PART
SEVENTY
The
Colletts of Shudy Camps in Cambridgeshire
Updated February 2018
The village of Shudy Camps in
Cambridgeshire, which includes the hamlet of Mill Green, is situated two miles
west of Haverhill in Suffolk. The parish
church is the Church of St Mary, while the nearby village of Withersfield lies
just to the north of Haverhill.
This is the family line of Kate McIvers
who supplied some of the details in 2009 which were only developed further
during the spring of 2015.
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It
is hoped that what appears to be two pairs of brothers (70N1 & 70N2 and
70N3 & 70N4) were in fact the four children of the same parents. In fact, it very much looks like the parents
of brothers Samuel and John were John and Hannah Collett, with Samuel
baptised at Ashdown in Essex which lies in the middle of area of bounded by
Withersfield and Haverhill to the east and Chesterford and Saffron Walden to
the west, which also included Shudy Camps. |
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70L1 |
John Collett was married to Mary and their two
sons were baptised at Horseheath in Cambridgeshire, not far from Haverhill
and the village just west of Withersfield. |
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70M1 |
William Collett |
Baptised on 27.08.1749
at Horseheath |
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70M2 |
John Collett |
Baptised on
10.11.1751 at Horseheath |
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70M1 |
William Collett was baptised at Horseheath near
Withersfield on 27th August 1749, the son of John and Mary
Collett. Nothing is currently known
about him excepted that he was twenty-two years of age when he married Hannah
Mills at Heveningham in Suffolk on 3rd December 1771. He may also have been the William Collett
who died in early 1839 at Linton just a few miles west of Horseheath, the
death recorded at Linton during the first three months of that year. |
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70M2 |
John Collett was baptised at Horseheath near
Withersfield on 10th November 1751, the son of John and Mary
Collett. He later married Hannah and
the first two sons listed below are certainly their children, while the later
two children may be the sons from a second marriage for John. |
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70N1 |
Samuel Collett |
Born in 1794
at Chesterford, east of Haverhill |
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70N2 |
John Collett |
Born in 1795
at Chesterford, east of Haverhill |
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70N3 |
William Collett |
Born in 1810
at Withersfield, north of Haverhill |
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70N4 |
Joseph Collett |
Born in 1812
at Withersfield, north of Haverhill |
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70N1 |
Samuel Collett was, according to later census
records, was born at Chesterford in 1794, and was baptised at Ashdon in Essex
on 9th November 1794 when he was named as the son of John and
Hannah Collett. It would appear that
he first married (1) during the late 1810s and that relationship produced at
least three children before Samuel’s wife passed away, perhaps during the
birth of a subsequent child. It seems
Samuel lived the life of a widower with his three children for the next ten
years, until that is, Samuel married (2) Rebecca Watson at Saffron Walden on
23rd September 1834 with whom he had a further three children. |
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Their
first child was baptised at Great Bradley, just north of Withersfield, on 18th
February 1836 when the parents of Samuel Collett junior were listed as Samuel
and Rebecca Collett. That child would
appear to have suffered an infant death, since the Samuel who was living with
the family in 1841 was only eleven months old. At the baptism of their second son named
Samuel Collett, who was baptised at Sturmer on 17th July 1840, the
boy’s parents were named in error as Daniel and Rebecca Collett, while at the
baptism of their fourth child, Thomas Watson Collett at Sturmer on 14th
May 1844, the parents were again recorded as Samuel and Rebecca Collett. |
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By
the time of the first national census in June 1841 Samuel Collett was living
at Couples Farm within the Parish of Sturmer in Essex, just south of
Haverhill, where his occupation was that of a farm bailiff. He was 45 and had not been born in Essex,
while his wife Rebecca Collett, aged 35, had been. The four children living with them were
Mary Ann and Hannah, both of whom had a rounded age of 20, Moses Collett who
was 15 and Samuel Collett who was only 11 months old. Two more children were added to the family over
the next three years, although it is possible that Rebecca and her last child
did not survive the ordeal of the birth, as neither of them featured in the
next census. |
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Samuel
Collett was 58 in the census of 1851 when he was visiting Charles Watson at
Leahouse Lane in Saffron Walden, who was most likely the brother of his later
wife Rebecca. Samuel was described as
a yeoman from Little Chesterford, while Charles Watson was a master baker and
a widower of 50 years. Living at the
same address was his married son Charles Watson who was 25 and a journeyman
baker, and unmarried Ruth Watson who was 23 and a housekeeper. At that same time in 1851 Samuel’s son
Moses Collett from Great Bradley, north of Withersfield, was 27 and a farm
bailiff, as his father had been, and was employed by bachelor James Osborne,
aged 43, a farmer of 350 acres employing 15 men, at Burton End in
Haverhill. |
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For
the next census in 1861 Samuel Collett from Great Chesterford was residing in
Great Bradley, where two of his sons had been born many years earlier. At that time in his life he was 69 and a
farmer of two acres with a grocer’s shop and home, where he was living with
his third wife (3) Mary who was 47 and born in Kidderminster. The only other person living with them was
Mary’s mother Elizabeth Lurcott who was 72 and also from Kidderminster in
Worcestershire. Nine years later, the
death of a Samuel Collett aged 78 was recorded at Lambeth in London (Ref. 1d
274) during the final three months of 1870.
By a sheer coincidence, his son and namesake Samuel Collett had
already died during the previous year when Samuel passed away in 1870. |
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70O1 |
Mary Ann
Collett |
Born in 1819
but not in Essex |
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70O2 |
Hannah
Collett |
Born in 1821
but not in Essex |
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70O3 |
Moses Collett |
Born in 1823
at Great Bradley, nr Withersfield |
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The
following are the children of John Collett and Rebecca Watson: |
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70O4 |
Samuel Collett |
Born in 1836
at Great Bradley, nr Withersfield |
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70O5 |
Samuel Collett |
Born in 1840
at Sturmer |
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70O6 |
Charles Watson Collett |
Born in 1843
at Sturmer |
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70O7 |
Thomas Watson Collett |
Born in 1844
at Sturmer |
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70N2 |
John Collett was, according to later census
records, born around 1795 at Chesterford to the east of Haverhill and near
Duxford. He may have been the older
brother of William and Joseph Collett (below) from Withersfield and,
following his marriage to Mary Ann, who was born at Helions Bumpstead just
south of Haverhill, all of his children were born at Withersfield. In the census of 1841 they and their family
were living at Button Green in Withersfield where John Collett was 45 and an
agricultural labourer, his wife Mary Collett was 30, and their three children
were Aaron Collett who was 12, Mary who was seven and Sarah who was five. |
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At
least three more children were added to the family during the 1840s and
according to the next Withersfield census in 1851 they were still living at
Button Green. John Collett from
Chesterford was 55 and was still working as an agricultural labourer. His wife Mary Ann Collett was 43 and the
children with them that day were Aaron who was 21, Hannah who was eight, Mary
Ann who was four and Martha who was just two months old. |
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Ten
years later John Collett was 67 and Mary Ann Collett was 54, while still
living there with them were their three daughters. Hannah S Collett was 18, Mary Ann H Collett
was 12 and Martha Ann Collett was 10 years of age, all three of them
confirmed as having been born at Withersfield, where the family was still
living. Although no record of their
son Aaron has been found in Britain after 1851, the couple’s daughter Mary
Ann Collett was a spinster of 68 years who was still residing in the
Withersfield area on the day the census was conducted in April 1911. |
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70O8 |
Aaron Collett |
Born in 1828
at Withersfield |
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70O9 |
Mary Collett |
Born in 1833
at Withersfield; died after 1841 |
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70O10 |
Sarah Collett |
Born in 1835
at Withersfield |
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70O11 |
Hannah S
Collett |
Baptised on 4th
June 1843 at Withersfield |
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70O12 |
Mary Ann H
Collett |
Born in 1846
at Withersfield |
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70O13 |
Martha Ann
Collett |
Born in 1851
at Withersfield |
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70N3 |
William Collett was born at Withersfield in 1810, the
older brother of Joseph Collett. In
the census of 1851 William was 40 years old and an agricultural labourer and a
drillman living at Button Green in Withersfield with his wife Elizabeth
Collett who was 38 and also born in Withersfield. The only other occupants of the dwelling
were William Potter, a servant of 16, and widower Joseph Fobersham who was 35
who was a lodger and another agricultural labourer. They were both still there in 1861 when
William was 47 and Elizabeth was 45.
