a servant to James and Charlotte Boggis.  Home Farm was 200 acres and James Boggis employed eight men and two boys to help him manage the land.  It would also appear that the Boggis family had only moved to Gorleston three or four years earlier, since the two eldest children had been born at Kirby Cane, where Matilda’s mother was born.  So, it is likely it was through that connection that Matilda was taken on by the family.  Within the next ten years Matilda made her way to London and by 1871 she was working in domestic service at the home of ‘factor of paper hangings’ Charles Weedon and his wife Maria at 323 Caledonian Road in Islington.  It also seems very likely that she secured work for her two younger sisters, since they were both working together in Islington by 1881.  In July 1876, Maud Matilda Collett was one of the witnesses at the Burgh Castle wedding of her younger brother Joseph Collett (below), when their brother Benjamin Collett was the other witness

 

According to the census of 1881 Matilda was still a spinster at the age of 34, when she was still working as a domestic servant for Charles Weedon, but at 13 Thornhill Square in Islington.  Her place of birth was confirmed as Mettingham.  It was also around that time in her life that Matilda became pregnant by a so far unknown gentleman, the child being born at Gorleston later that same year.  Following the birth of her son Matilda returned to live with her parents who, in 1891, were living in Porter’s Lane in Burgh Castle.  Matilda Collett from Mettingham was 44 and was working as a charwoman.  The only other occupant at her parents’ home was George J Collett, aged nine years and from Gorleston, who was described as the grandson to head of the household William Collett.  However, just a few months prior to the next census in 1901 Matilda’s son, aged around 19, must have died by some means, since his death was recorded at Yarmouth during the last quarter of 1900.  So the census in the following March listed just unmarried Matilda Collett, aged 54 and from Mettingham, as continuing to work as a charwoman, while a servant at the home of farmer John H Chapman and his wife Susan at St Johns Road in Belton Entire in the parish of All Saints, just one dwelling from the Kings Head Inn.  By the time of the census of 1911, Matilda Collett from Mettingham was still living and working at the home of the Chapman family in Belton.  At that time Matilda was 65, while Susan Chapman, aged 69, was a widow and had living with her, her daughter Beatrice Chapman who was 35.  It was during the first three months of 1925 that Matilda Collett died at the age of 77, her death being recorded at Stow register office (Ref. 4a 1070) near Bury-St-Edmunds

 

18Q33 – George James Collett was born in 1881 at Gorleston

 

Emma Collett [18P73] was born at Mettingham on 14th September 1848, where she was buried three days later on 17th September 1848.  It is understood that she was the daughter of William Collett and Mary Ann Bradnum, her birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. xiii 515) during the third quarter of the year, where her death was also recorded during that same three-month period (Ref. xiii 319)

 

Charlotte Collett [18P74] was born at Mettingham in 1849, her birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. xiii 549) during first three months of the year, another daughter of William Collett and Mary Ann Bradnum.  Curiously though, and the same as her brother Benjamin (below), she was not recorded living with her family in the Mettingham census of 1851.  By 1861, at the age of 12, niece Charlotte Collett from Mettingham was already working as a maid-servant at the Burgh Castle home of her uncle and aunt James Bradnum, aged 24 and a market gardener and his wife Mary 25 with whom, interestingly, her eldest daughter Louisa Elizabeth Jackson was living but at Gorleston High Street in 1891, when she was 19 and a shop assistant employed by fruiter James Bradnum.  Charlotte was still living in that same area ten years later, as confirmed by the Mutford & Gorleston census of 1871, when she was recorded as Charlotte Collett, aged 22.  Just over three weeks after the census day, Charlotte married John William Jackson at Burgh Castle on 25th April 1871, the event recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 1085).  John had been born at Reedham in 1842, the son of agricultural labourer James Jackson and his wife Mary Ann Sales.  Four year later Charlotte’s brother William Collett (below) married John’s sister Elizabeth Jackson

 

During the following decade Charlotte presented John with six children.  The first three were born while they were living at Somerleyton in Suffolk, while the second three were born after the family had settled in the village of Cantley in Norfolk, where they were living at the time of the census in 1881.  John Jackson, aged 39, was a plate-layer working on the railway which passed through Cantley, his wife Charlotte was 33 and from Mettingham, and their six children were Louisa Elizabeth Jackson who was nine, Matilda Jackson who was seven, Sarah Anna Jackson who was six, James William Jackson who was four, Dinah Jackson who was three, and Kate Jackson who was one year old.  Two further children were added to the family at Cantley during the following five years, but by 1891 two of the couple’s older children had left home by then.  The family recorded at Church Road in Cantley for the census of 1891 comprised John 50 and a plate-layer on the railway, Charlotte 43, Matilda 17, James 14, Dinah 13, Kate 11, Alice Jackson who was eight, and Violet Jackson who was four years old.  It is of some significance that Charlotte’s daughter Sarah Anna Jackson married Thomas William Collett [18Q48] at Yarmouth in 1898, he being the son of Charlotte’s brother William Collett (below)

 

By 1901, Charlotte Jackson was earning a living as a monthly sick nurse and, on the day of the census that year, she was at Cantley midway between Norwich and Great Yarmouth.  It was at the home of the large family of shopkeeper, grocer, butcher, and draper, Bernard England and his wife Julie, that Charlotte from Mettingham was recorded as being 52 and living at 79 School Road in Cantley, where she was looking after the family’s one-month-old daughter Adelaide B England.  After a further ten years, Charlotte and her husband were together again, when they were residing at Cantley in a two-roomed dwelling.  On that day John Jackson from Reedham in Norfolk was 68 and employed as a farm labourer, said to be working at home, and Charlotte Jackson from Mettingham in Suffolk was gave her age as being 65 (sic), when she was 62.  The census return also confirmed that they had been married for 41 years, during which time they had given birth to a total of ten children, seven of whom were still alive.  Fourteen years later, John William Jackson died in 1925, his death recorded at in Norfolk near Cantley at Blofield register office (Ref. 4b 262) during the first quarter of the year, when he was 80 years old.  Having lost her husband, Charlotte moved further north in Norfolk and it was at Smallburgh register office, near Barton Broad, where the death of Charlotte Jackson nee Collett was recorded (Ref. 4b 56) during the second quarter of 1935, at the age of 86

 

Only eight of the couple’s ten children appeared in the various census returns and are listed above.  The first of the two missing children is now known to be William Jackson who was born at Cantley and baptised there at St Margaret’s Church on 29th April 1883.  Tragically, he was just over two-and-a-half-years-old when he died and, on being buried at St Margaret’s Church on 17th November 1885, his name was recorded at William John Jackson.  The second of the two missing children was Ethel Esther Jackson who was born at Cantley and baptised at St Margaret’s Church on 31st May 1885 when she was around two months old.  Sadly, Ethel was just eight months old when she was buried there, with her brother William, on 17th November that same year.  Both of them were credited as being the children of railway labourer John Jackson and his wife Charlotte.  All of the couple’s other eight children were also baptised at Cantley, even though the baptism of first three girls was delayed for a few years, until they had decided to make their home there

 

Benjamin Collett [18P75] was born at Mettingham in early 1850, the second surviving child and eldest son of William Collett and Mary Ann Bradnum.  The birth was registered at Wangford (Ref. xiii 559) during the second quarter of 1850.  He was not listed with his family at the time of the census a year later in 1851, when he was one-year-old and was staying at the home of his maternal grandparents Joseph Bradnum, market gardener, and his wife Dina Bradnum.  He was however, recorded with his own family in 1861, when he was 11 years old.  By the time of the next census in 1871, he had already moved out of his parent’s home, which by then was at Burgh Castle near Great Yarmouth.  At that time in his life he was a seaman on board the fishing boat ‘Royal Oak’.  Two years later Benjamin married Emily Turvey Pearson at Burgh Castle on 30th April 1873, the event being recorded at Mutford Registration District during the second quarter of 1873.  Emily was born at Burgh Castle, where she was baptised on 13th June 1852, the daughter of agricultural labourer James Pearson and his wife Mary Ann, her birth recorded at Mutford during the second quarter of 1852.  Benjamin Collett was also a witness at the marriage of his younger brother Joseph (below) who was married at Burgh Castle in July 1876, together with sister Maud Matilda Collett as another witness.  During the following years Emily presented Benjamin with six children, four of them born before the next census in 1881, although the youngest of the three died just two weeks before the census day.  According to the census that year, Benjamin Collett, aged 30 and a fisherman from Mettingham, was living with his family at 12 Manor House in Burgh Castle.  On that occasion he was the third hand on board the fishing boat ‘Allah’.  His wife Emily was 28, and their three surviving children were Selina Collett, who was six, George Collett, who was three, and Jessie Collett who was two years old, all three of them having been born at Burgh Castle.  Also living with the family was Emily’s widowed mother Mary Ann Pearson aged 63 of Norwich

 

Just less than two years later, 33-year-old Benjamin Collett suffered a fatal accident when he reported as a merchant marine who was lost at sea on 26th January 1883.  On that fateful day, there were six men on the fishing boat ‘Water Witch’, none of whom survived.  Eight years after being widowed, Emily was still living in a dwelling on the High Road (High Street) at Burgh Castle, when the family was recorded as Emily J Collett who was 38 and the head of the household and a laundress, her son George W Collett who was 13, Jessie Collett who was 12, and Louis Collett who nine years old.  Ten years later it was only Emily, aged 48, who was living at Holly Cottage on the High Street at Burgh Castle, with just her youngest child.  Louis Collett was 18, and was not credited with an occupation, whereas his mother was described as a washer and laundress on that occasion.  After a few more years Emily’s son Louis was married and started a family of his own.  However, by April 1911, Louis and his wife, and their two daughters, were still living on the High Street at Burgh Castle, and still living there with them was his mother Emily who was 58.  By that time in her life, her eldest child, and only daughter Selina, had been married for over ten years who, with her husband and their two daughters had emigrated to Canada in 1906.  So when Selina suggested that her mother joined her there, it was an offer that she could not refuse

 

Emily Turvey Collett, a widow from England and the daughter of James and Mary Pearson, was residing at 303 Earl Street in Kingston, County of Frontenac, Ontario, when she died on 13th September 1932, the cause of death being coronary thrombosis and arterial sclerosis.  She was described as a retired person who had lived at the same address for the past twenty-two years, who was possibly 80 years and 4 months old, although the informant, Mrs S Cattermole, her married daughter Selina and also a resident at 303 Earls Street, did not know her mother’s date of birth.  It was on 15th September 1932 that her body was laid to rest at Cataraqui Cemetery in Kingston

 

18Q34 – Selina Margaret Collett was born in 1874 at Burgh Castle

18Q35 – George William Collett was born in 1877 at Burgh Castle

18Q36 – Jesse Benjamin Collett was born in 1878 at Burgh Castle

18Q37 – Arthur Herbert Collett was born in 1881 at Burgh Castle

18Q38 – Louis Arthur Collett was born in 1882 at Burgh Castle

 

Harriet Collett [18P76] was born at Mettingham in early 1851 and her birth was recorded at Wangford (Ref. xiii 571) during the first quarter of that year.  Furthermore, she was only a few weeks old by the time of the census at the end of March in 1851, when she was living at Mettingham with her parents and her older sister Matilda (above).  In the next census of 1861 Harriet, aged 10, was still living at Mettingham with her large family.  However, sometime between 1866 and 1870 Harriet and her family left Mettingham, when they moved nearer to Great Yarmouth, to settle at Burgh Castle.  With the family having twelve children, there may well have been an over-crowding issue in the new Collett household which prompted the older members to leave.  Certainly, by the time of the census in 1871, Harriet, aged 19, and her younger sister Sarah (below) were living within the Yarmouth Southern district of the town.  By that time both girls had entered into world of domestic service. 

 

Ten years later Harriet was still unmarried at the age of 29, but by then she was a domestic servant at the north London home of George Pavely and his wife Mary.  George was a wholesale bookbinder employing 100 hands, while living at 132 Queens Road in Hornsey, Middlesex.  It is possible that Harriet never married because in the census of 1901, at the age of 50, she was still working for the George Pavely at his home in the St Pancras area of London.  How long she worked for the Pavely family is not known, but in April 1911 she was employed as a domestic cook at the home of elderly Thomas Edmund Oldacre and his even older wife Jane.  Unmarried Harriet Collett was 56 and was one of eight people listed at the dwelling at 7 Hillmarton Road in Islington, North London, while her place of birth was incorrectly recorded as Bungay in Suffolk.  It was just over seven years later that Harriet Collett died at Islington, where her death was recorded during the third quarter of 1918 (Ref. 1b 232), after which she was buried at Islington on 1st October 1918

 

Joseph Collett [18P77] was born at Mettingham at the start of 1852, with his birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 665) during the first three months of that year.  He was nine years old in the Mettingham census of 1861 when he was still living there with his family.  During the last years of that decade his parents, William and Mary Ann Collett, took the family to live at Burgh Castle where Joseph, aged 18, was living and working in 1871.  However, on that occasion he was a fisherman living at Bull Way in Burgh Castle, at the home of journeyman tile-maker Thomas Stannard and his wife Eliza.  It was just over five years later that he married the widow Elizabeth Penrose at Burgh Castle on 26th July 1876, the event recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 1119).  Elizabeth, who had been made a widow at the age of 21, was born at Burgh Castle during the third quarter of 1857, her birth recorded at Downham (Ref. 4b 351), the daughter of Thomas Lack.  The witnesses at their wedding were Benjamin Collett and Maud Matilda Collett, two of Joseph’s older siblings.  The marriage of Joseph and Elizabeth produced nine children, the first two born at Burgh Castle, prior to the family settling in Gorleston, from where Joseph continued his occupation as a fisherman.  It was his work at sea, that was the reason why he was missing from the family home on the days of the census in both 1881 and 1891.  In the first of those, his wife and two of their first three children were living at 5 Manby Road in Gorleston.  Elizabeth Collett from Burgh Castle was 25 and was working as a charwoman, Susan Collett also from Burgh Castle was two years old, and Mary Ann Collett from Gorleston was only a few weeks old.  The birth of the first child had been registered at Mutford (Ref. 4a 842) during the second quarter of 1879, while the younger child’s birth had been registered there (Ref. 4a 854) during the first three months of 1881

 

Four more children were added to the family over the next eight years and, by the time of the census in 1891, Elizabeth and her young family were residing at 2 Back Wall Reach in Gorleston.  Once again Elizabeth’s husband was confirmed as being away at sea, so the family comprised Elizabeth aged 35, Susan who was 12, Mary Ann who was 10, Alice who was seven, Georgina Kate who was four, Joseph Thomas who was three, and George Henry who was one year old.  The couple’s final two children were born during the following decade, after the family had settled in Aberdeen.  According to the next census, conducted in 1901, Joseph Collett aged 48 and from Suffolk, has been positively identified as the master of a fishing boat working out of Durness, Loch Eriboll in Sutherland, at the most northerly tip of Scotland.  On that same day his wife and some their children were living at 1A Castlehill in West Aberdeen, where Elizabeth Collett, a fisherman’s wife born in England, was 44 and had seven of the couple’s eight children living there with her.  They were Mary A Collett who was 20, Alice Collett who was 17, Katie Collett who was 15, Joseph Collett who was 13, George Collett who was 11, William Collett who was six, and Maggie Collett who was one year old.  Their daughter Susan had married George Ross two years prior to the census in 1901 and, that same day, she and her young family were living with Susan’s family at 1a Castlehill.  George Ross was 21, Susan Ross was 20, their daughter Mary Ross was two and George Ross junior was three months old.  George was a widower when he died in Aberdeen on 30th January 1960

 

So far, no record of the family has been found in 1911 which was most likely still living in Scotland, where Joseph died on 17th September 1922.  His death certificate provided the following information: first, that he was Joseph Collett, a fisherman, whose wife was Elizabeth Lack; that he was 73 years old and died at 27 Malcolm Road in Newhills, Aberdeen; that his deceased parents were William Collett an agricultural labourer and Mary Ann Bradnum; that the cause of death was cardiac degeneration, general oedema, and cardiac failure; and finally, that the informant was Joseph T Collett, son, of 119 Hilda Street in Grimsby.  After the death of her husband, Elizabeth remained living in Aberdeen, although she did visit Gorleston during the following nine years later.  In the end, Elizabeth Collett, formerly Lack, died at Aberdeen on 1st December 1931 at the age of 74, when she was described as a widow, sometime of 71 Trafalgar Road in Gorleston and latterly of 37 Dee Street in Aberdeen.  Her Will was made on 21st November 1931 and recorded at Aberdeen on 6th May 1932, valued at £152 7 Shillings and 9 Pence, and confirmed on 7th May 1932 to George Ross of 37 Dee Street in Aberdeen, her son-in-law and executor of her Will

 

As regards their children, (1) the birth of Harriet Elizabeth Collett was recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 784) during the fourth quarter of 1877, who was baptised at Somerleyton on 15th January 1878 and who was 14 in 1891, a servant at the Southtown Road home of Anna E Arnott, (2) the birth of Susan Collett was recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 842) during the second quarter of 1879, (3) the birth of Mary Ann Collett was recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 854) during the first quarter of 1881, (4) the birth of Alice Collett was recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 845) during the third quarter of 1883, (5) the birth of Georgina Kate Collett was recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 940) during the third quarter of 1886, who married Aubrey James Stanley in Aberdeen on 20th December 1904, (6) the birth of George Henry Collett was recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 929) during the third quarter of 1889, (7) the birth of William Collett was recorded at Aberdeen in 1895, and (8) the only record found of Maggie Collett was as reported above, as a one-year-old in the census of 1901

 

18Q39 – Harriet Elizabeth Collett was born in 1877 at Burgh Castle

18Q40 – Susan Collett was born in 1879 at Burgh Castle

18Q41 – Mary Ann Collett was born in 1881 at Gorleston

18Q42 – Alice Collett was born in 1883 at Gorleston

18Q43 – Georgina Kate Collett was born in 1886 at Gorleston

18Q44 – Joseph Thomas Collett was born in 1888 at Gorleston

18Q45 – George Henry Collett was born in 1890 at Gorleston

18Q46 – William Collett was born in 1895 at Aberdeen, Scotland

18Q47 – Maggie Collett was born in 1899 at Aberdeen, Scotland

 

William Collett [18P78] was born at Mettingham on 13th July 1853, and was baptised there on 2nd September 1854, the son of William and Mary Ann Collett.  He was eight years old in 1861 when living at Mettingham with his family.  By 1871 the family was living at Burgh Castle where William was 17 years old.  It was four years later that William married Elizabeth Jackson by the reading of banns at All Saints Church in Wheatacre on 2nd March 1875, the event recorded at Loddon in Norfolk (Ref. 4b 341).  The bride and the groom were both 21 years old and residents of Wheatacre, William being a sailor and the son of labourer William Collett, and Elizabeth being the daughter of marshman James Jackson.  The witnesses were Alice Jackson and William Harling.  Elizabeth was born at Reedham in Norfolk, her birth recorded at Blofield (Ref. 4b 171) during the third quarter of 1853, after which she was baptised at Yarmouth on 26th September 1853, the daughter of agricultural labourer James Jackson and Mary Ann Sales.  She was also the sister of John William Jackson who married William’s sister Charlotte Collett (above)

 

Once married, the couple spent the first few years of their life together living at Wheatacre, between Beccles and Lowestoft.  And it was there that their first two children were born, although it was only the second child who was baptised at All Saints Church in Wheatacre when the baptism record revealed that William’s occupation was that of a fisherman.  The young family later moved to Lowestoft where two further children were born before 1881.  By the time of the census that year William, aged 28, was employed as a fisherman and was living with his family at 2 Hervey Street in Lowestoft.  His wife was 27 and their four children at that time were their two sons Thomas who was five and Frank who was three, both born at Wheatacre in Norfolk, and their daughters Frances Beatrice Collett who was one year old, and Dinah Daisy Collett who was just three months old.  Both girls had been born after the family had moved to Lowestoft.  Tragically it would appear that Frances Beatrice died shortly after 1881, since the very next child born into the family was also named Beatrice Collett

 

A total of five children were born into the family during the 1880s, so by the time of the census in 1891 Elizabeth Collett was 38 and was then living at 26 Trafalgar Road in West Gorleston with her eight surviving children.  They were Thomas W Collett 14, Frank Collett 13, Daisy Collett who was nine, Beatrice Collett who was eight, Ethel Collett who six, George Collett who was five, Louis Collett who was four, and Albert Collett who was one year old.  No record has been found of her husband William in 1891 so, as a fisherman, he may well have been at sea on the day of the census in 1891, since he was back with his wife and family at Gorleston for the census in March 1901.  At the age of 47, William Collett of Mettingham was working as a skipper at the local seaman’s mission in Gorleston, while he and his family were residing at 150 Bells Road in Gorleston.  His wife Elizabeth was 47 and from Reedham, and the children still living with their parents were Ethel 16, George 15, Lewis 13, all three of them born at Lowestoft, and Albert 11, and Jessie who was nine, both of them born at Gorleston.  Ten years later in 1911 the family was still living in Gorleston, where William and Elizabeth were both 57, and the only children still living with them on that occasion were Lewis 23, Albert 21, and daughter Jessie who was 19

 

Fourteen years after that census day, Elizabeth Collett was 71 years old when her death was recorded at Yarmouth register office (Ref. 4b 48) during the first quarter of 1925.  After a further fourteen years, widowed William Collett and his daughter Ethel Collett were living in Lothingland, Suffolk, just a short distance from his two unmarried daughters Dinah and Beatrice who were also living on New Road.  William Collett was 86 years old and a retired fisherman, with Ethel M Collett acting as his housekeeper.  Three years later, the death of William Collett was recorded at Yarmouth register office (Ref. 4b 5) during the third quarter of 1942, at the age of 89.  Upon being buried, he was described as a retired seaman, whose home address was recorded as 123 Lowestoft Road in Gorleston, which was subsequently the home of his three unmarried daughters Dinah, Beatrice and Ethel

 

18Q48 – Thomas William Collett was born in 1876 at Wheatacre

18Q49 – Frank Ernest Collett was born in 1877 at Wheatacre

18Q50 – Frances Beatrice Collett was born in 1879 at Lowestoft

18Q51 – Dinah Daisy Collett was born in 1880 at Lowestoft

18Q52 – Beatrice Collett was born in 1882 at Lowestoft

18Q53 – Ethel Mary Collett was born in 1884 at Lowestoft

18Q54 – George Collett was born in 1885 at Lowestoft

18Q55 – Louis James Collett was born in 1887 at Lowestoft

18Q56 – Albert Charles Collett was born in 1889 at Gorleston

18Q57 – Jessie Collett was born in 1891 at Gorleston

 

Sarah Collett [18P79] was born at Mettingham on 18th December 1855 and was recorded as being six years old in the Mettingham census of 1861 where it is known she and her family were living up to 1866.  Unlike her siblings, no registration of her birth has been found to date.  In the years after 1866 the family moved to Burgh Castle, but perhaps because of the cramped living conditions, Sarah and her older sister Harriet left home to enter domestic service in Great Yarmouth.  The 1871 census for the Yarmouth southern district listed Sarah Collett, aged 15 and from Mettingham, as a servant living and working at the King Street home in Yarmouth of house builder James Howard and his wife Bessie.  It was just over seven years after that day, at Burgh Castle on 21st July 1878, when Sarah Collett, aged 22, a spinster of Burgh Castle, and the daughter of cement burner William Collett, was married by banns to James Moore.  He too was 22, and a railway porter, from Islington in London, the son of Thomas Moore, a labourer.  They both signed the register in their own hand, when the witnesses were siblings William Collett (above) and Dinah Collett (below).  By 1881 the couple was residing in St Pancras, London, at 11 Newmarket Terrace, where James was 24 and a railway checker from Hampshire and Sarah was 25 and from Mettingham, who had only recently given birth to daughter Ellen M Moore who was five months old.  It was at Ropley in Hampshire where James had been born and where he was baptised on 7th September 1856

 

Their first child Ellen Maude Moore was born on 11th November 1880 and a month after was baptised at St Mary’s Church in Islington on 19th December 1880.  The baptism record gave the family address as 11 Newmarket Terrace and her father occupation as a goods clerk (with the railway).  Just over a year later Sarah gave birth to a son and another year after that a second daughter, although neither of them survived.  On both of those occasions the family home was 37 York Road in Islington and it was again at St Mary’s Church in Islington where they were baptised.  Charles Edward Moore was baptised on 5th February 1882, with his sister Alice Moore baptised there on 8th July 1883, the parish register confirming that she had been born a month earlier on 6th June 1883.  Their father’s occupation was recorded as a railway servant and a railway checker.  Two years prior to the next census the birth of Agnes Gertrude Moore was recorded at St Pancras (Ref. 1b 143) during the second quarter of 1889

 

According to the next census in 1891, the family had been enlarged with the birth of a second daughter, when the family was still living in St Pancras, but at 37 Agnes Road.  James was 34 and still working as a railway checker, Sarah was 35, when their two children were Ellen M Moore who was 10 and Agnes G Moore who was two years of age.  After a further ten years, neither daughter was living with their parents in 1901, by which time James 44 and Sarah 45 were living alone at 2 St Pancras Crescent in St Pancras.  On that day daughter Agnes, aged 12 and from St Pancras, was a visitor at 57 Hilldrop Road in Islington, where Sarah’s younger sister Jemima Collett (below) was the cook.  It was the same situation in 1911 except by then, the couple was living at 25 Marquis Road in Cantelowes, Camden Town, just north of St Pancras, where 54-year-old James Moores was still employed by the Midland Railway Company.  The sad story for the couple, was that 55-year-old Sarah Moore had given birth to a total of six children during their thirty-two-years together, only two of whom had survived and were still alive in 1911.  During the following twenty-eight-years, the pair of them had moved out of London and on the day the 1939 Register was compiled they were residing at 30 Bunyan Road in Hitchin, Hertfordshire.  James was a retired railway servant who had been born on 7th July 1856, and Sarah was undertaking unpaid domestic duties.  The death of James Moore six years later was recorded at Hitchin register office (Ref. 3a 1201) during the last three months of 1945 when he was 89

 

Henry Collett [18P80] was born at Mettingham six weeks into 1856, his birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 662) during the first quarter of the year.  He was then baptised one month later on 21st March 1856, another son of William and Mary Ann Collett.  Tragically, it was exactly two weeks later that he was buried there on 4th April 1856 at just seven weeks old.  The death of Henry Collett was recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 443)

 

Dinah Collett [18P81] was born at Mettingham in 1857, with her birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 683) during the second quarter of that year.  She was later baptised at Mettingham on 8th November 1857, the daughter of William and Mary Ann Collett.  Dinah was five years old in the Mettingham census of 1861, following which her family moved to Burgh Castle in the late 1860s, where Dinah was 13 at the time of the Burgh Castle census of 1871.  Dinah later joined up with her sister Jemima (below) and the two of them headed for London to find work, where their older sister Matilda was already gainfully employed.  Matilda was working in the Islington area of London and it may have been Matilda who arranged for her two younger sisters to enter into domestic service in that area.  By 1881 Dinah Collett, aged 23 and of Mettingham, was working as a nurse to four-year-old Cecil J Benson at the home of his parents Joseph and Rebecca Benson at 57 Hilldrop Road in Islington, where her sister also worked.  Joseph Benson was a Baptist Minister, while both he and his wife were credited as being the managers for a firm of coal merchants.  Dinah Collett aged 33 was still being employed by the Benson family as a housemaid ten years later in 1891, and again at their home which was 57 Hilldrop Road.  On that day, and working for the Benson family as their cook, was Dinah’s youngest sister Jemima Collett who was 28.  So far, no record of Dinah Collett has been found within the census returns for 1901, which was very close to her wedding day

 

The marriage of Dinah Collett and Richard Dowsing was recorded at the Nottinghamshire Basford register office (Ref. 7a 489) during the second quarter of 1901.  Both of them were passed the age when they could have children and in 1911 the pair of them were living alone in a six-roomed property at 40 Skegby Road in Annesley Woodhouse, just south of Kirkby-in-Ashfield, Nottinghamshire.  Richard from Wighton in Norfolk was 57 a coal miner and loader, while Dinah from Mettingham was 53 and had been married for nine years, having had no children.  In the end, their marriage had endured for a total of twenty years, when Richard died and his death was recorded at Basford register office (Ref. 7b 144) during the second quarter of 1921, when he was 67 years old.  After nine years as a widow, Dinah was living in London when she passed away, the death of Dinah Dowsing recorded at Edmonton register office (Ref. 3a 442) during the third quarter of 1930 when she was 73.  The processing of her Will revealed that she died at 40 Harringay Park in Middlesex on 13th August 1930, while her actual place of residence was 18 Crouch Hall Road in Crouch End, Middlesex.  Her Will was proved at London on 27th August 1930 to Enos Allchurch, a cabinet maker, her personal effects valued at £510 6 Shillings and 3 Pence

 

George Collett [18P82] was born at Mettingham in 1858, with his birth recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 672).  It was also at Mettingham that he was baptised on 14th November 1858, the son of William and Mary Ann Collett.  George was two years old in the 1861 Census for that village and was living there with his parents.  He was still with his parents ten years later when he was 12, by which time the family was living at Burgh Castle.  Burgh Castle overlooks Breydon Water on the eastern edge of the Norfolk Broads and close to the North Sea, so it made sense that George’s occupation was that of a fisherman.  It was at Burgh Castle on 29th August 1880 that he married Eliza Kerrison.  She was born at Belton, her birth recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 680) in 1858, and was baptised at Belton on 21st May 1858, the daughter of George and Eliza Sarah Kerrison.  The wedding of George and Eliza was recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 1161).  According to the 1881 Census, fisherman George Collett and his wife Eliza were both 22 and were living less than two miles north of Belton in Burgh Castle at 3 High Road.  Also living in Burgh Castle at that time were George’s parents William and Mary Ann Collett, and his brothers Benjamin and Joseph (above).  On that census day, Eliza was well into the pregnancy for the first of her three children when the couple was still living at the High Street in Burgh Castle.  Eliza may have been with her parents when she gave birth to her second child at Belton, while the couple’s last known child was born at Gorleston.  Very shortly after the birth, George Collett suffered a premature death, with his passing being recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 493) during the second quarter of 1888, when he was 29

 

The death of her husband prompted Eliza to return to her own family home in Belton and, it was there at St Johns Road, that she and two of her three children were living, with Eliza’s parents in 1891.  The census that year confirmed that Eliza Collett was a widow at 31, when she was living with Margaret M Collect, who was six, and George Collect, who was three, at the home of her father and mother, George and Sarah Kerrison who were 68 and 69 respectively.  Eliza’s mother died during the 1890s and, by March 1901, she and her son were still living with her widowed father, and her brother George Kerrison, at St Johns Road in Belton.  Eliza Collett was 42 and from Belton, and was described as a laundress and a washer, having her own account at home.  Her son George Collett, who was 13, was listed as having been born at nearby Gorleston.  Later that same year Eliza’s father, who had been a gardener, passed away and was buried at Belton on 6th August 1901.  Following the death of her father, Eliza was perhaps forced to leave the dwelling at St Johns Road and, by April 1911, she and her son were residing at 68 Suffield Road in Gorleston, where Eliza Collett of Belton was 52 and George B Collett of Gorleston was 23

 

Eliza Collett, nee Kerrison, was 65 years old when her death was recorded at Yarmouth register office (Ref. 4b 40) during the final three months of 1923.  She was buried at Great Yarmouth Cemetery, but not in a consecrated grave according to the parish register which confirmed the following details.  Firstly, that Eliza had been living at 22 Stradbroke Road in Gorleston-in-Sea where she died, and after which she was buried on 3rd December 1923

 

18Q58 – Eliza Collett was born in 1881 at Burgh Castle

18Q59 – Margaret Matilda Collett was born in 1884 at Belton

18Q60 – Benjamin George Collett was born in 1888 at Gorleston

 

James Collett [18P83] was born at Mettingham in 1860 with his birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 596) during the fourth quarter of that year.  It was also at Mettingham where he was baptised on 14th October 1860, the son of William and Mary Ann Collett.  He was listed as being under one year old in 1861 and was 10 years old in 1871 when, for the later census, he was living with his family at Burgh Castle.  No record of him has been found in 1881 when, like some of his siblings, he may have been a fisherman out at sea on the day of the census that year.  Despite his absence in 1881, it was just over two years later that he married Hannah Priscilla Adams at Burgh Castle on 17th May 1883, the event recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 1113).  Hannah was born on 17th February 1863, with her birth recorded at Yarmouth during the first quarter of 1863, where she was baptised on 7th May 1866, the daughter of sailor John Adams and his wife Harriet of Row 108.  The witnesses at the wedding were Hannah’s father John Adams and Jemima Collett, James’ younger sister (below).  The first five years of their married life together was spent in Gorleston, but thereafter the family lived for a few years in West Hartlepool where the couple’s fourth and fifth children were born.  Around the middle of the decade, Hannah temporarily returned to Suffolk for the birth of her sixth and last child, shortly after which she rejoined her family in the north of England.  The birth of their first child was recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 900) in the second quarter of 1884, the second child’s birth was recorded there (Ref. 4a 933) in the third quarter of 1887, and her third child during the third quarter of 1889 (Ref. 4a 921).  The birth of all six children confirmed the mother’s maiden-name as Adams

 

So, it was, in the April census of 1891, that the family was living at 1 Belgrave Terrace in the Stranton district of West Hartlepool, not far from James’ two younger brothers, the unmarried Cornelius Collett and the married Henry Collett (both below).  James Collett was 30 and a labourer at a cement works, his wife Hannah P Collett from Yarmouth was 27, and their four children on that occasion were James E Collett who was seven, Edward J Collett who was three, Maude M Collett who was one year old, and Cecil H Collett was just a few months old.  After the birth of their last two children the family was living in South Shields by 1901, as confirmed by the census that year.  However, head of the household James Collett was absent from the family home at 12 Beethoven Street – see below.  The census in 1901 listed the family as Priscilla Collett, who was 38 and from Yarmouth, James Edward Collett aged 17 who was a steward on a trawler, John Edward Collett aged 13 who was a draper’s errand boy, Maud M Collett who was 11, Cecil H Collett who was 10, Arthur B Collett who was eight, and Alice B Collett who was five years of age.  The census also confirmed that four of the children had been born at Gorleston, with the other two born at West Hartlepool

 

Thanks to David Elias, of Perth in Western Australia, we now know that the family left the British Isles three years later, bound for Cape Town in South Africa.  It is also now established that, one year prior to the census in 1901, when James Collett was 38, he sailed to South Africa from Southampton (in steerage for the 65-day journey), leaving Southampton on 14th April 1900, one of the two-hundred passengers on board the Castle Line vessel King Anne Castle.  That would have been an initial exploratory visit, with a second sea trip made by James and his two eldest sons, James and Edward, prior to the remainder of the family travelling joining them there 1904, although no passenger list for that second journey for the three men has been unearthed.  His wife Hannah Priscilla Collett, together with their four youngest children, travelled south on board the SS Galacian of the Union Castle Line on 26th March 1904 to be reunited in Cape Town with James and her two sons.  The four younger children were confirmed as Maud May Collett, Cecil Henry Collett, Arthur Benjamin Collett and Alice Beulah Collett.  The family is known to have lived in Cape where, eventually the deaths of both James and Hannah were recorded.  James Collett from England was 66 and a naval captain when he died on 9th April 1926.  At that time in his life he was residing at Highfield Road in Green Point, Cape Town, when the cause of death was mitral stenosis.  The death certificate indicated an intention for James to be buried at Maitland Cemetery on Voortrekker Road, Maitland in Cape Town.  Sixteen years after being widowed, Hannah Priscilla Collett, nee Adams, passed away at the age of 79, when she was living at ‘Allview’ Vesperdene Road, Green Point in Cape Town.  It was on 10th January 1942 that she died of a cerebral thrombosis and general arteritis and was also buried on 12th January at Maitland Cemetery with James, who had been buried there on 11th April 1926.  A large headstone marks their grave, having a very impressive large ship’s anchor craved on the upper half of the stone

 

18Q61 – James Edward Collett was born in 1884 at Gorleston

18Q62 – John Edward Collett was born in 1887 at Gorleston

18Q63 – Maud May Collett was born in 1889 at Gorleston

18Q64 – Cecil Henry Collett was born in 1889 at West Hartlepool

18Q65 – Arthur Benjamin Collett was born in 1892 at West Hartlepool

18Q66 – Alice Beulah Collett was born in 1895 at Gorleston

 

Jemima Collett [18P84] was born at Mettingham on 6th September 1862 and her birth was recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 634) during the third quarter of that year.  She was baptised at Mettingham on 12th October 1862, the youngest daughter of William Collett and Mary Ann Bradnum.  Her parents moved to Burgh Castle in the late 1860s and it was there she living with her family in 1871 aged eight years.  Sometime during the 1870s Jemima and her sister Dinah (above) followed their older sister Matilda into London for the purpose of seeking work.  Both girls were lucky enough to be taken on by coal merchant and baptist minister Joseph Benson and his wife at their home at 57 Hilldrop Road in Islington.  Jemima was listed as being aged 18 in 1881 and from Mettingham when she was employed as a domestic servant.  Two years after that she returned to Burgh Castle for the wedding of her older brother James Collett (above) who was married there in May 1883 when Jemima Collett was named as one of the two witnesses.  After that wedding day, Jemima returned to her place of work in London, as confirmed in the census of 1891, when Jemima Collett from Mettingham was 28 and the cook for the Benson family at 57 Hilldrop Road (Holloway) in Islington, where her older sister Dinah Collett was the housemaid

 

Joseph and Rebecca Benson were away from their home on the day of the census in 1901, so there was no head of the household recorded at 57 Hilldrop Road in Islington.  Instead, it was their son Cecil John Benson who was 24 and a merchant’s clerk, who had with him Jemima Collett aged 38 and a cook, plus 12-year-old Agnes Moore, a visitor from St Pancras.  She was Agnes Gertrude Moore, Jemima’s niece, being a daughter of her older sister Sarah Moore (above) and her husband James Moore.  The Benson family’s home at 57 Hilldrop Road was an 11-roomed property, as described in the 1911 Census, when Jemima Collett, aged 48, was still employed there by Joseph and Rebecca Benson as their cook, one of two live-in domestic servants listed with the four members of the Benson family.  Many years later, unmarried Jemima Collett was 77 years old and living at 12 Crouch Hall Road in Hornsey, London, when the 1939 Register was put together.  It was three years later when Jemima Collett of 1 Bryanstone Road in Hornsey was 80 when she died on 24th February 1943 as a patient at Hornsey Hospital.  Administration of her personal effects of £818 11 Shillings and 10 Pence was granted to her unmarried niece Matilda Mary Collett, the eldest daughter of Jemima’s youngest brother Henry Collett (below).  Jemima was laid to rest at Camden Cemetery on 25th February 1943

 

Cornelius Bradnum Collett [18P85] was born at Mettingham on 18th February 1864, when the recording of his birth at Wangford (Ref. 4a 722) during the first three months of 1864, gave his name simply as Cornelius Collett.  It was also at Mettingham that he was baptised on 10th April 1864, another son of William Collett and Mary Ann Bradnum.  During the late 1860s the family moved to Burgh Castle near Great Yarmouth where he was listed as being seven years old in 1871.  On leaving school he joined the crew of the ‘Joseph & Henry’ a fishing boat sailing out of Great Yarmouth, as recorded in the 1881 Census when he was 16 years old.  A little while later he gave up being a fisherman and made the long journey north to Durham with his brother Henry (below) and was recorded as living with him and his wife Mary and their first child at 21 Wards Terrace in the Stranton area of West Hartlepool in 1891.  Cornelius was 27 and described as a boarder.  Also living nearby in West Hartlepool in 1891 was his other brother James Collett (above) with his wife and their first four children.  It was also after he had moved to the north of England that he met his future wife.  A short while after that, during the third quarter of 1892, the marriage of Cornelius Bradnum Collett and Elizabeth Taylor was recorded at South Shields (Ref. 10a 1007).  Elizabeth was born at Crook in County Durham, her birth recorded at South Shields (Ref. 10a 730) during the third quarter of 1872, and was baptised there on 19th March 1873 at the Primitive Methodist Chapel, the daughter of coalminer John Taylor and his wife Elizabeth.  Their marriage produced five children, the first of which was born at Gorleston, but was baptised seventeen months later at Kirkley, near Lowestoft.  There then followed a family move and a long journey north, back to Hartlepool, as confirmed by the census in 1901, when Cornelius Bradnum Collett, aged 37 and from Mettingham, was recorded as being a man-in-charge of a wheeling steel works in West Hartlepool, while he and his family were living at 38 Winter Street.  However, by that time, Elizabeth had given birth to three more children after arriving there, the first of which, did not survive

 

Cornelius’ wife was confirmed as Elizabeth Collett, aged 28 and from Crook in County Durham and, shortly thereafter, she gave birth to her last child, who sadly died with a few months that same year.  The couple’s three surviving children were Elizabeth Collett, who was seven and who had been born at Gorleston, Grace Collett, who was three, and Mary Collett who was two years old, both of them born at West Hartlepool.  Working with Cornelius, at the steel works, was his nephew George William Collett [18Q35], who was a steel millwright and the son of Benjamin Collett (above).  It was as George Collett, aged 23 and from Burgh Castle, that he was lodging with Cornelius’ brother Henry Collett (below).  During the next decade, the family left West Hartlepool and moved to Tynemouth registration district where Cornelius resumed his former occupation as a fisherman.  And it was at 25 Princes Street in North Shields that Cornelius and his family were residing in April 1911.  Cornelius B Collett of Mettingham was 47, his wife Elizabeth of Crook was 39, and just two of their daughters were recorded with them.  They were Grace and Mary who were 13 and 12 and both of them confirmed as born at West Hartlepool.  The couple’s eldest daughter had already started work by then and was listed in the census across the River Tyne in South Shields, where she was noted as being 17 and from Gorleston.  Cornelius Bradnum Collett was still living in the Tynemouth area when he died in 1934, his death recorded at Tynemouth register office (Ref. 10b 218) during the third quarter of that year, at the age of 70.  His wife survived him by just over seventeen years when the death of Elizabeth Collett nee Taylor was recorded at Tynemouth (Ref. 1b 560) during the first three months of 1952

 

18Q67 – Elizabeth Julie Collett was born in 1893 at Gorleston

18Q68 – Cornelius William Collett was born in 1895 at West Hartlepool

18Q69 – Grace Hilda Collett was born in 1897 at West Hartlepool

18Q70 – Mary Ann Collett was born in 1898 at West Hartlepool

18Q71 – Cornelius Collett was born in 1901 at West Hartlepool

 

Henry Collett [18P86] was born at Mettingham on 24th November 1865, his birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 631).  He was baptised on 11th February 1866 at Mettingham, the youngest son and last of the twelve surviving children of William Collett and Mary Ann Bradnum.  Sometime after he was born his family moved to Burgh Castle where he was recorded as five years old in the 1871 Census.  In 1881 Henry was the only child still living with his parents at 14 Butt Way in Burgh Castle.  At the aged 15, he was working as a general labourer and the place of his birth was confirmed as having been at Mettingham.  Towards the end of the 1880s Henry travelled north to Durham with his brother Cornelius (above) and they both settled down to live at West Hartlepool.  It was there that Henry met Mary Tims Mitchell, whom he married during the second quarter of 1890, when the event was recorded at Hartlepool (Ref. 10a 242).  By the time of the census in 1891, their marriage had produced their first child.  The birth of Mary Tims Mitchell on 24th August 1870 at West Hartlepool was recorded at Hartlepool (Ref. 10a 171) during the third quarter of 1870.  As Mary Timms Mitchel, she was baptised at Christ Church in West Hartlepool on 18th September 1870, the daughter of block and mast maker Thomas Mitchell and his wife Eliza.  The census return for West Hartlepool in 1891 placed the family living at 21 Wards Terrace in the Stranton area of West Hartlepool.  General labourer Henry Collett, from Suffolk, was 25, his wife Mary T Collett from Durham was 20, and their baby daughter Matilda M Collett was just three weeks old.  Living with the young family, as a boarder, was Henry’s brother Cornelius Collett (above), also from Suffolk and, living nearby in the same registration district, was Henry’s older brother James Collett (above).  Over the next eight years a further four children were added to the family although, sadly, one of them, the couple’s second daughter, Maud Mary, did not survive and died towards the end of 1896

 

Ten years later, according to the March census of 1901, the family of six was still living at Stranton in West Hartlepool, but at 26 Bentley Street.  Henry Collett, aged 35, was employed as a jobbing bricklayer, and his place of birth was confirmed as Mettingham and his wife Mary was 30 and her place of birth was confirmed as West Hartlepool in Durham.  All four of their children were also recorded as having been born there, and they were Matilda Collett who was ten, William Collett who was eight, John Collett who was five, and Charles Collett who was two years old.  Staying with the family that day, as a boarder, was Henry’s nephew George William Collett [18Q35], the son of his older brother Benjamin (above).  Three more children were added to the family during the following decade.  Perhaps it was three or four years later, that the family moved from West Hartlepool, when they settled in the parish of Throston in Hartlepool, where the couple’s last two children were born, all as confirmed in the census of 1911 when they were residing at 194 Hart Road.  Henry Collett from Mettingham was 45 and working as a labourer for a cement manufacturer.  Living there with him was his wife Mary Tims Collett who was 41 and from West Hartlepool and six of their children.  They were Matilda Mary Collett who was 20, John Arthur Collett who was 15, Charles Albert Collett who was 12 years old, and Albert Edward Collett who was eight years of age, all of them born at West Hartlepool.  The two younger children, born after the move to Hartlepool, were George Richard Collett who was three and Cecil Benjamin Collett who was one year old.  Of their missing son William, who would have been 18, has not been found anywhere in Great Britain at that time, so there is a chance that he was in the army and possibly undertaking military service abroad

 

The family later moved to Stockton-on-Tees in County Durham, where all of their children were married.  It was also there that Henry (Harry) Collett was living in 1936 when he died at the age of 71, his death recorded at Stockton register office (Ref. 10a 103) during the final three months of that year.  The Will of Henry Collett was proved in London on 18th March 1937 to Mary Tims Collett, widow, and Matilda Collett, spinster, his eldest daughter.  His personal effects were valued at £640 8 Shillings and 2 Pence.  The probate documents confirmed that Henry was living at 31 Stavordale Road in Stockton-on-Tees when he died on 26th December 1936.  Three years after the loss of her husband, Mary T Collett was recorded as a widow who was still living at Stockton in the 1939 Register, when her date of birth was confirmed as 24th August 1870, making her 69 years old, undertaking unpaid domestic duties.  At that time in her life, Mary was living at the home of her daughter-in-law Aileen Anderson Collett and grandson Alan Collett at 6 Studley Road in Stockton, whose husband, Mary’s son George Richard Collett had already signed up with the army

 