However, William died during the next decade, leaving widow Elizabeth
Collett aged 57 from Withersfield still living in the village but at a time
in her life when she was in lodgings at the home of James and Sarah Jacobs. |
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70N4 |
Joseph Collett was born at Withersfield in Suffolk,
near Haverhill, on 3rd March 1812, the son of John Collett. He married Ann Webb at Haverhill on 26th
February 1839, Ann having been born there on 10th May 1820, the
daughter of Nathaniel Webb and Mary Wiseman.
It was also in Haverhill that the couple first lived, where their
first seven children were born, though only six of them survived. It was at Haverhill that the young family
was residing for the census in 1841 when Joseph was curiously named as John
Collett, who had a round age of 25, his wife Ann was 20 and their daughter
Emma was two years old. |
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By
the time the census of 1851 was conducted the family was residing in the
hamlet of Mill Green within the parish of Shudy Camps. Joseph Collett was a
servant at Stubbing Farm and was described as being 36 and born at
Withersfield in Suffolk. It may have
been out of embarrassment for the eight years difference in age between
himself and his wife that he said he was younger than he actually was. His wife Ann Collett was accurately
described as being 30 years of age and born at Haverhill. Their five Haverhill born children on that
occasion were recorded as Hannah Collett who was eight, Harriet Collett who
was seven, Kitty Collett who was six, John Collett who was two years of age
and William Collett who was ten months old. |
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Perhaps
because of overcrowding in the family home, and more children to be later
added to the family, Joseph’s and Ann’s first-born child Emma Collett was
staying with her maternal grandparents at Braintree in Essex. Nathaniel Webb was 56, his wife Mary was
51, and their granddaughter Emma Collett from Haverhill was 10 years of age. None of the children of Joseph Collett was
baptised in Haverhill, instead they were all baptised at St Mary’s Church in
Shudy Camps when the family was living at Mill Green. |
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A
year after the census in 1851 the family may have still been living at Mill
Green, although it was in the nearby village of Linton where the birth of
their son Harry was recorded (Ref. 3b 487) during the second quarter of
1852. However, it was still within the
parish of Shudy Camps that the enlarged family was recorded in the next
census of 1861. By that time Joseph
was acknowledging his correct age of 48, Ann was 41, and living with them
were seven of their twelve surviving children. They were Kitty Collett who was 15, William
Collett who was 10, Harry Collett who was nine, Ambrose Collett who was
seven, Alfred Collett who was five, Dick Collett who was two years of age and
Ellen Collett who was seven months old. |
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Sometime
during the following ten years Joseph and Ann left Shudy Camps when they
moved to Essex and Stansted Mountfitchet.
That was confirmed in the census of 1871 when Joseph Collett was 59
and working as a gardener at The Willows in the Bentfield End area of
Stansted. Included in the census
return with Joseph was his wife and five of their children. Ann was 51, daughter Catherine was 25 and
from Haverhill, son Alfred was 15 and an agricultural labourer from Shudy
Camps, as was son Dick who was 13. The
two youngest children Ellen who was 10 and Sarah Ann who was eight were both
attending the local school, while their place of birth was also confirmed as
Shudy Camps. |
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In
the next census of 1881 Joseph Collett was still living at Stansted
Mountfitchet in a cottage. He was 68
and had been born at Withersfield in Suffolk and, while his status was said
to be married, the only person living there with him was his daughter Ellen
who was 20 and a general domestic servant, presumably acting as housekeeper
for her father. In fact, his wife,
Anna Collett from Suffolk who was 61, was then boarding with their married
daughter Catherine (Kate Marsh) at 14 Weddington Road near Camden Town. |
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It
was also at Stansted where Joseph Collett died on 4th April 1891,
one day before the census was conducted that year. The census return completed that day listed
head of the household as the widow Ann Collett from Haverhill who was 70, who
still had living with her on that sad day, her daughter Ellen Collett from
Shudy Camps who was 30. The pair of
them was still in Stansted ten years later when Ann Collett aged 80 and from Haverhill
was living on her own means, supported by her unmarried daughter Ellen
Collett from Shudy Camps who was 40. |
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70O14 |
Emma Collett |
Born on
19.04.1839 at Haverhill |
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70O15 |
Hannah
Collett |
Born on
30.09.1840 at Haverhill; died 26.04.1841 |
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70O16 |
Hannah Collett |
Born on
20.11.1842 at Haverhill |
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70O17 |
Harriet Collett |
Born on
19.03.1843 at Haverhill |
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70O18 |
Catherine (Kitty) Collett |
Born on
27.01.1846 at Haverhill |
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70O19 |
John Collett |
Born on
17.07.1848 at Haverhill |
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70O20 |
William Collett |
Born on 18.05.1850
at Haverhill |
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70O21 |
Harry Collett |
Born on
18.03.1852 at Mill Green, Shudy Camps |
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70O22 |
Ambrose Collett |
Born on
01.04.1854 at Mill Green, Shudy Camps |
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70O23 |
Alfred Collett |
Born in 1856
at Mill Green, Shudy Camps |
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70O24 |
Richard Collett |
Born on 27.05.1858
at Mill Green, Shudy Camps |
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70O25 |
Ellen Collett |
Born on
18.08.1860 at Mill Green, Shudy Camps |
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70O26 |
Sarah Ann Collett |
Born on
02.03.1863 at Mill Green, Shudy Camps |
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70O4 |
Samuel Collett was born at Great Bradley near
Withersfield in 1836, the son of Samuel Collett by his second wife Rebecca
Watson. He was baptised there at Great
Bradley on 18th February 1836, but sadly died not long after that. |
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70O5 |
Samuel Collett was born at Sturmer, just south of
Haverhill, in late June or early July 1840 and was named in honour of his
older brother who had died before he was born. It was also at Sturmer that he was baptised
on 17th July 1840. Samuel
was eleven months old on the day of the census in June 1841 when he and his
family were still residing in Sturmer. However, by the time of the next census in
1851 Samuel’s mother, Rebecca Collett nee Watson, had already passed away. |
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At
the age of 10 years Samuel Collett and his brother Charles (below) were
staying with relatives at Button Green in Withersfield. Both of them were described as being from
Sturmer, the nephews of Ambrose Jefferies 53 and his wife Mahalah Jefferies
49 from Withersfield. It is therefore
possible that Mahalah was the sister of Rebecca, the boys’ late mother. According to the census in 1861 Samuel
Collett from Bradley was 20 years old when he was an apprentice living with
the large Whitmore family at Gazeley in Suffolk to the east of Newmarket. It was eight and a half years after that
when Samuel Collett died in Suffolk on 26th October 1869, with
probate resolved at Bury St Edmunds on 4th March 1870. His death preceded that of his father who
death was recorded in London at the end of 1870. |
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70O6 |
Charles Watson Collett was born at Sturmer in 1843, although
his birth was recorded at nearby Risbridge (Ref. 12 395) during the second
quarter of that year. Charles W
Collett was eight years of age in census of 1851 when he and his brother
Samuel (above) were staying with Ambrose and Mahalah Jeffries at Button Green
in Withersfield, their aunt and uncle, following the premature death of the
boys’ mother. Ten years later, in the
census of 1861, Charles W Collett from Sturmer in Essex was an apprentice at
the age of 17 when he was living within the Parish of St Peter in Sudbury,
Suffolk. He was the only Collett
living within that registration district and, by that time, Charles’ father
had also passed away. |
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70O7 |
Thomas Watson Collett was born at Sturmer in 1844, where he
was baptised on 14th May 1844, the last child born to Samuel
Collett and Rebecca Collett. Either at
the time of his birth or shortly thereafter his mother died. With no record of Thomas in any later
census, it is possible that he too did not survive. |
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70O14 |
Emma Collett was born at Haverhill on 19th
April 1839, the eldest of the thirteen children of Joseph Collett and Ann
Webb. She was two years old in the
Haverhill census of 1841 and it was in 1850 that the family left Haverhill
when they settled at Mill Green in Shudy Camps. By that time Emma was the eldest of the six
children and, perhaps for reasons of overcrowding in the family home, she was
staying with her mother’s parents at Braintree in Essex on the day the census
was conducted in 1851. Emma Collett
from Haverhill was 10 years old when she was with Nathaniel Webb, aged 56,
Mary Webb, aged 51, and their three children Sarah who was 20, Joseph who was
18 and Hannah who was 16. After a
further ten years Emma Collett was 21 when she was the only Collett living
within the Hedingham and Halstead area to the north-east of Braintree in
Essex. |
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70O16 |
Hannah Collett was born at Haverhill on 20th
November 1842, the third daughter of Joseph Collett and Ann Webb and the
second child of that name for the couple, following the death of her sister
during the previous year. It was ten
years later, after her family had settled in nearby Shudy Camps, that she was
baptised at St Mary’s Church on 4th July 1852 in a joint ceremony
with her sisters Harriet and Catherine (Kitty) Collett and her brothers John,
William and Harry Collett. The census
conducted during the preceding year included Hannah Collett aged eight years
living at Mill Green in Shudy Camps with her family. What happened to Hannah after 1851 is not
clear because no record of her has been found in the next two census returns
in 1861 or 1871. |
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It
was then around two years later that she married James Allsworth and by 1881
they and their children were living at St Leonards Square in St Pancras,
London. Her husband was James was a
general labourer from Cambridgeshire who was 36. Their five St Pancras born children were
listed as twins Robert and Herbert Allsworth who were six, George Allsworth
who was four, Frederick Allsworth who was three and Ellen Allsworth who was
under one year old. Visiting the
family were two of Hannah’s brothers, Ambrose and Richard Collett (below). |
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70O17 |
Harriet Collett was born at Haverhill on 19th
March 1843, another daughter of Joseph and Ann Collett. She was eight years of age when she was baptised
with five of her sibling at Shudy Camps on 4th July 1852, while
one year earlier she was seven years old in the Mill Green, Shudy Camps
census of 1851. Like her sister Hannah
(above) Harriet too has not been identified in the census returns for 1861
and 1871, but by 1881 she was still unmarried at the age of 37. The census that year recorded her as having
been born at Haverhill, when she was employed as the cook at the home of
retired solicitor Richard Fisher and his wife Mary at Hill Top, a private
house, in West Lavington, Sussex. It
would appear that Harriet never married and, following the death of her
widowed mother during the first few years of the new century, Harriet Collett
aged 67 moved to Stansted Mountfitchet in Essex to live with her younger
unmarried sister Ellen Collett (below).
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70O18 |
Catherine (Kitty)
Collett was born at
Haverhill on 27th January 1846, another daughter of Joseph and Ann
Collett. She was six years old when
she was baptised with five other members of her family on 4th July
1852. Although in later life she was
known as Kate, it was as Kitty that she was included in the census returns
for 1851 and 1861 when she was living with her family at Mill Green in Shudy
Camps at the ages of six and 15 respectively.
It was in London on 29th May 1870 that Catherine married
George Marsh who had been born at Ashdon in Essex on 12th October 1845, the son of Richard Marsh and Mary
Jepps. The couple’s first four
children were born in England before the family emigrated to Huron County in
Ontario, Canada. |
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In
1881 the young family was recorded at 14 Weddington Road to the north of
Camden Town in London. George Marsh
was a general labourer at the age of 35, as was his wife Kate Marsh from
Suffolk. Their four children were Anne
Marsh who was eight, Henry Marsh who was six, Arthur who was three and Minnie
Marsh who was one year old. Also
living with the family was Kate’s mother Ann (Anna) Collett who was 61 and
described as a married boarder. |
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The details for their six children are
as follows: Annie Marsh was born in
London during the third quarter of 1872 and died on 12th April
1949 at Pickford in Michigan, USA.
Harry S Marsh was born on 4th March 1875 at Ashdon in Essex
and died on 21st March 1955 at Royal Oak in Oakland County,
Michigan. Arthur Marsh was born on 10th
July 1877 at Kentish Town and died on 22nd July 1962 at Manitoba
in Canada. Minnie Marsh was born on 21st
January 1880 at Ashdon and died on 11th December 1977 at Dungannon
in Ontario. Willey Marsh was born on 9th May 1885 at Hullett Township in
Huron County, Ontario and died on 26th November 1983 at Goderich
in Ontario. And lastly Bertie
Marsh was born on 18th March 1890 at Hullett Township and died on
28th November 1979 at Auburn in Ontario and was buried at Ball's
Cemetery in Huron County. Catherine
Marsh nee Collett died on 24th
July 1930 at Auburn in Ontario and was buried at Ball's Cemetery in Huron
County. George Marsh died seven years
later on 26th June 1937 at West Wawanosh in Ontario and was buried
with his wife on 29th June 1937. |
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70O20 |
William Collett was born at Haverhill on 18th
May 1850 and shortly after he was born his family moved to Mill Green in
Shudy Camps where he was baptised on 4th July 1852 in a joint
ceremony at St Mary’s Church which included five of his siblings. He was ten months old in the census of 1852
and was 10 years old in the census of 1761.