Tragically, just nine months later, son George Richard Collett was killed off Dunkirk Beach in 1940 while serving with the Royal Engineers during the Second World War.  His parents, and his wife Aileen, were all named within his military records, which confirmed that Harry and Mary Collett lived at Stockton-on-Tees.  After a further seven years, Mary Tims Collett nee Mitchell passed away in 1947 aged 76, the event recorded at Durham South-East register office (Ref. 1a 570) during the second quarter of that year.  In January 2011 new information about this family, and their youngest son Cecil Benjamin Collett, was received from Sue Hammler nee Collett, Cecil’s daughter.  The source of the information was the Family Bible which she holds, together with a conductor’s baton inscribed with the name of her grandfather Henry Collett.  The baton, decorated in silver and inscribed with the words "Presented to Mr H Collett in 1889" was handed down to Sue from her father, who indicated that it had been given to his father by an orchestra from either Philadelphia or Pittsburg.  In addition to being a bricklayer, Henry Collett may have also been an accomplished musician.  However, it seems unlikely that he was presented with the baton in America during the year prior to his marriage to Mary Tims Mitchell, so it is more likely that the orchestra was visiting England at that time

 

18Q72 – Matilda Mary Collett was born in 1891 at West Hartlepool

18Q73 – William Henry Collett was born in 1893 at West Hartlepool

18Q74 – Maud May Collett was born in 1894 at West Hartlepool

18Q75 – John Arthur Collett was born in 1896 at West Hartlepool

18Q76 – Charles Albert Collett was born in 1899 at West Hartlepool

18Q77 – Albert Edward Collett was born in 1902 at West Hartlepool

18Q78 – George Richard Collett was born in 1907 at Hartlepool

18Q79 – Cecil Benjamin Collett was born in 1909 at Hartlepool

 

Mary Ann Collett [18P87] was born at Shipmeadow according to the census in 1851, just seven months after her parents were married at Mettingham, with her birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. xiii 514) during the second quarter of 1843.  She was baptised at Mettingham on 14th April 1843, the eldest child of Henry Collett and Maria Myall, and was eight years old in 1851 when she was living with her family at Low Road in Mettingham.  With her sister Maria suffering an infant death, and her next sister Ellen being too young, it must have been Mary Ann who gave birth to a base-born daughter at Shipmeadow towards the end of 1860 who, five months later, was living with Mary Ann’s father Henry Collett and his second wife at Mettingham.  Six years later the death of Mary Ann Collett was recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 442) during the second quarter of 1867

 

18Q80 - Emma Collett was born in 1860 at Shipmeadow

 

Maria Collett [18P88] was born at Mettingham towards the end of 1844 when her birth was recorded at Wangford (Ref. xiii 412) during the last three months of the year.  She was baptised at Mettingham on 29th December 1844, the second daughter of Henry and Maria Collett.  Sadly, Maria did not reach her first birthday, when she died on 3rd October 1845 and was buried at Mettingham two days after, at the age of 10 months.  Her death was subsequently recorded at Wangford (Ref. xiii 311)

 

Ellen Collett [18P89] was born at Mettingham possibly near the end of 1846, although it was during the first quarter of 1847 when her birth was recorded at Wangford (Ref. xiii 527).  It was also as Ellen Collett that she was baptised at Mettingham on 7th February 1847, the only surviving daughter of Henry and Maria Collett.  In the Mettingham census of 1851, Ellen was recorded with her parents and her sister Mary Ann (above) and her brother James (below) at Low Road in Mettingham, when she was four years old.  Following the death of her mother in February 1854, Eleanor continued to live with her father, who married for a second time four months later.  By the time of the census of 1861, she was living with her father and her stepmother and her brother James (below) at Great Road in Mettingham, where Ellen was recorded in error as Eleanor Collett at 13 years of age, when she had already started work as a silk weaver.  Also living with the family in 1861 was Maria Collett who was seven.  She was Ellen’s cousin, the base-born daughter of her aunt Susan Collett, the younger sister of her father Henry Collett.  It seems likely that Ellen was married by the time of the census in 1871, since no record of her has been located in her maiden-name.  It is important to point out that Eleanor Collett, born in 1846 who died in 1933, was the wife of Robert Collett [18O72] of Yarmouth Road in Broome where they were living with their five children in 1891

 

James Collett [18P90] was born at Mettingham in 1849 and his birth was recorded at Wangford (Ref. xiii 543).  He was the only surviving son of Henry Collett and Maria Myall and was baptised at Mettingham on 10th March 1850.  In the following year, and at the time of the census in 1851, James Collett was one year old while living at Low Road in Mettingham with his family.  Upon the death of his mother, when James was four years old, his father remarried and, in the census of 1861, James was 12 and was living at Great Road in Mettingham with his father, his stepmother, his sister Eleanor, and his cousin Maria.  It is not known at this time what happened to James after 1861, but no record of him has been located in any of the census returns after that date

 

Walter Collett [18P91] was born at Mettingham during the month of May in 1851, his birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. xiii 591) during the second quarter of the year.  It was also at Mettingham that Walter was baptised on 29th June 1851, the son of Henry and Maria Collett.  Tragically, James lost his life only six months later, following which he was buried at Mettingham on 4th January 1852 when he was only seven months old.  The death of James Collett was recorded at Wangford (Ref. xiii 371) during the first quarter of 1852

 

George Collett [18P92] was born at Mettingham around the end of July 1853, his birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 562) during the third quarter of the year.  the last child born to Henry Collett and Maria Myall.  Sadly, he died at Mettingham during the first week of October that same year, and was buried there on 9th October 1853 at the age of 10 weeks.  The death of George Collett was recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 413) during the last three months of 1853

 

Emma Porter [18P93] was born at Ilketshall St Andrew on 11th July 1857, her birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 619), after which she was baptised at Ilketshall St Andrew on 9th August 1857, the daughter of James Porter and Mary Ann Collett.  On leaving school, Emma was employed as a domestic servant by carpenter John Barber in his home at 10 Arnold Street in Lowestoft, as confirmed in the census of 1871 when she was 13 years of age.  It is possible that it was through the Barber/Collett connection that she met her future husband.  It was her cousin Henry (Harry) Collett (above) who Emma married at St Margaret’s Church in Toft Monks on 27th September 1881, their wedding day recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4b 349) during the third quarter of 1881.  Harry was the oldest son of Mary Ann’s brother Robert Collett and his wife Eliza Barber.  The village of Toft Monks, just north of Beccles, was where Emma’s parents were living at that time.  During the year before she was married Emma, at the age of 23, was working as a cook at the Parsonage House in Hellesdon, the home of the Curate of Hellesdon and Drayton, thirty-eight-year-old Charles A Hope from Tasmania and his Suffolk born wife Louisa Hope

 

The photograph below was taken on the occasion of Emma’s 90th birthday during the summer of 1947.  In the picture directly behind Emma is her eldest son Robert James Collett [18Q81], next to him to the right is his only son also Robert Collett [18R60] who was always known as 'Bobs', like his father.  In front of him, seated, is his mother Bessie (Elizabeth Teresa Collett nee Hamblin), while next to him is Emma’s second son William Walter Collett [18Q82] – the grandfather of Mary Ann Dunn who kindly provided the photograph.  Standing next to William on the far right is Mary Ann’s father Philip Robert Walter Collett [18R61] with his wife Babs [May Lillian Collett nee Read] seated in front of him.  Next to Babs, and seated in front of William, is his wife Florence Maud Collett nee Death

 

On Emma's right is her daughter Dorothy Alice Collett [18Q85], sitting in front of her husband Walter Ramsay, and standing next to him their son Harry.  Seated on the far left is Gladys Collett nee Finney, who was married to William Geoffrey [18R63], who took the photograph.  In the front are Geoffrey and Gladys' daughter Simone Hilary Collett [18S41], and Mary Ann Collett, aged nine, the aforementioned Mary Ann Dunn [18S40].  The picture was taken in William’s and Flo's garden in Ipswich.  Missing from the family gathering was Emma's daughter Mabel May Collett [18Q84], who had already emigrated to Australia by then, and her third daughter Beattie (aka Beatrice Emma Collett) 18Q83] who had died during the previous year at the age of 60.  See Henry Collett (below) for more details of the family of Emma Collett nee Porter

 

William Charles Porter [18P94] was at Ilketshall St Andrew during 1860, and it was there also that he was baptised on 8th July 1860, the fourth child and second son of James Porter of Ellough and Mary Ann Collett of Mettingham.  In the census conducted during the following year, nine-month-old William Porter was living with his family at Tooks Common in Ilketshall St Andrew.  Around five years later his family moved to Ringsfield near Beccles where two more children were added to the family, before moving to 16 High Road in nearby Worlingham, where they were recorded as living at the time of the census in 1871 when William was ten years of age.  Between 1873 and 1880 William’s parents moved the three miles north of Beccles to the village of Toft Monks, where they finally settled and where they were recorded as living at 7 Bull’s Green in 1881 when agricultural labourer William Porter was 20 years old.  And it was at Toft Monks during the following year that William Charles Porter married (1) Georgiana Sutton on 17th October 1882, the daughter of Charles Sutton and Mary Ann Snowling.  The witnesses were Charles Grimmer and Alice Sutton, with the wedding recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4b 587).  Eighteen months earlier, Charles L Grimmer of Burnt House Farm in Haddiscoe, one mile north of Toft Monks, was recorded in the census of 1881 as a veterinary surgeon and a farmer of 171 acres employing six men and two boys.  Supporting his family was domestic servant Georgiana Sutton, aged 18, from Gillingham in Norfolk

 

Georgiana was born at Gillingham near Beccles, her birth recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4a 204) during the last quarter of 1863.  According to the census in 1891, the family was living at Rant Score in East Lowestoft and, by then, the couple’s nine-year marriage had already produced four children.  At that time the family comprised general labourer William Porter 30, his wife Georgiana Porter 28, William C Porter who was nine, Ethel Porter who was six, Beatrice Porter who was three, and John Porter who was one year old.  Rant Score is still a thoroughfare in Lowestoft today.  Later that same year Georgiana presented William with a third daughter, Alice Jane Porter who was born on 22nd October 1891, who was baptised at Christ Church in Lowestoft on 18th November 1891.  Exactly two years after Alice was born, the couple’s final child and their third son, Charles James Porter was born in October 1893, both children being born while the family was still living at Rant Score in Lowestoft.  Sadly, it was during the birth of their last child, that Georgiana Porter died in Lowestoft, and it was on 9th October 1893 at Toft Monks, that William buried his wife, her death at the age of 28 recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 601).  It was nearly eight years later that widower William Charles Porter married (2) Richanda Duffield of 4 Eastern Square in Lowestoft.  She was the widow of James Thomas Duffield, and was formerly Richanda Blowers, the illegitimate daughter of Emma Blowers and John Mobbs, who was born at Oulton on 2nd April 1866, her birth recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 720).  The wedding ceremony took place at the Sailors & Fishermen Bethel in Lowestoft on 20th July 1901 and was recorded at Mutford register office (Ref. 4a 2072).  Four months earlier, widower William Porter, aged 40, was a watchman serving on board the fishing boat Emblem, sailing out of Lowestoft Harbour.  Historical note:  The ‘Emblem’ from Lowestoft was captured by a German submarine on 25th July 1915 and was destroyed

 

Only four of his five children have been identified in the 1901 Census, and the absence of son John may indicate he had already died by then.  William (Charles) Porter of Toft Monks was 20 and an agricultural labourer at Carlton Colville, Ethel (Elvina) Porter was 16 and a general domestic servant at the home of Samuel Read at 112 London Road in Kirkley, near Carlton Colville, while Beatrice (Georgiana) Porter was 13 and was still attending school in Toft Monks, while living there with her uncle Harry Porter.  Of the two youngest children, Alice Porter of Lowestoft was nine years old and may have been suffering with poor health, since she was living as a boarder with sick nurse Jemima Allen at her home at 8 Wesley Street in Lowestoft, while her brother Charles J Porter, age seven and from Lowestoft, was living at Toft Monks with his late mother’s parents, that is his Sutton grandparents.  Following his marriage to Richanda Duffield, the couple initially lived at Kirkley near Carlton Colville, where Richanda presented William with the first of their two children.  Edith Laura Porter was born at Kirkley on 17th February 1902, was baptised at St Peter’s Church in Kirkley on 23rd May 1902, but died before the end of June that same year.  By the time of the birth of their second child, William and Richanda were living at 6 Fir Terrace in Fir Lane in Lowestoft, where Herbert William Porter was born on 20th January 1905.  It was also at that same address that the family was living in April 1911

 

The record of the family in that year’s census return was curious to say the least.  William Porter was a boat owner’s labourer, but he gave his age as 53, instead of 50, and his place of birth as Toft rather than Ilketshall.  His wife was listed as Richanda Porter who said she was 45 and not married, and living with them was Charles Porter aged 16, William’s youngest son from his first marriage, and Bertie Duffield, aged six years, who was actually Herbert William Porter, together with Maud Duffield, aged 15, a child from Richanda’s first marriage, who was described as William’s niece, rather than his stepdaughter.  William Charles Porter was still living at 6 Fir Terrace in Fir Lane, Lowestoft when he died on 15th December 1914 at the age of 56, his death recorded at Mutford register office (Ref. 4a 1212).  Many years later, the death of Richanda Porter was recorded at Lothingland register office (Ref. 4a 1228) during the second quarter of 1937 when she was 71

 

Their eldest son, William Charles Porter, is of particular interest.  Firstly, he married Frances Matilda Duffield at St Margaret’s Church in Lowestoft on 14th January 1908.  Frances was born at Pakefield on 5th December 1889, the daughter of the aforementioned James Thomas Duffield and Richanda Blowers, the latter by then being married to William’s father.  William was born at Toft Monks on 31st January 1884, where he was baptised on 23rd March 1884 at Lowestoft Primitive Methodist Church, which raises the question as to why his parents recorded him as being nine years old in 1891, and why he said he was 20 in 1901.  His wife Frances died at Lowestoft on 31st May 1959, at the age of 70, when her death was recorded at Lothingland register office (Ref. 4b 825).  The later death of William Charles Porter was recorded at Deben register office (Ref. 4b 2121) during the summer in 1973.  The Will of William Charles Porter of 20 Church Green, St Margaret’s Road in Lowestoft, who died on 14th August 1973, was proved at Ipswich on 3rd October 1973

 

Twenty years prior to the death of his wife, the couple and four of their children were recorded within the 1939 Register as living at 95 Cambridge Road in Lowestoft.  William C Porter was a sea fisherman, Frances M Porter was undertaking unpaid domestic duties, George H Porter was a wood working machinist, Harry E Porter was a motor-coach builder and finisher, Edna Gwendoline Porter was net mender, and Eric D Porter was still at school.  From one of their children came a grandson for the couple, Robert Porter who, in 2010 was a tour guide at Adnam’s Brewery in Southwold where he met Brian Collett, to whom he generously provided all of the details regarding the Porter family and their earlier connection with the Collett family

 

Harry Porter [18P95] was born at Ringsfield on 19th January 1867, where he was baptised on 17th March 1867, the youngest surviving son, and eighth of the nine children of James Porter and Mary Ann Collett.  By the time of the census in 1871 Harry was four years old and was living with his family at 16 High Road in Worlingham, near Beccles.  During the next decade his family moved to 74 Bull’s Green in Toft Monks where he was 14 in 1881, when he was living there with his parents and his older brother William Porter.  Harry, and his brother, and his father, were all employed as agricultural labourers at that time.  Ten years later, the family was again living at 74 Bulls Green when Harry Porter was 24 and an agricultural labourer who was the only child still living there with his parents.  It would appear that he followed the example set by his sister Emma (above) by marrying one of his cousins.  It was at the Parish Church in Toft Monks on 7th April 1896 that Harry Porter married Alice Edith Collett (below) by the reading of banns.  In addition to being his cousin, Alice Edith Collett was also his sister-in-law, she being the sister of Henry Collett who married Harry Porter’s sister Emma Porter (above).  The wedding was recorded at Loddon register office (Ref. 4b 433) with the parish register providing the following details.  Harry was 29 and a dealer, the son of labourer James Porter, who was residing in Tofts Monk and who signed the register in his own hand.  Alice also signed the register, was a spinster at 28, who was living at Tofts Monk, the daughter of labourer Robert Collett

 

Once married, Harry and Alice Porter settled in the village of Toft Monks, where a total of eight children were born to the couple, although only five of them survived.  And it was there that the family was living at the time of the census in March 1901, when Harry Porter was a dealer in fowls.  According to that year’s census return, Harry was 34 and from Ringsfield, while his wife Alice was 33 and from Mettingham.  By then only two children were living with them, their first-born child Charles, having already died.  The two surviving children were Mary Ann Porter who was three and James Porter who was only one year old, both of them confirmed as having been born at Toft Monks.  During the next decade five more children were added to the family but only three of them survived.  So, by the time of the next census in April 1911, the family at Toft Monks near Beccles was made up of Harry Porter aged 44, Alice Porter aged 43, Mary Ann Porter who was 13, James Porter who was 11, John Porter who was nine, Robert Frederick William Porter who was five, and William Ernest Porter who was two years old.  In addition to this, the same census return stated that the couple had been married for fifteen years and included the names of the three children who had died even though they were ruled through. They were Charles Porter (born 1897), and Harold Porter (born 1903) and George Porter (born 1905) who were the couple’s fifth and sixth children

 

In the 1939 Register for Bulls Green in Loddon, Toft Monks, Harry Porter was 72 and a retired fisherman, when Alice E Porter was 71 and undertaking unpaid domestic duties.  Two years later Harry Porter died at Toft Monks, where he was buried on 2nd December 1941, his death recorded at Norwich register office (Ref. 4b 263), at the age of 74.  His wife survived him by fifteen years, when the death of Alice E Porter was recorded at Norwich register office (Ref. 4b 650) when she was 88 years old, after which the body of Alice Edith Porter of Raveningham (just north-west of Toft Monks) was buried at Toft Monks with her husband on 22nd October 1956

 

Maria Elizabeth Collett [18P96] was the base-born daughter of Susan Collett and was born at Mettingham, either at the end of 1853 or early in 1854, with her birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 614) in the first quarter of 1854.  In order avoid the shame brought on her family, the child was taken from Susan and placed in the care of the family of her older married brother Henry Collett (above), who had lost a baby daughter called Maria some years earlier, plus a baby son in the previous year.  It was while in his care that Maria Elizabeth Collett was baptised at Mettingham on 16th April 1854.  Three years later her mother married Edward Mayes and, by the time of the census in 1861, Maria was living with the Mayes family at Low Road in Mettingham, where she was recorded Maria E Mayes who was seven years old.  Edward Mayes died near the end of that decade, when Maria’s mother and five of her children were inmates at the Shipmeadow Union Workhouse.  On that same day in 1871, Maria was living nearby in Shipmeadow, when she was working at the home of elderly sisters Mary Ann Draper and Hannah Draper.  The sisters were unmarried and described as retired farmers and money lenders from Mettingham.  Their housekeeper was 21 years old Rosa Roe from Bungay, while Maria Collett from Mettingham was 18, and was employed as the domestic indoor servant.  During the following years it is anticipated that she was married, as no record of her as Maria Elizabeth Collett has been found in 1881, by which time her mother Susan Mayes was living in Bungay, where she died just after the census day in 1911

 

Albert Collett [18P97] was born at Mettingham in 1857, his birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 612) during the last three months of that year.  He was first-born child of Robert Collett and his first wife Eliza Barber.  Sadly, Albert died shortly after he was born, his death also recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 451) during the same three months of the year, after which he was buried at Mettingham on 11th November 1857

 

Henry Collett [18P98] was born at Mettingham in 1859, his birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 686) during the second quarter of the year.  It was also at Mettingham that he was baptised on 12th June 1859, the eldest surviving son of Robert and Eliza Collett.  Henry was one year old by the time of the census in 1861, although he was better known as Harry.  And it was as Harry Collett that he was listed in the census returns for 1871, 1881 1891, and 1901, although he was Henry Collett in the April census of 1911.  Harry Collett was 11 in 1871 and ten years later, at the age of 21, his occupation was that of a railway porter.  At that time, he was a lodger at the Mutford Bridge home in Oulton, Suffolk, of coal porter George Ratcliffe and his wife Elizabeth.  Six months later on 27th September 1881, Harry married his cousin Emma Porter (above) at Toft Monks, just two miles north of Beccles.  Emma was born in 1857 and was baptised at Ilketshall St Andrew on 9th August 1857, the daughter of James Porter and Mary Ann Collett.  Harry gave his occupation on that occasion as being a railway signalman.  The witnesses to the marriage were Emma’s father James Porter, who made his mark, and Alice Porter, with the event recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4b 349) during the third quarter of 1881.  Following their wedding the couple spent a short time living south of the Stour estuary at Mistley in Essex, but later moved north to Ipswich with their children, where they appear to have spent the rest of their lives together.  By the time of the Ipswich census of 1891 the family comprised Harry Collett, aged 31, his wife Emma Collett, who was 32, and their four children, who at that time were Robert Collett, who was seven, William W Collett, who was six, Beatrice E Collett, who was four, and Mabel M Collett who was one year old

 

According to the next census in 1901, the family was living in the St Mary Stoke area of Ipswich.  Harry was confirmed as being 41 and born at Mettingham, while he was employed as a ticket collector.  His wife Emma was 42 and from Ilketshall St Andrew, and their eldest son Robert, aged 17, had been born while the couple was living at Mistley.  All of the couple’s younger children had been born after the family moved to Ipswich, and they were William W Collett, aged 16, Beatrice E Collett, aged 14, Mabel M Collett, who was 11, and Dorothy A Collett who was five years old.  By April 1911 the family was still living within the Ipswich area, where Henry Collett of Mettingham was 51 and his wife Emma was 53.  Three of their children had left home by that time and they were Robert James, who was living nearby in Ipswich, although recorded in error as Robert James Collett from Mistley, William Walter who was married by then, and Beatrice Emma who was living and working in the Sudbury area of Suffolk.  The two children still living at Ipswich with their parents were the two youngest girls, Mabel May Collett, who was 21, and Dorothy Alice Collett who was 15

 

Henry (Harry) Collett survived for another six years after that census day, when the death of Henry Collett was recorded at Ipswich register office (Ref. 4a 851) during the third quarter of 1917 at the age of 58.  At the time that he died, on 17th September 1917, his occupation was that of a railway ticket collector.  When his Will for £129 1 Shilling and 10 Pence was proved at Ipswich on 3rd November 1917, there was no mention of his wife, instead the Will was proved to Edward Cattermole, another railway ticket collector.  Whether Edward was the son of Selina Margaret Collett [18Q34] and Frederick Cattermole who emigrated to Canada in 1906, is still not known.  Twenty-two years after being widowed, Emma Collett was 82 years old when she and her unmarried daughter Beatrice were living at 45 Burrell Road in Ipswich, as confirmed in the 1939 Register which stated that Emma had been born on 11th July 1857.  Both of them were described as undertaking unpaid domestic duties.  Her daughter and companion Beatrice died at Ipswich in 1946, while it was four year later that 93-year-old Emma Collett, nee Porter, passed away at Ipswich, her death recorded at Ipswich register office (Ref. 4a 605) during the third quarter of 1950.  The Will of Emma Collett of 14 Springfield Lane, Ipswich, who died there on 30th July 1950, was proved at Ipswich on 16th September 1950 to Robert James Collett, a retired commercial clerk, and Walter Arthur Ramsey, civil servant, the executors of her estate of £679 6 Shillings and 2 Pence.  See photograph (above) of Emma surrounded by her family at her 90th birthday party in the garden of her son William at Ipswich in 1947

 

18Q81 – Robert James Collett was born in 1883 at Mistley, Essex

18Q82 – William Walter Collett was born in 1884 at Ipswich

18Q83 – Beatrice Emma Collett was born in 1886 at Ipswich

18Q84 – Mabel May Collett was born in 1889 at Ipswich

18Q85 – Dorothy Alice Collett was born in 1895 at Ipswich

 

Alice Edith Collett [18P99] was born at Mettingham on 18th January 1868, the year before her mother died, with her birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 686).  By the time of the census of 1871, Alice and her family were living at Broome.  Alice was listed as being three years old and was living with her father Robert Collett, her stepmother Ellen, her brother Harry (above), and her half-sisters Clara and Ellen (below).  Ten years later, at the time of the census of 1881, the Alice and her family were living at the Black Horse Inn at Ditchingham, to where the family had moved from Broome in 1872.  Alice was listed as being 13 and born at Mettingham in Suffolk, and by that time she had left school and was working as a silk winder.  In 1891 Alice was 23 and was unmarried, while living within the Beccles & Wangford census registration district of Suffolk.  Just over five years later, at the Parish Church in Toft Monks, near Beccles, Alice Edith Collett was married by banns to her cousin Harry Porter on 7th April 1896.  Harry was the younger brother of Emma Porter who married Alice’s brother Henry Collett (above), Harry being the son of Mary Ann Collett and James Porter.  For more details of their family see Harry Porter (above)

 

Clara Elizabeth Collett [18P100] was born at Broome, near Bungay, on 19th February 1869, the first child of Robert Collett by his second wife Ellen Beckett, who were only married five months earlier at Denton, near Bungay, on 14th September 1868.  Clara and her family were still living in Broome at the time of the census in 1871, when she was two years old, but during the following year the family moved to Ditchingham near Bungay.  Clara’s father took over the running of the Black Horse Inn at Ditchingham, and it was there that the family was living in 1881, by which time Clara was twelve and was still attending school although she was also described as a silk winder, like her older sister Alice (above).  Nine years later, during the third quarter of 1890, Clara married Alfred Elden with whom she is reputed to have had around thirteen children, even though only twelve of them are listed below.  Their wedding was recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4b 359) and took place at the Parish Church in Broome on 22nd September 1890, when Clara and Alfred were both 21 and residing in Broome.  The marriage register recorded that Clara was a domestic servant and the daughter of Robert Collett, a labourer, and that Alfred was a builder, the son of George Elden, a builder.  The bride and the groom both signed the register in their own hand, with the witnesses being Henry Bird and Florence Collett who was Clara’s younger sister (below), who were married during the following year

 

Within the census returns Alfred’s occupation was that of a bricklayer, the son George and Rachel Elden of Broome, where Alfred was also born on 31st May 1869, his birth recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4b 199) during the second quarter of 1869.  Around the time that Alfred was ten years old, his mother died, possibly during childbirth.  Alfred was twelve years old in 1881 and was living with his widowed father and his three brothers and younger sister at Broome.  Two older sisters had already left the family home by then, or had not survived.  In 1871 the Elden family of Broome comprised George aged 34, Rachel aged 31, Caroline Elden who was eight, Edward Elden who was six, Susannah Elden who was five, and Alfred who was one year old.  Ten years later George was 43, Edward was 17, Alfred was 12, Eleanor was 10, Jeffrey George was five, and Bertie Joseph was four years old. 

 

Six months after their wedding day, Alfred and Clara were still living at Broome in 1891 where, over the next seven years, three of their surviving children were born.  Alfred Elden was 21 in 1891, while his wife Clara E Elden was 22.  It was after the birth of their fourth child at Broome in 1896, that the family left Norfolk and moved south to Ipswich, where the couple’s remaining children were born, and where they were living in 1901 and 1911.  The census of 1901 recorded the family as Alfred and Clara who were both 31, and their six children Donald who was nine, Margaret who was eight, Alfred who was four, Bertie who was three, Reginald who was one year old, and baby Horace who was under one year old.  Missing that day was the couple’s third child Harold Robert Elden who was born on 29th August 1894, his birth recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4b 223) – see below.  Over the next decade a further three children were added to the family.  By April 1911, the family comprised Alfred and Clara Elizabeth who were 42, and their nine children.  They were Donald Edward Elden aged 19 from Broome – his birth recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4b 234) during the second quarter of 1891, Margaret Kate Elden aged 18 from Broome – her birth recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4b 212) during the last quarter of 1892, Alfred George Elden aged 14 – who was born at Broome on 15th May 1896, his birth recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4b 226), Bertie Arthur Elden aged 13, - his birth recorded at Ipswich (Ref. 4a 935) during the first quarter of 1898, Reginald James Elden aged 12 - his birth recorded at Ipswich (Ref. 4a 987) during the second quarter of 1899, Horace Redvers Elden aged 10 - his birth recorded at Ipswich (Ref. 4a 982) during the last quarter of 1900, Arthur Sydney Elden who was seven - his birth recorded at Ipswich (Ref. 4a 1040) during the fourth quarter of 1903, and Frank Ernest Elden who was six years old - his birth recorded at Ipswich (Ref. 4a 1047) during the second quarter of 1905

 

Although Clara was 42 years of age in 1911, it was a few weeks after that she gave birth to Stanley Sylvester Elden whose birth was recorded at Ipswich register office (Ref. 4a 1014) during the second quarter of 1911.  Just immediately prior to the next census day in 1911, Clara had suffered the loss of the couple’s last two children, a girl and a boy.  One of the couple’s children, absent from the family home in 1901, was Harold Robert Elden who was 16 and a baker’s assistant, who was living at Ipswich in 1911, at the home of Clara’s stepmother, her father’s second wife, the former Ellen Beckett.  The first of the two ‘missing children’ of Clara and Alfred Elden was Clara Eleanor Elden, whose birth was recorded at Ipswich (Ref. 4a 1039) during the last quarter of 1906, who was three years old when her death was recorded at Ipswich register office (Ref. 4a 606) during the first three months of 1910.  The second child also died at Ipswich early in 1910, and he was Sydney Albert Elden, whose birth was recorded at Ipswich (Ref. 4a 1029) during the first quarter of 1909, who was one year old when his death was recorded at Ipswich register office at the same time as his sister Clara, his passing also under the same reference number, (Ref. 4a 606)

 

It was at 68 Britannia Road in Ipswich that Alfred and Clara were residing on the day of the survey for 1939 Register was conducted, at a time in their lives when their 40-year-old unmarried son Reginald was living there with them.  Alfred Elden’s date of birth was confirmed as 31st May 1869, when he was still working as a bricklayer in the building industry.  Clara E Elden was undertaking unpaid domestic duties at the age of seventy, while her son Reginald J Elden was a bricklayer’s labourer, working alongside his father.  His date of birth was recorded as 3rd April 1899.  Clara’s husband Alfred Elden died in 1946 at the age of 77, his passing recorded at Ipswich during the second quarter of the year (Ref. 4a 1068).  His widow lived a very long life before she died in 1963 when she was 94 years of age.  The death of Clara Elizabeth Elden was recorded Ipswich register office (Ref. 4b 864) during the three months of that year

 

Ellen Elizabeth Collett [18P101] was born at Broome in 1870, her birth recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4b 222) during the second quarter of that year.  Some months later, she was baptised at Ditchingham on 28th August 1870, the daughter of Robert and Ellen Collett.  By 2nd April 1871 she was less than one year old and, in the census return, she was referred to as Elizabeth, while living with her father Robert, her mother Ellen and her three siblings Harry, Alice, and Clara (above).  At the age of ten years, and as Elizabeth, she was living with her family at the Black Horse Inn at Ditchingham where her father was the beer retailer.  By 1891 she was listed as Ellen E Collett aged 20 and born at Broome, where she was living with her parents at that time.  Tragically, just over two years after that census day, Ellen Elizabeth Collett died at Broome on 2nd August 1893 at the age of 23, her death recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4b 151)

 

Horace Collett [18P102] was born at Broome on 14th May 1871, when his birth was recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4b 210) during the second quarter of the year.  It was over a year later, and after the family had moved to Ditchingham, when he was baptised there on 26th September 1872 in a joint ceremony with his younger sister Florence (below), the third and fourth children of Robert Collett and his second wife Ellen Beckett.  Horace was nine years old in April 1881 when he was living with his family at The Black Horse Inn in Ditchingham.  By 1891 Horace Collett of Broome was 18 and a driver with the Royal Artillery based at Farnborough in Hampshire, and that fact may also be the reason why he was not recorded in the census of 1901, when he could have been serving overseas with the army. Curiously, there was one other Collett living in the same area in 1891, and that was Owen Collett, who was 19, about whom nothing further is known, as no other record of him has been found either before or after 1891.  According to the census of 1911, unmarried Horace was thirty-nine and was once again living at the home of his widowed mother Ellen, who had since moved to Ipswich with her two youngest sons Arthur and Sidney (below).  On that day, Horace Collett from Ditchingham was employed as a labourer at an iron foundry, while staying with the family was Harold Robert Elden, the 16-year-old son of Horace’s married sister Clara Elizabeth Elden (above)

 

The 1939 Register included Horace Collett living at 25 Ringham Road in Ipswich where he was working as a car washer at the age of 68.  With him that day was his wife Ellen Collett whose date of birth was 10th July 1873, who was described as undertaking unpaid domestic duties.  Ellen had been born at Beccles and was the eldest child of Henry and Anne Batterbury whose family was living at Beccles in 1881, where Ellen was seven years of age and her father was a farm labourer.  The birth of Ellen Batterbury was recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 702).  Thirty years later the enlarged family was still residing in Beccles, when Ellen was 37, a dressmaker, and the eldest of the five children still living there with their parents.  The marriage of Horace Collett and Ellen Batterbury was recorded at Ipswich register office (Ref. 4a 2633) during the last three months of 1934.  It was four years after the 1939 Register was produced, that the death of Ellen Collett, nee Batterbury, was recorded at Ipswich register office (Ref. 4a 1049) during the second quarter of 1943, when she was 69.  By the time Horace passed away at Ipswich, he was 82 years old, when his death was recorded at Ipswich register office (Ref. 4b 754) during the second quarter of 1954

 

Florence Collett [18P103] was born at Broome, like her brother Horace (above), with whom she was baptised in a joint ceremony at Ditchingham on 26th September 1872, after the family had moved there almost immediately following the birth of Florence, whose birth was recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4b 195) during the third quarter of the year, another daughter of Robert and Ellen Collett.  By the time of the 1881 Census Florence was aged 8 and was living with her parents at the Black Horse Inn at Ditchingham.  She was also still living with her parents ten years later at their home in Broome at the age of 18.  However, it was during the previous year, at the Parish Church in Broome on 22nd September 1890, that Florence was one of the witnesses at the wedding of her older sister Clara Elizabeth Collett (above) and Alfred Elden, the other witness being Florence’s future husband Henry Bird who were married fifteen days after the census day in 1891.  Florence married Henry Bird at the parish church in Broome on 29th March 1891.  The parish register confirmed that Henry Bird of Ditchingham was 21 and a labourer, while Florence was 19 and a domestic servant from Broome whose father was labourer Robert Collett.  The witnesses at the church were Robert Collett and Rose Saws

 

The first child of Henry and Florence was William Bird who was born at Ditchingham on 12th June 1892, and was followed by two daughters Marion Bird whose birth was recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4b 241) during the third quarter in 1895, and Ellen Bird, before Henry and Florence appear to have parted company.  Henry Bird was recorded living at Broome from 1895 through to 1915, his name listed in the electoral rolls for those twenty years.  Rather strangely in the census for Broome in 1901, Henry Bird and two of his three children were living at Stone Lane, Yarmouth Road in Broome, where Henry from St Lawrence was 31 and working as a horseman, who informed the census enumerator that he was a widower.  The two children were William Bird who was eight, and Marion Bird junior who was five.  His daughter may have been referred to in that way, because Henry’s unmarried sister was Marion Collett from St Johns, aged 28, a dressmaker living at Ditchingham with Henry’s parents, Edward and Elizabeth whose place of birth was also St Lawrence.  The third and youngest child, three-year-old Ellen Bird, was staying nearby in Broome with her maternal grandmother Ellen Collett

 

However, despite having the martial status of a widower, on that same census Henry’s wife was residing at Highbury Station Road in Islington within census registration district of the London Borough of West Ham, with Henry’s brother George.  On that day Florence Bird, aged 29 and from Broome, was recorded as married and the wife of head of the household George Bird from Ditchingham who was 30 and a carpenter’s labourer.  Listed with the couple in the census return was their one-year-old daughter Alice M Bird who was born in Islington.  That situation would appear to indicate that her marriage to Henry Bird had only lasted for about seven years, following which she had ‘runaway’ to London with his brother.  Four further children were added to the family over the next ten years and, by April 1911, the larger family was living at 25 Poplar Walk in Lambeth.  George Bird was a gardener aged 39 from Norfolk, his wife Florence from Norfolk was 38, and their five children were Alice Bird who was eleven, George Henry Bird who was nine, Gladys Bird who was six, Ivy Maude Bird who was three, and Grace Amelia Bird who was one year old.  The first three children had been born at Highbury Islington, the next at East Dulwich, and the last at Norwood

 

Kate Collett [18P104] was born at Ditchingham in 1874 and was baptised there on 6th March 1874, the daughter of Robert Collett and his second wife Ellen.  At the time of the census in 1881 Kate was seven years old and living with her family at the Black Horse Inn at Ditchingham.  During the next decade her family left Ditchingham and moved to Broome where they were living in 1891, but with Kate absent at that time.  Kate was around 24 years of age when she married Charles Bloomfield, the wedding taking place at Broome and recorded at Loddon register office in Norfolk during 1898.  Charles was born on 4th September 1871 and was the subject of an adult baptism at Waltham Cross on 4th September 1898 just prior to his church wedding, when he was confirmed as the son of Ephraim and Jane Bloomfield.  The couple initially lived at Broome where their first child was born, before moving to 5 Small Lea Cottages in Cheshunt, just north of Waltham Cross in Hertfordshire.  The move to Hertfordshire was very likely the result of Charles taking up employment as a carman with the London & North Eastern Railway, having a station on the main line at both Cheshunt and Waltham Cross

 

The photograph above was kindly supplied by Steve Keeble and is believed to have been taken around 1924, possibly even on the occasion of Kate’s fiftieth birthday.  The Cheshunt census in March 1901 recorded Charles Bloomfield of Suffolk as 29, Kate Bloomfield of Broome (sic) as 27, and their son as Arthur Charles Bloomfield who was just one year old.  Living with the family was boarder Arthur Cranfield who was 22 and a stockman from Suffolk.  Sometime during the next year or so, the family left Cheshunt and moved the short distance to 11 Kings Road in nearby Waltham Cross, to be closer to the railway station there.  And it was while the family was living there that Kate presented Charles with their second child Percy Walter Reuben Bloomfield in 1903, his birth recorded at Edmonton register office (Ref. 3a 668) during the second quarter of that year.  On being baptised at St Lawrence’s Church in Waltham Cross on 12th July 1903, the church register confirmed his date of birth as 17th May 1903.  According to the census of 1911, the family was still living at 11 Kings Road, from where Charles was still working as a carman.  The census return recorded that Charles Bloomfield of Wingfield in Suffolk was 39, and that his wife of twelve years Kate, was 37 and from Ditchingham in Norfolk, while their two sons were eleven and seven respectively.  Living with the family as boarders on that occasion were two bachelors, carpenter Charles Miller, 37 from Notting Hill, and 28 years old John Clark from Watford, a worker at the Royal Gunpowder Factory.  Tragically, it was just three years later that Kate was made a widow when Charles died as a result of an accident while working on the railway.  That happened in 1914 when he suffered a fatal head injury caused by a collision with an overhead beam.  Eighteen years after being losing her husband, the death of Kate Bloomfield was recorded at Suffolk Wangford register office (Ref. 4a 1199) during the last three months of 1932, when she was 59 years old. Seven year after losing his mother, the premature death of her youngest son was recorded at the North Suffolk Wainford register office (Ref. 4a 1180) during the second quarter of 1939, when Percy Walter Reuben Bloomfield was only 34. 

 

As regards Arthur Charles Bloomfield, his birth was recorded at Loddon register office (Ref. 4b 211) during the last quarter of 1899, following his birth on 14th October 1899 at Broome.  Very shortly after he was born his father’s work took the family to Cheshunt and Waltham Cross in Hertfordshire, and it was there at St Lawrence’s Church in Waltham Cross that he was baptised 17th December 1899.  He volunteered for the army in 1915 but, being below the minimum age, he said he was older in order to be accepted.  He joined a Norfolk Regiment and gained the crossed guns emblem of a marksman.  In 1916, he was sent to France and was given the role of a Lewis Gunner in trenches.  During the Battle of the Somme in August that same year, Arthur sustained a serious shrapnel injury to the head which resulted in his return to England for recuperation and his ultimate retirement from the army.  It was a few years late, during the second quarter of 1923, that Arthur Bloomfield married Winifred Jackson, their wedding recorded at Edmonton register office (Ref. 3a 1353), with whom he had two children.  Their first child was Audrey Winifred Bloomfield, whose birth was recorded at Edmonton during the last three months of 1923, who died in 1979.  It was around the birth of the second child that sadly Winifred died.  Dorine Bloomfield was born during the third quarter of 1928, her birth also recorded at Edmonton register office, just prior to the death of her mother, following which Arthur returned to live in Suffolk with his two daughters.  Majuba Cottage in Beccles, where Arthur and the girls settled, had previously been owned by the late Henry Keable, Arthur’s uncle through marriage to his aunt Maria Bloomfield.  Upon the death of Henry Keable in 1924, the property was purchased by Mr H Theobald for £580 and was eventually rented by Arthur Bloomfield from 1928

 

At the time of the sale in 1924, Majuba Cottage, at Swines Green, off Ingate Place in Beccles was described as being ‘A well-built freehold dwelling house containing 2 sitting rooms, kitchen and 3 bedrooms, with offices in rear, stable, cart shed, piggeries, granary, fowl houses, and other outbuildings AND valuable enclosure of productive land, the whole containing 3 roods and 35 perches, well adapted for a Poultry Farm, Market Garden or Building Purposes, having a frontage of 252 feet upon the High Road’.  It was built in 1901 of bricks made from clay from the Beccles brick kilns.  Arthur’s mother Kate also lived with the family at Majuba Cottage, where she acted as mother to her two granddaughters.  That arrangement continued for a further five years, until the passing of Kate Bloomfield nee Collett while she lay in her bed at Majuba Cottage in 1933 at nearly 60 years of age.  Her son Arthur Bloomfield was 75 years old when he died in 1974.  All of this information has been kindly provided by Steve Keeble who was born in 1960, the son of Dorine Bloomfield and Stanley Charles Keeble who were married in 1959.  Sadly, Dorine Keeble nee Bloomfield passed away in hospital, following a very brief illness, on Saturday 30th June 2012 at the age of 84

 

Robert Collett [18P105] was born at Ditchingham on 17th March 1876, the very same day that he was baptised there, a son of inn keeper Robert Collett and his wife Ellen.  His birth was later recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4b 214) during the second quarter of the year.  He was most likely born at the Black Horse Inn in Ditchingham where his family was living in 1881, when Robert was six years old.  His birth was recorded at Ditchingham (Ref. 26 103) when his parents were named as Robert and Ellen Collett.  By the time he was 16, he was a brick labourer, living with his family at Woodton, just north-west of Bungay.  No trace of Robert Collett has been found so far in the 1901 Census, nor have any details been unearthed about him at any time thereafter.  What became of him is not known at this time if, in fact, he did survive beyond his teenage years

 

Jessie L Collett [18P106] was born at Ditchingham in 1877, mostly at the Black Horse Inn where her father was the inn keeper.  Her birth was recorded at Loddon as Jessy Collett (Ref. 4b 209) during the third quarter of 1877.  It was at Ditchingham where she was baptised as Jessie Collett on 24th August 1877, the daughter of Robert and Ellen Collett.  She was three years old in 1881 when living with her family at the Black Horse Inn in Ditchingham.  Upon leaving school, she entered into domestic service and by 1901 she was living and working in the St Margaret’s district of Ipswich where, at 23 years of age, she was employed as a parlour maid, at which time she was referred to as Jessie.  Two years later Jessie Collett married Edwin Abbott during the final quarter of 1903, the event recorded at Ipswich (Ref. 4a 1966), and by April 1911 she had given birth to three children.  The census that year placed the family at 28 Upland Road in the St John's district of Ipswich.  Jessie Abbott from Ditchingham was 33 and had been married to Edwin, also 33, for seven years.  Their three children were named as Florence Abbott who was six, Olive Abbott who was four and Monica Abbott who was two

 

The birth of Florence Mary Abbott was recorded at Ipswich (Ref. 4a 1029) during the third quarter of 1905, and a year later the birth of Olive Edna Abbott was recorded at Ipswich (Ref. 4a 1071) during the third quarter of 1906.  The birth of Monica Audrey Abbott was recorded at Ipswich (Ref. 4a 1062) during the third quarter of 1908.  The earlier birth of their father Edwin Abbott was recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4b 218) during the second quarter of 1878, after which he was baptised at Ditchingham on 25th July 1878, the son of carpenter’s labourer John Abbott.  It was on 16th August 1927, and at the age 49, that he died while at the Royal South Hants Hospital in Southampton.  His home address at that time was 28 Upland Road in Ipswich, and his Will for £262 15 Shillings and 5 Pence was proved at Ipswich on 24th September 1927 to Jessie Abbott, widow.  Twelve years later, it was as Jessie L Abbott, aged 61, that her death was recorded at Ipswich register office (Re. 4a 1504) during the first three months of 1939

 

Arthur Collett [18P107] was born at Ditchingham on 12th April 1883, his birth recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4b 236) during the second quarter of the year.  It was at the parish church in Ditchingham that he was baptised on the 11th June 1883, the son of labourer Robert Collett and his wife Ellen.  Sometime before 1889, his family left Ditchingham and moved the short distance to Broome, where they were living in 1891, when Arthur was seven years old.  Ten years later, at the age of 17, Arthur was working as a railway porter when he living with his widowed mother, Ellen Collett, and his youngest brother Sidney (below) at her home in Broome.  In April 1911, Arthur was still not married at the age of 27, when he was still living with his mother Ellen who had settled in Ipswich by that time.  On that census day, Arthur Collett from Ditchingham, was employed by the Ipswich Borough Council as a tramway motor man

 

Just over twelve months after that census day the marriage of Arthur Collett and Jane Alethea Offord was recorded at the Essex Tendring register office (Ref. 4a 1450).  The birth of Jane Alethea Offord was recorded at (Ipswich) Bosmore (Ref. 4a 688) during the third quarter of 1881, having been born on 30th July 1881.  Arthur’s military record for the First World War, provided his place and date of birth, and confirmed that his next-of-kin was his wife Jane Alethea Collett.  The service date was 24th May 1918 and as an airman with the Royal Air Force his service number was 188373.  It was only on 1st April 1918 that the Royal Flying Corps had been renamed as the RAF.  Twenty years later, according to the 1939 Register, the pair of them were living in Ipswich, where Arthur Collett, aged 56, was a depot clerk with the Ipswich corporation and Jane A Collett was 58 and undertaking unpaid domestic duties.  Three years later, the death of Jane Alethea Collett was recorded at Ipswich register office (Ref. 4a 993) during the third quarter of 1942, when she was 60 years old.  The Will of Jane Alethea Collett of 32 Rushmere Road in Ipswich, wife of Arthur Collett, was proved at Ipswich on 21st September 1942 to Arthur Collett, a trolley bus depot clerk in the sum of £466 2 Shillings and 6 Pence.  The probate documentation also confirmed Jane died on 29th July 1942, while at the East Suffolk and Ipswich Hospital.  Widower Arthur Collett was 80 years old when he died, his death recorded at Ipswich Samford register office (Ref. 4b 799) during the third quarter of 1963.

 

Sidney Walter Collett [18P108] was born at Broome on 29th January 1889, with his birth recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4b 224) during the first months of the latter.  He was the youngest child of Robert Collett, a labourer, and his wife Ellen Beckett, and was baptised at Broome on 31st March 1889.  It was also at Broome that he was living with his widowed mother Ellen in 1901 at the age of 12.  Also still living in the family home at Broome was Sidney’s older brother Arthur (above).  By the time of the census of 1911, Sidney Collett was 22 when he and his mother and two brothers, Horace and Arthur, were residing in the Ipswich area of Suffolk.  Also living there with them was Sidney’s nephew Harold Elden from Broome, the child of his married sister Clara Elizabeth Elden.  At that time in his life Sidney Collett from Broome was employed as a domestic chauffeur.  It was just four years after that day, when Sidney became a married man, with the marriage of Sidney W Collett and Ethel M Mallett recorded at Ipswich register office (Ref. 4a 2619) during the second quarter of 1915.  Ethel May Mallett had been born at Ipswich on 12th April 1889 (Ref. 4a 848), the fourth child of Joseph T Mallett and Jessie Mallett.  Their marriage produced two sons for Sidney and Ethel, the birth of both boys recorded at Ipswich, where their mother’s maiden-name was confirmed as Mallett.  One year after his wedding day, and following the birth of their first child, Sidney Walter Collett, an airman with the Royal Flying Corps, began his military service on 20th June 1916, service number 33333, when his next-of-kin was named as Ethel May Collett. 

 

The 1939 Register identified the four member of the family living at 18 Ringham Road in Ipswich, where Sidney W Collett was 50 and a garage forename, his wife Ethel was also 50 and an unpaid domestic worker, Ralph E Collett was an agricultural clerk aged 23, and Sidney V Collett was 18 and a cigarette machine operator.  Ralph never married and, following the death of Sidney Walter Collett on 19th August 1950 at the Borough General Hospital in Ipswich, Ralph and his brother Sidney, together with their mother were residing at 17 Ringham Road in the town.  His death was recorded at Ipswich register office (Ref. 4b 643), when he was 61 years old, with the Will of Sidney Walter Collett proved at Ipswich on 29th September 1950, when the two beneficiaries of his estate, amounting to £1,952 6 Shillings, were Ethel May Collett, widow, and Ralph Edwin Collett a commercial clerk.  Ethel May Collett survived her husband by nearly twenty-seven years, when her death was recorded at Ipswich (Ref. 10 2396) in the spring of 1977.  However, she had suffered the loss of her eldest son five years earlier when he was 55

 

18Q86 - Ralph Edwin Collett was born in 1916 at Ipswich

18Q87- Sidney Victor Collett was born in 1921 at Ipswich

 

George Collett [18P109] was born at Mettingham in 1859 and was baptised there on 29th May 1859, the eldest child of Christopher Collett of Mettingham and his wife Lucy Jones.  His birth was recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 686).  George was one year old in the Mettingham census in 1861 when he was living there with his parents.  He was still with his parents ten years later when the family was living at Wrentham, north of Southwold, when he was 11 years old.  When George was in his early-to-middle teenage years his younger brother Walter Henry Collett died when he was around three or four years old and that tragic event may have been the reason why his family moved north to Lancashire shortly thereafter.  By the time of the census in 1881, George Collett, aged 22 and from Mettingham, was living at 65 Rowbotham Street in Manchester.  He was a boarder at the home of Henry Cooper who was a railway porter, while George himself was a railway ticket collector.  It was at Barton-upon-Irwell (Ref. 8c 705) during the first quarter of 1884 that George Collett, aged 24 and the son of Christopher Collett, married (1) Martha Jane Higginbottom at Christ Church in Patricroft on 28th January 1884.  She was born at Morton Green in Patricroft (Eccles) in 1856, with her birth as Martha Jane recorded at Barton-upon-Irwell (Ref. 8c 399), the daughter of boiler maker Joseph Higginbottom and his wife Mary Ann.  It was at Eccles that she was baptised on 2nd March 1856.  The marriage of George and Martha produced three children prior to the next census in 1891, when the family was living at 24 New York Street in the Pendleton area of Salford and comprised George Collett from Mettingham, who was 32 and a ticket collector, his wife Martha J Collett, who was 34, and their children Florence M Collett who was six, George Collett who was two, and Walter Collett who was under one year old.  At the time of the birth of son Walter, George was a rail ticket collector living at Seedley Road in Pendleton

 

Within a couple of years of the census George’s wife presented him with their fourth and last child while they were still living at Pendleton.  However, during the next few years the family moved to 86 Church Street in Pendleton, as confirmed in the census of 1901, when George’s place of birth was confirmed as Mettingham in Suffolk.  George Collett was 42 and was a bus man for a railway company, and his wife Martha J Collett from Morton Green, Lancs, was 45 and a hardware dealer.  All four of their children were living with them at that time, and they were Florence Collett aged 16, George Collett aged 12, Walter Collett aged 10, and Ernest Collett who was seven.  All three boys were still attending the local school.  Another family move seems to have taken place during the first decade of the new century, most likely after their daughter gave birth to a daughter of her own, out of wedlock

 

By the time of the next census in 1911, the family was living at South Shore in Blackpool, not far from Fylde, where the base-born child had been born.  George of Mettingham was 53 and a railway porter, his wife Martha Jane was 55 and from Morton Green, and their unmarried children were Florence Mary who was 26 from Patricroft who was a mother’s helper, George who was 22 and working for a local newspaper, Walter who was 20 and a house painter, and Ernest Victor who was 17 and working as a shop assistant for a grocer.  All three of George’s sons were confirmed as having been born at Pendleton.  Also listed with the family was six-month-old Gertrude Lucy Collett, the first grandchild for George and Martha.  Just over ten years after that census day, Martha Jane Collett died at Blackpool on 11th November 1921, her passing recorded at Fylde register office (Ref. 8e 750) when she was 65.  Her Will was proved at Blackpool on 26th January 1922, the beneficiaries being named as George Collett and George Collett, her husband and eldest son

 

A year after the death of his wife, the second marriage of George Collett to (2) Rosetta Hough was recorded at Fylde register office (Ref. 8e 1388) during the last three months of 1922.  The registration of their wedding day at the Parish Church in South Shore confirmed the following details.  The date they were married was 11th December 1922 when George Collett, widower, was 63 and a railway inspector of 39 Rothwell Street in South Shore and the son of Christopher Collett, deceased, a labourer.  His bride Rosetta Alberta Hough was a 45-year-old spinster of 43 Saville Road, South Shore, and the daughter of Richard Henry Hough, deceased, an accountant.  Five years later, the death of George Collett was also recorded at Fylde register office (Ref. 8e 878) during the first quarter of 1928, when he was 68.  By the time the 1939 Register was released, Rosetta Alberta Collett from Prestwich was residing on Ansdell Road in Blackpool from where she was a shop assistant in fancy goods, while her date of birth was 10th December 1877, when she was 61 years old.  It was during the third quarter of 1963 when Rosetta Collett married Frederick C Brevitt, the event recorded at Blackpool register office (Ref. 10b 992).  Three years after, the death of Rosetta A Brevitt was recorded at Blackpool (Ref. 10b 403) when she was living at 86 Park Road in Blackpool, where she passed away on 19th August 966, her Will proved at Lancaster on 13th September to Lena May Danson, a married woman in the sum of £255

 

18Q88 - Florence Mary Collett was born in 1884 at Patricroft, Eccles

18Q89 - George Collett was born in 1888 at Pendleton, Salford

18Q90 - Walter Collett was born in 1890 at Pendleton, Salford

18Q91 - Ernest Victor Collett was born in 1893 at Pendleton, Salford

 

Ann Catherine Collett [18P110] was born at Chediston in 1862, the second child and eldest daughter of Christopher Collett and Lucy Jones, but was not baptised there.  Her mother was born at Chediston and it is therefore highly likely that Ann was born at the home of her maternal grandparents, since she was the only child of Christopher and Lucy to be born there.  Not long after she was born her family was living at Cuckholds Green in Wrentham near Southwold, and around the time of the death of her brother Walter Henry Collett (below) in 1873, Ann and her family moved to Lancashire.  The move was confirmed in the census of 1881 when the family was living at 33 King Street in Barton-upon-Irwell.  Ann was recorded as Catherine Collett, aged 18, who by that time had entered into domestic service upon leaving school.  However, whilst her occupation was stated as being that of a general domestic servant, she was also described as being unemployed at that time.  Her father died at the end of 1882 and six years after that her mother remarried to become Lucy Bower, and with no trace of her in 1891 it is assumed that she was married by then

 

Frederick Christopher Collett [18P111] was born at Wrentham near Southwold on 24th July 1866, his birth recorded at Blything (Ref. 4a 623).  Just five days later he was baptised at Wrentham on 29th July 1866, the son of Christopher and Lucy Collett.  And it was at Cuckholds Green in Wrentham that Frederick C Collett, aged four years, was living with his family in 1871, and was already attending the village school.  Around 1874 the family travelled to Lancashire where they were living in 1881.  By then Fred C Collett, aged 14, had left school and had begun work as a domestic groom, while still living with his family at 33 King Street in Barton-upon-Irwell.  His father died towards the end of 1882 and, six years later, his mother was remarried to become Lucy Bower.  So, by the time of the next census in 1891, the only Colletts still living in the Barton-upon-Irwell area were Frederick, together with his two brothers Henry and Walter William (below).  For whatever reason, at that time in their lives, both Frederick and brother Walter took up using their second names, so in the census return Frederick was recorded as Christopher Collett from Wrentham who was 24

 

It was just over four years later, during the last three months of 1895 that the marriage of Frederick Christopher Collett and Margaret Jane Challoner was recorded at Barton-upon-Irwell register office (Ref. 8c 863).  Margaret was born at Bryn Polyn, St Asaph, Flintshire, in North Wales, with her birth recorded during the third quarter of 1870 at St Asaph (Ref. 11b 373).  On being baptised at Bryn Polyn on 12th December 1870, the daughter of bricklayer Joseph Challoner and his wife Elizabeth, the family was living at Forge Street in Bryn Polyn.  It was at Christ Church in Patricroft where the couple was married on 9th October 1895, when Frederick, the son of Christopher Collett was 26.  Shortly after they were married, the couple settled in Wigan where their children were born.  By the time of the census in 1901 the marriage had produced their first children.  The census returned confirmed that Frederick C Collett, aged 33, was a green grocer living at 39 Darlington Street in Wigan

 

At that time his wife Margaret J Collett was 30, and their daughter Fanny Collett was four years old.  During the following year the family was expanded by the birth of a second daughter while the family was still living in Wigan, and before they moved to the Ormskirk area of Lancashire.  And it was at Hoscar Lathom, three miles north-east of Ormskirk, that the family was living at the time of the April census in 1911.  Frederick Collett was 44, Margaret Collett was 40, Fanny Collett was 14, and Clara Collett was eight years old, both confirmed as born at Wigan.  The death of Margaret J Collett was recorded at Ormskirk register office (Ref. 8b 948) during the last quarter of 1935 when she was 65.  After just over three years as a widower, Frederick Christopher Collett was living at West View in Hoscar Lathom when he died on 6th February 1939, his death being recorded at Ormskirk register office that same quarter.  Probate was completed less than a month later at Liverpool on 1st March, when his unmarried daughter Fanny Collett was named together with canal toll clerk Thomas Barrow.  His estate was valued at £448 14 Shillings and 6 Pence.  The reference to the canal is very interesting since Hoscar Lathom sits of the Leeds and Liverpool Canal

 

18Q92 - Fanny Collett was born in 1896 at Wigan

18Q93 - Clara Collett was born in 1902 at Wigan

 

Walter Henry Collett [18P112] was born at Wrentham in 1869, his birth recorded at Blything (Ref. 4a 664) during the second quarter of that year.  He was over two years old when he was baptised in a joint ceremony with his baby brother Alfred (below) on 10th July 1870, the sons of Christopher and Lucy Collett.  That was confirmed in the Wrentham census of 1871, when Walter H Collett was two years old.  His delayed baptism may have had something to do with Walter being a poorly child because, two years after his family had move north to Lancashire, Walter Henry Collett died at Winton in Eccles, his death at the age of seven recorded at Barton-upon-Irwell (Ref. 8c 354) during the second quarter of 1876

 

Alfred Collett [18P113] was born at Wrentham in 1870, where he was baptised in a joint ceremony with his two-year-old brother Walter (above) on 10th July 1870, the sons of Christopher and Lucy Collett.  The birth of Alfred Collett was recorded at Blything (Ref. 4a 719) during the second quarter of 1870.  He was one year old in the Wrentham census of 1871 when he was living at Cuckholds Green with his family.  Towards the middle of the 1870s his family moved north to Manchester, and in 1881 they were living at 33 King Street in Barton-upon-Irwell where schoolboy Alfred was 11.  His father died at the end of the following year and, it is also there eight years later, that Alfred Collett was another victim of whatever had killed his father and his older brother Walter (above), with the death of Alfred Collett recorded at Barton-upon-Irwell (Ref. 8a 394) during the third quarter 1890, when he was just 20 years of age

 

Henry Collett [18P114] was born at Wrentham on 28th May 1872 and his birth was recorded at Blything (Ref. 4a 705) during the third quarter of the year.  He was another son of Christopher and Lucy Collett, for whom no baptism record has been found at Wrentham, unlike his older brothers.  Henry was one year old when his brother died, and at that time his parents had swapped living in Suffolk for a new life in Lancashire.  It was at 33 King Street in Barton-upon-Irwell that Henry Collett was eight years old in the census of 1881, when he was living there with his family and attending the local school.  Following the death of his father in 1882, his mother married Samuel Bower in 1888, and in 1891 Henry Collett of Wrentham was 18 when he was working as a carter while he was a lodger at the home of labourer Richard Atkinson and his wife Sarah at 5 Dudley Street in Barton-upon-Irwell.  Also, a member of the Atkinson family was their daughter Catherine who was 19 in 1891, and it was with her that Henry began a friendship which resulted in them being married during the following year

 

It was during the third quarter of 1892 that the marriage of Henry Collett and Catherine Atkinson was recorded at Barton-upon-Irwell (Ref. 8c 956).  Catherine was born at Bolton towards the end 1871, her birth recorded there during the last three month of that year (Ref. 8c 345).  She was baptised at St Mark’s Church in Bolton-le-Moors on 18th October 1871, the daughter of Richard and Sarah Atkinson.  Over the next eight years Catherine presented Henry with four children and, according to the census in 1901, three of them were born at Patricroft in Eccles, within the Barton-upon-Irwell registration district.  The census return that year listed the family as living at 12 Hampton Groves in Eccles.  Henry and Catherine were both 28, and at that time in his life Henry from Wrentham was a house painter and decorator.  Their children were recorded as Bertha Collett who was six, Christopher Collett who was five, and Elsie Collett who were two years old.  During the next year the couple’s last child was born at Winton, whereas on the occasion of the census in 1911 the place of birth of all four of the children was stated as being Winton in Eccles, which was where Henry’s parents had originally settled after their move from Suffolk, and where his youngest brother Walter William Collett (below) was born, together with his two children

 

The census return in April 1911 placed the family living at 54 Liverpool Road in Eccles, within the Barton-upon-Irwell registration district where it comprised Henry and Catherine, who were both 39, and their five children.  Bertha Collett was 16, Christopher Collett was 15, Elsie Collett was 12, while Dora Collett was eight years old.  At that time in his life Henry was continuing to work as a house painter.  Staying with the family on the day of the census was Alfred Collett, aged 12 and from Winton, who was Henry’s nephew, being the son of his brother Walter William Collett (below).  Nothing much is known about the family after 1911 which was recorded in the Pre-War Register of 1939 residing at 7 Brentwood Drive in Eccles, when Henry Collett was a metal merchant and a scouring stone manufacturer aged 67.  Living there with him was his wife Catherine, whose birth was confirmed as 4th October 1871, and the couple’s youngest child, single Dora Collett who was a typist aged 36.  The later death of Henry Collett was recorded at Barton register office (Ref. 10b 255) during the last three months of 1952, when he was 80 years old.  A few months after losing her husband, Catherine Collett nee Atkinson, a widow, died during the first three months of 1953 with her death also recorded at the Barton registration office.  Sadly, her husband’s Will was slow to be proved with their deaths being so close together.  In the end, the Will of Henry Collett was proved at Manchester on 2nd April 1953, after Catherine had passed away, when the two executors were named as Bertha Collett, spinster, and Christopher Henry Collett, a rubbing stone manufacturer.  Henry was still living at 7 Brentwood Drive in the Monton suburb of Eccles to the west of Manchester when he died, but actually passed away at the Park Hospital in Davyhulme (Urmston), Manchester on 7th December 1952  

 

18Q94 - Bertha Collett was born in 1894 at Patricroft, Eccles

18Q95 - Christopher Henry Collett was born in 1896 at Patricroft, Eccles

18Q96 - Elsie Collett was born in 1898 at Patricroft, Eccles

18Q97 - Dora Collett was born in 1903 at Winton, Eccles

 

Walter William Collett [18P115] was born at Winton in Eccles on 10th October 1874, after which his birth recorded at Barton-upon-Irwell (Ref. 8c 579) during the last quarter of the year.  It was at Winton Chapel, when he was one month old, that he was baptised on 11th November 1874, the youngest son of Suffolk couple Christopher Collett of Mettingham and Lucy Jones of Chediston.  His parents had only just moved to Lancashire when he was born, and that move also happened following the death of his older brother Walter Henry Collett, after whom he was named.  Following a short period living in Winton the family moved from there to 33 King Street in Barton-upon-Irwell before 1881, since it was there that they were living at the time of the census that year.  Walter Collett was six years old by then and was attending the local school.  That reference to him in the census of 1881, appears to be the last occasion in his life when he was noted in public records as Walter Collett.  From the subsequent records thereafter, it looks as though, as an adult, that he opted to use his second name of William instead.  His father died at Barton-upon-Irwell towards the end of 1882, and in 1888 his mother married Samuel Bower.  By the time of the census in 1891, William Collett aged 16 was working as a labourer at a timber merchant, while he was living with his mother Lucy Bower at the home of Samuel Bower at 9 Elizabeth Street in Barton-upon-Irwell

 

It was less than four years later that William Collett married Eda Jones who was born at Salford on 2nd June 1869, the daughter of Francis Jones, a clerk at a paint works, and his wife Sarah.  The marriage was recorded at Barton-upon-Irwell register office (Ref. 8c 754) during the first quarter of 1895.  Once they were married William and Eda lived much of their early life together in Winton in Eccles.  The marriage produced just two children for the couple at Winton, and the four members of the family were living at 22 Worsley Road in Eccles by March 1901.  William Collett of Winton was 26 and a salesman at a timber yard, his wife Eda from nearby Salford was 31, their daughter Lillian Collett was four, and their son Alfred Collett was two years old.  Things were slightly different ten years later, perhaps because William’s mother, Lucy Bower, had died at Barton-upon-Irwell just a few weeks prior to the census and, following her death, his stepfather Samuel Bower, aged 66, was staying with the Collett family in early April 1911.  In order to accommodate Samuel, William’s son Alfred was staying with his brother Henry (above).  At that time the family was living at 5 Byron Street in the Patricroft area of Eccles, where William Collett was 36 and a house painter, Eda Collett was 40, and Lillian Collett was 14.  However, on that occasion their son was not living with the family but, later on, he joined his father in the family business of W Collett & Son, Painters & Decorators, who certainly worked together up until the Second War World. 

 

The 1939 Register, compiled just as the war with Germany was expected to start, listed four members of the Collett family living at 7 Lynwood Avenue in Eccles, the home of William’s son Alfred and his wife Mary, where William Collett was 65 and a master decorator, and his wife Ada Collett was 70 years old and performing unpaid domestic duties for the three working members of the household.  Less than four years after that, the death of William Collett was recorded at Barton-upon-Irwell register office (Ref. 8c 587) during the second quarter of 1943, when he was 68.  Two years later, William’s widow was reported in a local newspaper, printed in 1945, to be residing at Lynwood Avenue in Patricroft, in an article about the promotion of her son Alfred to Lieutenant-Colonel.  It was near the end of that same year, when the death of Ada Collett, aged 76, was recorded at Stockport register office (Ref. 8a 57) during the last three months of 1945

 

18Q98 - Lillian Collett was born in 1896 at Winton, Eccles

18Q99 - Alfred Collett was born in 1898 at Winton, Eccles

 

Alfred Ernest Collett [18P116] was born at Brooke, near Loddon in Norfolk during 1854, his birth recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4b 187), the eldest child of Charles Collett and Ellen Rix, who was baptised at St Peter’s Church in Brooke on 23rd October 1854.  Not long after he was born, his father’s work as a domestic servant took the young family to Hampstead in London, where they lived until around 1862, as confirmed by the Hampstead census in 1861.  That day Alfred Collett from Brooke was six years old and living with his mother and his siblings at a property on Heath Street in the London Borough of Camden, when his father was working at the nearby plaque grand home that is The Hill in Hampsted.  Following the birth of his second brother at Hampstead, the family returned to Brooke, where another brother was added to his family.  Two more children were born into the family after they had moved into Norwich around 1865 but, tragically, after that, Alfred’s mother died and, for a short while, the young children were looked after by their father within the Parish of St Margaret in Norwich.  It was there that they were living in 1871 when Alfred Collett from Brooke was 17.  Ultimately though, it would appear that the family was eventually split up and, by 1881, Alfred from Brooke was 26 and working as a brewer’s servant, while residing at Bartholomew Street within the Holy Sepulchre area of Norwich.

 

It was during the last quarter of 1888, when the marriage of Alfred Ernest Collett and the older Sophia Nobbs, a widow, was recorded at Norwich (Ref. 4b 387), whose age varied from census to census.  The former Sophia Knight had married William Nobbs at Ipswich during the summer of 1866.  In 1891 the childless couple was living at Heigham Street in the Coslany district of Norwich when Alfred Collett from Brooke was 37 and a gardener’s labourer, and Sophia Collett from Suffolk was 45 and a general storekeeper.  Being that much older than Alfred, there never was any chance of children and, in 1901, it was just the two of them still living in Norwich, but at 38 Exeter Street, where Alfred Collett from Brooke was 46 and a gardener, while Sophia Collett from Knodishall near Saxmundham was 56 with no stated occupation.  After a further decade they were still living in the Heigham Grove area of Norwich, at 38 Exeter Street, where Alfred from Brooke was 56 and a gardener who had been married to Sophia aged 69, for twenty-two years.  By 1913/14, their home address was 12 Ashbourne in Norwich, when the electoral roll also stated that they still had a qualifying and successive property at 38 Exeter Street

 

The couple was still residing at that address when first Sophia passed away, followed eleven years after by her husband.  Sophia Collett of 12 Ashbourne Street in Norwich and the wife of Alfred Ernest Collett died on 23rd March 1927, her death recorded at Norwich register office (Ref. 4b 190) when she was 85.  Curiously administration of her personal effects valued at £122 11 Shillings and 5 Pence was granted to Horatio William Nobbs, a corporation labourer, which raises the question, was he a son from her previous marriage?  The death of Alfred E Collett aged 83 was recorded at Norwich register office (Ref. 4b 141) during the second quarter of 1938.  It was eighteen months after he died, that administration of his personal estate of £174 14 Shillings and 11 Pence was granted at Norwich on 27th January 1940 to Charles Collett, a retired general labourer, presumably his brother (below).  The administration document also confirmed that Alfred Ernest Collett died on 18th June 1938 at the Poor Law Institution on Bowthorpe Road in Norwich

 

Charles George Collett [18P117] was born at Hampstead in London on 15th January 1858, the second child of Charles and Ellen Collett.  It was also at Hampstead (Ref. 1a 497) where the birth of Charles George Collett was recorded during the first three months of 1858.  In the Hampstead census of 1861 Charles G Collett was three years old.  After the death of his mother in 1870, when the family was living in Norwich, Charles and his five siblings were living in Norwich in 1871, when he was 14 and his place of birth was confirmed as London.  Charles was only one of two children still living with his father at the Jolly Butchers Inn on Ber Street in Norwich in 1881, when he was incorrectly recorded as Charles Collett junior aged 21 and born at Brooke, rather than being aged 23 and from Hampstead.  Also, in error, his younger brother Herbert (below) was said to have been born at Hampstead when, in fact, it was he who had been born at Brooke, both working as agricultural labourers with their father.  A little while later Charles married Jessie, although no record of the wedding has been found.  Curiously, in the Norwich & Conisford census of 1891, the childless couple gave the census enumerator incorrect ages when they said they were 29 and 28 respectively, when in fact they were nearer 32 and 30, and Charles was working as a bricklayer and Jessie’s county of birth was recorded as Kent

 

More accurate ages were offered at the time of the next census in 1901.  On that occasion Charles Collett from Brooke was 42 and was employed as a bricklayer’s labourer, while his wife Jessie from Devonport was 40 and was described as a charwoman.  The next Norwich census in 1911, raises a major question.  Charles G Collett was 53 and a bricklayer’s labourer, who said he was born at Brooke, obviously where he was raised from an early age.  However, instead of his status being married or widowed, he was recorded as being single.  That was also his marital status on the day of the 1939 Register, when simply as Charles Collett, with no stated occupation, he was living within the County Borough of Norwich at the age of 81.  Upon the death of his older brother Alfred Ernest Collett during the previous year, the administration process for his estate of £174 14 Shillings and 11 Pence, it was retired general labourer Charles Collett who named as the sole executor.  Around six months later, the death of Charles George Collett was recorded at Norwich register office (Ref. 4b 356) during the third quarter of 1940, at the age of 82

 

Harry Edward Collett [18P118] was born in 1861 at Heath Street (A502) in Hampstead within the London Borough of Camden, the third of the six children of Charles Collett and Ellen Rix.  Although he was known as Henry, his birth as Harry Edward Collett was registered at Hampstead (Ref. 1a 524) during the first three months of 1861.  No obvious record of him has been found in 1881, or any time thereafter

 

Herbert Albert Collett [18P119] was born at Brooke, near Loddon in Norfolk, following which his birth was recorded at Loddon (Ref. 4b 197) during the third quarter of 1863, as Herbert Collett.  He was seven years old in the Norwich census of 1871, when his birthplace was confirmed as Brooke.  With two older brothers born at Hampstead in London, it is perhaps not surprising that the census return completed in 1881 gave the birth place of Herbert Collett, aged 16, as Hampstead, rather than Brooke or Loddon.  At that time in his life, he was employed as an agricultural labourer, when Herbert, his widowed father Charles, and older brother Charles junior (above) were boarding at the Jolly Butchers Inn at Ber Street in Norwich.  Tragically, just four years after that day, the premature death of Herbert Albert Collett, aged 21, was recorded at Norwich (Ref. 4b 92) during the second quarter of 1885.  This was the only occasion when Albert had been added to his name

 

George Collett [18P120] was born at Norwich in 1866, the fifth child of Charles and Ellen Collett.  Just a few months before the census in 1871, and following the birth of George’s sister Eliza (below), his mother died, leaving George aged four years living at Norwich with his widowed father, who was struggling to come to term with his loss.  As a consequence, only two of George’s four brothers were still living with their father in 1881, with George and his sister Eliza living with other families that day.  At that time the census return for 1881 identified George Collett as 15 years old and a servant at the home of gardener Jonathan Hall and his wife at Eaton Park in Eaton St Andrew in Norwich.  His place of birth was recorded as Earsham, near Bungay, where his father was born, so it seems likely that it was his father who arranged for him to be with the elderly couple.  No census record has been found in 1891 that included George Collett from Norwich, who would have been around 25 years of age.  However, it was on 5th October 1891 at the Parish Church of St Andrew Haverstock Hill, within the London Borough of Camden, that bachelor George Collett was married after the reading of banns to spinster Ellen Wise Humble.  George was 24 and coachsmith who was living at 3 Marsden Street in Haverstock Hill, the son of Charles Collett, deceased, a gardener.  The wedding was recorded at St Pancras (Ref. 1b 77) during the last three months of 1891

 

Ellen Wise Humble (or Humbly) was living in Kentish Town up until their wedding day and had been born at St Pancras in London on 30th October 1868, but was not baptised until 17th May 1885, when she was confirmed as the daughter of labourer John Humbley and his wife Sarah.  It was with them that Ellen was still living in March 1891 at the age of 22, when she was a dressmaker.  The first child of George and Ellen was born at Kentish Town, the next at Wood Green north of Haringey, and the third born at Manor Park within the London Borough of Newnham when the birth of Charles Leslie Collett was recorded at West Ham register office (Ref. 4a 255) during the last quarter of 1900.  Just a few months later the family was living at Halley Road, Manor Park in East Ham for the census in 1901, when George Collet from Norwich said he was 33, instead of 35, and when his occupation was that of a coachsmith.  His wife Ellen W Collett was 31, and their three children were Herbert R Collett who was nine, mother and son born at Kentish Town, Margaret P Collett who was two and born at Wood Green to the north of Kentish Town, and Charles L Collett who was six months old and born at Manor Park

 

Five years later, on 11th March 1906, the whole family sailed across the Atlantic Ocean on the S S Pomeranian, out the Port of London and bound for Halifax, and then disembarking at the Port of Hamilton in Ontario, Canada.  From there they made the long overland trek to Calgary in Alberta.  The ship’s passenger list described that family as George Collett from Norfolk who was 36 and a blacksmith, housewife Ellen W Collett who was 34, scholar Herbert R Collett who was 14, Margaret Collett who was seven, and Charles Collett who was five years of age.  Three years after arriving in Canada, Ellen gave birth to another daughter and the couple’s last and only child born in Alberta.  According to the census in 1911 for Calgary, the Collett family from England were Quakers, comprising George Collett aged 41, Ellen Wise Collett aged 39, Herbert Robert Collett aged 19 and an operator in a laundry, Margaret Priscilla Collett who was 12, Charles Leslie Collett who was 10, and Jesse Alma Collett who was born in Alberta and was two years of age.  The dates of birth of the four children corresponded with their age, but that was not the case for George who would have been 45, and Ellen who would have been 43

 

The next census in 1921 listed the Quaker family at Colholme in Alberta Province as George Collett who said he was only 51, a farmer with his own account, his wife Ellen was 50, his two sons Herbert and Charles both working on their father’s farm aged 28 and 20 respectively, daughter Margaret who was 22, and Fern who was 12.  Twenty years after arriving in Canada the majority of the family was recorded in the 1926 census, once again living at Colholme in Alberta’s electoral district of Acadia 39 but without two of their children, daughter Margaret, and son Charles, no longer living with them.  The census return that year confirmed George, Ellen, and son Herbert, all from England, had arrived in the country in 1906, when head of the household George Collett was 56, Ellen Wise Collett was 54, Herbert Robert Collett was 34 and single, as was Fern Alma Collett was 17.  Just over a year after that census day, Ellen Wise Collett was 59 years old when she died on 1st November 1927 at Youngstown in Alberta.  Her death certificate confirmed that she had been born at St Pancras in London on 30th October 1868, as Ellen Wise Humble (or Humbly)

 

Her obituary read as follows, courtesy of The Plainsdealer, published at Youngstown on 10th November 1927:

“Mrs George Collett, a pioneer of Mellom district, living about twenty miles south of Youngstown, was found dead by her husband Saturday evening, November 4, 1927.  Mr Collett and son Herbert had been working on threshing outfit for some time, leaving Mrs Collett at home.  When Mr Collett went home on Saturday, for the weekend, he found his wife sitting in a chair in front of the kitchen stove, dead.  A post mortem examination disclosed that the unfortunate woman had died of pneumonia three days earlier.  The body was taken to Calgary and funeral was held there on 8th November 1927.  In addition to her husband and son living on the farm, Mrs Collett leaves a son and two daughters in Calgary.  She was 60 years of age and the family had been living in the Youngstown district for some thirteen year”

 

George’s marital status as a widower was confirmed in the next census of 1931, by which time he had moved to Calgary City, where he was reunited with his eldest daughter.  At that time in his life, George Collett was 65, having no occupation but described as a dependent, who was renting rooms at 65 8th Avenue West, the home of Thomas Shepard Ross aged 57 from England, a photographer with his own art studio, whose wife Ethel Jane was 55, and son Vernon was 21, who were also born in England.  Still living with George were his three unmarried children; Herbert Robert Collett who was 38 and a salesman for a bakery (the same occupation as his brother Charles), Margaret Collett who was 32 and a statistic clerk with the Electric Power House, and Alberta-born Fern Collett who was 22 and another employee of the Electric Power House, where she was an addressographer.  Once again, the census return confirmed that the three England born members of the family had come to Canada in 1906

 

Twenty-four years later, George Collett from Norwich in England passed away at Calgary, Alberta, on 14th May 1955 at the age of 89.  His obituary was published in the Calgary Herald on 16th May 1955, as follows:

“George Collett, 88, of 838 18th Avenue N. W, died Saturday in the General Hospital after a short illness.  Mr Collett was born in Norwich, England, moved to Hamilton in 1906.  He was a member of the Society of Friends, London, England.  He moved to Youngstown district in 1915 and homesteaded there until moving to Calgary 27 years ago.  He was one of the original shareholders in the Citadel Ornamental Ironworks in Calgary.  His wife Ellen Wise died in 1927.  He is survived by two sons Herbert in Calgary, and Charles in Fairview Alberta, two daughters Mrs George (Margaret) Furness in Calgary, and Mrs Joseph (Fern) Hetherington in Bowness, 9 grandchildren and 5 great grandchildren.”  He was buried at Burnsland Cemetery, Spiller Road in Calgary, on Wednesday 18th May 1955.  It is of interest, that his married daughter Margaret Priscilla Furness was living at the Collett family home at 838 18th Avenue N. W. at the time of the death of her husband George Furness

 

18Q100 - Herbert Robert Collett was born in 1892 at Kentish Town

18Q101 - Margaret Priscilla Collett was born in 1898 at Wood Green, London

18Q102 - Charles Leslie Collett was born in 1900 at Manor Park, East Ham

18Q103 – Fern Alma Collett was born in 1909 at Alberta, Canada

 

Eliza Collett [18P121] was born at Norwich on 18th February 1869 with her baptism delayed until she was twenty-eight months old, the last of the six children born to Charles Collett and Ellen Rix.  Tragically, her mother died shortly after she was born and that may have been the reason why she was not baptised until she was older.  In 1871, Eliza was two years old when she was living with her widowed father and her five older brothers in Norwich and, it was later that same year, when Eliza Collett was baptised on 25th June 1871 at St Benedict’s Church in Norwich.  However, Eliza was recorded as the daughter of Charles Collett, a messenger, and Maria Elizabeth Collett.  It may have been that second marriage that was the cause of the break-up of the family, when previously it was surmised that the break-up was due to her father not being able to care for his children.  By 1881, Eliza Collett from Norwich, was 12 years old and was living with John and Susan Waites, and their daughter Rosina, at their home in Russell Street in Norwich Higham.  No record of her has been found after that time, so it is likely that she was married by 1891

 

Sarah Ann Collett [18P122] was born at Fressingfield in 1843.  While the Suffolk Marriage Records show that her parents Benjamin Collett of Fressingfield and Sarah Ann Spalding of Earl Soham were married at Fressingfield on 26th December 1843, Sarah Ann Collett was baptised there on 9th July 1843.  Therefore, there is a strong possibility that Sarah Ann Spalding, the base-born child of Sarah Ann Spalding who was born or baptised at Fressingfield on 23rd December 1842, was the same child as Sarah Ann Collett, since only one of them has been identified in the census of 1851.  On that occasion, Sarah Ann Collett was eight years old and was living with her parents at their home in New Street in Fressingfield.  Ten years later in 1861, Sarah Ann Spalding from Fressingfield was 18 and a servant at the Rumburgh home of farmer Jonathan Fairload.  One year later in 1862, Sarah Ann’s father died and during the following year the marriage of Sarah Ann Spalding and William Brundish of Fressingfield was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 747).  William was born there on 14th December 1844, the son of Charles Brundish and Cecilia Celia Mayhew, his birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 421), after which he was baptised at Fressingfield on 3rd May 1846.  The couple’s first four children were born while they were still living at Fressingfield as confirmed by the census in 1871 which listed the family as William 29 and an agricultural labourer, Sarah Ann 28, Mary Brundish who was seven, William Brundish who was five, George Brundish who was four, and Jane Brundish who was two years old

 

Shortly after 1871 the Brundish family left Suffolk when they moved to the south of England and settled at Erith in Kent where the couple’s next two children were born.  By the time of the next census in 1881 the family was living at 25 Bottle Road in Erith.  By that time, Sarah Ann’s mother, Sarah Collett, aged sixty-two was living with the family.  William Brundish, at 39 was head of the household and a general labourer, while Sarah Collett of Fressingfield was 62 and a washer-woman, who was referred to as his mother-in-law.  His wife Sarah Ann Brundish was 38, and their children that day were listed as William Brundish who was 15 and a newsagent’s errand boy, George Brundish who was 13 and a baker’s errand boy, Kezia Brundish who was 12, Benjamin Brundish who was nine, James Brundish who was six, Lily Brundish who was four, and Katy Brundish who was approaching one year old.

 

Twenty years later, according to the census in March 1901, Sarah A Brundish was 58 and William Brundish was 59, both of them from Fressingfield, who were still living in Erith, but at Yeddo Cottage, on Halt Robin Road, Crayford, Belvedere in Kent, where the couple was still living in 1916. where William was working as a general labourer.  Just three children were still living there with them, and they were Benjamin who was 29 and plaster’s labourer, Florence M Brundish who was 18, and Ruth Brundish who was 15 and a dressmaker’s apprentice.  Ten years after that, Yeddo Cottage was described as a six-roomed dwelling.  At that time in 1911, William was 69 and employed by Erith Urban District Council as a labourer.  His wife of 47 years, Sarah was 68, both of them born at Fressingfield, who had given birth to ten children, nine of them still living that census day, with only seven of them identified above.  Five years later, the death of Sarah Ann Brundish was recorded at Dartford register office (Ref. 2a 843) during the first three months of 1916 at the age of 73.  Her burial record in the Parish of Erith confirmed she was still living at Yeddo Cottage, Halt Robin Road, when she died and was buried on 4th March 1916.  Just over eight years later, the death of William Brundish was recorded at Guildford register office (Ref. 2a 122) during the third quarter of 1924 when he was 82

 

Samuel Collett [18P123] was born at Fressingfield during September 1844, the first son of Benjamin Collett and Sarah Ann Spalding.  Tragically he only survived for a few months, when he died and was buried at Fressingfield on 17th May 1845 as Sam Collett aged eight months

 

Jane Collett [18P124] was born at Fressingfield in 1845, her birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 447), and was baptised at Fressingfield’s St Peter’s & St Paul’s Church on 30th November 1845, the daughter of Benjamin and Sarah Collett.  Unlike her brother Samuel (above) who suffered an infant death before she was born, Jane survived for a few years when she died at Fressingfield during November in 1848, where she was buried on 19th November 1848, aged three years, her death also recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 296)

 

Sam Collett [18P125] was born at Fressingfield in 1846 and was baptised as Sam Collett the son of Benjamin and Sarah Collett on 15th March 1846.  His absence from the census of 1851, coupled with the absence of his three immediately adjacent siblings perhaps indicates that all four of them suffered infant deaths

 

Matilda Collett[18P126] was born at Fressingfield during August 1847, her birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 407), and was baptised at Fressingfield on 31st October 1847.  The baptism record at St Peter’s and St Paul’s Church confirmed she was the daughter of Benjamin and Sarah Ann Collett.  Matilda was the couple’s third known child to suffer an infant death, when she died at Fressingfield and was buried there on 25th February 1849 at the age of one year and six months, her death also recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 347)

 

Edward Collett [18P127] was born at Fressingfield in 1849 and it was there that he was baptised on 13th March 1849, the son of Benjamin and Sarah Collett.  Sadly, he only survived for less than a week after he was baptised, when he died and was buried at Fressingfield on 19th March 1849, his death recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 348), immediately after the entry for his sister Matilda (above)

 

Harry James Collett [18P128] was born at Fressingfield on 14th October 1850, his birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 449), after which he was baptised at Fressingfield on 20th July 1851, the son of Benjamin and Sarah Collett.  According to the census in 1851 Harry Collett, who was four months old, was living with his parents and his sister Sarah at New Street in Fressingfield.  Sadly, it later that same year that Harry James Collett died at Fressingfield, where he was buried on 21st December 1851 aged just one year, his death recorded at Hoxne (Ref. xiii 324)

 

Jane Collett [18P129] was born at Fressingfield in 1852, where she was baptised on 14th August 1853, the daughter of Benjamin and Sarah Collett.  Jane was seven years old by the time of the census in 1861 when she was living there with her parents.  Her father died at Fressingfield during 1862 so by 1871, and at the age of 19, she was still living there with her widowed mother and her brother Anthony (below).  Jane continued to live at Fressingfield until the mid-1870s when she became a married woman.  The married of Jane Collett and Henry Day was recorded at Depwade (Ref. 4b 425) during the second quarter of 1873.  Henry’s birth was recorded at Depwade (Ref. xiii 52) after which he was baptised at Stratton St Michaels on 26th April 1849, the son of Robert and Maria Day.  In the Norfolk census of 1901, Jane Day from Fressingfield was 49 and living at Barnham Broom near Wymondham with her husband Henry Day who was 51 and an ordinary agricultural labourer from Stratton St Michael.  With them that day were their two sons Edward John Day who was eleven, and Frederick Leonard Day who was seven

 

During the following decade, the family moved south to Essex where they were living in 1911 at Ashfield in Little Baddow, to the east of Chelmsford.  Henry Day from Stratton St Michael in Norfolk was a farm labourer aged the age of 62.  His wife Jane from Fressingfield was 61 (sic) and had been married for 38 years and had given birth to ten children, seven of whom were still alive.  Three of the seven were still living with the couple, and they were Maud Day who was 28 and born at Trimley, near Felixstowe, Edward John Day who was 22 and born at Stratton St Michael who was working as a farm labourer, and Frederick Leonard Day who was 18 and a grocer’s assistant from Stratton St Michael.  Completing the household was boarder Fred Lloyd who was another farm labourer aged 43.  Nine years later the death of Henry Day was recorded during the first three months of 1920 at West Ham register office (Ref. 4a 67) aged 71.  Thirteen years after being made a widow, the death of Jane Day was also recorded at West Ham register office (Ref. 4a 265) during the first three months of 1933, when she was 79 years old.  Jane Collett was the great great grandmother of Glen Dersley who kindly provided some of the details regarding Jane’s father and her grandfather

 

Keziah Collett [18P130] was born at Fressingfield in 1856, her birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 459), and was baptised at Fressingfield on 10th August 1856, the youngest daughter of Benjamin and Sarah Collett.  According to the census in 1861, Keziah was four years old while living with his parents in Fressingfield.  During the following year her father died, but before that and just after Christmas in 1861, Keziah Collett died at Fressingfield, where she was buried on 29th December 186, her death recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 32)

 

Anthony Harry Collett [18P131] was born at Fressingfield on 18th February 1858 when his birth was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 570) another son of Benjamin and Sarah Collett.  It was over four years later when he was baptised at Fressingfield on 14th September 1862 in a joint ceremony with his brother William (below).  In the Fressingfield census of 1861, Anthony was two years old when living there with his family.  It was during the following year that his father Benjamin Collett died, so in the census of 1871 when Anthony was 12 years of age, he was still living at Fressingfield with his widowed mother Sarah and his older sister Jane (above).  No further record of Anthony or Harry Collett has been found after that time

 

William Collett [18P132] was born at Fressingfield on 3rd June 1862 and his birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 550).  It was also during the same year that his father died.  He was baptised at Fressingfield in a joint ceremony with his older brother Anthony (above) at the church of St Peter’s and St Paul’s on 14th September 1862, the last of eleven children of Benjamin and Sarah Collett.  However, just like five of his siblings before him, William Collett died on 21st March 1863 and was buried at Fressingfield during the following day, when he was described as being nine months old, his death recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 391)

 

Henry Collett [18P133] was born at Westport, County Mayo in Ireland in 1848, the first of five children of William and Ann Collett.  His father was a private with the Dragoon Guards and when Henry was around one year old, he was transferred from Ireland to Wales and was based at Brecon Barracks in 1851.  Henry was two years old by that time and was living with his mother and baby sister Bethia in the St Mary district of Brecon.  Within the next ten years his father was retired from the guards and during that decade the family moved from Brecon to Dartmoor, from Dartmoor to Fressingfield, and finally to Whitehaven.  It was at St Bees in Whitehaven that Henry, aged 12, was living with his family in 1861.  Following the death of his father during the 1860s, Henry eventually left his family to take up the occupation of a joiner, and by 1871 he was living and working in Kendal where he appears to have spent the rest of his life.  It was also during the first quarter of the previous year that Henry Collett, aged 22 and the son of William Collett, married (1) Isabella Bousfield at Kendal on 5th May 1870, their marriage recorded there (Ref. 10b 841).  It was also at Kendal where Isabella was baptised on 16th February 1851, the daughter of Robert and Ann Bousfield, having been born there on 18th February 1849

 

The newly married couple was recorded in the Kendal census of 1871 when Henry Collett and his wife Isabella Collett were both 22.  By the time Isabella was very likely pregnant with their first child.  During the next two decades Isabella presented Henry with at least six children, although there was a gap of ten years between the fifth and the sixth child.  Within that time period, other children may have been added to the family, but did not survive.  In 1881 the family was confirmed in that year’s census as living at 10 Serpentine Road in Kendal.  Henry Collett from Ireland was 32 and a house carpenter, his wife Isabella from Kendal was also 32, and by that time they had five of their children with them, and all of them born at Kendal.  They were Ann Collett who was nine, Mary E Collett who was seven, Maggie Collett who was five, William H Collett who was four, and Robert Collett who was one year old.  Also living with the family as a boarder, was unmarried Sarah Armstrong, aged 24, a woollen weaver from Kendal

 

On the day of the Kendal census in 1891, Henry and Isabella were expecting the imminent birth of their ninth and last child, although only three of them survived to live a full life.  In fact, four of the nine children passed away in 1892 and 1893.  However, in 1891, the family living in Kendal comprised, joiner Henry Collett and Isabella Collett, both 42 years old, and six of their children, Ann Collett who was 19, Mary E Collett who was 18, Margaret Collett who was 16, William H Collett who was 14, Robert B Collett who was 11, and John F Collett who was one year old.  Where missing daughter Isabella was that day has still not been determined, since it was in 1893 that she was buried in Cumbria.  Not long after that census day, Isabella gave birth to another daughter, who died in 1893, and herself passed away during the following year, with the death of Isabella Collett recorded at Kendal (Ref. 10b 445) during the first quarter of 1894, when she was 45.  One year later, during the first quarter of 1895, widower Henry Collett married (2) Mary Alice Foster, a widow, the event recorded at Leeds (Ref. 9b 561).  Mary came into the marriage with three children, Edith Foster who was 12 and born at Bradford, Eleanor Foster who was 10 and Robert Foster who was seven, both of them born at Leeds.  In 1891 widow Mary was a lodging house keeper when she and her three children were living at 14 St John Street in Scarborough.  Mary Alice Lancaster had been born at Scarborough in 1859, the eldest daughter of William and Emma Lancaster.  Curiously, for her previous marriage in 1881, it was as Mary Alice Robson that she wed John Henry Foster, the event recorded at Scarborough (Ref. 9d 697) during the last quarter of 1881

 

That second marriage for Henry, produced a further son for him, who was born at Kendal during the following year.  Just after the start of the new century, Henry and Mary were still living in Kendal, at Stricklandgate on Sandes Avenue, when the three members of Mary’s Foster family and three of Henry’s Collett family were still living with them.  Henry Collett from Ireland was 52 and a joiner and a carpenter, his wife Mary A Collett from Scarborough in Yorkshire was 42, and her three children were Edith F Foster who was 18 and a costume and mantle maker, Nellie F Foster who was 17, and Robert Henry Foster who was 13 and a solicitor’s clerk.  William Henry Collett was 24, Robert B Collett was 21, and Henry and Mary’ s child was Harold Collett who was four years old.  The brothers William and Robert Collett were joiners, most likely working with their father, but tragically it was Robert who suffered a premature death within the next two months. 