During the next decade his family left Shudy Camps when they moved to
Stansted Mountfitchet, although William did not move there with them, nor has
he been identified within the following census in 1881. The reason for that might be that he was
serving with the British Army. |
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However,
not long after that he married the much younger Margaret from Portsmouth,
following which the couple was living in the Aden area of Essex when their
first child was born. After that the
family settled in Warley, near
Brentwood, within the Romford & Hornchurch registration district
of Essex, where they were recorded in 1891, living at the army barracks. By that time William Collett was 39 and a
colour sergeant with the infantry, Margaret was 25, Edith Annie was six, John
William was four, Sydney was two and Joseph Henry was one year old. Curiously both Margaret and her eldest
child were recorded as having been born in India, while it was at Warley in
Essex where the three youngest children were born. |
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Four
more children were added to the family during the 1890s, all of them born at
Warley, before the large family moved east to Orsett to the west of
Corringham in Essex. The Orsett &
Corringham census in 1901 confirmed that William Collett from Haverhill was
49 and was employed at a local explosive work where he was a patrol/security
guard. His wife Margaret was 36 and
seven of her eight children were living there with them. Edith was 16 and was also working at the
explosive work where she was a cordite packer, Sydney was 13, Joseph was 11,
Margaret was nine, Jessie was seven, Harry was five and William was three
years old. Margaret may well have been
expecting the birth of the couple’s ninth child on the day of the census,
since later that same year their last child was born. |
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It
may have been during the birth of that last child that Margaret passed away
because she was no longer living with her husband in April 1911. On that occasion the family was still
living at Orsett where William was 60, and with him were his daughter Jessie
Collett who was 17, and his three sons Harry Ernest Collett who was 15,
William Collett who was 13 and Samuel Collett who was 10 years of age. William’s son Sydney Collett aged 24 was
serving overseas with the military on that occasion. The census return that year included the following family
details. William had been married for
twenty-seven years, during which time he and his late wife had given birth to
eleven children, with nine of them still living. That means it is the two children missing
from the list below, who did not survive.
He was also described as an army pensioner from Haverhill. The three eldest children, Jessie, Harry
and William, were all confirmed as having been born at Warley Barracks, while
it was at Kynochtown, in Corringham, where Samuel was born. Daughter Jessie Collett was a worker at the
Kynoch Explosives Factory, while Harry Ernest Collett was working at a nearby
oil refinery. The two youngest sons
were still attending school. |
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|
|
||||||
|
The couple’s eldest son, John William
Collett, whilst born at Warley, his birth was recorded at Romford (Ref. 4a
351) during the third quarter of 1886.
When his family was living at Orsett fourteen years old John Wm
Collett from Warley was a boarder at The Unicorn Inn on Magdalene Street in
Colchester, from where John was working as a shop’s cashier. The only other record of him was at the time
of his passing at the age of 89, his death recorded at Barnet register office
(Ref. 11 0272) during the month of December in 1975, when his birth was noted
as June 1886. |
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|
|
||||||
|
The death of son Harry E Collett was
recorded at Orsett register office (Ref. 4a 546) during the last three months
of 1928 when he was 32. That sad event
took place only seven years after Harry Ernest Collett married Violet Weaver,
both of them living in Basildon at that time in the lives in 1922. Harry’s father was confirmed as William
Collett and Violet’s father was named as Simon Weaver. |
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|
|
||||||
|
70P1 |
Edith Annie
Collett |
Born in 1884
at Aden, Essex |
||||
|
70P2 |
John William
Collett |
Born in 1886
at Warley, Essex |
||||
|
70P3 |
Sydney
Collett |
Born in 1888
at Warley, Essex |
||||
|
70P4 |
Joseph Henry
Collett |
Born in 1889
at Warley, Essex |
||||
|
70P5 |
Margaret
Collett |
Born in 1891
at Warley, Essex |
||||
|
70P6 |
Jessie
Collett |
Born in 1893
at Warley, Essex |
||||
|
70P7 |
Harry Ernest
Collett |
Born in 1896 at Warley,
Essex |
||||
|
70P8 |
William
Collett |
Born in 1897
at Warley, Essex |
||||
|
70P9 |
Samuel
Collett |
Born in 1901
at Orsett, Essex |
||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
70O21 |
Harry Collett was born at Mill Green in Shudy Camps
on 18th March 1852, one of the sons of Joseph Collett and Ann
Webb, who was baptised at St Mary’s Church on 4th July 1852. He was nine years old in the Shudy camps
census of 1861, while ten years later he had left the family home and was a
ledger at Oadby near Leicester when he was recorded as Harry Collett from
Shudy Camps who was 18. On that
occasion he was working as a groom and was staying with John and Mary Swanson
who were 36 and 31 respectively. It
was not long after that when he married Ellen Staples from Leicester, the
wedding taking place around 1872 or 1873, with their first child born in
1873. According to the census in 1881
the family of Harry and Ellen Collett was living at 27 Thomas Street within
the Leicester parish of St Margaret. |
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|
|
||||||
|
Harry
was 29 and a coachman from Cambridge, Ellen was also 29 and their first four
children were Alice Collett who was seven, George Collett who was five, Ellen
Collett who was two and Ambrose Collett who was six months old. All four children had been born in
Leicester. Over the next decade a
further four children were added to the family, three of them when they were
still living in Leicester and the fourth at Bassett Street in South Wigston near Oadby,
to the south of Leicester, where the family was recorded in the census of
1891. Harry was once again described
as a groom, at the age of 38, as was Ellen who was expecting the birth of the
couple’s ninth child. All eight
children were still living there with the couple, and they were Alice 17,
George 15, Ellen 12, Ambrose 10, together with Ethel Collett who was eight,
Gertrude who was six, Harry who was three and Emily Collett who was one year
old. |
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|
|
||||||
|
Two
more children were added to the family, the first of them in the following
year, and five years after that Ellen gave birth to the tenth child, when she
was around forty-six years of age. The
census return for Wigston in March 1901 listed the family at Kirkdale Road as
Harry Collett aged 49 and a coachman and beer house keeper from Cambridge,
Ellen Collett who was 49, George H Collett who was 25 and a hosier
over-looker, Ellen Collett who was 22 and a hosier framework knitter, Ethel
Collett who was 18, Gertrude Collett who was 16 and may have been helping her
mother, Harry Collett who was 13 and a shoe polisher, Emily Collett who was
11, Alfred B Collett who was nine and Frank E Collet who was three years of
age. |
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|
|
||||||
|
It
was at Bakewell House,
12 Kirkdale Road in South Wigston within the parish of Wigston Magna that
Harry, aged 59 and a domestic coachman, was living with his wife Ellen, who
was also 59, together with six of their children, in April 1911. Ethel was 28, Gertrude was 26, Harry was
23, Emily was 21, Basil was 19 and Frank Edward Collett was 13. Harry spent the remainder of his life at 12
Kirkdale Road in South Wigston, since it was at that address where he died on
22nd November 1926 when administration was granted to George Henry
Collett, a hosiery manufacturer foreman and Frank Edward Collett, a grocer’s assistant. The estate of Harry Collett was valued at
£1,001 8 Shillings 10d and his death was recorded at Blaby register office
(Ref. 7a 58) during the last three months of 1926 when he was 73. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
70P10 |
Alice Collett |
Born in 1874 at Leicester |
||||
|
70P11 |
George Henry Collett |
Born in 1876 at Leicester |
||||
|
70P12 |
Ellen Collett |
Born in 1878
at Leicester |
||||
|
70P13 |
Ambrose Collett |
Born in 1880
at Leicester |
||||
|
70P14 |
Ethel Collett |
Born in 1882
at Leicester |
||||
|
70P15 |
Gertrude Collett |
Born in 1885 at Leicester |
||||
|
70P16 |
Harry Collett |
Born in 1887
at Leicester |
||||
|
70P17 |
Emily Collett |
Born in 1890 at Wigston |
||||
|
70P18 |
Alfred Basil Collett |
Born in 1892 at Wigston |
||||
|
70P19 |
Frank Edward Collett |
Born in 1897
at Wigston |
||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
70O22 |
Ambrose Collett was born at Mill Green in Shudy Camps
on 1st April 1854, a son of Joseph and Ann Collett. It was just one month later when he was
baptised in the parish Church of St Mary in Shudy Camps on 7th May
1854, the son of Joseph and Ann. He
was six years old in the census of 1861, the only time he was recorded with
his family in Mill Green. By the time
he was 15 Ambrose was the only Collett recorded within the Cold Newton &
Billesdon census of 1871 for Leicestershire.