 

By April 1911, Henry’s son William was himself a married man, leaving his only other surviving son Harold, still living at Kendall with Henry and Mary.  The census that year listed the three of them as Henry Collett from Westport in County Mayo, Ireland, who was 63 and a joiner, Mary Alice Collett from Scarborough who was 53, and Harold Collett from Kendal who was 14 and already working as a shop assistant for an ironmonger.  One of Mary’s Foster children was again living there with them, and that was Nellie Foster from Leeds who was 27 and a machinist in the production of horse clothing.  The death of Henry Collett was recorded at Kendal register office (Ref. 10b 1045) during the first three months of 1931, at the age of 82.  He was buried on 23rd March 1931 and his Will was proved at Carlisle on 26th May 1931, which confirmed he passed away on 20th March and that the main beneficiary was his widow Mary Alice Collett, together with a second beneficiary, Thomas Farran.  Almost exactly seven years later, when Mary Alice Collett was residing at 7 Sandes Avenue in Kendal in Westmorland, she died on 21st March 1938 at St Joseph’s Hospital, Mount Street in Preston, at the age of 79 and was buried on 24th March 1938.  Her Will was processed at Carlisle on 26th April 1938, when the sole beneficiary of her £825 7 Shillings and 7 Pence estate was her son Robert Henry Foster

 

18Q104 - Ann Collett was born in 1871 at Kendal

18Q105 - Mary Elizabeth Collett was born in 1872 at Kendal

18Q106 - Margaret Collett was born in 1875 at Kendal

18Q107 – William Henry Collett was born in 1877 at Kendal

18Q108 - Robert Bousfield Collett was born in 1880 at Kendal

18Q109 - Edward Compston Collett was born in 1883 at Kendal

18Q110 - Isabella Collett was born in 1887 at Kendal

18Q111 - John Frederick Collett was born in 1889 at Kendal

18Q112 - Ruth Bousfield Collett was born in 1891 at Kendal

The following is the child of Henry Collett and his second wife Mary Alice Foster:

18Q113 - Harold Collett was born in 1896 at Kendal

 

Bethia Ann Collett [18P134] was born at Mullingar, the county town of Westmeath in Ireland, during 1850.  She was the eldest daughter of William and Ann Collett, and it was originally believed that she may have been named after her paternal grandmother Bertha Philpot.  However, it is now known that her name was Bethia.  At one year old she was living with her mother and brother Henry (above) at St Mary Brecon, while her father was billeted with the Dragoon Guards in the Brecon Barracks, when her name was recorded as Bethiah Collett on that occasion.  Over the next few years, the family moved around England as a result of her father’s service with the army.  In 1861 the family had settled in St Bees in Whitehaven when, as Bethia Ann Collett, she was ten years old.  And it was also as Bethia Ann Collett that she was recorded in the census of 1871 when she was living at 103 Scotch Street in St Bees with her widowed mother and three of her younger siblings.  At that time, she was 21 and was working as an assistant stationer.  It was on 25th December 1872 at the Church of St John the Baptist in the Parish of Skelsmergh in Westmorland that Bethia Ann Collett married John William Tanner who was born at Kendal in Westmorland on 10th December 1849.  Their wedding was recorded at Kendall (Ref. 10b 1223).  John was a cloth finisher of Skelsmergh aged 23, who had been born at Kendall (Ref. xxv 501) on 10th December 1849 and baptised there on 10th March 1850, the son of Thomas Tanner who was a bobbin turner and his wife Eleanor.  Bethia was also 23 and of St Thomas, Kendal, the daughter of William Collett deceased.  The witnesses were Joseph Smallwood Tanner and Isabella Wilkinson and the marriage was registered at Kendall.  It was also in Kendal that Bethia’s brother Henry Collett had been married two years earlier and where he living with his wife from that day forward

 

By the time of the census in 1881 railway porter John Tanner, aged 31, and his wife Bethia, who was also 31, were residing at West Gate Cottage in Barrow-in-Furness with their children Albert V Tanner who was eight, Walter K Tanner who was six, Edith A Tanner who was four, John W Tanner who was two and Francis H Tanner who was just ten weeks old.  John’s occupation as a railway porter was again confirmed two years later at the birth of the couples’ seventh child Beatrice Tanner in 1883.  However, it was only four years later, and after the birth of her eighth child, that the death of Bethia Ann Tanner nee Collett was recorded at Barrow-in-Furness (Ref. 8e 613) during the fourth quarter of 1887, at the age of only 37.  It seems likely that she died in childbirth, since it was at that same time when her ninth child, her son Edwin Tanner, was born who also did not survive the ordeal.  According to the next census in 1891 railway porter John Tanner was a widower living at 28 Settle Street in Barrow-in-Furness with his five surviving children.  They were Albert V tanner who was 18 and a billiards marker, Edith A Tanner who was 14 and a nurse/domestic servant, John W Tanner who was 12 and a milk boy, Beatrice E Tanner who was seven and Fredrick J Tanner who was six years of age.  To help John look after his family was servant Agnes E Clarke who was 23, and it was she who John married later that same year.  Agnes Eleanor Clarke was born at Ulverston in Lancashire in 1868

 

It was also six months after the census day in 1891, when John William Tanner married (2) Agnes Eleanor Clarke on 12th September 1891, the event recorded at Ulverston (Ref. 8e 1328).  In 1901 railway porter John W Tanner was 51, Agnes E Tanner was 33, son John W Tanner was 21, Beatrice E Tanner was 17, Frederick J Tanner was 16, Margaret J Clarke was 10, Hilda F Tanner was four, Henry Tanner was two, and Harold T K Tanner was under one year old.  By the next census in 1911, John and Agnes were living at Barrow-in-Furness, where John William Tanner was 52 and an assistant store keeper with the USA Naval Construction Works.  Agnes Eleanor Tanner was 45 and a wife and housekeeper, Margaret Jane Tanner was 19, Hilda Fawcett Tanner was 14 – both in domestic service, Henry Tanner was 13, and Victor Tanner was eight years old.  Three years later, on the occasion of the marriage of his daughter Beatrice in 1914, John Tanner was employed as a shipyard storekeeper, and it was twelve years after that when John William Tanner passed away in 1926 at the age of 77, his death recorded at Barrow-in-Furness register office (Ref. 8e 975) during the fourth quarter of that year.  Agnes died in 1939, her death recorded at Barrow-in-Furness register office (Ref. 8e 948) during the second quarter of the year, when she was 73 years old

 

The Collett Tanner children were:  Albert Vernon Tanner [18Q114] was born in 1873 at Kendall; Walter Kitchen Tanner [18Q115] was born in 1874 at Barrow-in-Furness; Edith Ann Tanner [18Q116] was born in 1876 at Kendall; John William Tanner [18Q117] was born in 1878 at Barrow-in-Furness; Francis Henry Tanner [18Q118] was born in 1880 at Barrow-in-Furness; Arthur Henry Tanner [18Q119] was born in 1881 at Barrow-in-Furness; Beatrice Eleanor Tanner [18Q120] was born in 1883 at Barrow-in-Furness; Frederick James Tanner [18Q121] was born in 1884 at Barrow-in-Furness; and Edwin Smallwood Tanner [18Q122] was born in 1887 at Barrow-in-Furness

 

John Collett [18P135] was born at Dartmoor in Devon during 1851, the son of William Collett from Fressingfield and Ann Vernon from Ravensglass.  It was five years later, perhaps when his father was visiting his Collett family in Suffolk, that John Collett was baptised at Fressingfield with his younger brother William (below) on 30th March 1856, the sons of William and Ann.  By the time of the census in 1861 John’s father had retired from serving with the Dragoon Guards and the family was then living in St Bees in Whitehaven, where John from Devon was nine years old.  After a further ten years, and following the death of his father prior to 1871, John was living at 103 Scotch Street in St Bees with his widowed mother and three of his siblings, where he was 19 and an unemployed grocer.  Where nothing was previously known about John Collett after 1871, it is thanks to Brian Eddleston that, it is now established that John married Isabella Landell, their wedding recorded at Berwick (Ref. 10b 695) during the last three months of 1874.  One year later Isabella presented John with a son whose birth was also recorded at Berwick (Ref. 10b 410) during the last quarter of 1875, with the child baptised at Berwick-on-Tweed in Northumberland on 5th December 1875, father John Collett, mother Isabella.  Within the next three months John Collett suffered a premature death, his death recorded at Berwick (Ref. 10b 262) during the first three months of 1876, when he was only around twenty-five years of age.  According to the census in 1881 John’s widow Isabella Collett from Hawick in Northumberland was 30 and a servant at the home of worsted spinner Walter Walker and his wife Margaret E Walker at 22 Highfield Terrace in Halifax.  On that same day her son William Collett from Berwick-on-Tweed was five years old when he was living with his paternal grandmother, the widow Ann Collett, at her home at 41 Hawke Street in Barrow-in-Furness.  William was described as her grandson, while also recorded at that address was William’s uncle, William Collett, his late father’s younger unmarried brother

 

Within the next six months the widow Isabella Collett married Job Barker, the event recorded at Halifax (Ref. 9a 552) during the third quarter of the year and, a year later, she gave birth to a daughter, Martha E Barker who was born at Halifax in 1882.  That situation was confirmed in the next census of 1891, by which time Isabella’s son William had returned to live with his mother and stepfather in Halifax.  Job Barker was 39 and worsted mill worker, Isabella was 40, their daughter Martha was nine, and job’s stepson was William Collett who was 15.  During the second half of that decade Isabella’s son left home to be married, and he was replaced by the arrival of two of her nieces, the daughters of her first husband’s sister Elizabeth.  So on the day of the census in 1901 Job and Isabella were residing within the Queensbury-Halifax registration district where their daughter Martha E Barker aged 19 was a worsted spinner, as was niece Elizabeth Creber who was 15 and from Barrow, while her sister Annie Creber also from Barrow was 11 who was still attending school.  On that occasion Isabella from Berwick was 49, as was Job Barker who was a warehouseman at a local worsted mill.  The later death of Isabella Barker was recorded at Halifax register office (Ref. 9a 603) during the second quarter of 1912 at the age of 61.  Fifteen years after his loss, the death of Job Barker was also recorded at Halifax (Ref. 9a 505) during the third quarter of 1927 when he was 75

 

18Q123 - William Collett was born in 1875 at Berwick-on-Tweed

 

William Collett [18P136] was born at Fressingfield in 1855, when his birth was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 525) during the first three months of the year.  It was at Fressingfield that he was baptised on 30th March 1856 in a joint ceremony with his older brother John (above), the sons of William Collett of Fressingfield and his wife Ann.  In 1861 William was five years old when he was living with his family at St Bees in Whitehaven.  Ten years later according to the census in 1871, and following the death of his father, William was 15 and was living with his widowed mother and his family at 103 Scotch Street in Whitehaven.  During the following decade his mother moved to live at Barrow-in-Furness and it was with her at 41 Hawke Street in Barrow that William was living in 1881 when he was 25 and a labourer at a local foundry.  In addition to his mother Ann, aged 52, four other people were staying at that address, the first of which was William’s nephew William Collett from Berwick-on-Tweed, the five-year old son of William’s late brother John Collett.  The other three were all married boarders, and they were Charles Littlewood, Job Roberts and Agnes Irving.  It was eighteen months later, during the third quarter of 1882, when William Collett married Frances Nelson at Barrow-in-Furness, where their wedding was recorded at Barrow-in-Furness (Ref. 8e 1258) that year.  Frances had been born at Whitehaven, where her birth was recorded (Ref. 10b 485) during the last quarter of 1861.  During the following year Frances gave birth to a daughter who sadly died when she was only three years old, by which time she also had a son. 

 

Over the following four years, Frances presented her husband with two more sons, all of the children born while the couple continued to live in Barrow-in-Furness.  By the time of the census in 1891, when William Collett said he was 33, although he was actually 35, he was employed as a railway porter while living at Barrow-in-Furness with his wife Frances who was 29.  Living there with them were their two sons, John W Collett who was four and Thomas H Collett who was two years old.  Not long after the census day that year Frances gave birth to her last child.  The complete family of five was recorded in the Barrow census of 1901 living at Back Hartington Street North.  William Collett from Fressingfield was 44 and a railway checker, his wife Frances from Whitehaven was 38, and their three children were John W Collett aged 14, Thomas H Collett aged 12 and Robert Collett who was nine years old.  Their eldest son John had already left school by then and was working as a railway clerk.  Staying with the family that day in 1901, were two of Frances’ family, they being John B Nelson aged 54 and William Nelson who was 44, both born at Whitehaven and, although they were described as ‘uncles’, they may have been the older brothers of Frances

 

The same five members of the Collett family were still living together in Barrow ten years later in April 1911, but at the Bay Horse public house.  William Collett was 53 and a goods checker on the railway, his wife Frances Collett was 49 and a beer-house keeper at the inn, and their three sons were recorded as John William Collett aged 24, Thomas Henry Collett aged 22, and Robert Collett who was 19.  Frances employed a barman, while staying at the inn were three seamen with the Royal Navy.  It is interesting that William from Suffolk and Frances from Whitehaven were described as being married for twenty-six years, during which time Frances had given birth to four children, with only three surviving, a confirmatory reference to their late daughter Elizabeth.  Just over twenty years after that census day, the death of Frances Collett was recorded at Barrow-in-Furness register office (Ref. 8e 931) during the second quarter of 1932 when she was 70 years old

 

18Q124 - Elizabeth Ann Collett was born in 1883 at Barrow-in-Furness

18Q125 - John William Collett was born in 1886 at Barrow-in-Furness

18Q126 - Thomas Henry Collett was born in 1888 at Barrow-in-Furness

18Q127 - Robert Collett was born in 1891 at Barrow-in-Furness

 

Elizabeth Collett [18P137] was born at St Bees in Whitehaven in 1857, her birth recorded at Whitehaven (Ref. 10b 467), the youngest child of William Collett of Fressingfield and Ann Vernon from Ravenglass in Cumberland.  She was three years old in 1861 and sometime in the following few years her father died, so by 1871 she was 13 and living at 103 Scotch Street in St Bees with her widowed mother and three older siblings.  It was during the last three months of 1876 that the marriage of Elizabeth Collett and Elijah Creber was recorded at Barrow-in-Furness (Ref. 8e 1205), Elijah having been born at Dudley in Worcestershire in 1856 (Ref. 6c 163).  Shortly after they were married Elizabeth gave birth to the first of their children, while the couple was still living in Barrow.  It was also in Barrow, at 30 Cook Street, that the family was living at the time of the census in 1881, not far from where Elizabeth’s mother Ann was living at that time.  Elijah Creber was 24 and a labourer at the local ironworks, his wife Elizabeth was 23, and by then they had two children, Sarah Ann Creber who was four, and William Creber who was one year old and born at Dudley

 

Five more children were added to the family during the next decade, so by 1891 the family living at Barrow was made up of Elijah Creber 34, Elizabeth Creber 33, Sarah Ann Creber 14, William Creber 11, James who was nine, Elijah who was seven, Elizabeth who was five, John who was three, and Annie B Creber who was just one year old.  Just under eight years later Elizabeth Creber nee Collett died during the first three months of 1899, her death recorded at Barrow-in-Furness (Ref. 8e 636) when she was 41.  Two years after that sad event widower Elijah Creber was still living in Barrow according to the census in March 1901 but the only two of his children still living there with him were his son Elijah junior, who was 17 and a brass dresser at the nearby shipyard, and daughter Hannah Creber who was six years old

 

On that same day two of Elizabeth’s daughters were staying with Elizabeth’s sister-in-law Isabella Barker whose first husband John Collett – Elizabeth’s eldest brother (above) - had died in 1876.   The census in 1901 placed the two girls, Elizabeth Creber aged 15 and a worsted spinner and her sister Annie Creber, who was 11, living in the Halifax home of Job and Isabella Barker, where they were described as their nieces.  From the website www.cumbriabmd.org.uk it is now known that Elizabeth Creber Collett had a total of ten children, two more than those named in the census returns for 1881 and 1891, the full list being as follows, with all births recorded at Barrow-in-Furness.  Sarah Ann Creber (born in1877), Elizabeth Creber (born in 1880, who died in 1880), William Creber (born in 1880), James Creber (born in 1881), Elijah Creber (born in 1883), Elizabeth Creber (born in 1885), John Henry Creber (born in 1887), Annie Blakley Creber (born in 1889), Levi Creber (born in 1891, who died in 1891) and Hannah Stanley Creber (born in 1894; who died in 1905 aged 10 years)

 

Harry Collett [18P138] was born at Fressingfield on 26th October 1862 when, during the last three months of that year, his birth as Harry Collett was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 493).  It was also as Harry Collett that he was baptised at Fressingfield on 26th July 1863, the eldest child of George Collett and Harriet Cracknell, and it was in the census of 1871 that Harry Collett was eight years of age.  By the time of the 1881 Census, he had left the family home in Fressingfield and, at the age of 19, Harry Collett was living and working at Weybread, between Fressingfield and Harleston.  He was described as an industrial farm servant, employed at the home of John and Emily Anness.  The farm holding was one hundred acres, for which John Anness employed eight men and one boy, the latter presumably referring to young Harry.  It was at Cratfield on 17th April 1883 that Harry Collett married Elizabeth Randall, the daughter of labourer William Randall of Laxfield and his wife Mary Ann (Marian) from Bungay.  Their wedding was recorded at Blything (Ref. 4a 1047).  Elizabeth was born during the fourth quarter of 1854 with her birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 427), and was therefore some years older than her husband.  On different occasions during her life, her place of birth was recorded as Cratfield and Laxfield, both in close proximity of each other.  Two years before they were married, Elizabeth Randall from Cratfield was 26 and was living there with her parents at the time of the census in 1881.  Over the twelve years after they were married, Elizabeth presented Henry with five sons and a daughter.  The first three boys, and her daughter, were all born while the couple was still living at Cratfield

 

By 1891, the family had already left Cratfield and had moved to 26 Bungay Road in Redenhall-with-Harleston, where the couple’s last two sons were born.  However, on the day the census forms were completed, Harry was at 26 Bungay Road with three of his Cratfield born children and his mother-in-law, when his wife Elizabeth, together with their eldest son, was visiting her father at Bell Lane in Cratfield.  That situation meant that Elizabeth was recorded twice in the 1891 census, with both her father AND her husband informing the census enumerator of her presence.  Therefore, the census return that year recorded the family at Redenhall as ‘Henry’ Collett from Fressingfield who was 28 and an agricultural labourer, his wife Elizabeth Collett from Laxfield who was 36, Harry Collett junior who was six, Maria Collett who was four, and George Collett who was three.  Living with the family, but described as a widow (sic), was Elizabeth’s mother Marian Randall from Bungay who 54.  The couple’s eldest son William Collett, aged seven, were staying at the home of his grandfather sixty-year-old William Randall at Bell Lane in Cratfield.  Also recorded there was William’s married daughter, Elizabeth Collett aged 36, and her daughter Maria Collett aged four years, both of them said to be in two places at the same time.  Not long after the census day in 1891 Elizabeth gave birth to another son, the first of two boys to be born while the family was living at Redenhall

 

By 1901 the family was together again, Henry and Elizabeth were living at Clintergate Cottage in Redenhall, but by that time their daughter Maria had already left the family home, and was the only child missing on that occasion.  The full census details revealed that Harry Collett from Fressingfield was working with horses as a teamster of a farm at the age of 38.  On that occasion his wife Elizabeth gave her age as being 42 (sic) and confirmed that she had been born at Laxfield.  Living with the couple were their five sons, the oldest three possibly working on the same farm as their father, since each of them was described as being an ordinary farm labourer.  The five boys were William who was 17, Harry who was 15, George who was 12, Charles who was nine, and Ernest who was seven years old, the first three born at Cratfield and the last two at Redenhall

 

Ten years later the April census of 1911 confirmed that he and his family were still living at Redenhall-with-Harlston, but ‘By Clintergate’ a reference used in the electoral roll when their dwelling was by Clintergate Farm where, presumably, Henry Collett was employed.  It was also as Henry Collett that the electoral roll placed him at the same address through to 1914.  In 1911 Harry Collett of Fressingfield was 49, and his wife Elizabeth Collett of Laxfield was 52 (sic).  The only children still living with them were the two youngest Charles Collett who was 19, and Ernest Collett who was 18.  Sons William, Harry and George were all married by then, but were still living nearby, William in Redenhall, with Harry and George in Harleston.  Also married by then, with a family of her own, was Harry’s daughter Maria, when she and her family were also living at Redenhall at that time.  It was around eight months after that census day, when the death of Elizabeth Collett was recorded at Depwade register office (Ref. 4b 264) during the last three months of 1911, when she was 56.  It was as Elizabeth Collett of Clintergate in Redenhall, that she was buried in the grounds of the parish church at Redenhall—with-Harleston & Wortwell.  Some years later, widower Harry Collett was offered the chance of a room in a council house, which was where he was living when the 1939 Register was compiled.  It was at Hartismere, within the Parish of Wingfield and just west of Fressingfield, that Harry Collett aged 77 was the seventh member of the household at the home of Henry Kemp and his wife Rosalie, that was Council House No. 5.  By that time in his life, Harry was simply described as retired and an old age pensioner

 

Harry lived a long life, when the death of Harry Collett was recorded at Blyth (Ref. 4b 731) during the last three months of 1952, when he was 90 years old.  Upon being buried with his late wife, at Redenhall-with-Harleston-and-Wortwell, the parish register recorded that he had died in Blythburgh Hospital and was buried on 23rd December 1952.  His youngest child, Ernest Collett was 23 when he died in the summer of 1916, his death recorded at Depwade register office (Ref. 4b 229), following his birth being recorded there (Ref. 4b 228) during the third quarter of 1893.  On being buried with his late mother at Redenhall-with-Harleston & Wortwell on 21st July 1916, the parish register stated that it was a special service, sanctioned by the Bishop, for an unbaptised person.  Four years later, widower Harry suffered a third death in the family, when the death of Charles Collett was recorded at Depwade (Ref. 4b 238) during the second quarter of 1920, aged 28.  His birth was also recorded at Depwade (Ref. 4b 234) during the second quarter of 1892.  Charles was also buried in the family grave at Redenhall-with-Harleston-and-Wortwell on 12th April 1920.  Tragically, Charles was only married for less than twelve months, when the marriage of Charles Collett and Mary Annie Hanner had been recorded at Depwade register office (Ref. 4b 657) during the second quarter of 1919

 

18Q128 - William Collett was born in 1883 at Cratfield

18Q129 - Harry Collett was born in 1885 at Cratfield

18Q130 - Maria Collett was born in 1886 at Cratfield

18Q131 - George Collett was born in 1888 at Cratfield

18Q132 - Charles Collett was born in 1892 at Redenhall

18Q133 - Ernest Collett was born in 1893 at Redenhall

 

Mary Ann Collett [18P139] was born at Fressingfield on 21st June 1864, her birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 519) during the third quarter of the year, the eldest daughter of George and Harriet Collett.  She was later baptised at Fressingfield on 29th April 1866 in a joint ceremony with her brother Benjamin (below), all of which was confirmed by the census in 1871 in which she listed as Mary Ann Collett aged six years.  However, within a year of the census day she died at Fressingfield, where she was buried on 4th February 1872 aged seven years, the death of Mary Ann Collett recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 371)

 

Benjamin Collett [18P140] was born at Fressingfield on 16th March 1866, when his birth was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 558) during the second quarter of the year.  He was then baptised at Fressingfield on 29th April 1866 in a joint ceremony with his sister Mary Ann (above).  He was five years old in 1871 and was 15 by the time of the 1881 Census when he was living with his family at Catchpool Gardens in Fressingfield.  It was on 7th October 1890 at Metfield that he married Emily Emma Poppy, the daughter of farmer Robert Poppy and his wife Emily.  Emily Emma Poppy was born on 18th October 1869, her birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 545) and was baptised at Metfield on 1st May 1870, and her marriage to Benjamin was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 1465) during the last quarter of 1890.  By the time of the next census in 1891 Benjamin Collett, aged 24, and his wife Emily Emma Collett, aged 22, were living at St James South Elham where their only child was born during the weeks and months after the census day that year.  And it was at St James South Elham that their daughter, Emily Emma Collett was born and baptised on 6th September 1891

 

Sometime after the birth, the family of three moved to Thetford and in 1901 they were living in the village of Barnham near the River Little Ouse.  The census that year recorded that Benjamin Collett, aged 35 and from Fressingfield, was a teamster on a local farm, just like his older brother Harry (above), his wife Emily Emma Collett from Metfield was 30, while their daughter was incorrectly recorded as Emma Emily Collett who was 10 years old.  It was very likely Benjamin’s work with horses that took the family to the Loddon area of Norfolk over the next few years.  Since it was there that the family was living in 1911.  Benjamin Collett was 43 and a foreman on a farm, his wife Emily Emma Collett was 41, and once again their daughter was named as Emma Emily Collett who was 19.  It was just fifteen years later, that the death of Emily Emma Collett, nee Poppy, was recorded at the Norfolk Henstead register office (Ref. 4b 185) during the second quarter of 1926, when she was 56.  Thirteen years after being widowed, Benjamin Collett, aged 73, was staying at the home of the Medler family of George and Emma at 36 Grenstein Cottages, when he was still working as an agricultural labourer, Emma being his married daughter.  The later death of Benjamin Collett was recorded at East Dereham register office (Ref. 4b 336) during the second quarter of 1948, when he was 82

 

18Q134 - Emily Emma Collett was born in 1891 at St James South Elham

 

Keziah Collett [18P141] was born in 1868 at Fressingfield, possibly at the end of 1868 or just after the start of 1869, with her birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. ) during the first quarter of the latter.  She was the fourth child and eldest surviving daughter of George and Harriet Collett, and was two years old in the Fressingfield census of 1871.  It was at Catchpool Gardens in Fressingfield where 12-year-old Keziah was living with her family in 1881.  Six years later young Keziah Collett married William Osborne, the event recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 1371) during the last three months of 1887.  The birth of William Osborne at Wilby, within the Brundish area if Suffolk, was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 580) during the first quarter of 1864.  He was born on 23rd February 1864, the son of William and Ann Osborne and was three years old when he was baptised at Wilby on 30th June 1867.  The first years of their life together were spent at Laxfield, where their first two children were born, as confirmed in the census of 1891, by which time the family of four had moved west to Redlingfield.  The family’s home was then 2 Rookery Cottage when William Osborne from Brundish (Wilby) was 25 and an agricultural labourer, his wife Keziah was 23 and from Fressingfield, and the two children were Ishmael Osborne who was two years of age, and George Osborne who was not yet one month old.  Staying with the family that day, as a boarder, was Keziah’s younger brother Esau Collett ages 17 and from Fressingfield who was another agricultural labourer

 

It would appear to have been a very short time that the family was at Redlingfield, with the next three children born at Fressingfield which, for the census in 1901, was also the place of birth of son George, and not Laxfield.  In the end, after seven years there, the family moved again following the birth of their fifth child.  That move took the family to Mendham where, at 73 Holly Trees, they were recorded in 1901.  William Osborne from Wilby was a farm’s horseman aged 34, Keziah was 33, when their four Fressingfield born children were George who was ten, Elsa Osborne who was nine, Ernest Osborne who was six, and Hessel Osborne who was three years of age.  Missing that day was the couple’s eldest son Ishmael, who would have been 12 years old, while it was during the following year that Keziah gave birth to the couple’s last child.  Just less than three years after that census day, Keziah Osborne suffered a premature death at the age of 35, when her death was recorded at Hoxne register office (Ref. 4a 570) during the first three months of 1904.  Upon helping the next census enumerator to complete the form, William Osborne signed the form with the mark of a cross, when he and three of his children were residing at Hartshall Cottage in Walsham-le-Willows, ten miles north-east of Bury-St-Edmunds.  William was still employed as a horseman on a farm in 1911, when he was 50 and a widower.  With him that day was 18-year-old Elsie May Osborne from Redlingfield who was performing the role of housekeeper, Hessel Osborne who was 15 and a farm labourer from Fressingfield, and Anthony Clarence Osborne who was nine, attending school, and born at Mendham.  

 

In the 1939 Register, retired William Osborne was 75 and living at Chevington Road in Thingoe, Suffolk, the home of his married son Hessel B Osborne and his wife Norah M Osborne.  Hessel was 43 and a cowman, his date of birth being 25th April 1896.  Norah was 41 and undertaking unpaid domestic duties, her date of birth being 1st February 1898.  Within the next nine months William passed away, his death recorded at Bury-St-Edmunds register office (Ref. 4a 2016) during the second quarter of 1940 at the age of 76

 

George Collett [18P142] was born at Fressingfield in 1870, his birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 527) during the last quarter of the year, and was baptised at Fressingfield on 27th November 1870, the son of George and Harriet Collett.  He was living at Catchpool Gardens in Fressingfield with his family in 1881 when he was ten years old.  Although his family then moved to Stradbroke, George was not living with them in 1891.  It was on 14th October 1892 at Fressingfield that George Collett married Eliza Pearce, the daughter of horseman Frederick Pearce, whose birth was also recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 564) during the third quarter of 1873.  Their marriage was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 1543) and produced just one son for Eliza and George who was born in the village of Metfield to the north-east of Fressingfield.  However, it was around the time of the birth of the child that George may have died, with the death of George Collett at Metfield recorded at Hoxne register office (Ref. 4a 441) during the second quarter of 1898, when he was only 27 years of age.  Following the premature death of her husband, the young widow Eliza Collett married the much older bachelor Thomas Woolnough at Metfield on 20th July 1899, who was an agricultural labourer from Metfield.  Their wedding was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 1621).  William’s birth was again recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 486) during the third quarter of 1857, following which he was baptised at Metfield on 16th August 1857, the son of Charles and Sarah Woolnough

 

By the time of the Metfield census in 1901, Thomas Woolnough was 43 years of age, Eliza Woolnough from Fressingfield was 29, while living with the couple was Thomas’ stepson and Eliza’s son George Collett from Metfield who was two years old.  Not long after the census day that year, Eliza gave birth to the first of her two known children with Thomas Woolnough, with the second child born two years after the first one.  That situation was confirmed in the next census in 1911, when the family was still living in Metfield, but without Eliza’s first-born child Frederick George Collett who had left the family by then.  Thomas was 53, Eliza was 38, Ruth Woolnough was nine and Charles Woolnough was seven years of age.  Ruth’s birth was recorded at Hoxne register office (Ref. 4a 987), where her Charles’ birth was also recorded (Ref. 4a 1022).  The death of William Woolnough was recorded at Hartismere register office (Ref. 4a 870) during the second quarter of 1927, when he was 69.  His widow was still alive in 1939, who was living at The Street in Hartismere when her date of birth was recorded as 15th June 1873, and living with her was a certain Charles Collett, a schoolboy who was born on 3rd March 1928.  He was the third of four grandchildren from her son Frederick George Collett and his wife Florence Churchyard.  Eleven year later, the death of Eliza Woolnough was recorded at Ilford register office (Ref. 5a 361) in the East End of London, during the last three months of 1950, age the age of 77

 

18Q135 - Frederick George Collett was born in 1898 at Metfield

 

William Collett [18P143] was born at Fressingfield during 1872, where he was baptised on 27th October 1872.  The birth of William Collett was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 575) during the third quarter of that year.  It was barely sixteen months later when he died, his death also recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 387) during the first quarter of 1874, after which she was buried at Fressingfield on 2nd March 1874, where the burial register recorded that he was one year and nine months old

 

Esau Collett [18P144] was born at Fressingfield in 1874 with his birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 605) during the second quarter of that year, after he was baptised at Fressingfield on 28th March 1874, just twenty-six days after his brother William (above) had been buried there.  Esau, the son of George Collett and Harriet Cracknell, was six years old in 1881 when he was living there with his family at Catchpool Gardens.  Upon leaving school, Esau also left the family home to seek work, and by 1891, at the age of 17, he was living and working at Redlingfield as an agricultural labourer.  Ten years later Esau Collett from Fressingfield was 26 and a boarder at the home of Harry and Fanny Frampton and their family within the Hackney parish of St Matthew in London.  Unmarried Esau was described as a horse-keeper when he was still a bachelor, who was presumably preparing for the day he would be married.  Also, at the same address were brothers George and William Cracknell, who may well have been Esau’s cousins through his mother’s family and whose sister was most probably his future wife.  Just four months after that census day Esau Collett, aged 27 and the son of George Collett, married (1) Mary Ann Cracknell, aged 25 and the daughter of William Cracknell, on 5th August 1901 at the Church of St Michael & All Angels in Stoke Newington within the London Borough of Hackney.  The wedding was recorded at Hackney register office (Ref. 1b 1133).  Like her husband, the birth of Mary Ann was also recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 633) during the second quarter of 1876.  Their married resulted in the birth of six children, all born at Upper Clapton and baptised there at St Matthew’s Church, with their births recorded at Hackney register office, when the parish register recorded the family as living at 32 Detmold Road in Upper Clapton, where Esau was a horse-keeper.  Also living at that same address was Esau’s brother William Collett (below), another horse-keeper

 

It was also within the London Borough of Hackney that the family was living in 1911.  According to the census return, Esau Collett from Fressingfield was 36 and a platelayer with the G E Railway, his wife Mary Ann Collett from Horham was 35, and their six Clapton born children were Mary Collett who was eight, George Collett who was seven, Edith Collett who was five, Charles Collett who was four, John Collett who was one year old, and baby Frank who was just two months old.  Fourteen years later, the death of Mary Ann Collett was recorded at Hackney register office (Ref. 1b 421) during the second quarter of 1926, when she was 50 years old.  During the following year, in July and then September, Esau’s two eldest children were married, when the family’s home address was 44 Aveley Road in Upper Clapton.  Four years after being widowed, Esau married (2) Elizabeth Haddon, the event recorded at Chelsea register office (Ref. 1a 1209) during the third quarter of 1930

 

After a further nine years, the family was recorded within the 1939 Register at 44 Aveley Road, Upper Clapton within the London Borough of Hackney.  Esau was 65 and a retired railway platelayer and Elizabeth was 47, doing unpaid domestic duties, and had been born on 6th November 1892.  It would appear that the head of the household was in fact Elizabeth’s son Frederick Haddon, an unemployed insurance agent who had been born at Chelsea on 8th April 1913.  Two other people were also recorded there and they were mother and daughter May Elizabeth Reay a laundry worker born on 9th March 1913, and Joyce E Reay who was attending school and born on 4th January 1933.  The very next entry in the 1939 Register was the family of Esau’s son George William Collett, which comprised George W Collett aged 36 and a railway porter, his wife Doris Collett who was 35, and their son George F Collett who was eleven years old and attending school.  The later death of Elizabeth Collett, at the age of 62, was recorded at Hackney register office (Ref. 5c 564) during the third quarter of 1954.  Esau Collett was 84 years old when he passed away in 1958, his death recorded at Hackney register office (Ref. 5c 725) during the final three months of that year

 

18Q136 - Mary Ann Collett was born in 1902 at Upper Clapton (Hackney)

18Q137 - George William Collett was born in 1903 at Upper Clapton (Hackney)

18Q138 - Edith Jane Collett was born in 1905 at Upper Clapton (Hackney)

18Q139 - Charles Esau Collett was born in 1907 at Upper Clapton (Hackney)

18Q140 - Albert John Collett was born in 1909 at Upper Clapton (Hackney)

18Q141 - Frank Martin Collett was born in 1910 at Upper Clapton (Hackney)

 

William Collett [18P145] was born at Fressingfield on 6th September 1875 and was named after his late brother.  His birth was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 563) during the last three months of that year.  He was the son of George and Harriet Collett and was baptised at Fressingfield on 27th February 1876.  He was four years old and living with his family at Catchpool Gardens in Fressingfield in 1881.  He was still living with his parents ten years later in 1891 when he was 15, but by then the family was recorded at St Cross South Elmham.  After the turn of the century, when William Collett was 25, he was still a bachelor living with his parents, but at Stradbroke, where his occupation was that of a non-domestic groom.  Not long after that census day, William Collett aged 26 and a stableman from Upper Clapton in London, married Lydia Frances Jarvis, aged 25, the daughter of Francis Jarvis deceased, who was residing in Haverland.  The wedding service took place at the Parish Church in Haverland (Haveringland) on 27th November 1901, when the groom’s father was confirmed as George Collett, with the event recorded at the Norfolk St Faith’s register office (Ref. 4b 279).  Lydia was born on 2nd May 1876 at Corpusty in Norfolk, with her birth recorded Aylsham (Ref. 4b 79) during the second quarter of 1876.  Once they were married the couple headed for Upper Clapton in London where all six of their children were born, with all of the births recorded Hackney, but with their first child baptised at Haverland, the remainder baptised at St Matthew’s church in Upper Clapton

 

Up to around 1905, the family was residing at 32 Detmold Road in Upper Clapton, but just after they were living at 7 Detmold Road, as confirmed by the parish register on the occasion of the baptism of their children.  32 Detmold Road was the home of William’s older brother Esau (above), hence why William’s family eventually moved to another property in the same road.  By the time of the census conducted at the start of April in 1911 the family of six was residing at 7 Detmold Road in Clapton just a few yards from Clapton Railway Station.  The three-roomed accommodation was occupied by William Collett from Fressingfield in Suffolk, who was 34 and a general labourer employed by London City Council Tramways, his wife of nine years Lydia Frances Collett who was also 34, Mabel Lydia Collett who was nine, Walter James Collett who was six, Grace Maria Collett who was four and Annie May Collett who was one year old.  Living with the young family was their cousin Bertha Crackwell, aged 24, a domestic cook from Stradbroke, and a work colleague of William’s, Thomas Wilding who was 43 and another general labourer working for London City Council Tramways.  William was still employed by the LCC in 1915 and again in 1920, as confirmed at the baptism of his last two children, as a conduit cleaner in the latter, while in 1929 he was a motor driver.  According to the much later 1939 Register, the Collett family was living at 11 Southwold Road in Hackney.  William Collett was a jobbing gardener aged 64, Lydia F Collett was 63 and undertaking unpaid domestic duties, Mabel L Collett was 37 and a shop manageress at a laundry, and Agnes S Collett was 24 and a PBX telephonist.  The subsequent death of William Collett was recorded at Blyth register office (Ref. 4b 648) during the second quarter of 1950, when he was 74.  Two years after being widowed, the death of Lydia Frances Collett was recorded at Hartismere register office (Ref. 4b 679) during the second quarter of 1952, at the age of 76

 

18Q142 – Mabel Lydia Collett was born in 1902 at Upper Clapton (Hackney)

18Q143 – Walter James Collett was born in 1904 at Upper Clapton (Hackney)

18Q144 – Grace Maria Collett was born in 1906 at Upper Clapton (Hackney)

18Q145 – Annie May Collett was born in 1909 at Upper Clapton (Hackney)

18Q146 – Agnes Sarah Collett was born in 1915 at Upper Clapton (Hackney)

18Q147 – Ernest William Collett was born in 1915 at Upper Clapton (Hackney)

 

Sarah Collett [18P146] was born at Fressingfield in 1878, her birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 653) during the second quarter of the year.  She was two years old in April 1881 when she was living with her family at Catchpool Gardens in Fressingfield.  Ten year later in 1891 she 12 years old.  When her parents moved to Stradbroke after 1891 Sarah moved with them and, at the age of 22, she was still living with them at Stradbroke, from where she was employed as a domestic housemaid.  She never married and sadly suffered a premature death which was recorded at Hoxne register office (Ref. 4a 465) during the second quarter of 1905, when she was only 27 years old

 

James George Collett [18P147] was born at Cratfield towards the end of 1881, after his parents moved there from Fressingfield, his birth recorded at Blything (Ref. 4a 830) during the first three months of 1882 as simply James Collett.  It was as James George Collett that he was baptised at St John’s Church in Lowestoft on 1st January 1882, the son of seaman George Collett and his wife Harriet who, by then, were living at Burgh Castle.  Also baptised with him that day was Dinah Daisy Collett [18Q51] daughter of seaman William and Elizabeth Collett of Lowestoft.  James was Dinah’s uncle two-steps removed, their common ancestor being William Collett [18M22] 1759-1846, who was Dinah’s great great grandfather, and James’ great grandfather. The time spent by James’ family at Cratfield lasted only around five years, since by 1891 his family was living within the Wangford & Bungay registration district, where James was nine.  A further family move took place after that, with the family living at Stradbroke in 1901, when James was 19 and an ordinary farm labourer.  Less than two years later, age the age of 21, the death of James Collett was recorded at Hoxne register office (Ref. 4a 525) during the first quarter of 1903

 

May Collett [18P148] was born at Cratfield on 23rd May 1885 and, like her brother James (above), her birth was also recorded at Blything (Ref. 4a 839) during the second quarter of that year.  She was the youngest child of George Collett and Harriet Cracknell, and was five years old in the Wangford & Bungay census of 1891.  Ten years later she had left the family home, which by then was a Stradbroke.  Instead, May Collett, aged 15 and from Cratfield, was a general domestic servant at Fressingfield-cum-Withersdale.  The census return in 1911 listed May Collett from Cratfield as 25, who was living and working at 9 Blakesley Avenue in Ealing, within the Brentford area of Middlesex, as a domestic cook at the home of Theresa Beatson from Montreal, Canada, and her son medical student Basil Frazer Beatson of Paddington, London.  Many years later, according to the 1939 Register, May Collett aged 54 when she was living at Mayhew’s Corner in Stradbroke, Suffolk, the only person listed at the property.  It was three years after that when May died, with the passing of May Collett recorded at Ipswich register office (Ref. 4a 1539) during the second quarter of 1942, when she was 57 years old.  It was on 14th June 1942 at the East Suffolk County Hospital in Ipswich that she died, while her home address was still Mayhew’s Corner in Stradbroke.  The Will of May Collett was proved at Norwich on 26th August 1942 to George Leonard Briggs, a farmer, and Mabel Lydia Collett, a spinster, when the estate was valued at £149 7 Shillings.  Mabel was the last child born to May’s older brother William Collett (above)

 

Elizabeth Collett [18P149] was born at Cawnpore in India on 8th June 1861 and was baptised there on 23rd June 1861.  Elizabeth and her sister Sarah (below) were the daughters of Mary Penney and Private John Collett of Ilketshall St Andrew who was serving in India with the 54th Regiment at the time of their birth.  In May 1873 the family returned to England and to Ilketshall St Andrew where Elizabeth’s mother Mary died in 1874, as was followed the next year by her father who had only just remarried.  Upon the death of her mother Elizabeth and her two siblings were taken into the family of their father’s brother William Collett, but by April 1881 Elizabeth was living and working in the Streatham area of South London.  By then she was 20 and her place of birth was confirmed as Cawnpore.  She was employed as a parlour maid at Matlock Lodge in Streatham which was the home of John and Ann Saunders.  What is of particular interest is the fact that working as a cook at the same address was 37 years old spinster Elizabeth Collett of Kennington in Surrey.  And as yet it has not been determined if she was an aunt of the younger Elizabeth or some more distant relative

 

Almost exactly ten years later, when Elizabeth was thirty, she married Charles Henry Howard at Camden Town in London on 28th March 1891, with whom she had five daughters and two sons, although two of them did not survive.  Their wedding was recorded at St Pancras (Ref. 1b 9) and eight days after, the census in 1891 recorded the couple living in rooms at 33 Goldington Street in St Pancras where other parts of the property were home to the four members of the Green family, and a single lady.  Charles H Howard was 23 and a painter from Portsmouth in Hampshire where he was born in 1868, and Elizabeth Howard was 28 and from India.  According to the next census in 1901, Elizabeth Howard of India was 39 when she was living at Queen Street in St Pancras with her family.  Charles H Howard was 32 and a general labourer, Elizabeth J Howard was nine, Ellen F Howard was seven, Charles H Howard was five, Daisy W Howard was three, Annie A Howard was one year old, and a very young baby who had not yet been given a name who did not survive.  Shortly after that the family moved out of London and settled in Walton near Felixstowe in Suffolk, and it was there, at 53 Kings Street, that they were living in March 1903 when the couple’s second son was born.  Sadly, the marriage only survived for twelve years when Elizabeth Howard died of exhaustion at the age of 42, leaving Charles with a young family to raise.  That tragic event was recorded at Woodbridge register office (Ref. 4a 511) during the third quarter of 1903, when the family was still living at 53 Kings Street in Walton, and occurred around six months after she gave birth to her second son Richard Howard, who was born on 10th March 1903.  However, having five daughters to look after, son Richard was taken by Elizabeth’s married sister, Sarah Smith nee Collett (below) to live in London with her and husband William Saunders Smith

 

The birth certificate for Richard Howard confirmed the following details.  That he was born on 10th March 1903 at 53 Kings Street in Walton, and that it was registered at Woodbridge under the sub-district of Colneis.  His father was Charles Henry Howard, a general labourer, and his mother was Elizabeth Howard formerly Collett, and that it was she who registered the birth on 18th April 1903.  A further tragedy struck the family six years later when Charles’ daughter Annie Amelia Sarah Howard died from diphtheria on 15th January 1909 at nine years of age.  On that occasion widower Charles and his daughters were still living at 53 Kings Street in Walton, and the same house was still there in 2008

 

The Walton census in 1911 recorded the Howard family as head of the household Charles Henry Howard aged 42 and a widower, Elizabeth Jane Howard aged 19 and the housekeeper, Ellen Frances Howard aged 18 and a domestic servant, Charles Henry Howard junior aged 16 and a general labourer, Daisy Winifred Howard aged 13 and still attending school.  The death of Charles Henry Howard was recorded at the London Edmonton register office (Ref. 3a 984) during the first three months of 1932, when he was 63, following four years of bitter exchanges with William Saunders Smith over his adoption of Charles’ son Richard Howard

 

Sarah Collett [18P150] was born at Moradabad in India on 19th December 1862, and was baptised there on 11th January 1863, another daughter of John and Mary Collett.  She returned to England with her family in May 1873 and settled in Ilketshall St Andrew, where she was orphaned by the deaths of her mother in 1874 and that of her father in 1875.  Initially Sarah and her sister Elizabeth (above) and brother John (below) lived with their uncle William Collett at Ilketshall St John, but it was at Hornsey in North London that she was living and working by the time of the census in April 1881.  Sarah was confirmed as being 18 and born in India.  The address where she was working as a general servant was 23 Upper Tollington Park which runs from Finsbury Park to the Hornsey Road (A103) which is still there today.  That was the home of Charles W Leach of Wakefield, who was described as a mantle warehouseman.  Five years later, on 3rd April 1886, Sarah Collett married William Saunders Smith at St Lukes Marylebone in London, the event recorded at St Marylebone (Ref. 1a 967).  His birth recorded in North Devon at South Molton (Ref. 5b 439) during 1857.  By March 1901, the childless couple was living at Great College Street in St Pancras, where William Smith was 43 and a bricklayer from South Molton, and his wife Sarah aged 39 was recorded as being born at Moradabad in India.  Staying with the couple that census day and recorded as a visitor, was five-year-old Alice Collett from Yoxford in Suffolk, who was still with the couple ten years later.  She was Alice Mary Collett the eldest daughter of Sarah’s brother John Christian George Collett (below).  Just over two years later, and upon the death of her married sister, Elizabeth Howard nee Collett (above), Sarah and William took over the care of her youngest child Richard Howard who was only six months old in the autumn of 1903.  As a result of that, to all intent and purposes, he was raised as Richard Howard Smith, the son of Sarah and William, and sadly it was not until he was in his mid-twenties that he discovered the identity of his real parents, and that he had five sisters, although only four of them survived beyond childhood

 

By April 1911, the Smith family was living at 172 Sirdar Road, Noel Park, in the Wood Green and Tottenham area of London.  The census that month recorded the occupants of the four-room dwelling as William Smith, aged 53 and from South Molton in Devon, who was a railway inspector, his British wife of 27 years Sarah Smith, who 49 and was born at Moradabad in India, their niece Alice Collett, aged 16, who was born at Reydon in Suffolk, and their nephew Richard Howard who was eight years old and from Walton in Suffolk.  Alice Mary Collett was the eldest daughter of Sarah’s brother John Christian George Collett (below) and, although she knew who her parents and her siblings were in Westleton, she too referred to Sarah and William as Mum and Dad.  It was at that same address that Sarah and William continued to live until the day they died, at which time Richard Howard Smith took over the property and lived there with his wife and their son.  Richard was the grandfather of Louisa Rickett, and it was his son who was her father.  Richard Howard Smith died in 1968 while still living at 172 Sirdar Street.  Many years before his passing Richard had made contact with his sister Elizabeth Jane Howard, with whom he became very close, and who sent flowers and a card on the day of his funeral

 

However, between 1928 and 1932 there were some very bitter exchanges between Charles Howard and William Saunders Smith, as details in letters held by Louisa Rickett.  Charles Howards had written his letter himself, while William Saunders Smith had instructed a solicitor to reply.  From the exchange of correspondence, it seems that Sarah and William were allowed to take Richard to live with them in 1903 on the understanding that he should be brought up to know he had a father and siblings still living.  But it seems that the Smiths did not fulfil that promise.  In addition to which the Howard family was furious that William Smith had signed himself as Richard’s father on his marriage certificate.  When challenged on this, the Smiths claimed they had Richard’s surname changed by a Justice of Peace and that everything was above board

 

The 1939 Register identified William and Sarah stilling residing at 172 Sirdar Street, Tottenham, where William S Smith was a retired bricklayer whose date of birth was 28th February 1858, and where his wife Sarah Smith was undertaking unpaid domestic duties.  Also listed with the couple at the same address, was their adopted son Richard Howard Smith and his young family.  Richard was a bricklayer who had been born on 10th March 1903, his wife Louisa Smith had been born on 26th December 1904, their daughter Bessie E S Smith had been born on 14th December 1930, and their son Alan R W Smith had been born on 14th June 1934, both of them at school. A few months later, the death of William S Smith was recorded at Edmonton register office (Ref. 3a 1715) during the first three months of 1940, at the age of 84

 

John Christian George Collett [18P151] was born at Fort William, Hastings, Calcutta in India on 21st December 1864, the only known son of John Collett and Mary Penney, who was baptised on 9th January 1865.  John Collett senior was a private with 54th Regiment serving in India during the 1860s and 1870s.  Like his sisters Elizabeth and Sarah (above) John had returned to England in May 1873 but had tragically lost both parents by 1875, first his mother in 1874, then his father in 1875.  As a result of the first death, the three children of John Collett were taken into the care of their uncle William Collett [18O89] and initially lived with him at his home at Ilketshall St John.  Five years later the census in 1881 confirmed that John was 16 and that he was living with his uncle William Collett at Ilketshall St John.  His occupation then was that of an agricultural labourer.  It seems very likely he was working alongside his younger cousin John Collett (below) who was also listed as an agricultural labourer.  He was again living with William and Emma Collett and their son John in 1891, but at Reydon north of Southwold, where John Collett was 26 and still working as an agricultural labourer.  It was when John was in his late twenties that he met Anna (Annie) Meadows who was born at Earl Soham near Framlingham on 23rd March 1873.  They were later married at Wangford Parish Church on 8th February 1893, their wedding recorded at Blything (Ref. 4a 1071).  The marriage produced thirteen children for John and Annie, made up of eight daughters and five sons.  The couple initially lived at Wrentham, near Southwold, where their first child was born, before the family settled at Willow Marsh Lane in Yoxford, where the next four children were born

 

According to the 1901 Census John C G Collett, aged 37, had been born at Fort William in Calcutta.  He was employed as a yardman working on a farm at Yoxford midway between Blythburgh and Saxmundham with his wife Annie aged 26 of Earl Soham and their five children.  The children at that time were John W G Collett who was seven and from Wrentham, Alice Collett aged five who was born at Yoxford but was a visitor at Great College Street in St Pancras, London, on the day of the census, the home of John’s married sister Sarah Smith nee Collett (above), Annie E Collett who was four, William S Collett who was two, and Elizabeth C Collett who was not yet one year old.  Also living with the family in March 1901 was a cook and domestic servant by the name of Kate Collett who was aged 26 and born at Great Malvern in Worcestershire.  Who she was, and where she fits into the wider Collett family, has still to be determined.  It was around the middle of the first decade of the new century that the family travelled two-miles to the east, when they settled in Westleton.  On the day of the census in 1911, the family living at Westleton was recorded as John Collett from Port William in Calcutta who was 48 and a farm labourer, his wife Annie who was 39 and from Earl Soham, John who was 17 and from Wrentham, Annie who was 14, William who was 12, Cissie who was 10, Francis who was nine, Violet who was eight, Ivy who was four, Robert who was two, and Lillian who was under one year old

 

Twenty-eight years after that census day the remnants of the family were still living in Westleton, as confirmed by the 1939 Register for the Blyth Rural District Council area.  The three members of the family were living at Old Mill Cottage, where John C Collett was 74 and still working on a farm as a general labourer, his wife Anna Collett was 65, and their son Robert C Collett was 30 and as tractor driver on a local farm. Just less than two years later, it was also at Westleton, when John Christian George Collett died on 14th June 1941, his death recorded at Blyth register office (Ref. 4a 2321) during the second quarter of the year when he was 76.  After a further eleven years, the death of Anna Collett was also recorded Blyth register office (Ref. 4b 725) during the fourth quarter of 1952, at the age of 79

 

18Q148 - John William George Collett was born in 1893 at Wrentham

18Q149 - Alice Mary Collett was born in 1895 at Yoxford

18Q150 - Annie Elizabeth Collett was born in 1897 at Yoxford

18Q151 - William Saunders Collett was born in 1898 at Yoxford

18Q152 - Elizabeth Cissie May Collett was born in 1900 at Yoxford

18Q153 - Francis Ernest James Collett was born in 1901 at Yoxford

18Q154 - Violet Hazel Collett was born in 1903 at Yoxford

18Q155 - Ivy Sarah Collett was born in 1906 at Westleton

18Q156 - Robert Charles Collett was born in 1908 at Westleton

18Q157 - Lillian Emma Collett was born in 1910 at Westleton

18Q158 - Claude Victor Collett was born in 1912 at Westleton

18Q159 - Louisa May Collett was born in 1913 at Westleton

18Q160 - Dorothy Vera Collett was born in 1914 at Westleton

 

Harriet Collett [18P152] was born at Ilketshall St Andrew in 1877, her birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 727) during the third quarter of that year.  That happened nearly two years after her mother’s late husband John Collett passed away, her father not identified.  Harriet Collett was then baptised at Ilketshall on 12th August 1877, when the parish register described her as the illegitimate daughter of Charlotte Collett nee Carver.  From the time of the death of Charlotte’s husband John Collet, his three children from his first marriage had been cared for by the family of John’s younger brother William Collett.  It therefore probably made sense for Harriet to be placed in the care of another family to enable her mother Charlotte to leave Ilketshall, perhaps in disgrace, to seek work elsewhere.  Because Harriet was not the child of John Collett, she was placed with an apparently unrelated family, as confirmed by the census in 1881 when, at the age of just three years, Harriet Collett was described as a boarder and lodger at the home of farm labourer William Howlett at Black Common in Ilketshall St Andrew.  Ten years later in 1891 Harriet Collett, aged 13, was still living with William Howlett who, by then, was a widower, with Harriet working as his housekeeper.  No record of her has been found in March 1901, by which time she was very likely married

 

George Collett [18P153] was born at Reedham on 21st April 1858, with his birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 590).  Shortly after that, his family left Reedham when they moved to Oulton near Lowestoft, where he was baptised on 9th May 1858, the eldest of the two sons of Charles Collett and Mary Ann Ellis.  It was also there that he was living with his parents in 1861, when George Collett was three years old.  Three years later, and following the birth of his brother Charles (below), George Collett, aged six years, was once again baptised, that time in a joint ceremony with his baby brother which took place at Oulton on 28th August 1864.  The boys’ parents were confirmed as Charles and Mary Collett.  George was 13 at the time of the census in 1871, when he and his family were living at 4 Common Lane, Southtown in Great Yarmouth.  Ten years later, according to the census in 1881, George Collett, aged 23, had left his east coast home and was a seaman with the vessel ‘Robert & Mary’ sailing out of Littlehampton in Sussex, on the south coast of England.  On that occasion he gave his place of birth as Oulton where he was living just after he was born and where his brother Charles (below) had been born.  The premature death of George Collett was recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 493) during the second quarter of 1888, when he was 29 years old.  The nature of his job of work, and the risks involved, could mean that he was the victim of an accident at sea

 

Charles George Collett [18P154] was born at Oulton near Lowestoft in 1864, the second of two sons of Charles Collett and Mary Ann Ellis.  He was only a few months old when he was baptised at Oulton in a joint ceremony with his older brother George (above) on 28th August 1864.  It was also simply as Charles Collett, aged seven, that he was listed in the census of 1871, by which time he and his family were living at 4 Common Lane, Southtown in Gorleston, and it was at that same address that he and his parents were living in 1881, when Charles was a general labourer at the age of 16.  Three years later, on 30th January 1884 at the Parish Church in Gorleston, when he was a dairyman aged 20 of Southtown, Charles Collett was married by licence to the much older Lavinia Anna Howlett aged 29 and a dressmaker of Gorleston, the daughter of dairyman William Howlett.  The two witnesses were William Howlett and Kate Howlett.  The couple’s wedding day was recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 1003) and, with the occupation of Charles’ father (Charles) also being that of a dairyman, it may have been a result of the two fathers knowing each other through their work, that Charles and Lavinia met.  Lavinia was born at Bungay, her birth recorded at Wangford during the second quarter of 1852, the daughter of gardener William and Sarah Howlett.  It may have been out of embarrassment of their 12-year age difference that Lavinia only admitted to being six years older than Charles in the subsequent census returns.  Certainly in 1861, as the eldest child in her family, Lavinia Howlett was confirmed as being nine years old.  It would appear that the first child of Charles and Lavinia may have been a honeymoon baby, as the birth was recorded at Mutford during the last quarter of the same year in which they were married.  A further three children were added to the family before the next census in 1891, all born at Southtown when their baptism records at the parish church of Gorleston-with-Southtown gave their father’s occupation as a cow keeper.  However, on the day of the census, the family was living at 8 Common Lane, Southtown in Great Yarmouth, the same road in which Charles’ parents were living in 1901, where they had two of Charles’ sons, Lionel and Bertie, living there with their grandparents, while in 1891 it was just son Lionel (recorded in error as George) who was five years of age who was living with his grandparents in 1891 at East Marsh Road in Burgh Castle

 

As a result of that fact, the census return for 1891 confirmed that Charles’ family comprised, himself aged 26 and a dairyman, Lavinia Collett who said she was 32 rather than her actual age of 38, Sara Mary Collett who was six years old, Bertie H V Collett who was three, and Albert Edward Sydney Collett who was not yet one year old.  It was two years later that the couple’s fifth and final child was born.  Eight years later, in March 1901, Charles Collett from Oulton was working at Barking in Essex, while his wife and five children were living at the High Street in Great Yarmouth.  Charles was 36 years of age and was employed as a general labourer at a chemical works in Barking.  His wife Lavinia Collett, a dressmaker, said she was 42 instead of 48, and confirmed she had been born at Bungay.  Their children were listed as Laurina who was 16, with no occupation, Albert who was listed as Sidney aged 10, and Grace who was eight years old, both born at Southtown.  By April 1911 the family was residing at 21 Burnt Lane in Southtown and comprised Charles Collett from Oulton who was 47 and a riverside labourer, his wife Lavinia from Bungay was 56 and a dressmaker, together with just two of their five children, Albert Edward Sidney Collett from Gorleston, Great Yarmouth was 20, and Grace Nellie Kate Collett who was 18.  Charles George Collett died at Southtown sometime between 1911 and 1915, and was followed by his wife Lavinia Ann Collett nee Howlett whose death was recorded at Yarmouth register office (Ref. 4b 59) during the first three months of 1915, following which she was buried on 18th January 1915 at the Parish Church of Gorleston-with-Southtown.  The burial record gave her home address as 21 Burnt Lane in Gorleston and her age as 62 years

 

18Q161 - Laurina Sarah Mary Collett was born in 1884 at Southtown

18Q162 - Lionel Charles George Collett was born in 1886 at Southtown

18Q163 – Bertie Herbert Victor Collett was born in 1887 at Southtown

18Q164 - Albert Edward Sydney Collett was born in 1890 at Southtown

18Q165 - Grace Nellie Kate Collett was born in 1893 at Southtown

 

Sarah Collett [18P155] was born at Ilketshall on 2nd February 1866, with her birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 731) during the first three months of the year.  She was baptised at Ilketshall St Andrew on 18th March 1866, the daughter of William and Emma Collett.  Upon leaving school she entered into domestic service and at the age of 15 she was a housemaid at The Rectory of St John the Baptist Church in Ilketshall St Andrew.  Sarah’s employer was the Rector John Beatty, aged 70 and from Londonderry, and his Irish wife Maria.  Towards the end of that decade Sarah from Ilketshall St Andrew married Charles Minister, the event recorded at Blything (Ref. 4a 1719) during the last quarter of 1890.  Charles Isaiah Minister was born at Thurlton near Loddon in 1869, the son of agricultural labourer Joseph Minister of Thurlton in Norfolk and his wife Sarah Ann from nearby Thorpe.  It was at Loddon that his birth was recorded (Ref. 4a 707) during the second quarter of that year.  By the time of the census in 1891, Sarah had presented Charles with the first of their four known children.  On that occasion the family of three was living in the village of Thurlton, where they were also recorded in 1901.  Charles Minister was 26, his wife Sarah was 25, and their son Sidney C Minister was not yet one year old.  During the following year Charles and Sarah Minister were the witnesses at the 1892 wedding of Sarah’s brother John Collett (below) at Reydon parish church near Southwold.  The Minister family was complete nine years later, when the census of 1901 recorded them living at Low Road in Thurlton, as farm labourer Charles of Thurlton who was 36, Sarah from Suffolk St Andrews (Ilketshall St Andrew) who was 35, and their four children, Sidney who was 10, Ernest who was eight, Beatrice who was seven, Mabel who was six, and Oscar who was three years old.  After that census day the family moved to 17 Queen Anne’s Road in Southtown, when the electoral roll also indicated that Charles had an interest in a second property at 7 Trafalgar Road West.

 

In 1908 the family was still living at 17 Queen Anne’s Road, but for the two years leading up to 1911, the family home was at 52 Albany Road in Southtown.  The electoral roll in 1911 recorded the family at 74 Lichfield Road in Yarmouth, when a second property was owned by Charles at 52 Albany Road.  The census that same year provided the full names of the children of the family.  Charles and Sarah were 46 and 45 respectively, while their children were listed as Sidney Charles Minister who was 20 (born in 1891), Ernest Arthur Minister who was 18 (born in 1892), Mabel Emma Minister who was 16 (born in 1894), and Oscar William Minister who was 13 years of age (born in 1897).  Sarah’s place of birth was recorded as St Andrews, with the other members of her family all having been born at Thurlton, their birth recorded at Loddon.  Missing daughter Beatrice Miriam Minister (born in 1893) was 17 years of age and living and working in Norwich at the home of inspector of schools Robert F Betts and his family, when her place of birth was also confirmed as Thurlton.  In 1915 the family of Charles Isaiah Collett was still living at 74 Lichfield Road in Yarmouth.  It was during March 1932, when the death of Charles Isaiah Minister was recorded at Yarmouth register office (Ref. 4b 56), after which he was buried on 31st March 1932 at Gorleston.  Seven years after, according to the 1939 Register, Sarah Minister was a widow aged 73, when she was living at 9 Church Street in Southwold.  That was the home of retired groundsman John Collett, a widower and Sarah’s younger brother (below).  The third member of the household was Bessie Grimble who was 76 and a member of staff and a maid working in a hotel

 

John Collett [18P156] was born at Ilketshall St Andrew on 26th October 1867, his birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 631).  He was also baptised two months later at Ilketshall St Andrew on 28th December 1867.  The baptism record confirmed that he was the son of William Collett and Emma Rackham.  According to the census of 1881, John was 13 and an agricultural labourer when he was living with his parents at Ilketshall St John.  Also living with the family was John’s older cousin, the orphaned John Collett (above) who was born in India.  Eight years later John was one of the witnesses at the Carlton Colville wedding of his cousin Robert Collett (below) and Lois Girling in February 1889.  John himself was married three year after, when the marriage of John Collett and Louisa Clara Haward was conducted at the parish church in Reydon on 2nd January 1892, their wedding recorded at Blything (Ref. 4a 1003).  However, it was as Louisa Clara Howard that she was born at Reydon, her birth being recorded at Blything (Ref. 4a 723) during the first three months of 1869.  It was also as Louisa Clara Howard that she was baptised at Reydon on 7th February 1869, the daughter of George Howard of Wrentham and Matilda Marjoram of Mutford.  The witnesses at the wedding were Charles and Sarah Minister, John’s brother-in-law and his sister (above)

 

By the turn of the century Louisa had presented John with the first four of their eight children.  The 1901 Census placed the family as living at 42 Church Street in Southwold.  John was 33 and his occupation was that of a corporation carter, presumably meaning that he was employed by the local council.  Louisa his wife was listed as being 32 and born at Reydon one mile north of Southwold.  The four children living with the couple in 1901 were Lily aged eight, Ellen aged seven, John aged six, and Edith who was five years old.  The first three children had been born while the family was living at Easton Bavents, while the fourth was born after they had moved into Southwold

 

This picture of John Collett was provided by his great great grandson John Davies, and is an extract from a larger photograph which included the two sons of his daughter Edith Florence Davies, together with one of their sons.  The parish of Easton Bavents was located just immediately north of Southwold, but today it does not exist, as the whole area was subject to coastal erosion and has since fallen into the sea.  Of the four children born after 1901, one is known to have been Daisy who was born during September 1907.  The census of 1911 revealed that the family was still living in Southwold, in the Blything registration district, where John Collett from Ilketshall St Andrew was 44 and a locomotive engine driver and railway worker, his wife Louisa Collett from Reydon was 43, and the children still living with the couple were Edith Florence Collett who was 14, Agnes Bessie Collett who was seven, Dorothy Mary Collett who was six, Daisy Evelyn Gertrude Collett who was three, and Ronald Sidney George Collett who was two years of age.  The place of birth of all five children was recorded as Southwold.  The death of Louisa Clara Collett, described as Clara Louisa Collett, was recorded at Blything register office (Ref. 4a 1602) during the first three months of 1931, when she was 63 years of age.  Eight years later, widower John Collett was 72 and head of the household when he was living at 9 Church Street in Southwold, where he was described as a retired groundsman in the 1939 Register.  Staying with him that day was his slightly older widowed sister Sarah Minister (above).  Also listed as the third person living at 9 Church Street was Bessie Grimble aged 76 and recorded as a hotel staff maid.  After another period of eight years, the death of John Collett, aged 79, was recorded at Ipswich register office (Ref. 4b 748) during the fourth quarter of 1947

 

18Q166 - Lilian Emma Collett was born in 1892 at Easton Bavents

18Q167 - Ellen Louisa Collett was born in 1893 at Easton Bavents

18Q168 - William John Collett was born in 1895 at Easton Bavents

18Q169 - Edith Florence Collett was born in 1896 at Southwold

18Q170 - Agnes Bessie Collett was born in 1903 at Southwold

18Q171 - Dorothy Mary Collett was born in 1905 at Southwold

18Q172 - Daisy Evelyn Gertrude Collett was born in 1907 at Southwold

18Q173 - Roland Sidney George Collett was born in 1909 at Southwold

 

William Collett [18P157] was born in the village of Ilketshall St Andrew in 1869 with his birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 656) during the third quarter of the year.  He was baptised at the Church of St John the Baptist on 24th September 1869, the son of William Collett and his wife Emma Rackham.  Sadly, he died there at the age of three weeks and was buried at St John the Baptist Church on 7th October 1869, the death of William Collett recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 457)

 

William Collett [18P158] was born at Ilketshall St Andrew during the month of January in 1871, his birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 736) in the first quarter of that year.  He was around one-month-old when he was baptised at the Church of St John the Baptist on 5th February 1871, the second son of that name born to William and Emma Collett.  The Ilketshall census in 1871 recorded William Collett as being two months old, although tragically he suffered the same fate as his namesake and brother two years earlier, when the death of William Collett was also recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 432) at the end of 1871.  On being buried the Church of St John-the-Baptised on 14th December 1872 he was recorded in the parish register as being just 23 months old

 

Robert Collett [18P159] was born at Ilketshall St Andrew towards the end of 1863, the only surviving child of Robert Collett and Lydia Ann Brighton.  His birth was recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 651) during the fourth quarter of that year.  Tragically his father and his baby sister died while he was still very young, so by 1871, and at the age of only seven years, he was living at Ilketshall St Andrew with his widowed mother Lydia Ann Collett, and his widowed grandmother Mary Brighton.  It may be of interest that, in his later years, Robert gave his place of birth as Shipmeadow, a village approximately two miles north of Ilketshall St Andrew.  Upon leaving school he became a fisherman like his father, and in early 1881 it would appear that he set sail out of Pakefield near Lowestoft on board the fishing boat ‘Au Revoir’.  By the third of April in 1881 the boat was moored at Falmouth in Cornwall.  According to the census return that day, fisherman Robert Collett of Ilketshall St Andrew was 17, and was one of eight fishermen employed by master fisherman Daniel Colby Adams of Pakefield.  Upon giving up his occupation as a fisherman, Robert became a groom employed at Carlton Colville, where it is very likely that he met his future wife.  Also, by that time Robert’s widowed mother, Lydia, was living at Carlton Colville and had married widower William Artis, following the death of his first wife Amy Girling.  It is therefore significant that Robert Collett was married after the reading of banns to Lois Girling at Carlton Colville on 5th February 1889, the marriage being registered at Mutford (Ref. 5a 73) during the first quarter of that year

 

On that day, Robert Collett of Carlton Colville was 24 and a labourer, the son of mariner Robert Collett, with Lois also being 24 and of Carlton Colville, the daughter of a labourer, when the witnesses were John Collett and Catherine Girling.  John was very likely Robert’s cousin (above).  Lois was born at Ilketshall St Lawrence on 13th October 1864, with her birth recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 646) during the last quarter of 1864.  She was later baptised as Louisa Girling on 16th April 1865, the daughter of agricultural labourer Henry Girling and his wife Eliza, Henry being the brother of the late Amy Artis nee Girling.  It was prior to her wedding day that Lois Girling had given birth to a base-born son who continued to carry his mother’s maiden-name, although nothing more is known about the child at this time, except that he was the grandfather of Brian Girling

 

Lois Girling was the fifth child of agricultural labourer Henry Girling and his wife Eliza Barber.  Henry was born at Westhall, near Halesworth in 1824, while his wife was from Ilketshall St Margaret, where she was born in 1831.  The couple’s first two children, William and Robert Henry, were born at Ilketshall St Andrew, while the remainder of their children were all born at Ilketshall St Lawrence.  In the Ilketshall St Lawrence census of 1871, Lois Girling was six years old when she was living there with her parents and her six siblings.  An eighth child was added to the family during the following few months, but by 1881 three of the children had left the family home in Ilketshall St Lawrence to make their own way in the world.  They were the eldest son William Girling, who was 25 and married to Eliza with whom he already had four children while living at Mutford Bridge in Oulton, from where William was employed as a railway carman; Charlotte Girling, aged 18, who was a kitchen maid at Bramford Hall near Ipswich, the home of Lieutenant Colonel Frank Scott; and Lois (Louisa) Girling, aged 17, from Ilketshall St Lawrence who was a domestic servant at Lorne Villa in Carlton Colville, the home of farmer Elijah Lee and his wife.. It was around six years after that, when Lois found she was with-child, and in 1888 she gave birth to a son out of wedlock, who was baptised as Henry Robert Girling at Ilketshall St Lawrence on 13th May 1888.  By the time Lois married Robert Collett at Carlton Colville her base-born son had been taken into the care of her older brother Robert Henry Girling, gamekeeper, and his wife Susan, at Ilketshall St Margaret, with whom he was the only child living there with the couple in both 1891 and 1901, when he was three years of age and 13 years old respectively

 

It was while Robert Collett and his wife Lois were still living at Carlton Colville that their first child was born there during the month of August in 1890.  Following the birth of Francis their son, Robert and Lois, moved to Lancashire, very likely for work purposes, since it has been established that the couple was living at 15 Carno Street in the Wavertree district of Liverpool West Derby by the time of the census in 1891.  The census return confirmed that Robert Collett from Shipmeadow in Suffolk was 27 and that, at that time in his life, he was employed as a railway porter.  His wife Lois Collett from St Lawrence, Suffolk was 26, and their eight-month-old son Francis W C Collett had been born at Carlton Colville in Suffolk.  Lodging with the family were two other men who were also employed on the railway, and both of them came from Suffolk.  In addition to the Collett household, it is interesting that all of the occupants of the two adjoining houses in Carno Street had also been born within the North Suffolk area, perhaps indicating a mass exodus to the north of England for the promise of work.  It was while Robert and his family were still living at 15 Carno Street in Wavertree that Lois presented her husband with the couple’s second child, who was born during the following year.  During the next year or two, the family left Wavertree when they moved the four miles south to Garston on the east bank of the Mersey River between Liverpool and Widnes.  That move may have coincided with a change of occupation for Robert.  It was also at Garston that a further three children were added to the family

 

By 1901 Robert Collett, aged 37 and from Shipmeadow, was living at 68 King Street in Garston, very close to the docks where he was employed as a dock labourer.  Living at the house with him was his 36 years old wife Lois Collett of Ilketshall St Lawrence, together with four of their five known children.  They were William Collett who was 10 years old and born at Carlton Colville near Lowestoft, Ethel Collett who was five, Albert Collett who was two, and Florence Collett who was 11 months old.  Absent from the family that census day in 1901 was the couple’s eldest daughter Nora Collett from Wavertree who was eight years of age and staying with her grandmother Lydia Ann Collett, nee Brighton, and her second husband William Artis, following the earlier death of Norah’s grandfather Robert Collett.  Tragically, two years after the census in 1901, Robert Collett died just when his wife was due to give birth to the couple’s last child, who was given the name Robert.  The death of Robert Collett, aged 39, was recorded at West Derby (Liverpool) register office (Ref. 8b 410) during the second quarter of 1903, following his passing on 20th June 1903.  Sadly, he never saw or held his last child, who was born one month later and given the name Robert, with his father Robert laid to rest in Garston on 25th June 1903.  The Administration of his personal effects, amounting to £15 5 Shillings, was granted at Liverpool on 9th July 1903 to Lois Collett, widow

 

At that time in his life, the family’s home address was 31 Salt Dock Cottages in Garston, although when he died he was a patient at Garston Cottage Hospital.  The family’s new arrival Robert Collett, together with his two older siblings William Collett and Albert Collett, were the only children still living with their widowed mother at Garston in 1911.  On that occasion Lois Collett from Suffolk was 45 and a cleaner at the local library, employed by the municipal authority in Garston.  As regards her other children, nothing has found of daughter Ethel Maude Collett, while her two other daughters, Norah Collett and Florence May Collett, had returned to Suffolk and were living at the home of their paternal grandmother Lydia Ann Artis, formerly Lydia Ann Collett nee Brighton in 1911

 

It is known that sometime after being widowed, Lois and the remaining members of her family moved to 97 Chesterton Street in Garston, which was certainly the family home in 1913 until 1943, as confirmed at the time of the weddings of four of her children; William in 1913, Albert in 1928, Florence in 1921, and Robert in 1933. By the time of the 1939 Register, widow Lois Collett was 75 years old and described as a retired office cleaner who was living alone at 97 Chesterton Street in Garston.  Just under four years later, the death of Lois Collett was recorded at the Liverpool South register office (Ref. 10d 530) during the second quarter of 1943, when she was said to be 82.  The Liverpool Corporation Register of Burials stated that Lois Collett was buried at Allerton Cemetery on 28th April 1943, a widow of 84 from 97 Chesterton Street, who was laid to rest in a private grave, number 185, already the place of rest of her late husband and her first three children

 

18Q174 - Francis William Charles Collett was born in 1890 at Carlton Colville

18Q175 - Norah Collett was born in 1892 at Wavertree, Liverpool

18Q176 - Ethel Maude Collett was born in 1895 at Garston, Liverpool

18Q177 - Albert Collett was born in 1897 at Garston, Liverpool

18Q178 - Florence May Collett was born in 1900 at Garston, Liverpool

18Q179 - Robert Collett was born in 1903 at Garston, Liverpool

 

Mary Anne Collett [18P160] was born at Ilketshall St Andrew in 1866, the only known daughter of Robert Collett and his wife Lydia Ann Brighton.  Her birth was recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 681) during the last quarter of that year.  Tragically, Mary Anne Collett died at Ilketshall St Andrew when she was only eight months old, her death recorded at Wangford (Ref. 4a 442) during the second quarter of 1867, after which she was buried on 29th June 1867 at the Church of St John-the-Baptist at Ilketshall.  It was also around that time when her father also passed away, although no burial record for him has so far been found

 

Ruth Collett [18P161] was born at Norwich in 1883 after which her birth was recorded there (Ref. 4a 138) during the third quarter of the year.  She was the oldest of the three children of George Collett and his wife Amy, who sadly died around the time that Ruth was four years old, just after the birth of her brother Philip (below).  That following that tragic event George and his children were living at 43 Mill Street in the Lakenham district of Norwich, where Ruth’s grandmother Lucy Collett was the housekeeper.  Ruth was recorded as a scholar at seven years of age.  Ruth and her family were still living in Norwich but at Gordon Road in 1901 when she was 17, and when her father George was married to Katherine A Collett, who had taken over housekeeping duties.  Curiously by 1911, her father’s wife was recorded as Hannah Collett, by which time Ruth had left Norwich and had moved to London where, in April 1911, she was living in the Hackney area of the city at the age of 27, when her place of birth was confirmed as Norwich

 

David Collett [18P162] was born at Norwich in 1884, where his birth was recorded (Ref. 4b 154) during the last three months of the year.  Upon the birth of his younger brother Philip (below), when David who only two years old, his mother Amy died.  According to the next census in 1891 David Collett, aged six years, was living at 43 Mill Street in Lakenham, Norwich, with his father and his two siblings, where his grandmother Lucy Collett was the housekeeper for the family.  Following the death of David’s grandmother, David’s father George married for a second time, his new wife Catherine with, him together with his three children, when they were living at Gordon Road in Norwich in 1901.  By then David was 16 and was working as a labourer at a starch factory.  Sadly, his stepmother died not long after that census, with the result that his father was married for a third time in 1905.  That was confirmed in the next census of 1911 when David who was 26 and a labourer, together with his brother Philip, were recorded as living at Norwich with their father and new step-mother Hannah.  With the war starting in Europe, David joined the 1st Battalion Norfolk Regiment in which he was Private Collett 6531.  Sadly, not long after the start of the Great War, David was killed in action during the Battle of Loos.  He died on 18th October 1914 and his name is one of the 13,000 listed on the Le Touret Memorial which commemorates those soldiers killed at the Battle of Loos who have no known grave.  The name of David Collett can be found in Panel 8.  David’s army record confirmed that his father and next-of-kin was George Collett of 40 Harford Street, in Lakenham, Norwich, and that his mother had been Amy Collett

 

Philip Collett [18P163] was born at Norwich on 26th November 1887, with his birth recorded at Norwich (Ref. 4b 160) during the first quarter of the following year.  Tragically, either at the time, or just after the birth, his mother Amy passed away, leaving Philip and his two older siblings (above) in the care of their father George and his widowed mother, the elderly Lucy Collett.  According to the census in 1891, the family was residing at 43 Mill Street in Lakenham, Norwich, when Philip was three years old.  Over the next few years his grandmother died in her late seventies and by March 1901 Philip’s widowed father was married for a second time to Catherine.  That year Philip was 13 and Norwich was confirmed as his place of birth, like his two older siblings and younger sister Naomi, when the family was residing at Gordon Road in Norwich.  It was during the next few years that Philip’s father was widowed for a second time and was married for a third time to Hannah in 1905, and by April 1901, when Philip was 23, he was still living at Norwich with his father George and stepmother Hannah, and brother David (above), when Philip Collett was a plate layer employed by the Great Eastern Railway.  Where he was in 1911 remains a mystery, while two years later the marriage of Philip Collett and Annie (Peggy) Cringle took place at Wells-next-the-Sea and was recorded just south of Wells at Walsingham register office (Ref. 4b 604) during the third quarter of 1913.  Annie Cringle was born at Wells-next-the-Sea in 1886, the daughter of fisherman Thomas and Maria Cringle of Boughs Yard in Wells.  Later that same year, the birth of their son Jack, at Wells-next-the-Sea, was recorded at Walsingham register office (Ref. 4b 480) during the fourth quarter of 1913, when his mother’s maiden-name was confirmed as Cringle.  It was at Wells that the family was living in 1914

 

On 1st September 1914, Philip Collett was accepted as a new recruit for the 8th Battalion of the Norfolk Regiment, as a private, service number 12889.  His next-of-kin was his wife Annie Collett of Dogger Lane in Wells-next-the-Sea, Norfolk, with whom he already had a son Jack Collett.  It was at Norwich that he signed up, when he was 28 years and 279 days old, whose occupation was that of a stoker, being 5 feet 8 inches tall and weighing 127 pounds.  He only served for 64 days, when he was discharged for misconducted, when he was described as a very bad character.  The discharged sheets stated “It is not thought that this man misconducted himself with a view to discharge.  His conduct is a very bad example to the men of the New Army”.  It was at Colchester Camp that he was based when he was discharged on 7th November 1914.  Of those 64 days, 14 were spent in detention, with two lots of 10 confined to barracks, for being drunk and absence for parade and duties, while on another occasion he was fined half-a-crown for damages

 

Two more son were added to the family, the births of both of them recorded at Walsingham register office, when their mother’s maiden-name was again confirmed as Cringle.  The first of them during the second quarter of 1915 (Ref. 4a 455), and the second during the first three months of 1920 (Ref. 4b 590).  Nineteen years later, the 1939 Register identified Philip Collett living at 1 Greenhill Place, London Road in Thrupp, near Stroud in Gloucestershire, the home of Walter and Frances Parsons.  Philip Collett was 51 and a carpenter and a rigger, was recorded as a married man, while column 11 of the form said that he was an RAF pensioner 337547

 

18Q180 - Jack Collett was born in 1913 at Wells-next-the-Sea, Norfolk

18Q181 - David Collett was born in 1915 at Wells-next-the-Sea, Norfolk

18Q182 – Edward D Collett was born in 1920 at Wells-next-the-Sea, Norfolk

 

Naomi Collett [18P164] was born at Norwich in 1889, the last of the four children of George Collett and Amy London.  Her birth was recorded at Norwich (Ref. 4b 150) during the second quarter of that year.  She was one year old when her mother died and, with her father having four children to care for, it was baby Naomi who was initially taken in the Rosary Road, Norwich home of George’s older married sister Eliza Giles, nee Collett, where she was two years of age in 1891.  Following her father’s second marriage in 1892, Naomi returned to the family home in Norwich, where she was 12 years old in 1901.  Upon leaving school she took up work in domestic service and adopted the forename of her late mother, and it was as Amy Naomi Collett from Norwich, aged 22, that still was living and working in London at the Lambeth School of Lina Simpson Baibie, the head mistress of a private girls school at 126 128 Hounslow Park Road in Dulwich, where Amy was a parlour maid

 

Two years later the marriage of Naomi Collett and George Edward Wilks was recorded at the Essex Orsett register office (Ref. 4a 836) during the first three months of 1913.  Naomi was 23 and the daughter of George Collett, when the wedding was conducted at the Church of St Margaret of Antioch in Stanford-le-Hope on 23rd January 1913.  The birth of George Edward Wilks was recorded at Billericay (Ref. 4a 397) in Essex during the third quarter of 1889, and it was at Christ Church in Great Warley where he was baptised on 20th October 1889, the son of John and Marian Wilks.  He suffered a premature death when, at the age of only 39 he died with his death recorded at Rochford register office (Ref. 4a 496) during the third quarter of 1929.  The Will of George Edward Wilks of 2 Bull Lane in Raleigh, Essex, was proved at London on 26th September 1929 to Naomi Wilks, widow, to the value of £210 12 Shillings and 9 Pence, following his death on 3rd July 1929.  The later death of Naomi Wilks, at the age of 47, was recorded at Rochford register office (Ref. 4a 669) during the second quarter of 1936

 

Annie Collett [18P165] was born in 1866, with her birth recorded at Brentford in Middlesex (Ref. 3a 41) during the second quarter of that year, the daughter of Hammond Collett and Mary Bradford, who had been married during the spring of the previous year.  She was not listed with her family in 1871, although ten years later, Annie Collett from Brentford was 16 and a servant at The Butts, New Brentford home of builder William Ball and his family.  After a further decade, Annie Collett was correctly recorded as 24 years old when she was working as a cook at Egliston Road in Putney, the home of hydraulic engineer Thomas Wheatley and his family.  It is interesting that by 1901, living with and working for the Wheatley family at Egliston Road, was Sarah Collett aged 35 and from Twickenham who was the cook that year

 

Hammond Isaac Collett [18P166] was born at Strand-on-the-Green in Chiswick on 3rd August 1868 and his birth was also recorded at Brentford (Ref. 3a 91) during the third quarter of the year.  He was the eldest son of Hammond Collett and his wife Mary Bradford and was baptised at Chiswick on 30th August 1868, curiously that was the only occasion that his father was referred to as Hammond Isaac Collett.  As Hammond I Collett, he was two years old in 1871, and was 12 in the Chiswick census of 1881 when he was living with his family at Back Lane.  He was 21 when he was married by banns to Jessie Elizabeth Draper aged 18, on 22nd June 1890 at the parish church for Turnham Green-with-Gunnersbury.  Their wedding was recorded at (Ref. 3a 118) during the second quarter of 1890.  Jessie Eliza had been born at Brisbane, Queensland in Australia on 11th January 1873, and the marriage certificate named her father as William Draper, an engineer, and her mother as Eliza Smith who was a witness and made her marked with a cross.  The male witness was H Collett, presumably Hammond’s father, both father and son described as labourers.  The same address was given for both Hammond and Jessie, that being Turnham Green.  Around nine months after their wedding day, Hammond and Jessie were the only one residing in a dwelling on Kew Bridge Road in Ealing, at what appears to be Star Court.  Hammond was 22 and a labourer from Strand-on-the-Green, and Jessie was 18 and from Australia, who may have already been anticipating the birth of their first child.  The couple lived the early days of their married life in Brentford, where their first two children were born.  It was after they were born, and around the middle of the 1890s, that Hammond and his family settled in the Chiswick area, near to where his parents were still living, and where the couple’s next five children were born.  Towards the end of the century Hammond entered the service of the British Army, initially with the 2nd Battalion Middlesex Regiment, although he later transferred to the Queens Mounted Infantry.  It was during his time with the latter regiment that he saw action in the Second Boer War at Cape Colony from October to December 1899 and the following year in February at Tugela and the Relief of Ladysmith.  He was also involved in the final battle of the War at Transvaal in April 1902

 

However, he may have been on leave at the end of March in 1901 as the census recorded the family living at Chiswick as Hammond Collett, aged 32 who was working as a labourer navvy, his wife Jessie from Brisbane who was 27, and their four sons Hammond Collett (junior) who was nine, William Collett who was eight, John J Collett who was four and Harry Collett who was two years old.  It seems highly likely that Jesse was with-child at the time of the census since latter that same year she gave birth to the couple’s fifth child, and their first of the couple’s three daughters, and all of them born while the family was still living at Chiswick.  It was at 3 Bond Street in Chiswick that the whole family was living in April 1911.  Hammond was 41, his wife Jessie Elizabeth was 38, and their children were Hammond Alexander who was 19, William Alfred who was18, John Isaac who was 14, Jessie Elizabeth who was nine, Rosetta who was six, Rene Rebecca who was four and Albert who was one year old.  Five years later, at the time of the wedding of his eldest son, Hammond Isaac Collett was described as an engineer.  Jessie Elizabeth Collett nee Draper was living in the Brentford area when she passed away in 1938, her death recorded at Brentford register office (Ref. 3a 357) at the age of 65 during the first quarter of that year.  Eighteen months later Hammond I Collett was living at 3 Bond Street in Brentford-with-Chiswick in the 1939 Register.  He was 71 and a general labourer who had living with him his younger unmarried sister Ada E Collett who was 61 and described as being incapacitated, the word ‘invalid’ having been crossed out.  During the next twelve years Hammond continued to live in London, when the death of Hammond I Collett was recorded at Wandsworth register office (Ref. 5d 726) during the second quarter of 1951, when he was 82

 

18Q183 - Hammond Alexander Collett was born in 1891 at Brentford

18Q184 - William Alfred Collett was born in 1893 at Brentford

18Q185 - John Isaac Collett was born in 1897 at Chiswick

18Q186 - Harry Collett was born in 1899 at Chiswick

18Q187 - Jessie Elizabeth Collett was born in 1901 at Chiswick

18Q188 - Rosetta Collett was born in 1904 at Chiswick

18Q189 - Irene Rebecca Collett was born in 1906 at Chiswick

18Q190 - Albert Collett was born in 1909 at Chiswick

 

Mary Ann Collett [18P167] was born at Chiswick in 1870 when her birth was registered at Brentford (Ref. 3a 92) during the first three months of that year.  It was at Chiswick where she was baptised on 20th February 1870, another daughter of Hammond and Mary Collett.  She was one year old at the time of the Chiswick census on 1871.  She was still living with her parents at Back Lane in Chiswick in 1881, when she was 11, and again ten years after that, when Mary A Collett was 21.  Her absence from the census in 1901, as Mary Collett, very likely indicates that she was married by then

 

Alfred Lewis Collett [18P168] was born at Chiswick around 1871, with his birth registered at Brentford (Ref. 3a 88) during the last quarter of the year.  He was nine years old when living with his family at Back Lane in Chiswick in 1881.  He was still living there in 1891 when he was 19 and was working as a bargeman’s mate on the River Thames at Brentford.  Like his two brothers Hammond Isaac (above) and Robert (below), Alfred served as a professional soldier from June 1891 with the 2nd Battalion Middlesex Regiment.  On 22nd February 1892 he sailed from Waterford in Ireland to India on board HMS Crocodile.  It was while he was serving at Ahmednagar in India that he was hospitalised on five occasions, suffering with malaria, between 1892 and 1894.  It was many years later, on 2nd December 1899, that he sailed with the regiment from Southampton aboard the SS Avondale Castle for South Africa where they arrived at Cape Town on Boxing Day.  During the period from December 1899 to 31st May 1901, while fighting in the Second Boer War, Private Alfred managed to write a diary of his experiences and this can be found on the website:  www.muralartist.co.uk/diary/diary.htm.  Once he was back at home in England, Alfred married spinster Rose Punter on 25th December 1902 in Christ Church at Turnham Green in Chiswick, the event recorded at Brentford register office (Ref. 3a 274) at the end of the year.  Rose was born on 17th December 1880, her birth registered at Kingston-on-Thames (Ref. 2a 315) during the first quarter of 1881 as Rosa Punter, the daughter of James Punter and Mary Ann Huggins.  Their marriage produced a total of five children, the births of all of them recorded at Richmond register office, when the family home was at 21 Cambridge Cottages in Kew Green from 1906 onwards.  It was at that address that Alfred, Rose and their first two children, were living in 1911, just a short distance from 15 Cambridge Cottages, the home of Alfred’s brother Robert Collett (below).  Alfred Lewis Collett from Chiswick was 39 and a general labourer working in the building industry, his wife Rose was 30 and from Kingston, and their two children were Alfred Lewis Collett junior who was seven and Freda Collett who was three years old, both of them born said to have been born at Richmond, where their births were certainly recorded

 

Three more children were added to their family at 21 Cambridge Cottages in Kew Green, although the last of them suffered an infant death.  Arthur Collett was born on 4th November 1916, his birth recorded at Richmond register office (Ref. 2a 819), when his mother’s maiden-name was confirmed as Punter, and it was there also, where his death was recorded (Ref. 2a 770) during the first quarter of 1918, when he was one year old.  Three years earlier, just after the start of the First World War, Alfred Lewis Collett of that address was 43 years 6 months when he enlisted with the army on 28th April 1915 at Hornsey.  He was described as being five feet six inches, with a tattoo of a ship on his chest.  His wife was confirmed as Rose Punter, while the full names for their five children were also included on the enlistment form.  It was on 24th June 1915 that he was made Private 38186 and assigned to 19th Battalion of the Middlesex Regiment, the Pioneers and, on 16th July 1917, he was transferred to the Suffolk Regiment.  However, while it was on 29th March 1918 that he was discharged from duty, being no longer physically fit for war service.  His military service record therefore stated that, by that time, he had completed two years and three hundred-and thirty-six-days service.  Most of that time was spent ‘in the field’ but, for a few days, at the end of March and the beginning of April in 1917, he was sick and had returned to England. 