However, after a further ten years it was Ambrose and his younger
brother Richard who were staying with their older married sister Hannah
Allsworth at St Leonards Square in St Pancras, London. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Ambrose
Collett was 27 and a coachman who, with his brother Richard Collett aged 22,
was visiting the Allsworth family, both of them born in Cambridgeshire. During the next couple of years Ambrose
married the much younger Elizabeth whose children who were all believed to have been born at
Hackney, but later revealed not to be correct. Curiously, within the census of 1891, no
children were listed with the couple, nor have any searches revealed their
whereabouts. On that occasion Ambrose
Collett, an undertaker’s coachman and groom was 36 when he and his wife
Elizabeth from Islington, who was 27, were residing at 23 Smith Street in
Mile End Old Town. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
The
full family was recorded in the next census of 1901 as living at 4 St Thomas
Square in Hackney, where
they were also recorded in the Electoral Role of 1903, whereas it was at
number 2 St Thomas Square that the family was recorded in 1910. In March 1901 Ambrose Collett from
Cambridgeshire was 46 and a bus driver.
Elizabeth was 37 and their four children were named as Annie Collett
who was 16, Harriet Collett who was 14, Ernest Collett who was eight and
Elsie Collett who was three years of age.
Tragically, the
couple’s three-year-old daughter Elsie Adelaide Collett died within the next
six months, her death recorded at Hackney (Ref. 1b 338) during the third
quarter of 1901. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
It
may have been Ambrose’s occupation that resulted in another move for his
family during 1910, since it was within the Edmonton area of London that they
were recorded in the April 1911.
Ambrose was 57 from
Shudy Camps, Elizabeth was 47 and from Islington, Ethel was 27 and born at Leyton,
Harriet was 24 and born
at Stepney, and Alfred was eight years old and born at Hackney. It was also at Hackney (Ref. 1b 552) where
his birth was recorded during the last quarter of 1903. Their son Ernest Ambrose Collett was 18 and
was serving with the army at Woolwich at that time. In 1914, a certain Frank Ambrose Collett, born in 1893, entered
military service with the Royal Field Artillery, service number 940320, with
379th Battery of the 96th Brigade. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
70P20 |
Ethel
Annie Collett |
Born in 1884 at Leyton, Essex |
||||
|
70P21 |
Harriet
Collett |
Born in 1886 at Stepney; died 09.02.1964 |
||||
|
70P22 |
Ernest
Ambrose Collett |
Born in 1893 at Hackney |
||||
|
70P23 |
Elsie Adelaide Collett |
Born in 1898 at Hackney |
||||
|
70P24 |
Alfred William Collett |
Born in 1903 at Hackney |
||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
70O23 |
Alfred Collett was born at Mill Green in Shudy Camps
during the first three months of 1856, a son of Joseph Collett and Ann
Webb. It was also at the parish church
in Shudy Camps that he was baptised on 6th April 1856 when his
parents were confirmed as Joseph and Ann.
He was five years old and 15 years of age in the next two census
returns, on each occasion when he was living with his family at Mill Green. By the time he was 25 Alfred Collett from
Shudy Camps was employed as a domestic servant and a groom for Justice of the
Peace and farmer of 148 acres William Trolter at Horton Manor House in Epsom,
Surrey. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
It
may have been later that same year, or during the following year, that Alfred
Collett married Amelia Ann Hicks and by 1891 their marriage had resulted in
the birth of four children. The family
of six was recorded in the census for the St Pancras and Kentish Town
district of London as Alfred who was 35 and from Shudy Camps, Amelia who was
34, Alfred E Collett who was seven, Amelia M Collett who was six, Mary E
Collett who was four and Annie Collett who was two years old. The next St Pancras census in 1901 revealed
that Alfred Collett from Shudy Camps was 45 and still working as a stableman
and a groom. His wife Amelia A Collett
from Hillingdon was 44 and their two eldest children were named as Alfred E
Collett who was 17 and a compositor’s apprentice from Kentish Town and Amelia
M Collett also from Kentish Town was 16 and a cook stamper. The three younger children were still
attending school and they were Mary E Collett who was 14, Annie E Collett who
was 12 and latest arrival Ellen M Collett who was only seven years old, all
three of them also born at Kentish Town. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
The
family was still living within the St Pancras area of London in April 1911
when Alfred Collett from Shudy Camps was 55, Amelia Ann Collett was 54,
Alfred Ernest was 27, Amelia Margaret who was 26, Mary Emily Collett was 24
and Ellen May was 17. Tragically their
son Alfred Ernest Collett was 33 years old when he was killed in action
during the First World War. He was
Private 26826 with the Royal Fusiliers and died on Flanders Field on 13th
November 1916. His name is one of many
on the Thievpal Memorial in the Somme department of the Picardy region of
northern France, while his name also appears on a tablet in St Silas the
Martyr Church in Kentish Town. On
receiving the sad news from the War Department Alfred and Amelia were
residing at 15 Christchurch Avenue in Wembley. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
70P25 |
Alfred Ernest
Collett |
Born in 1883
at Kentish Town; died 13.11.1916 |
||||
|
70P26 |
Amelia
Margaret Collett |
Born in 1884
at Kentish Town |
||||
|
70P27 |
Mary Emily
Collett |
Born in 1886
at Kentish Town |
||||
|
70P28 |
Annie E
Collett |
Born in 1888
at Kentish Town |
||||
|
70P29 |
Ellen May
Collett |
Born in 1893
at Kentish Town |
||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
70O24 |
Richard Collett was born at Mill Green in Shudy Camps
on 27th May 1858, another son of Joseph and Ann Collett. It is interesting that his birth was recorded using the name Dick
Collett at Linton (Ref. 3b 500) during the second quarter of 1858. He was baptised at St Mary’s Church in
Shudy Camps when he was fourteen months old on 24th July 1859 and
he and his family were still living in Mill Green for the census of 1861
when, as Dick Collett, he was two years old. During the 1860s the family moved to Essex
and by 1871 Dick Collett, aged 13 and an agricultural labourer from Shudy
Camps, was still with the family at The Willows, at cottage in Bentfield End
in Stansted Mountfitchet. At the time
of the next census in 1881 Richard Collett, aged 22 and a labourer, was
accompanying his brother Ambrose (above) when they were visitors at the St
Leonards Square in St Pancras, London, the home of their married sister
Hannah Allsworth nee Collett. Although
no record of Richard or Dick has been found in England after 1881, it is
reputed that he later married and had two children, Joyce and John, about
whom nothing is known. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
70P30 |
Joyce Collett |
Date of birth
unknown |
||||
|
70P31 |
John Collett |
Date of birth
unknown |
||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
70O25 |
Ellen Collett was born at Mill Green in Shudy Camps
on 18th August 1860, the twelfth child of Joseph Collett and Ann
Webb. She was baptised at St Mary’s
Church in Shudy Camps on 25th November 1860, when she was
confirmed as the daughter of Joseph and Anne Collett. On the day of the census the following year
Ellen Collett was seven months old, but sometime after that the family left
Shudy Camps and by 1871 they were residing at The Willows, a cottage at
Bentfield End in Stansted Mountfitchet when Ellen Collett was 10 years of
age. Part of the family was still
living at Stansted in 1881 when Ellen was 20 and a general domestic servant
looking after her father in the absence of her mother who was away visiting
Ellen’s married sister Kate Marsh in London. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Almost
exactly ten years later Ellen’s father passed away and in the 1891 census for
Stansted conducted the following day Ellen Collett from Shudy Camps who was
30, the only person living with her widowed mother Ann. It was the same situation in march 1901
when Ellen Collett from Shudy Camps was 40 and was looking after her 80-year
old mother from Haverhill who was living on her own means. After her mother died during the next few
years Ellen continued to live in the family home at Stansted Mountfitchet where
she subsequently joined by her older unmarried sister Harriet Collett. That was confirmed by the next census in
1911 when Ellen Collett, aged 49, was living with Harriet Collett who was 67.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
70O26 |
Sarah Ann Collett was born at Mill Green in Shudy Camps
on 2nd March 1863, and was baptised there on 24th May
1863 the last child born to Joseph Collett and his wife Ann Webb. Saran Ann was eight years old in the census
of 1871, by which time she and her family had moved to The Willows in the
Bentfield End area of Stansted Mountfitchet where her father was a
gardener. On leaving school Sarah
entered domestic service and in 1881 she was recorded in that year’s census
as Sarah Collett from Cambridgeshire who was 18 and a housemaid at the 17
Parkhurst Road in London, the home of Doctor of Science Oliver Joseph Lodge,
an assistant professor of physics at London College. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
70P10 |
Alice Collett was born at Leicester in 1874, the eldest of
the ten children of Harry Collett and Ellen Staples. Her birth was recorded at Leicester (Ref. 7a 175) during the first
three months of 1874. When she was
seven years of age, Alice and her family were residing at 27 Thomas Street in
Leicester, according to the census of 1881, but during the decade the family
moved to South Wigston and were living there in 1891 at Bassett Street. By then Alice was 17 and working as a stockinger
with a hosiery manufacturer, the same occupation as her brother George
(below), possibly even working alongside of each other. It was just over seven years later when
Alice Collett married Emmanuel Reynolds, the event recorded at Blaby (Ref. 7a
103) - just west of Wigston, during the last quarter of 1898. Emmanuel was the same age as Alice and had
been born in the Northamptonshire village of Isham, near Kettering. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Less than two years later Alice gave
birth to a son, Herbert Ambrose Reynolds, whose birth was recorded at Blaby
(Ref. 7a 29) during the third quarter of 1900. Tragically, Alice did not survive the
ordeal of the birth, since it was during that same quarter of 1900 that the
death of Alice Reynolds, aged 26 years, was also recorded at Blaby (Ref. 7a
17). On the day of the census on the
last day of March in 1901, Emmanuel Reynolds and his son were living at
Clifford Street in South Wigston. Emmanuel,
from Isham, was 26 and a fireman working on the railway, while his son
Herbert Ambrose Reynolds was eight months old. Looking after them, and recorded in the
census return as a domestic housekeeper, was Emmanuel’s older unmarried sister
Mary E Reynolds, from Isham, who was 32. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Emmanuel Reynolds was 67 when he
passed away, his death recorded at Ashby-de-le-Zouch register office (Ref. 7a
73) during the third quarter of 1942.
Over forty years later, the death of his son Herbert Ambrose Reynolds
was recorded at the Leicester Central register office during the second
quarter of 1989, when his date of birth was confirmed as 1st
August 1900. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
70P11 |
George Henry Collett was born at Leicester in 1876, the second
child and eldest son of Harry and Ellen Collett, whose birth was recorded (Ref. 7a 217) during
the first quarter of the year.
As simply George aged five years he was living with his family in
Leicester at 27 Thomas Street in 1881.
During the following years his parents took the family to live in Bassett Street at
nearby South Wigston where, in 1891 George Collett was 15 and already working as a stockinger
hosier, the same as his sister Alice (above) and sister Ellen (below). And it was at Kirkdale Road in South Wigston,
again with his family, that George H Collett was 25 in the census of 1901
when he was employed as a hosier over-looker, an inspector. Within the next few years George became a
married man and, while his first child was born at South Wigston, it was at
Nottingham that George senior and George junior were living in 1911. On that day George Henry Collett was 35 and
a manager for a hosiery manufacturer living at Factory Lane in Nottingham
with his son George Harold who was five years old and confirmed as born at South
Wigston. Curiously though, George was
described as a married man, but the whereabouts of his wife is not currently
known. The census record did not say
how long he had been married, nor did it give any indication as to the number
of children that had been born to George and his absent wife. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
The
birth of his son was recorded at Blaby register office (Ref. 7a 25) during
the second quarter of 1906. It would
be very likely that further children were added to George’s family over the
following years. Upon the death of his
father in 1926 George Henry Collett and his brother Frank were named as joint
administrators, when George was described as a foreman with a hosiery
manufacturer. George was still residing in Leicester when he
died at the age of 78, his death recorded there (Ref. 3a 640) during the last
three months of 1953. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
70Q1 |
George Harold Collett |
Born in 1906
at South Wigston, Leicester |
||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
70P12 |
Ellen Collett was born at Leicester in 1878, where her birth was recorded
(Ref. 7a 236) during the second quarter of the year. She may have been born in the family home
at 27 Thomas Street, where two-year-old was living with her family on the day
of the census in 1881. Ten years
later, at the age of 12 years and employed by a hosiery manufacturer as a
stockinger, working with her two older siblings Alice and George, Ellen and
her family were recorded at Bassett Street in South Wigston, and it was also
at South Wigston that the family was living in 1901, but at 12 Kirkdale
Road. Ellen Collett was 22 by then and
working as a hosiery framework knitter.