 

Curiously, for some reason, the baptism of the couple’s two youngest children was conducted at St Mary’s Church in West Horsley, midway between Guildford and Leatherhead in Surrey on 3rd February 1915 and 23rd November 1916 respectively, where the parish register confirmed the parents as Alfred Lewis and Rose Collett.  It would appear that those two events, twenty-six miles south of Kew Green, were part of a temporary arrangement for the family, perhaps because of the danger of being in South London during the Great War.  However, upon the tragic death of one-year-old son Arthur in early 1918, the family was already back in Richmond, where his death was recorded.  Furthermore, it was certainly at 24 Kew Green in Richmond, that the family was living at the start of the Second World War.  The 1939 Register listed the six members of the extended family as: Alfred L Collett an old age pensioner of sixty-eight years; Rose Collett aged 58; Alfred F Knight, son-in-law, Freda R M Knight, married daughter, Joyce Knight, granddaughter; and Ronald Knight, grandson.  After the Second World War, Alfred and Rose were living at 21 Cambridge Cottages in Kew Green, where Alfred passed away at the age of 83, the death of Alfred Lewis Collett recorded at the Surrey Northern register office (Ref. 5g 424) during the second quarter of 1955.  It was there also, eight years after being made a widow, that the death of Rose Collett was recorded (Ref. 5g 777) during the first quarter of 1963, when she was 83

 

18Q191 - Alfred Lewis Collett was born in 1903 at Richmond

18Q192 - Freda Rose Mary Collett was born in 1907 at Kew Green (Richmond)

18Q193 - John Collett was born in 1912 at Kew Green (Richmond)

18Q194 - Marjorie Collett was born in 1915 at Kew Green (Richmond)

18Q195 - Arthur Collett was born in 1916 at Kew Green (Richmond)

 

ROBERT COLLETT [18P169] was born at Chiswick on 16th August 1875, his birth registered at Brentford (Ref. 3a 99) during the third quarter of the year.  He was baptised at Chiswick on 24th October 1875, another son of Hammond and Mary Collett.  He was five years of age and 15 years old in the Chiswick census returns for 1881 and 1891.  He married Edith Martha Sykes on 26th December 1903 at Brentford, and their wedding recorded at Brentford register office (Ref. 3a 309).  Edith was born on 14th October 1884, the daughter of John Sykes and Maria Harper, her birth registered at Fulham (Ref. 1a 187), and it was at Hammersmith St Peter’s Church that she was baptised on 4th November 1884.  In 1891 Robert was a labourer, an occupation that he continued with for those parts of his life when he was not in military service.  As with his two older brothers Hammond and Alfred, Robert was a member of the 2nd Battalion Middlesex Regiment and saw active service during the Second Boer War.  At some point during his military career, he transferred to the Queens Mounted Infantry of the Middlesex Regiment, as did his brother Hammond Collett (above).  It is generally known, within the family, that he fought at Klerksdorp in 1901 and was awarded the Victoria South Africa Medal 1901 with clasps (below left) for the campaigns at Transvaal, Orange Free State, Relief of Ladysmith, Tugela Heights and Cape Colony.  He also received the King Edward VII South Africa Medal with 1901 and 1902 clasps (below right).  Robert also served with the British Army during the First World War

 

 

Both medals carry the inscription “Private 4998 H Collett” which would appear that they were given to Hammond Collett.  However, the present-day family are convinced that they were presented to Robert Collett who, curiously, also had the service number 4998.  An independent investigation by an expert in military history has been undertaken to try to resolve this matter, and these are his findings.  I found an H Collett, number 4998, in both the King's and the Queen's medal rolls being listed with 2nd Battalion Middlesex in the Queen's, but no battalions were given in the King's.  There was also in the Queen's an R Collett, but his number was also given as 4998.  He was with the Mounted Infantry Company of the Middlesex.  The numbers for Robert Collett in the WWI medal rolls are 3429 (Middlesex Regiment) and 21367 (Labour Corp).  I also found in the WWI medal rolls, Hammond Collett no 42708 (Royal Field Artillery) as a Gunner and a Bombardier.”

 

According to the census of 1911 the family was still living in Chiswick, where Robert Collett from Chiswick was 35 and a gardener and general labourer, Edith Martha Collett from Hammersmith was 27, and their two children at that time were Robert John Collett who was six, and William Hammond Collett who was one year old, both of whom had been born at Chiswick.  Also living with the family on that occasion was Robert’s elderly widowed mother Mary Collett from Kingston, who was seventy years old.  Edith was due to give birth to the couple’s third child before the end of that year, with the birth of the first of their two daughters.  Robert’s brother Alfred (above) lived at 21 Cambridge Cottages in Kew Green from 1906, with Robert and his family moving into 15 Cambridge Cottages not long after 1911, where their last child was born.  Between the two world wars, Robert resumed his job as a labourer, securing a position with the Port of London Authority.  It was certainly at 15 Cambridge Cottages where Robert lived for the remainder of his life.  Living close by at 21 Cambridge Cottages was his brother Alfred Collett who had moved there in 1906.  It is also understood within the family that Robert took up arms again during the First World War but, so far, no military records have been found to confirm that happened

 

On the occasion of the marriage of his second son at Chiswick in 1932, the groom’s father was described as Robert J Collett, a labourer with the Port of London Authority.  Which may have been an error, since all of the records only give his name as simply Robert Collett.  Where there may be confusion, is with the fact that it was William’s older brother Robert John Collett who signed the marriage register as one of the witnesses.  By 1939, the Register that year identified Robert and Edith living at 15 Cambridge Cottages in Richmond, where Robert was a general labourer undertaking heavy work at the age of 64, and Edith M Collett was 55.  Their daughter Alice A Collett was still living with them and was employed as a domestic servant.  Residing at 9 Cambridge Cottages was Robert’s nephew John Collett [18Q193] a milk salesman, and his wife May Alexandra Collett.  Robert Collett died during July 1954, his death recorded at Surrey North register office (Ref. 5g 358) during the third quarter of 1954, at the age of 78.  Sixteen years after being widowed, Edith Martha Collett died at Richmond in Surrey on 25th December 1970, her death recorded at Richmond register office (Ref. 5d 1935) when she was 87

 

18Q196 - ROBERT JOHN COLLETT was born in 1904 at Chiswick

18Q197 - William Hammond Collett was born in 1910 at Chiswick

18Q198 - Alice Ada Collett was born in 1911 at Chiswick

18Q199 - Winifred Rose Collett was born in 1915 at Kew

 

Ada Emily Collett [18P170] was born at Chiswick on 17th October 1877, her birth registered at Brentford (Ref. 3a 83) during the fourth quarter of 1877.  She was baptised at Chiswick on 18th November 1877, daughter of Hammond and Mary Collett.  She was three years old and 12 years of age in the next two Chiswick census returns.  Ten years later in March 1901, Ada was 23, when she was still living with her parents and younger sister Rosella (below) at Chiswick.  By 1911, Ada Collett was recorded in the census that year as a boarder at 16 Geraldine Road, Strand-on-the-Green in Chiswick, the home of Benjamin and Lilian Nicholls, when she said she was 31 and born at Kew Bridge.  She never married and, at the start of the Second World War, Ada E Collett was living at the home of her eldest brother, Hammond I Collett, a widower, at 3 Bond Street in Brentford-with-Chiswick, when the 1939 Register noted that she was incapacitated.  Three years later the death of Ada Emily Collett was recorded at Brentford register office (Ref. 3a 225) during the third quarter of 1942, when she was 63

 

John Collett [18P171] was born at Back Lane in Chiswick on 21st September 1880 when his birth was recorded at Brentford (Ref. 3a 75) during the last three months of that year.  It was at Chiswick that he was baptised on 17th October 1880, a son of Hammond and Mary Collett.  He was six months old on the day of the census in 1881, when he was living at Back Lane with his family.  By 1891 he was 10 years old and still living with his parents in Chiswick, but by 1901 at the age of 20, he was a private with the 3rd Battalion of the Middlesex Regiment.  Although not listed on the Commonwealth War Graves Commission website, it is understood that John Collett of the Middlesex regiment died during the Battle of the Somme

 

Rosetta Collett [18P172] was born at Back Lane in Chiswick on 1st January 1883, her birth registered at Brentford (Ref. 3a 112) during the first three months of 1883.  She was baptised at Chiswick on 28th January 1883, the last child of Hammond Collett and his wife Mary Bradford.  She was eight years old in 1891 and was 18 at the time of the 1901 Census, when her occupation was that of a domestic servant.  On that day she was working at a lodging house ‘Zachery’ at 70 Strand-on-the-Green in Chiswick and not far from her parents.  Two years later, the marriage of Rosetta Collett and Richard Edgar Miller Sheldrick was recorded at Brentford register office (Ref. 3a 203) during the second quarter of 1903.  Their wedding, after the reading of banns during the Sunday church service over the three previous weeks, took place at Chiswick on 1st June 1903.  On the day of the census in 1911, the childless couple was residing at 17 Treport Street in Wandsworth, where Richard Sheldrick from Camden Town was 31 and a private drayman employed at a local brewery, and his wife of eight years was Rosetta Sheldrick from Chiswick who was 28.  The couple was still together in 1939, when they were living at 12 Coliston Road in Wandsworth, where Rosetta was 56 and Richard was 60 and working as a milk roundsman.  His date of birth was recorded in the 1939 Register as 10th April 1879.  Thirty years after that, the death of Rosetta Sheldrick was recorded at Wandsworth register office (Ref. 5e 1304) during the second quarter of 1969, when she was 86.  For the last fifteen years of her life, she had been a widow, following the death of Richard, which was also recorded at Wandsworth register officer (Ref. 5d 684) during the second quarter of 1954 at the age of 74

 

John Collett [18P173] was born at Chelsea on 20th December 1866, the eldest child of John Collett of Wilby, Suffolk and Sarah Mallett of Pimlico.  Not long after the birth of his brother Ephraim (below), his parents moved out of London when they settled in Wilby, where all of the remaining siblings were born.  That was confirmed in the census of 1871 when John was three years old.  By 1881 he was 13 and he and his family were living on the Framlingham Road in Wilby, and ten years after that he was 23 and still living there with his family.  It was towards the end of the following year that John married Ellen Muttock at Wilby on 3rd November 1892, the event recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 1567).  Ellen was born in the nearby town of Eye, and before the end of the century she had presented John with three children.  The first two children were born at Wilby, with the third born after the family had moved to Shotley near Harwich.  At the time of the 1901 Census, the family was living at Shotley across the River Stour from Harwich.  John 33 was an ordinary agricultural labourer, Ellen was 32 and their children were Ernest Collett who was six, Emily Collett who was four, and John Collett who was one year old.  During the following year, another son was added to the family while they were still living at Shotley.  It was also at Shotley, the couple’s last child was born, but suffered an infant death.  Like their previous children, the birth of Charlotte Collett was recorded at Samford register office (Ref. 4a 1007) during the second quarter of 1905, as was her death (Ref. 4a 479) during that same three-month period

 

Shortly after that tragic event, the family left Shotley and moved inland to Bury-St-Edmunds where they were living in 1911.  John was 43 and his wife Ellen was 44, and both of them said that they were from Wilby, like their oldest son.  Only three of their four children were listed with them, and they were Ernest Collett 16, John William Collett 11, and Herbert George Collett who was eight years old.  By that time, the couple’s daughter Emily had left school and was recorded working at the home of the large Cobbald family in Bury-St-Edmunds, where she was listed as Emily Collett from Wilby who was 14 years of age and employed as a domestic maid.  In the 1939 Register John and Ellen were living at Great Green in Thedwastre, near Bury-St-Edmunds, and still had living with them was their son John W Collett who was unmarried at the age of 39.  John Collett was 62 and employed as a yardman on a farm, while Ellen Collett was also 62, her date of birth being 17th May 1867.  The death of Ellen Collett was recorded at Bury-St-Edmunds register office (Ref. 4a 1366) during the first three months of 1944 when she was said to be 74 instead of 76

 

18Q200 - Ernest Collett was born in 1894 at Wilby

18Q201 - Emily Collett was born in 1896 at Wilby

18Q202 - John William Collett was born in 1900 at Shotley

18Q203 - Herbert George Collett was born in 1902 at Shotley

18Q204 - Herbert George Collett was born in 1905 at Shotley

 

Ephraim George Collett [18P174] was born at Chelsea in 1870 where his birth was recorded (Ref. 1a 253) during the second quarter of the year and, just after he was born his family moved to Wilby, where he was baptised on 28th May 1870.  It was at Framlingham Road in Wilby that the family was living in 1871 and 1881, where Ephraim was living with his family at the age of one year and eleven years respectively.  Ten years later in 1891, Ephraim Collett was 21 when he was a bachelor living and working at Walsham-le-Willows to the north of Stowmarket.  It was two years after that day, when the marriage of Ephraim George Collett and Alice Louisa Mulley was recorded at the Suffolk Stow register office (Ref. 4a 1163) during the third quarter of 1903.  The birth of Alice from Elmswell, just five miles south of Walsham-le-Willows, and midway between Bury-St-Edmunds and Stowmarket, on 19th February 1876 was also registered at Stow (Ref. 4a 587) during the first quarter of 1876.  And it was at Elmswell that the couple settled and where all of their children were born, although sadly, two of their sons only lived for a very short time.  By March 1901 Ephraim G Collett, aged 31 and from Chelsea, was a bricklayer at Elmswell.  His wife was Alice L Collett, aged 25, and their three surviving children at that time were Edith May Collett who was seven, Ephraim Geo Collett who was five, and Bessie A Collett who was only one year old.  Four more children were added to the family during the next decade, although one suffered an infant death, so by April 1911 the family still living at Elmswell comprised Ephraim George Collett 43, Alice Louisa Collett 35, and their six children.  Edith May Collett was 17, Ephraim George Collett was 15, Bessie Amelia Collett was 11, Walter Herbert Collett was eight, Cyril Charles Collett was seven, and Gladys Dorothy Collett was two years old.  All occupants of the house, except Ephraim, were confirmed as having been born at Elmswell.  The lost child was William Orby Collett whose birth and death were recorded at Stow register office during the first six months of 1907, the birth in the first quarter (Ref. 4a 961) and his death in the second quarter (Ref. 4a 481)

 

The birth of their son Walter Herbert Collett was recorded at the Stow, Suffolk register office (Ref. 4a 959) during the second quarter of 1902, while it was at Hackney register office in London (Ref. 1b 396) that his death was recorded during the fourth quarter of 1935, at the age of 33.  Four years later, the 1939 Register included Alice Louisa Collett, with her youngest daughter Katherine, and daughter-in-law Lily, the wife of Alice’s son Cyril who was working in London at that time.  All three of them were described as having no occupation but undertaking unpaid domestic duties.  Alice was 63, Katherine was 27, and Lily was 29, when they were residing at Rose Lane in Thedwastre (Bury-St-Edmunds).  Where Alice’s husband was on that day has still to be discovered

 

The later death of Ephraim George Collett was recorded at Cuckfield register office (Ref. 5h 177) in West Sussex during the second quarter of 1953, when he was 83.  A marble headstone marks his grave, which also includes his wife and their son Walter, who suffered an early death.  The elaborate grave has the following inscription: “In Loving Memory of Walter Herbert Collett who passed away Oct 22nd 1935 aged 33 years - In the prime of years I was cut down, no longer could I stay, because it was my saviours will, to call me hence away.  Till we meet again.  Also of Ephraim George Collett who passed away June 18th 1953 aged 83 years at rest.  Also of his wife Alice Louisa who died June 24th 1968 aged 92 years.  Reunited”  The death of Alice Louisa Collett was recorded at Bury-St-Edmunds register office (Ref. 4b 1073)

 

18Q205 - Edith May Collett was born in 1893 at Elmswell

18Q206 - Ephraim George Collett was born in 1895 at Elmswell

18Q207 - Henry James Collett was born in 1897 at Elmswell

18Q208 - Bessie Amelia Collett was born in 1899 at Elmswell

18Q209 - Walter Herbert Collett was born in 1902 at Elmswell

18Q210 - Cyril Charles Collett was born in 1904 at Elmswell

18Q211 - William Orby Collett was born in 1907 at Elmswell

18Q212 - Gladys Dorothy Collett was born in 1908 at Elmswell

18Q213 – Katherine G Collett was born in 1912 at Elmswell

 

Robert Collett [18P175] was born at Framlingham Road in Wilby in 1871, his birth registered at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 533) during the fourth quarter of the year.  It was also at Wilby where he was baptised on 17th November 1871, the third son of John and Sarah Collett.  He was nine years old and 19 years old respectively in the Wilby census returns for 1881 and 1891, when he was living with his family at Framlingham Road.  Tragically, Robert Collett died four years later, his death recorded at Hoxne register office (Ref. 4a 485) during the third quarter of the year, and was buried at Wilby on 30th June 1895 aged 23

 

Alfred Louis Collett [18P176] was born at Framlingham Road in Wilby in 1872, his birth recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 589) during the third quarter of that year.  He was around six months old when he was baptised at Wilby on 13th April 1873, the fourth son of John and Sarah Collett.  He was eight years old at the time of the 1881 Census when he was living with his family at Framlingham Road in Wilby.  Ten years later he was still living there with his family at the age of 18.  Alfred was still a bachelor in March 1901 when he was 28 and working as an agricultural labourer while still living at Wilby with his parents.  It was nearly eight years later, when the marriage of Alfred Louis Collett and Elizabeth Anne Clark was recorded at Hartismere register office (Ref. 4a 1887) during the final quarter of 1908.  It was simply as Elizabeth Clark that she was born on 13th May 1868, with her birth registered at Hartismere (Ref. 4a 535) during the second quarter of 1868.  By 1911 the family of three was living at Dennington, just north of Framlingham, and staying with them was Alfred’s younger brother Charles (below) and their widowed father John Collett.  The full Dennington census return listed the occupants of the house as Alfred Louis Collett of Wilby who was 38 and a farm labourer, his wife of two years Elizabeth Anna Collett was 43 and from Bury-St-Edmunds, their niece Emily Amelia Collett who was eight and of Wilby, Alfred’s unmarried brother Charles Collett of Wilby who was 32 and a roadman labourer, and his father John Collett, also of Wilby, who was 67 and a bricklayer.  Alfred’s niece was the base-born daughter of Emily Collett, his youngest surviving sister.  The later death of Alfred Louis Collett was recorded at Bury-St-Edmunds register office (Ref. 4a 1008) during the second quarter of 1938 when he was 65.  On the day of the 1939 Register, Elizabeth A Collett, a widow, was a lodger at 387 Scot Lane in Wigan, the home of James Berry and his wife.  The subsequent death of Elizabeth Anne Collett was recorded at Wigan register office (Ref. 8c 50) during the first three months of 1944, at the age of 76

 

Harry Collett [18P177] was born at Framlingham Road in Wilby in 1874, his birth registered at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 609) during the second quarter of the year.  It was also at Wilby that he was baptised 27th September 1874, and there too that he died a year later and was buried there on 29th August 1875, the fifth son of John Collett and Sarah Mallett.  He was listed as being one year old in the burial record at Wilby, when his premature death was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 338)

 

James Collett [18P178] was born at Framlingham Road in Wilby in 1875 with his birth registered at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 623) during the second quarter of that year.  He was baptised at Wilby on 30th May 1875, another son of John and Sarah Collett.  He was five years old in the census of 1881 and was 16 years of age in the Wilby census return for 1891 when he was still living there with his large family.  It was just over two years later that he died there, his death recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 431) during the second quarter of 1893, when he was buried at Wilby on 12th April 1893 aged 17

 

Charles Collett [18P179] was born at Framlingham Road in Wilby in 1876, when again, like those of his siblings, his birth was registered at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 609) during the third quarter of the year.  He was baptised at Wilby on 20th August 1876, the seventh child of John and Sarah Collett.  Charles was four years old and 15 years old while living at the family home in Framlingham Road in Wilby in 1881 and 1891.  Sometime later he travelled to London to seek work and in 1901 was living in Chelsea where his two oldest brothers had been born and where at 25 years of age he was employed as a labourer in a distillery.  Ten years later Charles was still a bachelor at 32 when he was a roadman labourer who was living in Dennington at the Suffolk home of his older married brother Alfred Louis Collett (above) and his family.  Also living there with them was Charles and Alfred’s widowed father John Collett

 

Sarah Ann Collett [18P180] was born at Framlingham Road in Wilby in 1878, her birth registered at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 659) during the second quarter of the year.  Her baptism was conducted at Wilby on 21st April 1878, the first daughter and eighth child of the thirteen children of John and Sarah Collett.  Sarah was three and 13 in the next two Wilby census returns, but by the time of the March census in 1901 she had left the family home and was working as a general domestic servant at Mellis, south of Diss, where she was 23

 

Amelia Betsy Collett [18P181] was born at Framlingham Road in Wilby in 1879 with her birth registered at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 663) during the second quarter of the year.  She was quickly baptised at Wilby on 1st June 1879 and tragically died a week later, when her death was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 397) and she was buried at Wilby on 8th June 1879

 

Emily Collett [18P182] was born at Framlingham Road in Wilby during September in 1880, her birth registered at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 634) in the last quarter of that year.  and was six months old at the time of the 1881 Census.  She was living with her family at Framlingham Road and had been baptised at Wilby at three months old on 12th December 1880.  Following the premature deaths of her three younger siblings (below), Emily was the youngest child of John and Sarah Collett still living with them at Wilby in 1891 when she was 10 years old.  It seems likely that she moved to London with her older brother Charles (above), since in 1901 she was a domestic servant aged 20, who was working and living in the Kensington district of the city.  Towards the end of the following year, Emily returned home and gave birth to a base-born daughter at Wilby, the birth of Emily Amelia Collett recorded at Hoxne register office (Ref. 4a 968) during the last three months of 1902.  It is likely that mother and child continued to live in Wilby with her father, until her older brother Alfred Louis Collett (above) was married towards the end of 1908, when daughter Emily was given to him and his wife to raise.  In the Dennington census of 1911, both Emily’s widowed father John Collett and her eight-year-old daughter Emily Amelia Collett were recorded with Alfred and his wife Elizabeth Anna Collett.  It is possible that it was this Emily Amelia Collett who married Charles S Payne at the Suffolk Stow register office (Ref. 4a 2391) during the fourth quarter of 1927

 

Perhaps it was the embarrassment of having a child out of wedlock, that resulted in Emily leaving Suffolk and moving to London to seek work there.  It was there, south of the River Thames, in the Woolwich area of the city, that the marriage of Emily Collett and Ernest Leonard Stroud was recorded (Ref. 1d 1649) during the first the months of 1910.  The couple was married by banns at Holy Trinity Church in Woolwich on 15th February 1910, when Emily was 27 and a domestic servant living at 37 Gough Street, the daughter of John Collett, a bricklayer.  Ernest was 23 and a labourer living at 19 Gough Street, the son of labourer Henry Stroud.  They both signed the register in their own hand, while the two witnesses were Evan and Caroline McCrae.  Leonard’s birth was registered at Croydon (Ref. 2a 216) during the first quarter of 1887, following his birth on 24th December 1886 and was baptised on 24th August 1887, the son of labourer Henry Stroud and his wife Sarah of 2 Edith Cottages, Parchmore Road in Thornton Heath, Surrey.  It was during the third quarter of 1967, when he was 80, that the death of Henry George Stroud was recorded at Greenwich register office (Ref. 5b 349).  His Will was proved at Lewes in Sussex on 15th August 1967 to Harry Purkiss, an omnibus driver for £625.  The probate process also revealed that he had been residing at 20 Admiral Seymour Road at Eltham in the London Borough of Greenwich, but passed on 10th July 1967 at Brook Hospital in Greenwich

 

18Q214 - Emily Amelia Collett was born in 1902 at Wilby

 

Mary Ann Collett [18P183] was born at Framlingham Road in Wilby in 1882 and her birth was registered at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 672) during the third quarter of the year.  She was baptised at Wilby on 21st January 1883, but died six weeks later and was buried at Wilby on 7th March 1883, aged seven months, her death recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 414)

 

Ernest Collett [18P184] was born at Wilby in 1884 with his birth registered at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 719) during the second quarter of the year.  He was then baptised at Wilby on 21st May 1884, the twelfth child of John Collett and his wife Sarah Mallett.  Tragically, he was ten months old when he also suffered an infant death, like other members of the family, when his death was recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 489) during the first quarter of 1885.  Ernest Collett was then buried at Wilby on 30th January 1885 at the age of just ten months

 

Arthur Collett [18P185] was born at Wilby in 1885, the last child of John and Sarah Collett, and their seventh child to die while still an infant.  His birth was registered at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 726) during the final three months of the year, after which he was baptised at Wilby on 25th October 1885.  Sadly, he was nearly one year old when he died with his death also recorded at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 422) and was buried at Wilby on 12th September 1886

 

Cornelius Collett [18P186] was born at Wilby on 11th October 1874, his birth registered at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 573) during the last two months of that year.  It was also at Wilby, where he was baptised on 1st November 1874, the son of Alfred Collett of Wilby and his wife Caroline Smith from Brundish.  At the time of the census in 1881, Cornelius Collett was six years old and the eldest child of the family living with his parents at Framlingham Road in Wilby.  In 1891 Cornelius was 16 and a drover like his father, when he was still living at the family home with his parents in Wilby.  Some years later his work took him north to Yorkshire.  According to the census in 1901, Cornelius Collett from Wilby in Suffolk, was a bachelor aged 27, and was living at Pocklington in the East Riding of Yorkshire where he was employed as a domestic ostler.  Later that same year, the marriage of Cornelius Collett and Elizabeth Tennison was recorded at Pocklington register office (Ref. 9d 176) during the fourth quarter of 1901, with whom he had three children by 1905.  The birth of Elizabeth was registered at Beverley (Yorkshire) during the last quarter of 1873 (Ref. 9d 91), and was baptised at Hull on 4th February 1874, the daughter of William and Hannah Tennison

 

Initially, the couple lived at Pocklington, where their first child was born, before moving to Cadeby Road in Sprotbrough on the west side of Doncaster, where they were living in April 1911.  The three-roomed dwelling had six members of the Collett family living there.  They were Cornelius Collett from Stradbroke who was 39 and a shepherd on a farm, and his wife of nine years Elizabeth Collett from South Cave near Hull who was also 39.  She had given birth to four children, the last of which was included on the census form with a note that she had already died sixteen days after she was born, whose details were crossed out.  The three surviving children were Caroline Collett who was eight and born at Pocklington, Alfred Collett who was seven, and Florence Collett who was five years old, both of them born at High Melton two miles west of Sprotbrough.  The child who did not survive was Martha Collett, whose birth was recorded at Doncaster register office (Ref. 9c 844) during the last quarter of 1909, with her death sixteen days later also recorded there (Ref. 9c 426) during the same quarter of 1909

 

During the second quarter of 1934, Cornelius was widowed when the death of Elizabeth Collett was recorded at Doncaster register office (Ref. 9c 838) at the age of 62.  Five years after the loss, Cornelius Collett working as a cowman at Kilham Farm just south of Doncaster, when he was 65.  He was 81 years old when the death of Cornelius Collett was recorded at Yorkshire register office (Ref. 2d 138) during the third quarter of 1954

 

18Q215 - Caroline Collett was born in 1902 at Pocklington

18Q216 - Alfred Collett was born in 1903 at High Melton, Doncaster

18Q217 - Florence Elizabeth Collett was born in 1905 at High Melton, Doncaster

18Q218 - Martha Collett was born in 1909 at Sprotbrough, Doncaster

 

David Collett [18P187] was born at Wilby in 1876, with his birth registered at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 631) during the second quarter of that year.  He was also baptised at Wilby on August 1876, the second child of Alfred and Caroline Collett.  By the time he was five years of age, David and his family were living at Framlingham Road in Wilby, where he may have been born.  After a further ten years, he and his family had moved to Laxfield Road in Stradbroke where, David Collett was 15 years old in the census of 1891.  By that time, he had left school and was already working as an agricultural labourer.  No record of him has been found after that day

 

Elizabeth Collett [18P188] was born at Wilby near the end of 1877, with her birth registered at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 600) during the last three months of that year.  It was a few months later when she was baptised at Wilby on 21st April 1878, the eldest daughter of Alfred and Caroline Collett.  Elizabeth was two years of age in 1881, when living at Framlingham Road in Wilby, and was 14 years old and helping her mother in 1891, but at Laxfield Road in nearby Stradbroke.  Seven years later, the marriage of Elizabeth Collett and George William Cunningham took place at Wilby and was recorded at Hoxne register office (Ref. 4a 927) during the first three months of 1898.  As George William Cunningham his birth was registered at Ipswich (Ref. 4a 571) during the last quarter of 1871.  Perhaps at the end of that year, or early in 1899, Elizabeth gave birth to the first of her two children who, both suffered a premature death, although they were both living with the couple in 1901.  Both children had been born at Wilby, like their mother, but in 1901 the family of four was living at Flowton Road in Elmsett, north-west of Ipswich.  William was 27 and an ordinary agricultural labourer, Elizabeth was 24, and the two children were Maria Jane Cunningham (born 1899) who was two and Alfred William Cunningham (1900-1902) who was not yet one year old.  Those two children were replaced by another two young children by the time of the census in 1911.  By that time the family was residing in Saxtead where William Cunningham was 40 and a labourer on a farm, Elizabeth Cunningham was 33, and the two newcomers were Robert Percy Cunningham (born in 1905) who was three and Caroline Violet Cunningham (born 1910) who was one year old, both of them born at Wilby like their mother.  The later death of William Cunningham was recorded at Norwich register office (Ref. 4a 124) during the second quarter of 1946 at the age of 76.  Just was just under ten years later that the death of Elizabeth Cunningham was recorded at Essex South-Western register office (Ref. 5a 234) during the first three months of 1956, when she was 78

 

Annie Collett [18P189] was born at Framlingham Road in Wilby in 1880, her birth as Annie Collett registered at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 654) during the third quarter of the year.  She was baptised at Wilby 5th September 1880 and, as Anna, she was nine months old in the Wilby census of 1881.  After a further ten years Anne Collett was said to be 12 years of age.  The fact that her older sister Elizabeth (above) was married just after the start of 1898, it must be assumed that it was unmarried Annie Collett who gave birth to a base-born daughter around that same time.  It is also possible that Annie did not survive the ordeal, since no record of her has been found in the census of 1901, when her baby girl had been taken into the care of Annie’s parents, where Ethel Minnie Collett was three years of age at Stradbroke, who was still living with her paternal grandparents in 1911 as Ethel Collett who was 13 and still attending school

 

18Q219 - Ethel Minnie Collett was born in 1897 at Stradbroke

 

Dinah Collett [18P190] was born at Stradbroke during in the summer 1882 and was baptised there on 21st January 1883, the daughter of Alfred and Caroline Collett.  Sadly, she died there and was buried at Stradbroke on 24th April 1883 at the age of only nine months.  The birth of Dinah Collett was registered at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 665) in the third quarter of 1882, where her death was also recorded (Ref. 4a 409)

 

Kate Collett [18P191] was born at Stradbroke in 1884, the youngest surviving child Alfred Collet of Wilby and his wife Caroline Smith of Brundish.  Her birth was registered at Hoxne (Ref. 4a 719) during the first three months of that year.  She was possibly born at Laxfield Road in Stradbroke, where she was living with her family in 1891, where Katy Collett was seven years old.  Ten years later, in 1901, she was the only child still living with her married mother and head of the household at Wootten Green near Stradbroke, while her father was working away in Ipswich.  Kate Collett, aged 18 and from Stradbroke, was working as a general domestic servant at that time.  The only other person living at the address was the granddaughter of Kate’s mother and therefore the base-born child of her late sister Annie Collett (above)

 

Thomas Tomlin Collett [18Q0] whose birth was registered at Hackney (Ref. 1b 369) during the second quarter of 1866, was born at Upper Clapton within the London Borough of Hackney, the eldest child of Thomas Trusson Collett and his cousin Georgiana Collett.  His second forename was his paternal grandmother’s maiden-name.  It was also at the Parish Church of St Matthews in Hackney that he was baptised on 15th May 1866, when his parents were confirmed as Thomas Trusson Collett of Upper Clapton, a merchant, and his wife Georgiana.  Tragically, as their first child, he died prior to the birth of the couple’s second son, who was simply named as Thomas Collett in his honour.  The death of Thomas Tomlin Collett was registered at Hackney (Ref. 1b 221) during the second quarter of 1867, before reaching the age of one year, following which, he was buried on 17th April 1867 in the Collett family grave at the Church of St Mary the Blessed Virgin in Woodnesborough in Kent, where his father was born and baptised

 

Thomas Collett [18Q1] was born at Upper Clapton in Hackney in 1867, another son of Thomas Trusson Collett and his cousin Georgiana Collett, whose birth was registered at Hackney (Ref. 1b 377) during the fourth quarter of that year, and later confirmed in his college records at Cambridge.  The baptism of Thomas Collett, as distinct from his late brother Thomas Tomlin Collett (above), also took place at St Matthew’s Church in Hackney on 28th November 1867, when his father was described as a gentleman.  He was three years of age in the Hackney census of 1871, when he and his family were again residing in Upper Clapton.  While still a young child, Thomas’ parents eventually left London around 1873-1874, following the birth his brother Francis (below) at Upper Clapton, but prior to his infant death near the end of 1874, to set up home at Woodnesborough in Kent, where his father had been born and baptised.  However, according to the 1881 Census Thomas was the only member of his family living in the United Kingdom at that time.  What the census does reveal was that Thomas Collett from London, Middlesex, aged 13, was attending The Lines Private School at Sutton Valence in Kent as a boarder, when it is known that the rest of his family was living at Woodnesborough, where Thomas’ sibling Trusson Collett was born, died, and was buried around the time of the census day in 1881

 

Sadly, it was just over four months later that Thomas’ father died during the month of August that year.  Five years later, on 9th October 1886, Thomas entered Clare College at Cambridge, but for some reason he must have been withdrawn after a few years, because the university records indicate that he was re-admitted on 17th January 1891.  Just over two months later Thomas Collett, aged 23 and an under-graduate at Cambridge, was living at Ringleton, Woodnesborough in Kent with his widowed mother Georgiana and his three younger siblings, William, Charles, and Katharine (below), as recorded in the census of 1891.  The Clare College re-entry record for 1891 confirmed that Thomas was the son and heir of Thomas Trusson Collett of Ringleton (House) in Kent, and that he was born in 1867.  The record also stated that he had matriculated in 1886, gained his BA in 1892, and been awarded an MA in 1896.  Between the latter two dates, he was ordained as a deacon in 1894, and became a priest at Exeter in Devon during 1895.  He was the Curate at St Jude’s Church in Plymouth from 1894 to 1899, when he took up the post of Vicar of St Mary’s Church in Doncaster which he held for ten years until 1909

 

It was while Thomas was living in Devon that he met and it was at Plymouth register office (Ref. 5b 349) that the marriage of Thomas Collett and Agnes Maude Bewes was recorded during the first three months of 1896.  Agnes had been born at Plymouth on 9th May 1867, with her birth registered at nearby Plympton (Ref. 5b 242) during the second quarter of 1867 and was the daughter of Charles Theodore Bewes of Mannamead in Plymouth.  It was while Thomas and Agnes were living at Plymouth that their first two children were born.  Shortly after the birth of their second child, Thomas and Agnes moved north to the West Riding of Yorkshire and to the village of Wheatley, where the two youngest girls were born.  The 1901 Census stated that Thomas Collett, aged 33 and from Upper Clapton, was a Church of England clergyman living at St Mary’s Road in Wheatley with his wife Agnes Maud Collett, who was also 33, and their first two children Thomas Theodore Collett who was four, and Kathleen Maude Collett who was one year old, who died in 1903.  Employed by Thomas that day were three domestic servants, a cook, a parlourmaid, and a nurse.  It was two years earlier that Thomas had become the Vicar of St Mary’s Church, Doncaster, so after a further eight years there, Thomas made his final move to Scotby, to the east of Carlisle in 1909, where he was living at the time of the census in 1911.  However, by that time his wife Agnes was not living there with him, instead she and the couple’s two youngest children were living (or visiting) Agnes’ hometown of Plymouth

 

The census in April 1911 recorded Thomas Collett, aged 43 and from Upper Clapton, London, living at Scotby in the Parish of Wetheral, Carlisle, where he was referred to as the Reverend Thomas Collett, Vicar of Scotby, a Clerk in Holy Orders and a Clergyman of the Established Church.  His wife Agnes Maude Collett, aged 43 and born at Plymouth, was living there with her daughters Florence Mary Collett aged eight years, and Evelyn Margaret Collett who was five, both of them born in Yorkshire.  Of their other two children, only their son Thomas has been identified in the census of 1911.  He was recorded as Thomas Collett, aged 14 from Plymouth, who was attending a boarding school at Whitehaven in Cumberland, so he was approximately thirty miles away from his father in Scotby, Carlisle.  No record at all has been found for their daughter Kathleen, so it seems likely she did not survive to reach her eleventh birthday.  Thomas Collet died while he was visiting Eastbourne on 3rd December 1913 at the age of 46, following which he was buried at Scotby, together with his sister Katherine (below) who had died two years earlier at Scotby Vicarage, their headstone at Scotby also including the details of his son Thomas Theodore who died and was buried in France in 1918.  It was also at Eastbourne register office (Ref. 2b 96) in Sussex that his death was recorded at the end of 1913.  Four-years later, at the time of the death of his son Thomas Theodore Collett in 1917, his military record described him as the son of the late Reverend Thomas Collett of Scotby and his wife Maude Collett.  Also, by that time Thomas’ widow Agnes Maude Collett had left Plymouth and was living in Sussex, as confirmed by her son’s military records, which gave her address on the occasion of his death as 12 Garden Road in Tunbridge Wells.  Just prior to the start of the Second World War, the 1939 Register identified Agnes Maude Collett, born on 9th May 1867, at a private convalescence home on Garden Road in Royal Tunbridge Wells, when she was a widow living on private means.  Visiting her that day was her unmarried daughter Evelyn Margaret.  Less than a year later, Agnes Maude Collett nee Bewes was residing at Heather Patch in Groombridge in Kent when she died on 23rd June 1940, her death recorded at Sussex Uckfield register office (Ref. 2b 358) at the age of 73.  Her Will was proved at Llandudno on 2nd November 1940 when her two surviving daughters were confirmed as the executors of her estate of £5,759 2 Shilling and 4 Pence.  They were Florence Mary Warren, the wife of the Reverend Max Alexander Cunningham Warren, a clerk, and Evelyn Margaret Collett, a spinster

 

18R1 - Thomas Theodore Collett was born in 1897 at Plymouth

18R2 - Kathleen Maude Collett was born in 1899 at Plymouth

18R3 - Florence Mary Collett was born in 1902 at Wheatley, Yorkshire

18R4 - Evelyn Margaret Collett was born in 1905 at Wheatley, Yorkshire

 

William George Collett[18Q2] was born at Upper Clapton in Hackney on 2nd June 1869, his birth registered at Hackney (Ref. 1b 390).  A month later he was baptised at St Matthews Church in Hackney on 1st July, the son of Thomas Trusson Collett, gentleman, and his wife Georgiana.  No record of William or his parents has been found within the census of 1881, but it is known that during August that same year his father Thomas Trusson Collett died.  William was educated at Sutton Valence School in Kent and, following his matriculation, he was accepted for a place at Corpus Christi College in Cambridge on 1st October 1888.  William Collett of Middlesex, the third son of Thomas Trusson Collett of Ringleton (House) in Kent obtained his BA in 1891 and his MA in 1895.  He was an assistant master at Oxford Military College from 1892 to 1897, after which he was appointed as a master at Wellington College at Crowthorne in Berkshire, where he worked from 1897 to 1929.  In the census of 1891, William G Collett was 21 and an under-graduate at Cambridge, when he was living with his widowed mother Georgiana and his two brothers and one sister at Woodnesborough in Kent.  Ten years later, at the time of the 1901 Census, William was listed as being aged 31 and an assistant master clergyman at Wellington College in Crowthorne.  It was while working at Wellington College that he met his future wife to whom he was married in 1903.  The wedding of William George Collett and Ruth Lilian Kempthorne, the daughter of the Reverend P H Kempthorne of Wellington College, was recorded at Easthampstead register office (Ref. 2c 941) during the second quarter of that year.  Easthampstead lies midway between Crowthorne and Bracknell in Berkshire.  Ruth was born at Crowthorne on 2nd June 1882, her birth also recorded at Easthampstead (Ref. 2c 436) during the second quarter of that year, and was therefore thirteen years younger than William.  In 1901 Ruth was still single at the age of only 18 years, so her marriage to William probably took place when she was around twenty in 1903.  William lived a long life and died in 1956 and was buried at Crowthorne

 

It seems very likely that all of the children of William and Ruth were born at Crowthorne, since certainly the first three were, as confirmed by the census of 1911.  At that time William George Collett, aged 41 and from Upper Clapton, and was described as an ‘Assistant Master at a public school’ that was Wellington College.  The actual home address for William, his family, and their four servants, on that occasion was given as Quatre Bras, Wellington College Station, Berkshire in the district of Easthampstead, sub-district Sandhurst, and the parish of Crowthorne.  William’s wife of seven years was recorded as being Ruth Lillian Collett from Crowthorne who was 28.  The couple’s three children living with them on that occasion were Charles Trusson Collett, who was six years old, George Kempthorne Collett who was five, and Helen Elizabeth Collett who was two years old.  Visiting the family on the day of the census was Mrs Florence Mary Tyler who was 40 and born at Tabulpor in India.  The four servants were single ladies, the oldest being Fanny Loader at 41, the others being Fanny Hunt who was 30, Winifred Annie Martin 19, and Alice May Fowler who was just 15 years old.  During the First World War, William George Collett served as a major with the Rifle Brigade

 

During the last few months of the Great War, William George Collett, a schoolmaster, was named as the second executor for the Will of George Collett of Dane Park House in Ramsgate, the first named executor being Ann Friend Collett, his father’s younger sister, George Collett being Ann’s younger brother.  The fact that he ceased to be a master at Wellington College in 1929, may suggest that he had simply retired at that time in his life.  Certainly, that was the case when his mother died early in 1933, when it was William George Collett, a retired schoolmaster who proved the Will in London on 28th April 1933, as it was again in the later Will of Ann Friend Collett, aged 99, who died at the end of May in 1941.  She was his maiden aunt, being his father’s younger sister.  Two years earlier, William George Collett, a retired schoolmaster was 70 and also listed in the 1939 Register as a special constable.  His wife Ruth Lilian Collett was 57 and undertaking unpaid domestic duties, the pair of them residing at Woodhill in Crowthorne, within the Easthampstead Rural District.  The third member of the household was Patrick Wall who was at school.  Seventeen years later, the couple was still living at Woodhill, where William George Collett died on 27th April 1956, his death recorded at Windsor register office (Ref. 6a 162), during the quarter of 1956, at the age of 86.  His Will was proved at London on 3rd October 1956 to Charles Trusson Collett, a retired Royal Navy Commander, and Frank Ainslie Collett, company official, when his personal effects were said to be £44,138 11 Shillings and 1 Penny.  After sixteen years as a widow, Ruth died during the summer of 1972, with her death recorded at Easthampstead register office (Ref. 6a 47) when she was 90 years old.  The Will of Ruth Lilian Collett, who died at Ringleton in Crowthorne on 10th July 1972, was proved at London on 5th October 1971, when her estate amounted to £23,743

 

It is interesting to note that in the Easthampstead census of 1911 another Collett was also living there, and he was George Collett of Alvescot in Oxfordshire, with his wife Mary from Wantage, who are listed in Part 28 – The Faringdon Line (Ref. 28O54)

 

18R5 - Charles Trusson Collett was born in 1904 at Crowthorne

18R6 - George Kempthorne Collett was born in 1906 at Crowthorne

18R7 - Helen Elizabeth Collett was born in 1908 at Crowthorne

18R8 - Frank Ainslie Collett was born in 1911 at Crowthorne

18R9 - John William Collett (twin) was born in 1915 at Crowthorne

18R10 - Gillian Ruth Collett (twin) was born in 1915 at Crowthorne

18R11 - Ann Kathleen Collett was born in 1923 at Crowthorne

 

Caroline Collett [18Q3] was born at Clapton Road in Upper Clapton, her birth registered at Hackney (Ref. 1b 391) during the third quarter of 1871 and, like her two older brothers, she was also baptised at the Parish Church of St Matthews in Hackney on 26th September 1871.  Her baptism recorded confirmed that her parents were Thomas Trusson Collett, a gentleman, and his wife Georgiana.  She was four years old when she died, but in Kent, where her death was recorded at Eastry (Ref. 2a 515) during the last quarter of 1875.  As with three of her other siblings, following their premature deaths, it was at the Church of St Mary the Blessed Virgin in Woodnesborough, that she was buried on 21st October 1875

 

Francis Collett [18Q4] was born at Clapton Road in Upper Clapton on 18th April 1873, his birth registered at Hackney (Ref. 1b 413).  He too was baptised at St Matthew’s Church in Hackney on 6th June 1873, the fifth, but fourth surviving, child of Thomas Trusson Collett, gentleman, and Georgiana Collett.  During that same year, or maybe 1874, the family left London when they moved south to Woodnesborough in Kent, where Francis’ father had been born.  The family then went through the ordeals of the birth of the couple’s next son Trusson Collett, the same last quarter of the 1875 that the deaths of Caroline Collett (above) and Francis Collett were recorded at Eastry in Kent (Ref. 2a 516).  He was then buried at Church of St Mary the Blessed Virgin in Woodnesborough, nine days after his sister Caroline (above) with whom he was laid to rest 30th October 1875

 

Charles Collett [18Q5] was born at Ringleton House, Woodnesborough in Kent on 20th October 1875, but was baptised at nearby Woodnesborough on 25th November 1875, around the time his two siblings Caroline and Francis died and were buried there.  Those events may be the reason why the birth of Charles Collett at Eastry (Ref. 2a 908) was not recorded there until the first quarter of 1876.  No record of him or his parents has been located in the census of 1881 even though it is established that they were at Woodnesborough for the birth and burial of Charles’ youngest sibling, and for the death of his father in August that same year.  In 1891 Charles Collett was 15 years old when he was attending school and living at Woodnesborough with his widowed mother Georgiana Collett, his brothers Thomas and William (above), and his sister Katharine (below).  Three years later, on 1st October 1894, Charles Collett of Kent entered Corpus Christi College in Cambridge, as had his two older brothers; Thomas in 1886 and William in 1888.  The admission papers confirmed his date of birth, and that he was the son of Thomas Trusson Collett, gentleman of Ringleton (House) in Kent.  The college records also refer to the fact that his two older brothers Thomas and William also attended Corpus Christi.  His earlier education had been completed at Kent’s Sutton Valence Grammar School, from where he matriculated in 1894.  Whilst at Cambridge he was awarded his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1897.  Four years later, at the time of the census in 1901, Charles Collett was 25 and was living at Suffield Park, near North Walsham in Norfolk, where he was working as a schoolmaster

 

Two years later in 1903, he was tragically killed in a bicycling accident, when the death of Charles Collett was recorded at the Norfolk Erpingham register office (Ref. 4b 46) in mid-September.  It was a traditional practice that members of his Collett family were buried in the family plot at the Church of St Mary the Blessed Virgin at Woodnesborough where, already his father and four of his siblings were buried.  Because of that, the body of Charles Collett was transported to the church, where he was buried on 28th October 1903.  The Wil of Charles Collett of Ringleton in Woodnesborough was proved at London on 16th January 1904 to Georgiana Collett, a widow, for his personal effects valued as £4,724 10 Shillings and 1 Penny.  Probate also confirmed that it was at Cromer in Norfolk, where he died on 25th October 1903

 

Katharine Collett [18Q6] was born at Woodnesborough on 28th December 1878, her birth registered at Eastry (Ref. 2a 919).  She was youngest daughter of Thomas Trusson Collett of Ringleton (House) and his wife Georgiana Collett of Monkton who was also his cousin.  It was at Woodnesborough where Katherine lived for all of her life, and it was there that she was baptised on 24th January 1879.  Not record of the family has been found in 1881, when they were known to be living at Woodnesborough, while in 1891 Katherine was 12, and was 22 in 1901, and 32 in 1911.  On each occasion she was living at Ringleton, Woodnesborough, with her widowed mother, a lady of private means, when unmarried Katherine was not credited with having any occupation.  Just over six months after that census day, unmarried Katherine was visiting her brother Thomas Collett in the very north of England when she died, her death recorded at Carlisle register office (Ref. 10b 604) during the last three month of 1911, when she was 32 years of age.  Her Will was proved at London on 2nd November 1911 to the Reverend Thomas Collett, a clerk (in Holy Orders) and William George Collett, a schoolmaster, her personal estate worth £10,927 1 Shilling.  The probate process revealed that she died at The Vicarage at Scotby, Carlisle, on 30th September 1911. 