Just over two
years later the marriage of Ellen Collett and Jonathan Ford was recorded at
Blaby register office (Ref. 7a 107) during the third quarter of 1903. An alternative, unvalidated source, has
suggested that Ellen’s husband was Arthur Ford. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
On the day of the census in 1901
unmarried Jonathan Ford from Bruntingthorpe was 24 and a railway storekeeper
living at Glen Gate in South Wigston with his parents Tom and Jane Ford. Ten years after that, the 1911 census
confirmed that Jonathan and Ellen were residing at South Wigston, where
Jonathan Ford was 34 and employed by the Midland Railway Company as a
storekeeper in the locomotive department.
His wife was 32, and boarding with the childless couple was Lewis
Arthur Getliffe aged 27 and a clerk at a local brickworks. He is of particular interest because he
married Ellen’s sister Ethel Collett (below) in 1914. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
The death of Ellen Ford nee Collett
was recorded at Leicester register office (Ref. 3a 790) during the first
three months of 1955 when her age was noted as being 76. She was survived by her husband for four
years, when the death of Jonathan Ford was also recorded at Leicester (Ref.
3a 588) during the first quarter of 1959. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
70P13 |
Ambrose Collett was born at 27 Thomas Street in Leicester
on 8th August 1880 (Ref. 7a 240), another son of Harry and Ellen Collett with
whom he was living at that same address in Leicester in 1881 when he was six
months old. By the time of the census
in 1891, when Ambrose was 10 years old, he and his family were residing in
Wigston, south-east of Leicester. Six
years later on 2nd October 1897, Ambrose joined the Royal
Artillery. He was 18 years and two
months old on enlistment and his trade by then was that of a moulder. His place of birth was simply stated as
within the Parish of St Margaret’s in Leicester and he was described as being
five feet five and a half inches tall, having blue eyes and fair hair, whose
religion was Wesleyan. His last permanent address was named as
Brighton House, Fairfield Road, South Wigston, Leicester, the home of his
parents, while his siblings were listed as George, Harry, Basil, Frank,
Alice, Ellen, Gertrude and Emily. Curiously there was no mention
of his sister Ethel who was certainly alive long after that date. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Upon
entry at Leicester,
he was considered fit for service on 25th September 1897 and was
allocated the regimental service number RA-22785. He saw action during the Boer War in South
Africa before returning to England after the census in 1911 in which he was
described as being 32 and serving overseas with the military. The records seem to suggest that Ambrose
left the army for a while after his time in Africa, since it was at Kirkee in
India on 21st July 1909 that he was re-engaged, when he signed on
for another seven years, plus a further five years as a reserve. By that time in his life he had already
completed service of eleven years and three hundred days. He was still in India over four years
later, when he became a father and was subsequently married. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
It
was on 1st October 1913 when Ambrose was 32 that he married
Kathleen Gladys Kiddle who was 21 and born at Kamptee in India, with whom he
had two daughters before the First World War.
The first of those daughters was born one year before they were
married. It would also appear very
likely that Ambrose was still serving with the British Army in India when he
married Kathleen, who was known as Gladys, and that may have been while he
was stationed at Bellary (later renamed Ballari), where their first child was
born. It was also in India, at Kamptee
or Kirkee, that their second child was born, which raises a query with the
number of days stated in his records (below) for his total time in that
country. A few years after the Great
War was over, and while the family was back living in Leicestershire, Gladys
presented Ambrose with a third daughter. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
The
military records for Ambrose Collett also include the following extra
details. Firstly, that his address on
23rd June 1919 was given as 1 Bassett Street in South Wigston,
Leicester, and that a month later on 26th July 1919 he
acknowledged receiving his DCM medal.
It was after his initial service, that his military service was
extended by a further 8 years and then later by 12 years. It was on 20th May 1915 that he
was promoted to Sergeant Major for the duration of the Great War. He served in South Africa for 274 days, in
India for 21 days and in France for 294 days.
As a result of his time in Africa he was awarded the Kings Medal and
clasp. His next of kin was stated as
being Harry Collett of Brighton House in Wigston, Leicester, while his mother
was confirmed as Ellen Collett. His
siblings were recorded as George, Harry, Basil, Frank, Alice, Ellen, Ethel,
Gertrude and Emily. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
The
same military records indicate that Gladys Collett was residing at 12 Station
Street in South Wigston while Ambrose was serving overseas, and that she
received a warrant for Ambrose when she was living at 21 Kirkdale Road in
South Wigston where his family had been living in 1911. For the latter, Gladys was advised that her
husband was in Rangoon, Burma, and gave her instructions for her to reply to
him there. For his service to King and
Country, Ambrose Collett T/SM with the Royal Artillery, Royal Horse Artillery
and Royal Field Artillery, was awarded the British War Medal, the Victory
Medal and the 1914-1915 Star. He was also known as a
champion horseman. On 21st
June 1919 Ambrose left Boulogne in France and returned to his family in
England after the end of the war. The
reason for his late return, after peace was declared on 11th
November 1918 was due to him being wounded in action during the previous
September. On 21st July 1919, on his discharge
from the army, Ambrose was presented with a certificate which read as
follows: “This is to certify that the ex-soldier named herein as Ambrose
Collett W O/RSM has served with in the colours for twenty-one years ten
months and his character during this period has been honest, sober,
trustworthy and thoroughly reliable, a man of exemplary character”. |
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It
was less than four months after returning to Leicester that, on 5th
October 1919, Ambrose wrote a letter to the India Office at Whitehall in
London from his home address at 1 Bassett Street in South Wigston. The letter was a plea for assisted passage
to Rangoon in Burma, and read as follows: “Sir, as I am desirous of residing abroad,
could you kindly grant me passage for myself, wife and two children to Rangoon
Burma. I have completed 21 years 300
days in the RFA and was discharged to pension on 21st July
1919. I have served a number of years
abroad and had every intention of settling there. We were sent to ? at the outbreak of war
but the climate has been very trying to my wife who is unfortunately
suffering from pleurisy. A doctor’s
certificate can be provided if necessary.
The children’s ages are 7 and 6 years respectively. I trust you will favour my application for
passage and will you kindly advise me who to write to for permission to
reside abroad. Your obedient servant,
Ambrose Collett – late 22785 RSM RFA.”