 

A large ornate headstone marks her grave, which also includes other members of the family.  The inscription reads as follows:

“Katherine Collett second daughter of Thomas Trusson Collett Esq. and Georgiana his wife of Ringleton, Kent who died September 30th 1911 in her 33rd Year.  Also of Thomas Collett for four years Vicar of Scotby who died December 3rd 1913 in his 47th Year son of the above Thomas Trusson Collett.  Also of Thomas Theodore Collett only son of the above Thomas Collett who died in France of wounds received in action on February 1918 aged 20 Years”

 

Trusson Collett [18Q7] was born at Woodnesborough either near the end of 1880 or within the first week of 1881, since it was there that he was baptised on 11th January 1881.  He was last of the eight children of Thomas Trusson Collett and his wife and cousin Georgiana Collett, although only four of them survived to adulthood.  The birth of Trusson Collett was registered at Eastry (Ref. 2a 959) during the first quarter of 1881.  It was during the second quarter of that same year, that the death of Trusson Collett was also recorded at Eastry (Ref. 2a 499).  It is perhaps not surprising that the family have not been located within the census conducted at that same time that year.  In fact, it was one week after the census day that the little body of baby Trusson Collett was laid to rest in the grounds of the Church of St Mary the Blessed Virgin at Woodnesborough on 7th April 1881, where his older siblings Thomas Tomlin Collett, Caroline Collett, and Francis Collett were buried, most likely in the family grave, where they were joined by their father in August 1881

 

George Clemson Collett [18Q8] was born at Camberwell in London on 6th July 1882, the eldest child of George Alfred Collett of Monkton and Georgina Ching Clemson who was also born at Camberwell.  However, his birth was registered at Thanet in Kent (Ref. 2a 619) during the third quarter of 1882, after his family settled in Ramsgate not long after he was born.  It was also in Ramsgate that George Clemson Collett was baptised on 12th September 1882 at the Church of St Laurence-in-Thanet.  In 1891 he was eight years old and, ten years later, he was working on the land at Monkton with his father, both of them being described as farmers, when George Clemson Collett was 18, although his place of birth was recorded in the census of 1901, as being St Laurence, Ramsgate, where his brother Alfred and his sister Dorothy (both below) had been born.  By April 1911 George’s father had died, following which George and his sister Dorothy left Monkton when they moved into the Kensington area of London, where George Clemson Collett was 28.  His living companion was recorded as unmarried Dorothy Collett of Ramsgate who was 25.  Three years later, during the first three months of 1914, the marriage of George Clemson Collett and (1) Elizabeth Mary Arkcoll was recorded at Paddington register office (Ref. 1a 40), with whom it is established he had at least two children.  George was 31 when he married Elizabeth, aged 32, on 24th February 1914 at Holy Trinity Church in Paddington.  The register there confirmed the groom’s father was George Alfred Collett, while the father of the bride was William James Arkcoll, whose wife was Priscilla.  The birth of Elizabeth Mary Arkcoll was recorded at Macclesfield (Ref. 8a 145) during the third quarter of 1881, when she was baptised at Rainow in Cheshire on 18th September 1881, having been born on 20th August 1881

 

It was on 2nd May 1918 that George, aged 36, entered into military service with the Rifle Brigade, service number 50186, when he and his young family were living at 1 Bassett Road in North Kensington.  At that time in his life George had been working as an insurance agent, while his next-of-kin was named as Elizabeth Mary Collett of 1 Bassett Road in Notting Hill.  (Bassett Road actually lies midway between North Kensington and Notting Hill).  In the end George was discharged on 2nd September 1918 after just 122 days.  During a medical he was stated to be in good general health but unable to keep still for any length of time.  He was also shown to have had jaundice and since then had been unable to handle any hard work without the fear of a nervous breakdown.  With the threat of the Second World War looming on the horizon, the 1939 Register was organised, within which the four members of the family were listed as living at 1 Bassett Road in North Kensington.  They were George C Collett, an insurance agent aged 57, Elizabeth M Collett who was 58, Rita E Collett who was 24 and a shorthand typist, and George R Collett who was 23, a former insurance official, and a sergeant with the Royal Air Force

 

That was not a good time for the family, since George was widowed in October that same year, and less than a year after joining the air force, his son’s Spitfire was shot down.  The death of Elizabeth Mary Collett was recorded at Kensington register office (Rf. 1a 168) during the last three months of 1939 at the age of 58 and was buried there on 23rd October 1939, while nine months later George received the tragic news that his son had been killed in action.  By that time, perhaps because of the bombing of London, George and his daughter were living in Luton, following which his daughter was married at the start of 1941.  Administration of the personal effects of Elizabeth Mary Collett amounting to £574 6 Shillings was resolved at London on 18th November 1939 to George Clemson Collett, an insurance official.  The documentation also confirmed that she died at 1 Bassett Road in North Kensington on 20th October 1939

 

After being a widower for the next ten years, George married (2) Winifred Lindsay nee Davey, their wedding recorded at Peterborough register office (Ref. 4a 1563) during the last three months of 1949.  She was the widow of George Davey, a master plumber and decorator, with whom she was living in 1939 when he was already a widower, and who were subsequently married in 1941, when George was 60 and spinster Winifred was 48.  George Clemson Collett and his second wife were still living in Peterborough, at 37 Grange Road, when he died there on 21st July 1954 at the age of 72, with his Will proved at London on 13th October 1954.  The probate process confirmed that the estate of George Clemson Collett at £3,565 7 Shillings and 1 Penny was placed in the hands of Barclays Bank.  Winifred had been born at Peterborough on 12th November 1892 and died there at 37 Grange Road on 14th November 1978, two days after her eighty-sixth birthday, with her death recorded at Peterborough (Ref. 9 1210).  She died having a personal state of £13,752 as revealed when her Will was proved at Ipswich on 24th January 1979.

 

18R12 - Rita Eileen Collett was born in 1914 in Kensington, London

18R13 - George Richard Collett was born in 1916 in Kensington, London

 

Alfred Collett [18Q9] was born at Ramsgate in 1883, his birth registered at Thanet (Ref. 2a 921) during the last three months of that year.  Like his older brother (above), Alfred was also baptised at St Laurence’s Church on 14th December 1883, another son of George Collett and Georgina Ching.  After the birth of his sister (below) at Ramsgate, the family left St Laurence-in-Thanet when they settled in nearby Monkton in Kent.  Again, as Alfred Collett, he was seven years old and at school on the day of the Monkton census in 1891, when he was living on the family farm with his parents at Monkton Road.  He was later sent to a boarding school in Margate, and it there at Edgar Street in 1901 that Alfred Collett from Ramsgate was a student/pupil aged 17.  Attending the same school on Edgar Street were his two younger brothers, Harold Collett who was 14 another student/pupil, and Percy Collett who was 12 and simply described as a pupil (below).  Five years later Alfred Collett aged 22, and his brother Harold W Collett aged 19, both in farming, sailed second class from Liverpool on 22nd March 1906 to Halifax, Nova Scotia in Canada onboard the ‘Virginian’, when their ultimate destination was noted as Indian Head. During the next year, Harold made the return crossing on hearing the news of the death of his father at Monkton in 1907.  After the funeral, it was youngest brother Percy Collett who joined Alfred in Canada, where they made their permanent home.  The two brothers were subsequently recorded as residing at Plaster Rock, New Brunswick in Canada.  In 1916, when brother Percy enlisted with the Canadian Expeditionary Force, it was Alfred Collett of Maple View in Victoria County, New Brunswick, who was named as the family contact in the case of injury to Percy during the war, who was notified of his death towards the end of 1917.  Alfred lived the remainder of his life in New Brunswick, at Plaster Rock, and was later buried there at the Plaster Rock Community Cemetery following his death in 1948, where a red marble headstone marks the grave

 

In error, it was previously believed that Alfred Collett was actually Alfred Alexander Collett [18Q9X].  However, it is now established that he was born at Camberwell, where his birth was registered (Ref. 1d 783) during the third quarter of 1889.  He became a married man on 31st March 1913, when the marriage by banns of Alfred Alexander Collett and Lydia Matilda Annie Perigow took place at Christ Church, Camberwell in London, the event recorded at Camberwell register office (Ref. 1d 1130).  Bachelor Alfred was 25 and a sawyer, residing at 40 Bridson Street, the son of John Collett [18P9X], a dock labourer.  The bride was simply referred to as Annie Perigow of Bridson Street, a spinster aged 32 with no occupation, and the daughter of labourer John William Perigow deceased, whose widow was Mary Ann Cruttenden.  Her birth, under her full name (above) was registered at Hastings (Ref. 2b 14) during the second quarter of 1877.  The much later death of Lydia M A Collett was recorded at Dartford register office (Ref. 5b 464) during the second quarter of 1961 at the age of 86.  Prior to that, Annie Collett was living at ‘Mayfair’, Hever Road in Dartford in the 1939 Register, with her married daughter Violet Lamb who was born on 1st May 1906, when their marital status was that of married women

 

According to the census in 1901, and as simply Alfred Collett from Camberwell, he was 12 years old when he was living Sharratt Street in Deptford with his father John Collett who was 47 and a general labourer from Kensal Green.  While his father was still described as being married, it was just two of Alfred’s siblings who completed the household, and they were Charles Collett who was 20, and Emily Collett who was 14, both of them also born at Camberwell.  Ten years later, and two years before their wedding day, and during the first three months of 1911, Alfred Alexander Collett became the father of a son Alfred Alexander junior whose birth was recorded at Camberwell register office (Ref. 1d 876).  He died in London in 1975 and was born on 13th January 1911 so was nearly three months old on the day of the census in 1911, when the family was living at 40 Bridson Street, off the Old Kent Road, in the Camberwell/Peckham area of South London

 

Alfred Collett from Kent was 23 and working as a sawyer at a local timber saw mill, when his wife (sic) was Annie Collett who was 30 and born at Hasting.  Of the four children living with the couple, the first two were the children of Annie Perigow by two different fathers, but were given the Collett surname after Annie gave birth to her first child by Alfred Collett.  The four children were Doris Collett who was six and born at Lewisham, Violet Collett was three and born at Lewisham, Gladys Collett who was one year old and born at Greenwich, and Alfred Collett who was two months old and born at Old Road in Camberwell.  The census return also stated that Alfred and Annie had been married for six years.  Two years later, on the day of their wedding, Annie was nearing the end of the pregnancy of the couple’s fifth and last child, the birth of Agnes Collett recorded at Camberwell during the second quarter of that same year, when the mother’s maiden-name was confirmed as Perigow

 

The work of trying to identify the father of Alfred Alexander Collett, has revealed a number of men by the name of John Collett who were born in London around 1853, who of them being the son of John Collett, a labourer from Bradford-on-Avon and his wife Ellen from Kent, the birth of whose children were recorded at Chelsea.  See Part 31 – The New Wiltshire Somerset Line (Ref. 31N32).  In addition to all of this, it is now known that Private Alfred Alexander Collett of 17 Battalion, Machine Gun Corps, service number 159019, of 40 Bridson Street, Old Kent Road in London, was discharged from the army after the First World War, with defective vision, on 21st May 1919, having been first posted for duty on 8th September 1914.  His military record also confirmed the date he was married and the dates of birth of four children.  The first two children were Alfred and Agnes (below), whose births were recorded at Camberwell, as was the first of the two previously unknown offspring Robert A Collett born on 12th February 1915, when his mother’s name was Collett instead of Perigow.  As regards the second 1st May 1918, nothing has so far been found

 

18R14 - Daisy Collett was born in 1905 at Lewisham – not the child of Alfred A Collett

18R15 - Violet Collett was born in 1907 at Lewisham – not the child of Alfred A Collett

18R16 - Gladys Marie Collett was born in 1909 at Greenwich

18R17 - Alfred Alexander Collett was born in 1911 at Peckham

18R18 - Agnes May Collett was born in 1913 at Peckham

 

Dorothy Collett [18Q10] was born at Ramsgate in 1885, her birth registered at Thanet (Ref. 2a 911) during the third quarter of that year.  She was baptised at St Lawrence’s Church in Ramsgate on 12th August 1885, the only daughter of George and Georgina Collett.  Very soon after she was born, her parents moved to nearby Monkton, where her father was a farmer and where, in 1891, Dorothy Collett was five years of age.  The family was still living at Monkton in 1901, when Dorothy was 15.  Following the death of her father in 1907, Dorothy and her older brother George (above) left Kent and moved to Kensington in London, where they were still living in April 1911.  Dorothy was 25 and was unmarried, her place of birth confirmed as Ramsgate when, on the census return, under occupation, was a note that she was living on private means.  On the occasion of her younger brother Percy (below) entering the Great War from his home in Canada, it was Miss Dorothy Collett of 7 Grove Mansion, The Grove in Hammersmith, London, who was named as his next-of-kin.  She was also named as the sole beneficiary under the terms of his Military Will, sign at the end of 1916.  Dorothy was still living at that same address during the earlier 1920s, when she would have received the two medals he had won during his active service in France, and Belgium where he was killed at the end of October 1917.  Dorothy Collett never married and was living at 103 Chesterton Road in Kensington, London, when she died on 14th January 1967 at the age of 80, with her death recorded at Kensington register office (Ref. 5c 753).  Administration of her estate of £3,890, supported by her Will, was settled at London on 21st April 1967 for Westminster Bank Limited

 

Harold Willis Collett [18Q11] was born at Monkton in 1887, where he was baptised on 23rd April 1887, another son of George and Georgina Collett.  His birth was registered at Thanet (Ref. 2a 909) during the first quarter of that year.  Harold W Collett was four years old in the Monkton census of 1891 and after another ten years, Harold Collett was 14 when he was attending at boarding school in Margate with his brothers Alfred and Percy, as confirmed in the Margate census of 1901.  Five years later, Harold and his older brother Alfred, sailed from Liverpool to Halifax, Nova Scotia in 1906, only for Harold to return the following year for the funeral of his father in 1907.  As a result, Harold was again living with his family at Monkton when his father passed away.  That sad event led to the family leaving Monkton and going their separate ways.  Four years after the death of his father, Harold Willis Collett of Monkton in Kent was living at Wargrave in Berkshire, north-east of Reading, where he was still a bachelor at the age of 24.  Under occupation, it simply read ‘gentleman’ and on that census day in 1911 he was a visitor at the home of elderly Elizabeth Emma Coley Bromfield.  Tragically, it was less than three years later, that Harold Willis Collett died on 8th January 1914 at the age of 26, his death recorded at Paddington register office (Ref. 1a 43).  Probate of his estate of £536 18 Shillings and 4 Pence was granted in London to George Clemson Collett, his eldest brother (above) on 27th January 1914.  At that time in his young life Harold was residing at 26 Westmorland Road in Bayswater and following his death he was buried at Kensal Green Cemetery in London, where Isambard Kingdom Brunel was also laid to rest

 

Percy Stapleton Collett [18Q12] was born at Monkton in 1888, the son of George Alfred Collett and his wife Georgina Ching Clemson.  His birth was registered at Thanet register office (Ref. 2a 893) during the last three months of that year, and he was baptised at Monkton on 17th December 1888, the last of the five children of George and Georgina Collett.  It was at Monkton that he was living in 1891 when Percy S Collett was two years old.  When he was old enough, he was sent away to a boarding school in Margate, where his two older brothers were already pupils where, in 1901, Percy Collett from Monkton was 12 years of age.  Five years after the census day, Percy’s two older brothers Alfred and Harold (above) sailed to Canada in 1906, with Harold returning in 1907 for the funeral of their father.  It may have been what Harold told Percy of their visit to the new world, plus the death of both of his parents in 1907 and 1910, that persuaded Percy should join his brother Alfred in Canada.  It was on 6th May 1911, that Percy Collett, a farmer aged 22, sailed out of the Port of London on board the SS Pretorian of the Allan Steamship Line, in a third-class cabin, bound for Quebec and Montreal.  He eventually settled in Plaster Rock, News Brunswick, where he was joined a few years later by his brother Alfred

 

With the outbreak of war in Europe, Percy Stapleton enlisted with the Canadian Overseas Expeditionary Force (CEF), when his attestation form, completed on 3rd March 1916 at St John in New Brunswick, revealed the following details.  That he was born on 22nd October 1888 at Monkton in Kent, England, and was residing at Maple View in New Brunswick, where he was a farmer.  His next-of-kin was Miss Dorothy Collett (sister) of 7 Grove Mansion, The Grove in Hammersmith, London.  An additional note on the form stated that, in case of casualty, notify Alfred Collett (brother) of Maple View in Victoria County, NB.  Tragically, eighteen months later, Percy Stapleton Collett was serving as Private 817913 with the Eastern Ontario Regiment of Princess Patricia’s Light Infantry when he was killed in action on 30th October 1917 at the age of 29.  His military record confirms that he was the son of the late George Alfred Collett and that his name appears on Panel 10 of the Menin Gate Memorial at Ypres in West Flanders, Belgium.  Percy’s name also appears on the cenotaph in the village of Plaster Rock, and a short biography of him is included in a book entitled ‘Written in Stone’, about all of the local men in New Brunswick whose lives were lost in both in WWI and WWII

 

Amongst his military records are some additional details, which are very interesting.  First of them is that his unit sailed from Halifax, Canada on 25th September 1916 aboard the SS Corsican, arriving at Liverpool on 6th October.  Then, on 9th December 1916, the tear-out page (2C) of his pay book provided this important information.  “Perforated sheet for Will from Pay Book of Reg. No. 817913 - Name P S Collett - Unit Royal Canadian Regiment - Military Will In the event of my death I give the whole of my military property and effects to my sister Dorothy Collett, 7 Grove Mansions, The Grove, Hammersmith, London.  Signature P S Collett - Rank and Regt Private Royal Canadian - Date December 9th 1916” - That was written up five days before he entered the theatre of war in France on 14th December 1916

 

On 15th February 1917, he was on the frontline with 140th Battalion of the Canadian Expeditionary Force and was taken by 4th Canadian Field Ambulance to the Corps Rest Station, suffering with acute bronchitis.  Eleven days later, he was discharged from the CRS on 6th February 1917, when he returned to frontline action.  Eight months and four days later, Percy was in Belgium when he was killed in action in the field, as confirmed in a report written at Rouen on 12th November 1917.  After the war, in the early 1920s, further another document headed Medals & Decorations confirmed that Percy was posthumously awarded the Victory Medal and the British War Medal.  On the same page was listed the name and address of his sister Dorothy, together with the first mention of another brother George C Collett of 1 Bassett Road, Notting Hill, London, England

 

Twenty years after his death, the Will of Percy Stapleton Collett of New Brunswick in Canada was proved in London on 19th June 1937.  The full account stated that Percy Stapleton Collett of Maple View, Lorne in Victoria County, Province of New Brunswick, died in France with administration of his Will being granted to George Clemson Collett his eldest brother (above), an insurance official and the attorney of Alfred Collett his second oldest brother.  His personal effects were valued at £272 19 Shillings and 9 Pence

 

Margaret Marion Collett Mason [18Q14] was born in Buenos Aires in Argentina on 16th June 1888 where she was baptised on 13th July 1888 at St John’s Cathedral.  She was the eldest of the five children of James Collett Mason and Jessie Susette Collett who, in the Argentina census in 1895, was seven years old and living on the family farm, albeit named as Daisy Marion.  Towards the end of 1907, Margaret, then aged 19, and her mother travelled back to England, arriving in Southampton on 4th January 1908.  They later returned to Argentina, but in 1910 the whole family minus son William, made their final sea journey back to England, arriving at Southampton on 2nd July 1910.  By the start of April in 1911, her mother and Margaret’s two surviving sister were living at The Hoo in Aspley Guise, Bedfordshire.  The Clovelly, North Devon, census in 1911, recorded a Margaret Mason, aged 22 and born in Argentina, a British subject by parentage and living on private means, was staying with the farming family of Perry Kenyon Stanley, which included two student sons who were also born in Argentina.  The year before she was married, her future husband was a lieutenant and a temporary captain of the Royal Army Medical Corps.  She married Philip Adams Opie on Saturday 26th January 1918, which was advertised the previous day in The Times newspaper.  The notice under ‘Marriages’ read as follows:

Captain P. Opie and Miss Collett-Mason

A marriage is arranged and will take place tomorrow (Saturday) between Captain Philip Opie D.A.D.M.S, Cairo, eldest son of Mr Ernest Opie J.P. of Willand, Cullompton in Devon and Margaret Collett, eldest daughter of Mr J.C. Collett Mason J.P. and Mrs Collett-Mason of Nieuport Hall, Eardisley in Herefordshire.  The wedding ceremony was conducted by the Reverend Baghot de la Bere, T.C.F. at the Citadel Garrison Chapel in Cairo, Egypt, where Philip Adams Opie was a Captain with the Royal Army Medical Corps.  This information was extracted from the Supplement to the British Medical Journal published on Saturday 23rd March 1918

 

The marriage of Margaret and Philip, who was born on 7th January 1886, his birth registered at Plympton (Ref. 5b 230), produced one son for the couple, he being Peter Mason Opie who was born on 25th November 1918, and died on 5th February 1982 at Westfield House in West Liss, Hampshire, leaving an estate valued at £239,861.  Margaret accompanied her husband Philip on a trip across the Himalaya Mountains and, by so doing wrote herself into the history books as the first white women to cross the range.  In addition to all of this, Margaret Opie was the grandmother of Avryll Sixtus nee Opie of New Zealand who provided valuable information relating to this family line.  Avryll’s father was the aforementioned Peter Mason Opie, the son of Margaret Marion Collett Mason, who was named in the probate process for the considerable estate of William Wallis Collett Mason (below) when he was described as an author.  Philip Adams Opie was the Surgeon to the Governor of Bombay when he died on 6th October 1936, and was recorded in the India records as Opie, Major P A, Royal Army Medical Corps.  He was fifty-years-old when he was buried at Poona in Bombay on 7th October 1936.  The Will of Philip Adams Opie of Government House, Bombay, care of Messrs Glyn Mills & Company, Holts Branch, Kirkland House, Whitehall, Westminster was proved at London on 11th November 1936 to Messrs Holt and Company Trustees for £6,982 12 Shillings and 2 Pence

 

Six days later, his widow set out from London on board the ‘Cathay’ a ship of the P&O Steam Navigation Company bound for Brisbane, although Margaret Opie, aged 45, of 7 De Vere Gardens in South Kensington London would be vacating her first-class cabin on reaching India.  De Vere Gardens lie opposite the Queen Victoria Statue in the south-west corner of London’s Hyde Park.  Her first-class return to London aboard the SS Uruguay Star of the Blue Star Line disembarked on 10th September 1957, by which time her forward address was Flat 6, Kelso Place, Queensgate, Kensington, just a-stones-throw from De Vere Gardens.  It was at 52 Godfrey Street, Brompton, London, a couple of miles south-east of Kelso Place, where she died on 26th July 1974, following which her Will for £49,919 was proved at London on 23rd November 1974, while the death of Margaret Marion Opie was recorded at the Hampshire Petersfield register office (Ref. 20 0407) during the third quarter of 1974

 

Ascelin Frances Collett Mason [18Q15] was born in Argentina on 8th April 1890 and was baptised on 27th April 1890 at St Bartholomew’s Church in Rosario, the daughter of James Collett Mason and Jessie Susette Collett.  When Ascelein was around three and a half years old she was given a present by her aunt Sarah Mason, possibly her father’s sister.  It was a copy of the book Aesop’s Fables, inside which was written “to Ascelein Frances Collett Mason with the love of her affection, Aunt Sarah Mason, October 3rd 1893".  In 2011, the book is the property of William (Bill) Ebden who received it from his father.  On the day of the 1895 Census in Argentina, Ascelin Frances Collett Mason was five years of age.  It was four years later that the family left Buenos Aires and arrived back in England at the start of 1910, when Ascelin’s father, mother, and her two surviving sisters returned to England.  According to the census the following year, Ascelin Francis Collett Mason from Argentina was 20, when she was living with her mother Jessie and sister Kathleen Lucy Collett Mason (below) at The Hoo in Aspley Guise, Bedfordshire.  Over the following years the two sisters added a further ‘Collett’ forename to their birth names, as confirmed when they were married

 

It was around the time that the gift was presented to Ascelein that Sarah Ann Mason married into the Stag family, which owned and ran the Stag Garage Company in Ipswich.  Six years later it is established that Ascelin Frances Collett Collett-Mason was married by licence to Captain Edward George Hay, of the Devonshire Regiment, on 13th November 1917 at the Church of St Philip in London, with the event recorded at St George’s Hanover Square (Ref. 1a 1060).  The couple’s marriage certificate described Edward as being 38, a bachelor, a Captain with 8th Devons, residing at Palace Parade in Walthamstow, and the son of George Hay, a Major General with 2nd Army.  His younger bride was 27 and a spinster having no occupation, the daughter of James Collett Collett-Mason, a gentleman, when the witnesses were Ascelin’s father J C C Mason, and A Hay, mother of the groom.  Edward was born on 21st October 1879, the fifth son of William Hay of Duns Castle in Berwickshire, J.P, Colonel of Militia and Convenor of Berwickshire, and was baptised at Mysore in Madras, India on 28th November 1879.  On that occasion, his parents were named as Alexander Charles Hay and Annie Hay.  Many years after the war, the marriage produced a daughter for Ascelein and her husband, Nora Margaret Hay, who was born on 24th July 1922, and she married John Robertson Campbell on 15th August 1942 with whom she had seven children.  The 1939 Register identified George and Ascelin living at ‘Silkwood’ in Ampthill, Bedfordshire, when George said her was a retired farmer in Argentina, with Ascelin living on private means.  Six years later, the death of Edward George Hay was recorded at Bournemouth register office (Ref. 2b 936) during the last quarter of 1945, when he was 65.  After fifteen years as a widow, the death of Ascelin Frances Collet Hay was recorded at the Hove register office (Brighton) during the first quarter of 1960 (Ref. 5h 460), at the age of 69.  did not live long enough to see her last three grandchildren, when she died on 8th October 1945.  These details about her and her family have been taken from page 1194 of the 1963 version of Debrett, and page 1138 of the 1976 version which, in the case of Edward’s father’s name, contradicts his name on their marriage certificate, and his Indian baptism record

 

Curiously, there was an Asline Collett Mason listed in the Service Records of the National Archives of Australia as someone who supported the effort during the Great War of 1914 to 1918 by serving at a depot in Australia.  However, the entry would also indicate that Asline was a male since the next-of-kin was listed as his wife Mrs Mason.  It is also interesting that within the Victorian Law Reports of 1884 there is the mention of a probate case in Australia involving Asline Collett Mason.  It now transpires that he was the son Henry Ward Mason who was born at Beverley in 1812 (see Ref. 18M7) and his wife Anne Lightfoot.  Asline Collett Mason was born at East Barnet in Hertfordshire on 29th January 1858, where he was baptised on 10th March 1858.  It was after his arrival in Victoria, and during 1889, that Asline Collett Mason married Annie Rae Nesbitt Welshman who was born at St Kilda in Victoria during 1865.  Their marriage produced three children at Shepparton, they being Asline Claude Mason who was born in 1890, Dorothy A Mason who was born in 1892, and Clive Collett Mason who was born in 1901.  It was also at Shepparton in Victoria that he died during 1921 at the age of 63

 

Kathleen Lucy Collett Mason [18Q16], who was known as Kay, was born in Argentina on 23rd March 1892 and was baptised at St Bartholomew’s Church in Rosario on 30th June 1892.  In the Argentina census of 1895, Kathleen Lucy Collett Mason was three years old.  Five years later, she and her two older sisters (above), escorted by their parents, returned to England in early 1910 and The Hoo at Aspley Guise became their new home.  It was there, where Kathleen Lucy Collett Mason was 19 in the Bedfordshire census of 1911, where she living with her mother Jessie and her sister Ascelin.  Both sisters were confirmed as having been born in Argentina.  It was nearly eight years after that census day when the marriage of Kathleen Lucy Collett Collett-Mason and (1) Kenneth Herbert Metcalfe Davison was recorded at Weobly register office in Herefordshire (Ref. 6a 1399) during the first three months of 1919.  Kenneth had been born on 20th January 1890 and he received his first commission on 29th January 1910 when he reached the rank of lieutenant with the British Officers of the 106th Pioneers with the Indian Army.  The couple are known to have had two sons, both of whom later married the same woman in Kenya.  They were born during the first five years of the marriage of Kenneth and Kay, with Herbert suffering a premature death on 18th November 1925, the same day that he was buried at Pach Marchi in Bengal, at the age of only 35.  His residence at that time was the Small Arms School at Pach Marchi Central Provinces in India, whilst it was at the British Station Hospital in Pach Marchi that he died. 

 

The Administration (with Will) of his estate of £1,748 was proved at London on 14th June 1926 to Kathleen Lucy Collett Davison, widow.  After six years as a widow, the marriage of Kathleen Lucy Collett Davison and (2) Hugh Charles Stephen Minchin was recorded at Newport Pagnell register office (Ref. 3a 2634) during the last three months of 1931.  Hugh had been born in India on 5th January 1893 and was baptised that same day at Belgaum in Bombay, the son of Hugh and Frances Caroline Minchin.  Kay was widowed for a second time in 1957, when the death of Hugh C S Minchin was recorded at Tonbridge (Kent) register office (Ref. 5b 936) during the first quarter of that year when he was 64.  It was 9 Molyneux Court in Tunbridge Wells where he was living with Kay just before died, while it was at 39 Molyneux Park Road in Tunbridge Wells that he actually passed away on 11th March 1957.  Administration of his personal effects of £2,257 4 Shillings, was granted at London on 25th April 1957 to Kathleen Lucy Collett Minchin, widow.  Kay lived a very long life, at the latter part of which she was cared for at a nursing home that was previously Malvern Priory.  At the age of one-hundred-years, she died on 6th May 1992 at Perrins House, Doveham, Graham Road in Malvern.  The Will of Kathleen Lucy Collett Minchin was proved at Llandaff on 22nd September 1992 and was valued at £55,650

 

William Wallis Collett Mason [18Q18] was born in Argentina on 25th August 1895 and was baptised at St Bartholomew’s Church in Rosario on 10th December 1895.  He was the youngest child of James Collett Mason and Jessie Susette Collett and he inherited everything from his father to the detriment of his siblings.  At the time of the census in 1911, he and his family had returned to England, and on that occasion, when his mother and two of his sisters were living at Aspley Guise, William Wallis Collett-Mason, aged 15 and from Argentina, was attending a school in the Thanet area of Kent.  It was only during the first three months of 1911 that the family surname was changed to Collett-Mason.  It was later that he staked his fortune on a game of cards and lost the entire inheritance including the family home.  That may have taken place in America since, on 3rd February 1923 he arrived at Plymouth from New York on the SS De Grasse of the French Shipping Line, when he was said to be 34 (sic) and an artist bound for Ashurst Place in Langton Green.  Ashurst Place still is a large detached property set in 23 acres of parkland and fields in the village of Langton Green, three miles from Tunbridge Well.  Six years later he made the return sea voyage, when he left Liverpool on 8th November 1929 on the Steam Ship Samaria bound for New York.  Curiously on the ship’s passenger list, he was again stated to be 34-year-old and an artist.  It would appear that he often crossed the Atlantic Ocean, and was recorded at 32 De Vere Gardens near Hyde Park in the 1939 Register where, his married sister Margaret Marion Collett Opie was living at 7 De Vere Garden in the following year

 

The 1939 Register confirmed his date of birth and that his occupation was that of a traveller and a single man who was also temporarily attending the Chiswick Police Hospital formerly of the 8th Hussars.  However, whatever it was that he subsequently did in America, he was worth a small fortune when he died on 28th August 1957.  Also, by that time William Wallis Collett Collett-Mason was once again living in England, with his death recorded at Tonbridge register office (Ref. 5b 778).  His Will was proved at London on 29th October 1957 to David Drummond, a solicitor, Kenneth Forbes Davison, a farmer, and Peter Mason Opie, an author, when his personal estate was valued at £72,795 7 Shillings and 8 Pence.  The latter of the two was William’s nephew, the only child of his sister Margaret Marion Collett Collett-Mason (above) and her late husband Philip Adams Opie.  The probate process also revealed that William’s residence was at 71a Mount Ephraim in Royal Tunbridge Wells, but that he died while at the Calverley Hotel in Royal Tunbridge Wells

 

Phillis Anne Collett [18Q19] was born in India during 1922, the eldest daughter of Arthur Preston and Sheila Collett, who returned to England in April 1926.  At the outbreak of World War Two Phillis joined the Women’s Royal Naval Service and became a Wren with the land-based HMS St Angelo.  Their headquarters were in London and that was the main administration centre for the Royal Navy activities in the Mediterranean Sea.  The wrens that worked there were billeted at Whitehall Mansions.  Towards the end of the war Phillis reached the rank of Petty Officer Wren 11235 and it may have been her elevation to that level of responsibility which took her from the relative safety of London into action in the Mediterranean arena.  With the war over and peace declared, Phillis’ parents received the tragic news at Felixstowe that she had died on 30th August 1945 at the age of 23.  Sadly, Phillis never made it home and was buried at the Mazargues War Cemetery in Marseilles – Grave 31, Row A, Plot 11.  The Will of Phillis Anne Collett of The Lodge at Hollesley, Woodbridge in Suffolk, a spinster, who died on 30th August 1945 while on war service, was proved at Llandudno on 14th March 1946 to Arthur Preston Collett of no occupation, and his wife Sheila Collett, for her personal estate of £10,591 9 Shillings and 2 Pence

 

Anthony Farquar Charles MacKinnon Collett [18Q20] was born in Bengal, India on 18th October 1924, the son of Arthur Preston Collett and his wife Sheila MacKinnon.  During the Second World War the home address for Anthony and his parents was Brackenbury Lodge on Cliff Road in Felixstowe and it was there in 1945 that they received the tragic news of the death of Anthony’s sister Phillis (above).  It was also that address which was used in 1947 when Anthony sailed back to India, when his occupation, at the age of 23, was given as a tea planter.  Under his full name Anthony Farquar Charles Mackinnon Collett he sailed out of Southampton on 21st November 1947 on board the Strathmore bound for Bombay

 

Sheila Candace Collett [18Q21] was born in India on 18th January 1926, the third child and second of the two daughters of Arthur Preston Collett and his wife Sheila MacKinnon.  It was as Sheila C Collett aged three months that she returned to England from Bombay on 1st April 1926.  On leaving school Sheila became a physiotherapist and travelled the world.  On 11th November 1950 she sailed in a first-class cabin on the SS Manchester City of Manchester Liners Limited bound for Montreal in Canada, when the home address of Miss Sheila Candace Collett, aged 24, was 80 St John’s Road in Oxford, and her occupation was within physiotherapy.  It would appear to be a small ship as there were only twelve adults and one child on board, which included a crew of four.  At the end of the following she returned to England, possibly because of father father’s failing health.  The ship ‘Manchester Merchant’ sailing out of Montreal disembarked on 4th December 1951 in Manchester, with Miss Candace Collett from Canada was 24 and her onward address was Brackenbury Lodge, Cliff Road in Felixstowe, when she was still working in physiotherapy.  It was just over two years later that her father died at Brackenbury Lodge on Cliff Road near the end of March 1954.  Nine months later, on 21st December 1954, when her address was confirmed as Brackenbury Lodge and her occupation that of a physiotherapist, she travelled to India to be reunited with her brother Anthony (above), who had settled there seven years earlier, where he and Sheila had been born.  Sheila Candace Collett aged 28, was still a single lady in a first-class cabin aboard the ship ‘Chusan’ of the P&O Line sailing from London to Yokohama via Penang and Singapore, but stopping at Bombay.  For her first-class return journey to England, she was on the P&O SS Strathmore from Brisbane, Australia, boarding at Colombo in Ceylon, which arrived in London on 28th May 1955

 

Six months later, after receiving a proposal of marriage from tea planter Philip John Austin, who was born at Southwold in Suffolk on 14th February 1926, Sheila made another sea journey, that time to Singapore.  It was on 25th November 1955, that she sailed out of Southampton bound for Singapore on the MS Willem Ruys of the Royal Rotterdam Lloyds Line, on that occasion in a second-class cabin.  Her home address was still recorded as Brackenbury Lodge in Felixstowe and with the same occupation as before.  Once married, Sheila gave birth to a daughter, after which the three members of the family sailed to England on the MS Willem Ruys, but in a first-class cabin, arriving at the Port of London on 22nd January 1957.  The passenger provided the following details for the three of them.  Philip J Austin was an Englishman whose permanent place of residence was Malaya, where he was a planter, who was intending to only be a visitor to England for a maximum of six months, the same condition applying to his wife and child.  The onward destination for housewife Sheila C Austin, and her family, was again Brackenbury Lodge, Cliff Road in Felixstowe, the home of her elderly mother, where baby Sheila C A Austin would meet her grandmother for the first time, having only just been born in Singapore on 31st December 1956.  Philip is likely to have returned to Singapore within the six-month visit period, although his wife and daughter stayed on for another year, when they left Southampton on the ‘Hannover’ of the Hamburg & Amerika Line on 12th June 1958, bound for Singapore.  At the end of his life, Philip John Austin was 82 when he died at Southwold on 31st December 2008, his daughter’s fifty-second birthday

 

Nora Collett [18Q22] was born at Chorlton-cum-Hardy in Manchester during 1887, possibly at Keppel Road where the family was living in 1891, her birth registered there (Ref. 8c 687) during the last quarter of the year.  However, by the time of her baptism, which perhaps surprisingly took place at Rustington in Sussex on 31st December 1887, she was named as Nora Pyemont Collett, the eldest child and only daughter of Edward Pyemont Collett of Leicester and Aurora Beatrice Landi from London.  Still only recorded as Nora Collett, she was three years old in the Chorlton-cum-Hardy census of 1891, after which she and her brother were sent away to boarding school.  By the age of 13, Nora was attending a school in Sussex, when her place of birth was confirmed as Chorlton-cum-Hardy.  Although no record has been found so far, it is believed that Nora married John Cooke and that they lived at Tynemouth in Northumberland

 

Henry Robert Pyemont Collett [18Q23] was born at Keppel Road in Chorlton-cum-Hardy on 23rd December 1890, the second child and only son of dentist Edward Pyemont and Aurora Beatrice Collett.  His birth, as Henry Robert Pyemont Collett, was registered at Chorlton (Ref. 8c 734) during the first quarter of 1891.  He was then baptised at the Church of St Clement in Chorlton-cum-Hardy on 5th April 1891, the very same day of the national census that year.  In the census return, he was recorded with his family at Keppel Road as Henry R P Collett aged three months.  His parents were still living in Chorlton-cum-Hardy in 1901, when Robert Collett, aged 10 and from there, was attending a private school in Harrogate.  During the next decade, and on completing his education, Henry Robert Pyemont Collett, aged 20, was once again living with his family which, by April 1911 was residing in Bucklow, near Knutsford, in Cheshire.  It was also at Bucklow in Cheshire, in 1913, that the marriage of Henry R P Collett and (1) Irene Findlater was recorded (Ref. 8a 374) during the last three months of that year.  Irene was the eldest child of Thomas Findlater and was born on 14th March 1893 who, by the 16th September 1908 was a pupil at the Macclesfield Girls’ High School, at Jordon Gate House in Cheshire.  Her birth day been recorded at Prestwich register office (Ref. 8d 469) during the second quarter of 1983.  It was on 19th May 1893, that she was baptised at Christ Church in Blackpool, when her parents were confirmed at Thomas and Alice Steele Findlater.  It would appear that there were no children produced from their marriage, and unfortunately during 1918, the death of Irene Collett was recorded at Salford register office (Ref. 4d 49) during the third quarter of 1918

 

Two years prior to the census in 1911, Henry Robert Pyemont Collett was a member of The Lancashire Fusiliers, with whom he was promoted to Second Lieutenant with the 8th Battalion on 20th March 1909.  However, despite his time in the army, at the outbreak of the Great War, Henry joined the Royal Flying Corp, where he eventually became a lieutenant with the 21st Balloon Company, having initially enlisted as a student officer with the 49th Balloon Section of the RFC.  As a flight-lieutenant with 49th he was twice mentioned in despatches.  There is a story written about him under the title “A Balloonatic in Palestine: being the Travels of 49 Balloon Section in the Wilderness and Judea" a tale of Lieutenant H R P Collett RAF.  It was during the war years that the RFC became the RAF

 

The 21st Balloon Company, in which Collett was an observer officer and whose two sections, 49 and 50, included many men who were past middle-age and had an Army medical category of C2 or C3, arrived in Egypt in July 1917.  Collett, who was serving with 49 Section, explains their routine and how the balloon was operated and emphasises the difference between the temperature on the ground in the desert and in the balloon at some 3000 feet.  The Section's principal responsibility was to spot for the artillery batteries in the vicinity: Collett notes that from their "letting up" position at Sheikh Shabasi he could see every house in Gaza 12000 yards away.  Many Royal Artillery officers, however, were prejudiced against balloons and believed that their own observation posts were quite adequate for spotting.  The Section remained at Sheikh Shabasi until the time of the final successful attack on Gaza and they then moved forward to a camp at Saris, just off the road leading north towards Jerusalem. The balloons had already been fired at by Turkish aircraft and artillery and shortly before the surrender of Jerusalem one was shot down.  After Jerusalem had fallen, writes Collett, "things were very quiet in the Section... and it was hard to kill time" and the narrative dwells on the good living conditions and amenities which the officers and men were able to enjoy.  Their next excitement came in February 1918, at a new "letting-up" position at Attara, when a German aircraft was shot down after attacking the balloon in which Collett was observing.  The following month the Section moved to a camp near the coast at Hadrah which, as it was well in the rear area, was only very occasionally shelled.  From here, on 13 April, Collett did his first night ballooning and on 9 May he had to parachute to safety after his balloon had been shot down by an aircraft flown by a Bulgarian NCO, but Collett only sustained a few minor injuries.  After a quiet summer, all three of the balloons were aloft when the major Allied offensive began on 17 September, but, records Collett, "... before long, the tide of battle had swept away beyond our vision" to the north.  The Section advanced with the armies for a short time, but they then withdrew to Kantara and Collett was posted back to Home Establishment just before the Armistice. His narrative is a pleasant, but somewhat episodic, record of an unusual aspect of the Palestine campaign

 

Ten years after peace in Europe was declared, the second marriage of Henry R P Collett and (2) widow Winifred Gill was recorded at the Manchester South register office (Ref. 8d 359) during the fourth quarter of 1928.  Eleven years later, according to the 1939 Register, Henry R P Collett was 48 and a dental surgeon who, for the coming war, was also noted as being an ambulance driver.  His wife Winifred was three years older than Henry, her date of birth recorded as 18th November 1887.  The third person at the address in Altrincham was private secretary Barbara W Gill aged 25, Winifred’s unmarried daughter by her first husband James P Gill.  Other than this, all that is so far known about him after the war is that Henry Robert Pyemont Collett, BA, became the Vicar of Islington in Norfolk while, at the time of his death in 1958, he was married and was living at 26 Newton Road in Failsworth, Lancashire.  He died at the Monsall Hospital in Manchester on 13th June 1958, when administration of his personal effects, amounting to £2,668 7 Shillings and 5 Pence, was granted to his widow Winifred Collett.  It was also in Manchester register office that his death was recorded (Ref. 10e 371) during the second quarter of 1958, when he was 67 years old

 

Selina Benson [18Q24] was born at Glasgow on 3rd June 1908, the first-born child of Walter and Ada Benson from Hull, who was two years old in the Blackley Manchester census of 1911, when Selina and her family were living at 11 Walton Road.  Selina was thirty-years-old when she married William Gibson, the wedding recorded at the Manchester North register office (Ref. 8d 1051) during the second quarter of 1938.  It was also at Manchester that Selina Gibson died in 1990 at the age of 81

 

Ernest Walter Benson [18Q25] was born at 11 Walton Road, Blackley in Manchester on 3rd May 1910, his birth was recorded at Prestwich register office (Ref. 8d 352).  Ernest was eleven months old in the Blackley census of 1911 but, within the next few months, the family moved again to 34 Turkey Lane, Queens Park in Manchester.  It was from that address that Ernest and his twin-siblings (below) were baptised at St James Church in nearby Collyhurst on 21st August 1912, when their father Walter was a musician, their mother was Ada Benson.  Ernest Walter Benson later married Winifred Sybil Barnett at Manchester in the summer of 1940, while it was at 991 Christchurch Road in Boscombe, East Bournemouth on 7th June 1982 that he died, leaving an estate of £6,904

 

Francis William Benson [18Q26], who was known as Billy, and his twin sister Edna (below) were born at 34 Turkey Lane, Queens Park in Manchester on 19th July 1912, when his mother’s maiden-name was confirmed as Wright.  It was one month later that the twins and their two-year-old brother Ernest (above) were baptised together at St James’ Church in Collyhurst, adjacent to Queens Park on 21st August 1912.  Just prior to the Second World War Billy married Mary Cockett at St Anne’s Church in Manchester on 21st June 1939.  Mary was born on 20th September 1911 and was also baptised at St James’ Church, Collyhurst on 22nd October 1911, the daughter of Thomas Henry Cockett, a salesman living at 20 Ash Street in Collyhurst with his wife Mary Hannah Cockett.  Just prior to their wedding day Mary Cockett was the manager of a shop at Hale in Cheshire.  Once married Billy joined Mary and they lived over the shop in Hale.  The couple’s first child was born in North Manchester Hospital near to the home of Billy’s mother where Mary was staying at that time due to the fact her husband was away with the British Army.  It was also thought that the shop at Hale was not the most convenient or suitable place for Mary to give birth.  The family continued to live at the shop in Hale until 1954 when they moved to Hale Barns, followed in 1960 by a further moved to Bowdon near Altrincham.  The couple’s two sons were born in a Maternity Home in Bowden.  Later moves saw the family living at Cuddington in Cheshire and at Manchester with just their son Phil.  A final move took place during the 1970s when the couple retired to Gloucestershire.  And it was at Woolstrop House in Quedgeley, just south of the city of Gloucester, where Billy died on 1st February 2003 aged 90.  He was cremated at the Gloucester Crematorium and his ashes scattered elsewhere.  Mary died four years later at Stroud in Gloucestershire on 27th May 2007 when she was 96, after which her ashes were scattered at the same place as her husband

 

18R19 - Elizabeth Mary Benson was born in 1941

18R20 - David William Benson was born in 1942

18R21 - Philip Martin Benson was born in 1953

 

Edna Maria Benson [18Q27] was a twin with her brother Francis (above) who were born at 34 Turkey Lane, Queens Park, Manchester on 19th July 1912.  It was on 21st August 1912, that Edna and Francis were baptised in a combined church ceremony with their older brother Ernest (above) at St James’ Church in Collyhurst.  Edna Maria Benson later married Thomas Murphy in Manchester towards the end of 1940.  Edna was still living in the Manchester area when she died in the summer of 1997, at the age of 85

 

Hector Benson [18Q28] was born at 34 Turkey Lane, Queens Park in Manchester on 21st October 1913.  It was during the first quarter of 1940 when Hector Benson married Eva Willis and his later death was recorded at Manchester in the summer of 1975.  Eva Willis was born on 29th January 1916, and was 79 when she died in Manchester during November 1995

 

Myra Benson [18Q29] was born at 34 Turkey Lane, Queens Park in Manchester on 18th March 1917.  Myra married Frank Betney during the last quarter of 1940, their wedding recorded at Manchester register office.  Frank had been born on 4th May 1914 and he passed away at Manchester in the summer of 1998

 

Elizabeth May Collett [18Q30] was born at 316 Foxhall Road in Ipswich on 29th August 1910, the eldest of the two surviving children of Charles Frederick W Collett from Sunderland and Hull, and his wife Emma Matilda Woodward of Sproughton near Ipswich.  Her birth was recorded at Ipswich register office (Ref. 4a 942).  Elizabeth was seven months old in the Ipswich census of 1911, with the first of her two brothers born the following year, but who suffered an infant death, so grew up with her surviving brother who was also born at Ipswich in 1915.  After a further twenty years, the marriage of Elizabeth May Collett and Herbert William Coe was recorded at Ipswich register office (Ref. 4a 2955) during the second quarter of 1935.  After four years together, they were living at 22 St David’s Road in Ipswich, when Herbert W Coe was a heavy worker a brass turner using a capstan lathe, his date of birth recorded as 13th September 1910, with his wife Elizabeth M Coe undertaking unpaid domestic duties.  They were living at 35 Sherborne Avenue in Ipswich when Herbert died on 1st May 1995 at the age of 84.  His Will was proved at Ipswich on 14th June 1995, the value of his estate being less than £125,000.  Elizabeth enjoyed a very long life, when Elizabeth May Coe died at Ipswich on 8th October 2004, at the age of 94

 

Temple Charles Collett [18Q32] was born at Ipswich in 1915, the sole surviving son of Charles Frederick W Collett and Emma Matilda Woodward, whose birth was recorded at Ipswich register office (Ref. 4a 1915) during the second quarter of that year, when his mother’s maiden-name was confirmed as Woodward.  It was during the fourth quarter of 1939 that the marriage of Temple Charles Collett and Nellie Protheroe was recorded at Llanelly register office (Ref. 11a 3453).  The couple was residing at 23 Selkirk Road in Ipswich, where Temple died on 10th December 1980 at the age of 75.  Administration of his estate of £5,255 was granted at Ipswich on 8th January 1981.  His widow survived him by seventeen years when Nellie, who had been born at Swansea in South Wales on 5th November 1913, passed away at the age of 83 at Ipswich near the start of 1997

 

George James Collett [18Q33] was born at Gorleston towards the end of 1881, his birth being registered by his unmarried mother Matilda Collett, aged 34, at Mutford (Ref. 4a 862) during the last quarter of that year.  Following the birth, George and his mother went to live with his grandparents at Porter’s Lane in Burgh Castle, where George was nine years old in the census of 1891.  Sadly, for whatever reason, George died at Burgh Castle, where he was buried on 7th August 1900 at the aged of 18, perhaps as a result of a work-related accident.  His death was later recorded at Yarmouth register office (Ref. 4b 22) during the third quarter of 1900

 

Selina Margaret Collett [18Q34] was born at Burgh Castle, possibly at the end of 1874 or the beginning of 1875, with the birth being registered at Mutford (Ref. 4a 783) during the first three months of 1875.  She was the eldest of the six children of Benjamin Collett and his wife Emily Turvey Pearson and was baptised at Burgh Castle on 11th April 1875.  She was six years old at the time of the census in 1881, when she was living with her family at 12 Manor House in Burgh Castle.  Upon leaving school, Selina entered domestic service and, in the census of 1891, she was a servant at the Burgh Castle home of elderly farmer William Jackson and his wife Lucy.  It was six years later when Selina was living and working in London that she married Frederick George Cattermole at St Thomas’ Church in Finsbury Park on 14th August 1897, the event recorded at Islington register office (Ref. 1b 432).  Frederick was 21 and a milk carrier, the son of pensioner Isaac Cattermole, while Selina was 22 and her address at that time was given as 143 Green Lanes in Finsbury Park.  The earlier birth of Frederick George Cattermole took place at Willesden on 20th September 1875, registered at Hendon (Ref. 3a 127), and baptised at Willesden on 8th June 1876, the son of policeman Isaac Abraham Cattermole and his wife Eliza

 

Once married the couple initially settled in the Hampstead area of London, at Greville Road in Kilburn, where Selina Cattermole from Burgh Castle was 26, and her husband Frederick Cattermole was 25 and from Willesden in Middlesex, was a domestic coachman.  By that time, the census return for 1901, confirmed that Selina had already given birth to a daughter, with two-year-old Jessie Cattermole having been born at Kilburn.  It was as Jessie Selina Cattermole that her birth was recorded at Hampstead register office (Ref. 1a 642) during the first three months of 1899.  In the end, Jessie was seven years old, and her sister Hilda May Q V Cattermole was three, (her birth also recorded at Hampstead 1a 607 during the second quarter of 1902), when they and their parents travelled north to Liverpool, where they boarded the Dominion Line ship ‘Kensington’ on 1st March 1906 on their way to a new life in Canada, arriving at Halifax two weeks later.  On the passenger list Frederick and Selina were both 30 years old, with Frederick having the occupation of a farmer.  That seems odd because, on the birth of the couple’s third daughter Ivy Irene Cattermole on 3rd May 1909 at the Kingston Division of Frontenac County, he was once again working as a coachman.  Whether Frederick got to see his youngest daughter is not yet know, except to say, that it was that same year that he suffered a premature death

 

As a result of her loss, no more children were added to their family which, in the census of 1921, was still living in Kingston, Ontario, at 65 Johnson Street.  On that day the head of the household was Margaret Cattermole aged 45 and having no occupation.  With her, were her three daughters Jessie who was 23 and a book-keeper at an office, Hilda who was 19 and married (as Hilda Gee), and Ivy who was 12 and a student.  Staying with the family was Emily Collet from England who was 69 and the mother of Selina Margaret Cattermole.  Eleven years later, Selina’s mother Emily Collett nee Turvey, a widow from England, was still living with the family at 303 Earl Street in Kingston, County of Frontenac, where she died during 1932.  The informant for her death was Mrs S Cattermole of 303 Earls Street, following which her mother was buried at Cataraqui Cemetery in Kingston.  Selina Margaret Cattermole died in 1966 and a simple stone marks her grave as 1875 - 1966.  A much older headstone marks the grave of her late husband with the dates 1876 - 1909

 

George William Collett [18Q35] was born at Burgh Castle on 19th September 1877, the birth being registered at Mutford (Ref. 4a 779) during the final quarter of that year.  He was baptised on 18th October 1877, the son of Benjamin Collett and his wife Emily Turvey Pearson, and was three years old in April 1881, when he was living with his parents at 12 Manor House in Burgh Castle.  Ten years later, and following the death of his father, George was 13 and already working as a farm labourer, when he was living in the High Street at Burgh Castle with his mother and his two younger siblings, Jessie and Louis (below).  Sometime after leaving school, in the mid-1890s, George moved north to seek work with his uncle Cornelius Bradnum Collett [18P85] at West Hartlepool.  By the time he was 23 years old, according to the census in 1901, his occupation was that of a millwright at the local steel works, where his uncle was a manager.  However, at that time in his life, he was lodging with another uncle, that being Henry Collett [18P86], at his home at 26 Bentley Street in West Hartlepool

 

It was also at Hartlepool register office (Ref. 10a 179), during the second quarter of 1910, that the marriage of George William Collett and dressmaker Sarah Margaret Elder was recorded.  Sarah had been born on 5th April 1883 at West Hartlepool (Ref. 10a 140), who was baptised at St James’ Church in Hartlepool on 2nd May 1883, the eldest child of sailor Joseph Elder and his wife Harriet J Elder.  The following year, the census of April 1911, recorded George William Collett of Burgh Castle living at 10 Hurworth Street in West Hartlepool, when he was 33 and a bricklayer’s labourer.  His wife was confirmed as Sarah Margaret Collett who was 27 and, by that time, their marriage had already produced a daughter for the couple, Vera Margaret Collett who was just under one month old

 

By the time of the 1939 Register was drawn up, George W Collett was living at Costa Drive in Middlesbrough, where he was 62 and described as having something to do with the supply of electricity, although the notes are not clear.  Living there with him was his wife Sarah M Collett, whose date of birth was recorded as 8th April 1883.  It was eight years later that George William Collett died, his death recorded at the Middlesbrough register office (Ref. 1b 746) during the first three months of 1948, at the age of 70.  After ten years as a widow, the death of Sarah Margaret Collett was recorded at Middlesbrough register office (Ref. 1b 907) during the first quarter of 1958, when she was 74.  Administration of her estate of £1,216 16 Shillings and 8 Pence was granted at Durham on 25th April 1958 to her married daughter Vera Margaret Beadle, the wife of Raymond Douglas Beadle.  The notice of her passing reported that her last place of residence was 58 Harrow Road, Linthorpe, Middlesbrough, but that it was at the Middlesbrough General Hospital where she died on 16th March 1958

 

18R22 - Vera Margaret Collett was born in 1911 at West Hartlepool

 

Jesse Benjamin Collett [18Q36], who was known as Jessie, was born at Burgh Castle in 1878.  The birth was registered at Mutford (Ref. 4a 836) during the fourth quarter of the same year.  He was therefore around three months old when he was baptised at Burgh Castle on 2nd March 1879.  It was also at Burgh Castle where he was living with his family at 12 Manor House in 1881, when he was two years old.  The family was still at Burgh Castle ten years later when they were residing in a property in the High Street, where Jessie was 12.  It is now established that Jesse Collett spent some time in his early years in South Africa, where he may have been 1901, when no record of him has been found in Great Britain.  So, there is a chance that he was a soldier with the British Army involved in the Boer War.  However, it was around eighteen months later that he was once again back in England, and had settled in County Durham, to where other members of the Collett family had previously migrated.  It was there at South Shields register office (Ref. 10a 1286a) during the third quarter of 1902, that the marriage of Jesse Benjamin and Mary Ann Seales was recorded.  Mary’s birth had also been registered at South Shields (Ref. 10a 746) during the second quarter of 1883, the fourth child of fish-salesman Matthew Seales and his wife Harriet.  After they were married, the couple must have sailed to South Africa, where Mary presented Jessie with the first of their three children

 

When the child was one month old, the family of three left Cape Town on the ‘Kildonan Castle’ bound for Southampton, where they disembarked on 9th March 1907.  The passenger list confirmed that Mr Benjamin Collett was 28 years of age and a fisherman, Mrs Mary Ann Collett was 24, and that their infant child has been born at Cape Colony.  Once the family was back in England, the couple’s second child was born at South Shields and, much later, after a gap of ten years, Mary gave birth to their last child.  It is highly likely that during those years, Jesse had been on military duty for the duration of the war.  Prior to the start of the war, and according to the South Shields census of 1911, the young Collett family had been lodging with Jesse’s parents-in-law at 69 Imeary Street in the village of Westoe.  Head of the household was Matthew Seales who was 54, his wife Harriet Seales was 52, and their children were Susan Seales who was 23, Annie Seales who was 20, and Robert Seales who was 18.  Jesse Collett from Burgh Castle was 32 and a skipper of a fishing boat, most likely working for his fishmonger father-in-law.  His wife Mary Collett from South Shields was 28, and their two sons were Benjamin Collett who was four and born at Woodstock, Cape Town, South Africa, and Clifford Collett who had been born at South Shields, just six months earlier.  Ten years later Mary Ann presented Jesse with their last child, another son

 

Upon the death of Jesse Benjamin Collett at North Shields on 28th September 1930, it was his widow Mary Ann Collett who was granted administration of his personal effects of £404 4 Shillings and 6 Pence at Newcastle on 6th January 1931.  At the time of his passing, Jesse and Mary were residing at 47 Kitchener Terrace in North Shields, while their two eldest sons were living in South Africa, where they were reunited with their younger brother after the Second World War.  The obituary of Jesse Benjamin Collett was published in the North Shields newspaper, as follows.  “A North Shields trawler arrived in the Tyne yesterday with her flag at half-mast and landed the dead body of the skipper, Jesse Collett, who had been taken suddenly ill and died the previous night when the vessel was about 70 miles off the port.  Collett complained of illness while preparations were being made for shooting the trawl gear.  He went below to rest, but gradually grew worse.  The gear was stowed and a dash made for port, but Collett grew rapidly worse and died.  He was a native of Yarmouth”

 

Nine years after the sad death of her husband, his widow Mary Ann Collett, whose date of birth was recorded in the 1939 Register as 20th March 1883, was residing at 45 Hulne Avenue, Tynemouth in North Shields.  The only person living with her at that time was her youngest son Edward Arthur Collett who was 18 years old and an apprentice engineer and fitter, working on ships’ engines.

 

18R23 - Benjamin Louis Collett was born in 1907 at Woodstock, Cape Town

18R24 - Clifford Collett was born in 1910 at South Shields

18R25 - Edward Arthur Collett was born in 1921 at Tynemouth

 

Arthur Herbert Collett [18Q37] was born at Burgh Castle at the start of 1881, the son of Benjamin Collett and Emily Turvey Pearson.  His birth was registered at Mutford (Ref. 4a 857) during the first three months of 1881 and he was baptised at Burgh Castle on 7th February 1881.  It was just six weeks later when he died, his death recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 530) also during the first quarter of 1881, following which he was buried at Burgh Castle on 21st March 1881

 

Louis Arthur Collett [18Q38] was born at Burgh Castle in 1882, the youngest child of Benjamin Collett and his wife Emily Turvey Pearson.  The birth was registered at Mutford (Ref. 4a 861) during the final quarter of 1882, he given the second forename after his deceased brother. It was also at Burgh Castle that he was baptised on 10th December 1882.  By the time of the Burgh Castle census of 1891, Louis was eight years old when he was living at High Street with his widowed mother, following the death of his father shortly after he was born.  Ten years later in March 1901, he was still living with his widowed mother Emily at Holly Cottage on the High Street in Burgh Castle, from where he was working as a milkman on a local farm, at the age of 18.  It was on 8th December 1906 that Louis Arthur Collett, aged 24, married the much older Elizabeth Artherton at Lakenham in Norfolk, when the event recorded at Walsingham register office (Ref. 4b 773).  Walsingham lies five miles north of Hempton, where Elizabeth had been born on 2nd May 1870 and was baptised on 2nd June 1870, the daughter of Philip and Anna Maria Artherton.  By April 1911 the marriage had produced two children for the couple, at which time the family was still residing at a dwelling on the High Street in Burgh Castle.  Louis was 28, his wife Elizabeth from Hempton was 33 (sic), and their two daughters were Queenie who was three, and Mabel who was two years old.  Also, still living with Louis and his family was his mother Emily Collett who was 58, while Elizabeth was expecting the birth of the couple’s third child, with the couple’s last child born two years after.  The census return confirmed that Louis was employed as a cowman, and that he and his mother and his two daughters were all born at Burgh Castle

 

At the outbreak of war, Louis Arthur Collett joined the 1st Norfolk Regiment as Private Collett 16810, with his Report on Enlistment dated 23rd November 1914 describing him as 32 years and 2 months, at 5 feet 6 inches, whose next-of-kin was his wife Mrs Elizabeth Collett of Burgh Castle, Suffolk.  Her maiden-name was Artherton and they were married at Lakenham, Norfolk, on 8th December 1906.  Their children were listed as Queenie Blanche, Mabel Jessie, Ivy Selina, and Phyllis Emily Collett.  Tragically, he was killed in action on 4th June 1916 on the Western Front at Festubert in France, a village north of Arras that was virtually destroyed by the Battle of Festubert in May 1915.  The Arras Memorial bears his name on Bay 3.  The next record of his widow was in the 1939 Register, when Elizabeth Collett, a widow, was living at Lawn View Terrace, Walsingham, with her youngest daughter.  Phyllis E Collett was 26 and working in a grocery shop as a saleswoman.  On that day Elizabeth would have been 69, while it was eleven years later that she passed away at the age of 80, her death recorded at East Dereham register office (Ref. 4b 363) during the second quarter of 1950

 

18R26 - Queenie Blanche Collett was born in 1907 at Burgh Castle

18R27 - Mabel Jessie Collett was born in 1908 at Burgh Castle

18R28 - Ivy Selina Collett was born in 1911 at Burgh Castle

18R29 - Phyllis Emily Collett was born in 1913 at Burgh Castle

 

Joseph Thomas Collett [18Q44] was born at Gorleston in 1888, the son of Joseph Collett and Elizabeth Penrose nee Lack, his birth registered at Mutford (Ref. 4a 959) during the first three months of the year.  It may have been at 2 Back Wall Reach in Gorleston that he was born, as it was there that he and his family were living in 1891, when Joseph Thomas was three years of age.  His father was a fisherman and was away at sea on the day of the census in 1891and in 1901 when he was fishing off the north coast of Scotland.  For whatever reason the whereabouts of Joseph, his mother and the rest of his family, has not been identified from the census in 1901.  However, towards the end of the following decade Joseph Thomas Collett married Mary Jane Bruce.  On the day of the census in 1911, Joseph Thomas Collett, aged 23 and from Yarmouth, was a married man who was working as the third hand on the fishing boat T S Saturn at Great Grimsby.  On that same day, when her husband was away at sea, his wife Mary Collett, aged 31, was preparing herself for the birth of their first child, when she was boarding with the Rouse family in the Old Clee area of Grimsby.  Later that same year, the first of the couple’s three children was born at Grimsby.  However, it is likely that the young Collett family was visiting Joseph’s elderly parents at Newhills in Aberdeen in 1914, where Joseph and Mary’s middle child was born.  Although, it was back at Grimsby where the couple’s last child was born, Joseph was again in Newhills, Aberdeen, when his father died there in 1925, with Joseph T Collett of 119 Hilda Street in Grimsby being the informant of his demise.  It was twenty-four-years later when Joseph Thomas Collett died in Grimsby at the age of 61, his death recorded at Grimsby register office (Ref. 3b 209) during the second quarter of 1949.  His widow continued to live in Grimsby, where the death of Mary Jane Collett was recorded (Ref. 7 0481) near the end of 1980, when her date of birth was confirmed as 16th November 1880

 

18R30 - Joseph William Collett was born in 1911 at Grimsby

18R31 - Frederick Bertrand Collett was born in 1914 at Aberdeen

18R32 - Willemina Cumming Collett was born in 1916 at Grimsby

 

William Collett [18Q46] was born at Aberdeen, Scotland, in 1895 and was the eighth child and youngest son of Joseph Collett and Elizabeth Lack.  He was six years old in 1901, when he and his family was living at 1A Castlehill in West Aberdeen.  No record of any member of his family has been identified with the next census of 1911, but it was on 2nd October 1914, and under twenty years of age, that he married Jennie Farquhar in Aberdeen.  From that day forward the young couple lived at Roslin Street in Aberdeen, which was their address when he enlisted with the army.  His military Report on Enlistment gave his age as 20 years and 11 months, and that he was just under 5 feet tall.  By that time Jennie had presented William with a daughter, Elizabeth Collett who was born at Aberdeen on 19th August 1915.  Curiously, the only other note on his service record, states that he served at home from 14th December 1916 until 5th April 1917

 

18R33 - Elizabeth Collett was born in 1915 at Aberdeen

 

Thomas William Collett [18Q48] was born at Wheatacre All Saints in Norfolk on 16th May 1876, the eldest child of William Collett of Mettingham and his wife Elizabeth from Reedham.  His birth was registered at Loddon (Ref. 4b 201) in the third quarter of that year but, as yet, no baptism record for him has been found.  He was five years old in 1881 when living at 2 Hervey Street in Lowestoft with his parents.  He was still living with his family ten years later in 1891 when he was 14, although by then, they had moved the seven miles north to 26 Trafalgar Road, West Gorleston, where he was already working as a greengrocer’s assistant.  During the final quarter of 1898, at Yarmouth (Ref. 4b 79), Thomas William Collett married Sarah Anna Jackson of Somerleyton, where she was born on 3rd October 1874, the daughter of platelayer John William Jackson and his wife Charlotte Collett [18P74], the sister of Thomas’ father, thus making them first cousins.  The marriage produced four children for the couple, the first two being born prior to the census in 1901.  According to the census that year, Thomas aged 24 was living 2 Station Terrace in Gorleston, when his occupation was that of a fishermen’s store keeper.  Living with him was his wife Sarah from Somerleyton, not far from Wheatacre, where Thomas was born, and their two children Gladys who was one year old and another baby daughter who had only just been born and was still unnamed.  Both children were recorded as having been born at Southtown

 

Two further children were added to the family after a move to 47 Elsie Road in Southtown, where they were born, before another move to 40 Hill Mill Road, where the family lived from 1908 to at least 1915, according to the electoral roll.  The full family was described in the Southtown census of 1911 as, Thomas Collett who was 34 and a factory hand working for an oilskin manufacturer, Sarah who was 35, and their three daughters, Gladys who was 11, Mary who was 10, Isa who was seven, and their son William who was four years of age.  By 1939 it was just Thomas and Sarah who were living at 6 Sefton Lane in Great Yarmouth, where Thomas William Collett was 73 and an assistant departmental manager of and oil-skin factory.  Sarah Anna Collett was carrying out unpaid domestic duties.  Thomas lived a long life in Norfolk and was 80 years old when he died there, the death of Thomas William Collett recorded at East Dereham register office (Ref. 4b 413) during the last three months of 1956.  Four years later, Sarah Anna Collett was in Gloucestershire when she died at the age of 86, her death recorded at Stroud register office (Ref. 7b 475) during the third quarter of 1960

 

18R34 - Gladys Jessie Collett was born in 1899 at Southtown, Yarmouth

18R35 - Miriam May Collett was born in 1901 at Southtown, Yarmouth

18R36 - Isa Irene Collett was born in 1903 at Southtown, Yarmouth

18R37 - Thomas William Harcourt Collett was born in 1906 at Southtown, Yarmouth

 

Frank Ernest Collett [18Q49] was born at Wheatacre All Saints, where he was baptised on 22nd November 1877, the second child of William and Elizabeth Collett.  Curiously, his birth was registered at Loddon (Ref. 4b 212) during the last quarter of 1877 and, during his life, he gave different places where he was born.  Not long after he was born, his family moved to nearby Lowestoft, where they were living at 2 Hervey Street in 1881, when Frank was three years old.  He was still living with his family in 1891, by which time they had moved the short distance to Gorleston, and were residing at 26 Trafalgar Road in West Gorleston, where Frank was 13.  By March 1901 Frank E Collett was 23 and was a visitor at the Church Road, Brightlingsea, Essex, home of Thomas Godhard, a retired mariner.  On that occasion he was single and described as a Primitive Methodist Missionary from Lowestoft.  Up until 2020, no positive identification of Frank Ernest Collett from Wheatacre had been found in the next census in 1911.  However, by that time in his life he was married, with four children, and was living at Banham in Norfolk, midway between Attleborough and Diss, when the electoral roll identified him residing at New Buckenham Road, where he and his wife had been living since 1906.  Prior to that, Frank and his wife had lived at Heath Road in Banham, following their wedding in 1903

 

It was during the first three months of that year, that Frank Ernest Collett married Alethea Rasberry from Gayton in Norfolk, the event recorded at Kings Lynn register office (Ref. 4b 513).  From the day of their wedding, until the census in 1911, Alethea gave birth to four children.  That was confirmed in the census return for New Buckenham Road in Banham, when Frank Collett from Somerleyton was 33 and an insurance agent with the Prudential Insurance Company, Alethea Collett from Gayton was 32, Freda B Collett was seven, as was the next child who was recorded as Hugh Collett, Frank C Collett junior was three, and Olive E Collett was one year old.  Around eighteen months later, the family was completed with the birth of the couple’s last child, who was only five years old when her father suffered a premature death at the age of 39.  The death of Frank Ernest Collett was recorded at Norwich register office (Ref. 4b 158) during the third quarter of 1917, following which he was buried at Banham on 18th August 1917.  Alethea Rasberry was the daughter of James and Mary Elizabeth Rasberry and was born at Kings Lynn, her birth registered at Freebridge (Ref. 4b 315) during the last three months of 1878 who, in 1901, was an evangelist at the age of 22 when she was a visitor at the Ovington, Norfolk, home of the Stubbings family of farmers.  Eight years after being widowed, Alethea also suffered an early death, which was recorded at Yarmouth register office (Ref. 4b 43) during the first three months of 1926, after which she was buried (not in consecrated ground) at Great Yarmouth on 22nd March 1926, at the age of 47.  Whatever had been her cause of death, appears to have affected her youngest child, who died shortly after Alethea passed away

 

18R38 Freda Jessie B Collett was born in 1903 at Banham, Norfolk

18R39 James William Hughbourne Collett was born in 1904 at Banham, Norfolk

18R40 Frank Christian Clowes Collett was born in 1907 at Banham, Norfolk

18R41 Olive Elizabeth Hagan Collett was born in 1909 at Banham, Norfolk

18R42 Ida Alethea Mary Collett was born in 1912 at Banham, Norfolk

 

Frances Beatrice Collett [18Q50] was born at Lowestoft in 1879, her birth registered at Mutford (Ref. 4a 810) during the last three months of that year, and shortly after her parents moved there from Wheatacre.  She was the eldest daughter of William and Elizabeth Collett, and her birth was registered at Mutford.  She was one year old in the census of 1881 when she was living with her family at 2 Hervey Street in Lowestoft.  Within six weeks of the census day, she had died and, simply as Beatrice Collett, she was buried at St Margaret’s Church in Lowestoft on 16th May 1881 at the age of one year.  Her death was recorded during the second quarter of that year at Mutford (Ref. 4a 474)

 

Dinah Daisy Collett[18Q51] was born at 2 Hervey Street in Lowestoft in December 1880.  Her birth was registered at Mutford (Ref. 4a 835) during the first three months of 1881, but after she was baptised at St John’s Church in Lowestoft on 1st January 1881, the daughter of seaman William and Elizabeth Collett of Hervey Street.  Also baptised with Dinah that same day was James George Collett [18P147] the son of seaman George and Harriet Collett of Burgh Castle.  James was Dinah’s uncle two-steps removed, their common ancestor being William Collett [18M22] 1759-1846, who was Dinah’s great great grandfather, and James’ great grandfather.  Dinah Collett was three months old in the census of 1881, when she and her family were again recorded at 2 Hervey Street in Lowestoft.  It was as Daisy Collett aged nine years, that she was recorded with her family in 1891, by which time her parents had taken the family to live at 26 Trafalgar Road in West Gorleston.  No record of her has been found in 1901, while ten years later, at the age of 30, Daisy Dinah Collett from Lowestoft was a domestic servant in the employ of elderly widow Marian Cochrane at 34 Alexander Road in Kingston-upon-Thames, Surrey.  Also living and working in Kingston that day was her younger sister Ethel (below)

 

In 1911, another of Dinah’s sister Beatrice (below) was also living and working in Surrey, and sometime later the settled down to live together, both being unmarried.  On the occasion of the 1939 Register, they were together and living and working at the home of retired coal merchant Jasper Burwell, and his wife Emily, at ‘Toits Rouge’ on New Road, Lothingland in Suffolk.  Dinah D Collett was 58 and a municipal midwife, with Beatrice being the elderly couple’s housekeeper.  Further along New Road were living Dinah’s father and younger sister Ethel (below) who, before 1942, moved to Gorleston and set up home at 123 Lowestoft Road, where they were joined by Dinah and Beatrice.  With the death of their father in 1942, the three sisters continued to reside at 123 Lowestoft Road.  Seven years later, and following the death of her sister Beatrice at the address at the end of 1949, Daisy Dinah Collett and Ethel Mary Collett, spinsters, at the same address, were named as joint executors of the estate of Beatrice Frances Collett the following year.  Two years after that, and upon the death of sister Ethel Mary Collett of 123 Lowestoft Road in 1951, it was Daisy Dinah Collett who was named as the sole executor for her Will.  It was fifteen years after that, when the death of Dinah Daisy Collett was recorded at Acle register office (Ref. 4a 445), to the west of Great Yarmouth, during the third quarter of 1966, when she was 85.  The Will of Dinah Daisy Collett “otherwise Daisy Dinah Collett” was proved at Norwich on 3rd November 1966 to Albert Charles Collett, a retired gas meter fitter, and Jessie Blake, widow, the estate valued at £4,886.  The death notice also confirmed that at the time of her passing, Daisy had been living at 123 Lowestoft Road in Gorleston, but that she died on 13th September 1966 while in the St Andrews Hospital on Thorpe Street in the St Andrews area of Norwich

 

Beatrice Collett [18Q52] was born at 2 Hervey Street in Lowestoft on 27th August 1882, the fifth child of William and Elizabeth Collett, her birth registered at Mutford (Ref. 4a 841), simply named as Beatrice, during the third quarter of that year.  She was again named as just Beatrice Collett when she was baptised at the Church of St John in Lowestoft on 25th February 1885, when her father William was a fisherman still living at 2 Hervey Street in Lowestoft with his wife Elizabeth.  Yet again, she was Beatrice Collett aged eight years in the census of 1891, by which time she and her family were living at 26 Trafalgar Road in West Gorleston.  On completing her schooling in Lowestoft, she entered the world of domestic service and by 1901 had secured a position of housemaid at Elgin Road, Wallington in Surrey, when Beatrice Collett from Lowestoft was 19.  That was the home of the three unmarried Goatley siblings, head of the household was Richard, a woollen agent, and with him, his two older sisters Ada and Emily both described as school keepers

 

It was during the following decade when Beatrice appears to have used Frances as a second forename, the name possibly a tribute to her older sister Frances who died just before Beatrice was born.  Ten years later she was still unmarried and was still living in Wallington, Surrey, but at the home of spinster Hannah E Grummant.  On that occasion she was recorded (temporarily it seems) as Beatrice F Collett, aged 28 and from Lowestoft, who was a general domestic servant.  Also living in Surrey on that day was her older unmarried sister Dinah Daisy Collett, who decided to live together thereafter.  That was confirmed in the 1939 Register, when spinster Beatrice Collett was the housekeeper for retired Jasper and Emily Burwell at ‘Toits Rouge’ on New Road, Lothingland in Suffolk.  Beatrice was 57 and her sister Dinah was 58.  At the same time and living close by in Lothingland was the father of the two sisters, with their younger sister Ethel (below).  Just prior to the death of their father, he moved to 123 Lowestoft Road in Gorleston, his three daughters joining him there.  He died there in 1942 and, after a further seven years, Beatrice Collett of 123 Lowestoft Road died on 13th December 1949, her death as only Beatrice Collett was recorded at Yarmouth register office (Ref. 4b 449) when she was 67.  Probate of her estate of £526 11 Shillings and 2 Pence was granted at Norwich on 8th May 1950 to her two sisters Daisy Dinah Collett and Ethel May Collett, both spinsters themselves.  On being buried, her name was again confirmed as simply Beatrice Collett

 

Ethel Mary Collett [18Q53] was born at 2 Hervey Street in Lowestoft on 12th June 1884 when her birth was registered at Mutford (Ref. 4a 880) during the third quarter of the year.  It was at St John’s Church in Lowestoft where she was baptised on 6th August 1884, the daughter of sailor William Collett and his wife Elizabeth.  It was simply as Ethel Collett that she was listed in the census of 1891, when she was six years old and was living with her mother and her family at 26 Trafalgar Road in West Gorleston, her father being absent on that occasion because he was a fisherman and most likely away at sea on that day.  Ten years later in March 1901, Ethel Collett, aged 16, was still living with her parents, who were then residing at 150 Bells Road in Gorleston.  However, ten years after that, according to the census in April 1911, she was living and working in the Kingston-on-Thames in Surrey, where she was recorded as Ethel Maude Collett from Lowestoft who was 27 and a housemaid for the Knight family

 

Like her two older sisters (above), Ethel Mary Collett never married and also like them, Ethel at the age of 55, was living at New Road in Lothingland in the 1939 Register, with her elderly father William, for whom she was his housekeeper.  Within a year or so, Ethel and her two sisters Dinah and Beatrice, together with their father, moved to 123 Lowestoft Road in Gorleston, where they were all living when their father passed away in 1942.  Eight years later in 1950, Ethel Collett, spinster, was named as one of the two executors for the estate of her sister Beatrice Collett of 123 Lowestoft Road, Gorleston.  Ethel was the second of the third sisters to pass away during the following year, the death of Ethel M Collett recorded at Yarmouth (Ref. 4b 393) at the age of 66.  The Will of Ethel Mary Collett of 123 Lowestoft Road, who died there on 21st April 1951, was proved at Norwich 25th July 1951 to Daisy Dinah Collett, spinster, for her estate of £401 14 Shillings and 3 Pence

 

George Collett [18Q54] was born at Lowestoft on 29th November 1885, with his birth registered at Mutford (Ref. 4a 942) during the first three months of 1886, another son of William Collett and Elizabeth Jackson.  It was on 26th November 1886 that he was baptised at St John’s Church in Lowestoft, when his family was living at 2 Heavey Street and where his father was a fisherman.  He was five years old at the time of the 1891 Census and was living at 26 Trafalgar Road in West Gorleston with his mother and other members of his family.  Ten years later he had left school and at 15 years of age he was living at the family home which was at 150 Bells Road in Gorleston, from where he was working as a grocer’s apprentice.  By the time of the census of 1911, unmarried George Collett, aged 24 and from Lowestoft, was living and working at Great Grimsby in Lincolnshire, where he was a waiter employed at an institute.  It is likely that he saw active service during the Great War, although no records have so far been found

 

Towards the end of the war, George Collett married Ethel May Shepherd at the Church of St Mary and St James in Great Grimsby, the event recorded there (Ref. 7a 1456) during the third quarter of 1918.  Ethel was nearly ten years younger than George, having been born on 8th April 1894, the daughter of Arthur and Mary Ann Shepherd of Grimsby, her birth recorded at Rotherham (Ref. 9c 672).  Over the following years, Ethel presented George with three children, the births of which were all recorded at Grimsby register office, when their mother’s maiden-name was confirmed as Shepherd.  According to the 1939 Register, two of the couple’s three children were still living with them, although one of entries was redacted and the record officially closed due to the individual still being alive when the Register was made available for public viewing.  The four members of the family were living at 102 Ainslie Street in Grimsby, where George Collett was 53 and a heavy worker, being a lumper with a fish company, a person who loads and unloads crates of fish.  His wife Ethel M Collett was 45, and their youngest child was Norman G Collett, a 15-years-old schoolboy who was also an Air Raid Patrol scout messenger.  The death of George Collett was recorded at Sleaford register office (Ref. 3b 340) in Lincolnshire near the end of 1970, when he was around 85 years of age.  The last four years of his life was spent as a widower, following the death of his wife during the spring of 1976 which was recorded at Lincoln register office (Ref. 7 1738) at the age of 82

 

18R43 - William A Collett was born in 1919 at Grimsby

18R44 - Eileen Nora Collett was born in 1921 at Grimsby

18R45 - Norman George Collett was born in 1924 at Grimsby

 

Louis James Collett [18Q55] was born at Lowestoft on 21st April 1887, while his birth was registered at Mutford (Ref. 4a 985) in the second quarter of that year.  As far as can be determined, it was only at the time of his birth and that of the 1891 census, that his name was recorded as Louis.  Thereafter it was recorded as Lewis.  Just after he was born his parents left Lowestoft when they moved the family to Gorleston.  By the time of the census in 1891, Louis Collett aged four years was living at 26 Trafalgar Road in West Gorleston with his family, and ten years after that, as Lewis Collett, aged 13, he was living with his parents at 150 Bells Road in Gorleston.  After a further ten years, the census in April 1911, stated that bachelor Louis Collett was 23 and that he was still living with his family at Gorleston, when his place of birth was once again confirmed as Lowestoft.  Five years later the marriage of Lewis James Collett and Ethel May Hicks was recorded at Mutford register office (Ref. 4a 2171) during the first three months on 1916, which produced two children for the couple.  The birth of Ethel May Hicks was recorded at Romford in Essex (Ref. 4a 431) during the second quarter of 1893.  The births of the two children were recorded at Yarmouth register office and confirmed their mother’s maiden-name was Hicks (Refs. 4b 66 & 4b 42) respectively. 

 

Both of the children were listed with the couple when the 1939 Register was compiled, but like other entries, the one for their son was redacted and officially closed due to him being alive when the document was released to the general public.  At that time in their life, the family was residing at 33 Bells Road in Great Yarmouth, where Lewis J Collett was a grocery and provisions dealer aged 52.  His wife Ethel M Collett was 46 having been born on 9th March 1893, and their daughter Marjorie J Collett was 19 and an insurance clerk.  Lewis was 80 years old, when the death of Lewis J Collett was recorded at Yarmouth register office (Ref. 4b 774) during the first three months of 1968, when he was living at 42 Lower Cliff Road in Gorleston.  Curiously after he passed away, his body was transported two-hundred miles south-west to Winchester in Hampshire, where his body was buried on 18 January 1968.  The Will of Lewis James Collett was proved at Norwich on 26th February 1968 for £283 and referred to the day he died as 12th January 1968

 

Apart from what is written above, the only other details unearthed regarding his daughter are that she was born within the catchment area of Great Yarmouth on 9th December 1919, and that her death was recorded there in 1998 when she was 78.  Her record at Great Yarmouth Crematorium in Gorleston stated that she died on 27th May 1998 while in the James Paget Hospital, her home address being 14 Clement Court in Gorleston, and that the cremation service was held on 4th June 1998

 

18R46 – Marjorie Joan Collett was born in 1919 at Yarmouth

18R47 - Leslie James Collett was born in 1924 at Yarmouth

 

Albert Charles Collett [18Q56] was born at Gorleston-on-Sea on 29th June 1889, just after his family had arrived there from Lowestoft, with his birth registered at Mutford (Ref. 4a 923).  He was the youngest son of William Collett of Mettingham and his wife Elizabeth Jackson from Reedham.  Albert was one year old at the time of the Gorleston census of 1891, when he and his family was living at 26 Trafalgar Road in West Gorleston.  He was 11 years old in the Gorleston census of 1901 when he was still living there with his parents but at 150 Bells Road in Gorleston, and was once again living with his parents after a further ten years, in 1911, when he was 21.  It was on 4th February 1915 when Albert Charles Collett was 25 that he enlisted with the British Army.  His attestation form for four years’ service included the following details.  His address was 9 South Road in Gorleston when he was assigned to the 2-6th Cyclist Battalion of the Suffolk Regiment, service number 2244, with the rank of private.  His next-of-kin was his father William Collett of 9 South Road aforesaid.  He had only served King & Country for a total of 130 days when he was discharged on 13th June 1915 because “of not likely to become an efficient soldier”, even though he was described as being a very good character.  It was on medical grounds that he was reject, having a cardiac weakness, being very debilitated, with a poor physique, and suffering with epilepsy.  After the war, when the army were trying resolve whether or not he was entitled to a pension, his address was recorded at 56 Suffield Road in Gorleston-on-Sea, running between Lowestoft Road and Middleton Road

 

It may well have been from that address that Albert Charles Collett married Eva Annie Sayer; their wedding recorded at Yarmouth register office (Ref. 4b 45) during the first three months of 1918.  Just over three years after the wedding day, Eva gave birth to a daughter, whose birth was recorded at Yarmouth register office (Ref. 4b 48) during the second quarter of 1921, when the mother’s maiden-name was confirmed as Sayer.  Eva Annie was born on 9th June 1892 and was baptised at Gorleston on 6th July 1892, the daughter of Charles Coburg Sayer, a baker, and his wife Elizabeth.  Previously written here there was doubt as to the correct identification of Albert Charles Collett, with a reference to one such gentleman of that name whose death was recorded at Norfolk register office (Ref. 4b 17) in 1927 at the age of 30.  However, we now know that the son of William and Elizabeth was still alive in 1966, when he was one of the executors of the Will of his older sister Dinah Daisy Collett (above).  Albert Charles Collett was described as a retired meter fitter, while the second executor was Albert’s sister Jessie Blake (below), a widow, when Dinah’s estate was valued at £4,886

 

The earlier Register of 1939 identified Albert and Eva living at 184 Bells Road in Gorleston, from where Albert C Collett, aged 50, was working as an electric meter fitter and repairer.  His wife Eva A Collett was 47 and the third member of the household, their eighteen-year-old daughter, had her details redacted and officially closed.  The death of Albert Charles Collett was recorded at Great Yarmouth register office (Ref. 10 1229) during the second quarter of 1974 at the age of 85.  According to the cremation record at Great Yarmouth he was 84 when he died on 28th May 1974, one day short of his 85th birthday.  He was cremated on 3rd June 1974 when his home address was 184 Bells Road in Gorleston-on-Sea.  The Will of Albert Charles Collett was proved at Ipswich on 5th August 1974, when his estate had a value of £1,222.  Five years after losing her husband, the death of Eva Annie Collett was also recorded at Great Yarmouth register office (Ref. 10 1143) during the second quarter of 1979 when she was nearly 87.  Her cremation record stated that she was still living at 184 Bells Road in Gorleston where she died on 22nd April and was cremated on 27th April 1979

 

18R48 – Betty E Collett was born in 1921 at Yarmouth

 

Jessie Collett [18Q57] was born at Gorleston-on-Sea on 4th October 1891, the youngest child of William Collett and his wife Elizabeth Jackson.  Her birth was registered at Yarmouth (Ref. 4b 32) during the final quarter of 1891.  Jessie was nine years old by the time of the census in 1901, when she was living at 150 Bells Road in Gorleston with her parents, and she was still living at the family home in Gorleston ten years later in 1911, when she was 19.  It was just over five years later that she married Robert Stanley Blake at Yarmouth where their wedding was recorded (Ref. 4b 41) during the last three months of 1916.  Robert’s birth had been recorded at Ely (Ref. 3b 569) in Cambridgeshire during the second quarter of 1889, where he was also baptised on 10th June 1889, the son of Arthur Ephraim and Agnes Blake.  By the time of the 1939 Register, the couple was living at 10 Palmar Road in Maidstone, where Robert S Blake was the chief clerk at an electricity works, his date of birth being 23rd March 1889.  Three other people were listed at the address, the first being his wife Jessie Blake who was 47, the second name being redacted, and the third being 14-year-old school girl Sheila K Brown, whose date of birth was 1st June 1925

 

During the second quarter of 1964 Robert Stanley Blake died, with his death recorded at Maidstone register office (Ref. 5b 608) at the age of 75.  It was at the West Kent General Hospital in Maidstone where he passed away on 8th April, following which his body was taken to Great Yarmouth where he was buried on 13th April 1964. The Will of Robert Stanley Blake of 10 Palmar Road, Maidstone, was proved at London on 12th June 1964 to Jessie Blake, widow, in the sum of £3,361.  Two years later, widow Jessie Blake was one of the two executors of the Will of her older unmarried sister Dinah Daisy Collett (above), following her death at Gorleston in 1966.  The later death of Jessie Blake was recorded at Kingston-upon-Thames in Surrey (Ref. 5c 2344) during the last three months of 1969, when she was 78

 

Eliza Collett [18Q58] was born at Burgh Castle during the middle of June 1881, where she was baptised on 22nd June 1881, the eldest daughter of George Collett and Eliza Kerrison.  Her birth was registered at Mutford (Ref. 4a 861) during the second quarter of 1881, and it was there also that her death was recorded (Ref. 4a 459) the third quarter of 1881, after which Eliza Collett was buried at Burgh Castle on 9th July 1881.  Another Eliza Collett also had her birth recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 827) during the third quarter of 1881, but tragically, she too suffered an infant death which was recorded at Mutford (Ref. 4a 457) during the third quarter of 1882

 

Margaret Matilda Collett [18Q59] was born at Belton on 21st August 1884, possibly at the home of her maternal grandparents, as her parents had been living at Burgh Castle in 1881.  The birth was registered at Mutford (Ref. 4a 913) during the third quarter of 1884, when her parents were named as George and Eliza Collett.  Margaret was just over three years of age when her father died, following which her mother took Margaret and her younger brother George (below) to live at Belton with her parents.  The Mutford & Gorleston district census of 1891 recorded the three members of the Collett family under the name of Collect, and they were Eliza Collett who was 31, Margaret M Collett who was six, and George Collett who was three years of age.  Eliza’s parents, with whom they were living at St Johns Road in Belton, were listed as George Kerrison, aged 68, and Sarah Kerrison, who was 69.  After leaving school, towards the end of the century, Margaret may have left her grandparents’ home in Belton to secure work.  Certainly, at the time of the census in 1901, Margaret M Collett, aged 16 and from Belton, where visiting the Norfolk home of Charles and Edith M Holland at Turner’s Green in the village of Garvestone near East Dereham.  Charles was 34 and an ordinary agricultural labourer who was born at Garvestone, Edith was 27, and with then were their two children young Ernest and Ellen.   Whether the Holland family was in some way related to Margaret is not currently known, but ten years later she was living at 21 Albermarle Road in Gorleston, the home of Edith Bullock who was 27.  By that time in her life the unmarried daughter of George and Eliza Collett was listed as Margaret Matilda Collett, aged 26, who had been born at Belton.  After that, it might be that she travelled to London, since it was there that she was married

 

Six years later, during the third quarter of 1917, the marriage of Margaret Matilda Collett and Henry Stark was recorded at West Ham register office in London (Ref. 4a 487).  Their wedding ceremony was conducted at All Saints Church in West Ham on 1st August 1917, when the bride was 32 years of age and confirmed as the daughter of George Collett.  Their son Albert David Stark was born two years later, his birth recorded at West Ham register office (Ref. 4a 60) during the third quarter of 1919.  After a further twenty years, Margaret M Stark, aged 55, was still located within the West Ham area of East London in 1939, when she was a married woman and a housekeeper at 108-110 The Grove, adjacent to Grove Crescent Road in the Borough of West Ham, the home of elderly widow Mary L Beck who, together with her unmarried daughter, were partners in a pawn broking business.  Where Margaret’s husband was that day has yet to be discovered.  What is known is that on 21st August 1984 she received a letter from Queen Elizabeth II to celebrate her one-hundredth birthday.  Sadly, it was just after that happy day when she died, the death of Margaret Matilda Stark was recorded at the Hasting & Rother register office in East Sussex (Ref. 18 899) during October 1984