The reply written by the Officer in Charge at Woolwich Barracks on
20th October stated that the finance for assisted passage could
not be provided. |
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Two
years later the family was still residing in South Wigston when Gladys
presented Ambrose with their third children.
Over the following years Ambrose saved up sufficient money to pay for
the family’s passage to India. It was
on 12th February 1929 that Ambrose and his entire family boarded
the Anchor Steamship Liner ‘Tuscania’ at the port of Liverpool which was
bound for Bombay. The passenger list
included the family as Ambrose Collett aged 48, Gladys Collett who was 37,
Iris Collett who was 16, Vera Collett who was 15 and Freda Collett who was
seven years of age. The family’s
address was once again stated as being 1 Bassett Street in South Wigston,
while Ambrose’s occupation, not being clearly written, appears to have been
that of a ring maker. It is understood
from his grandson John Carroll, the son of Vera Patricia Carroll, that
Ambrose Collett died in Burma during 1932, with his widow Kathleen Gladys
Collett nee Kiddle passing away twenty-six years later in 1958. In addition to this, it is now known that
Iris Winifred Collett was later married, to become Iris Winifred Baines, and
it was her son Philip who made contact in October 2015, as did Vera
Bergersen, the daughter of Freda Joan Collett. |
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70Q2 |
Vera Patricia Collett |
Born on 25.09.1912
at Bellary, India |
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70Q3 |
Iris Winifred Collett |
Born on
21.01.1914 at Kirkee, India |
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70Q4 |
Freda Joan Collett |
Born on
05.05.1921 at South Wigston |
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70P14 |
Ethel Collett was born at 27 Thomas Street in Leicester
during 1882, her birth
recorded there (Ref. 7a 239) during the last three months of that year.
She was eight years of age in 1891
when listed with her family at Bassett Street in South Wigston and, on
leaving school, Ethel joined other members of her family at the local hosiery
maker, confirmed in 1901 when she was 18 and a hosiery linker. On that later occasion Ethel and her family
were living at 12 Kirkdale Road in South Wigston. And it was at that same address that she
was again recorded in the census of 1911, when she was still employed as a
hosiery linker aged 28, the eldest of the six children living with their
parents. Also living nearby in South Wigston in both 1901 and
1911 was Ethel’s future husband, to whom she was married three years later. |
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It was during the summer months of
1914 that Ethel Collett married Lewis A Getliffe, the wedding taking place at
Blaby (Ref. 7a 85). Lewis Arthur
Getliffe was born within the Belgrave district of Leicester city in 1883,
although his birth was recorded at Barrow-upon-Soar (Ref. 7a 153) during the
third quarter of that year. He was a
son of Samuel and Emma Getliffe who was living with his large family at
Clifford Street in South Wigston in 1901, from where Lewis, at the age of 17,
was employed as a clerk in a shoe factory.
Also living in Clifford Street, at that same time, was Emmanuel
Reynolds, the very recently widowed husband of Ethel’s eldest sister Alice
Collett. Ten years later, the census
in 1911, placed Lewis Arthur Getliffe, aged 27 from Belgrave and a clerk at a
brickworks, was a boarder living with Ethel’s sister Ellen Collett (above)
and her husband Jonathan Ford. It
would therefore seem highly likely that it was through that association with
the Collett family that Lewis met Ethel.
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It would also appear that Ethel and
Lewis did not have any children, but that they lived all of their married
life together at Blaby, since it was at Blaby register office (Ref. 3a 359)
that the death of Lewis A Getliffe was recorded during the third quarter of
1947, when he was 64. Ethel survived
him by sixteen years, when the death of Ethel Getliffe, aged 80, was recorded
at the Leicester Central register office (Ref. 3a 440) during the last
quarter of 1963. |
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70P15 |
Gertrude Collett was born at Leicester in 1885, where her birth was
recorded (Ref. 7a 211) during the first three months of the year. It is possible she was born at 25 Thomas
Street in Leicester, where her family was living in 1881, but by 1891 they
had moved out of Leicester to Wigston, where they were residing at Bassett
Street when Gertrude was six years old.
After a further ten years, when Gertrude was 16, with no stated
occupation, she was still living with her family at 12 Kirkdale Road in South
Wigston, as she was in 1911 when she was 26 and still with no occupation. She was most likely supporting her mother
to look after the needs of the large family.
It is believed that she was
married and became Gertrude Lofthouse. |
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70P16 |
Harry Collett was born at Leicester in 1887, and perhaps
at 27 Thomas Street in Leicester, with his birth recorded there (Ref. 7a 216) during the fourth quarter
of that year. He was the son of
Harry and Ellen Collett with whom he and his siblings were living at 27
Thomas Street in 1891 when Harry was three years old. After completing his schooling Harry became
a shoe polisher, as confirmed in the next census of 1901 when he was 13 and
by which time he and his family were living at Kirkdale Road in Wigston. He was still living at the family home at
12 Kirkdale Road in South Wigston in April 1911, where Harry Collett was 23 and working as a motor
repairer. |
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Three
years later Harry was a mechanical engineer living in Nuneaton at the
outbreak of war when he enlisted with the British Army. That happened on 29th August
1914 when he was 26 and allocated the service number 034558 with the Supply
Column of the North Midland Division.
However, less than three months later he was discharged on 14th
November 1914, following which he enlisted with the Regular ATC. His short military record confirmed that
his next-of-kin was Harry Collett of Kirkdale Road in South Wigston. Just over two years later Harry Collett married
Mary Jane Soars at Christchurch in Leicester on 7th January 1917,
when Mary was living at 50 Clifford Street in South Wigston. The marriage was recorded at Leicester
register office (Ref. 7a 289). |
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Whatever
the reason why he was discharged so early on in the war, it must have been
later in the campaign that his services were eventually called upon. Because at the end of the Great War he was
awarded the British War Medal and the Victory Medal, as a result of him
seeing active service in France. Harry
Collett married Mary Jane, although it is not known for certain that they had
any children. What is known is that
Harry Collett of 50 Clifford Street in South Wigston died in Leicester Royal
Infirmary on 25th April 1956.
His death was
recorded at Leicester register office (Ref. 3a 556) during the second quarter
of that year, when he was 68. Administration
of his person effects valued at £244 19 Shillings 3d was resolved at Leicester
on 22nd June 1956 in favour of his widow Mary Jane Collett. |
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Although
not confirmed, it is likely that the marriage of Harry Collett and Mary Jane
Soars produced a son, also named Harry Collett. The reason for including this assumption is
a statement made in 2015 by John Carroll (Ref. 70Q2) who relayed the fact
that his mother, residing in Australia, visited her cousin Harry Collett in
England during the latter years of her life.
She was born in 1912 and died in Australia during 1996 and therefore
would have been just slightly older than her cousin. |
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70Q5 |
Harry Collett |
Born circa
1917 in England |
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70P17 |
Emily Collett was born at Bassett Street in South Wigston in 1890, her birth recorded at
Blaby (Ref. 7a 31) during the second quarter of the year. And it was there that she was with her
family in 1891, aged one year. In the
census returns for 1901 and 1911 Emily Collett, aged 11 and 21 respectively,
was again living with her parents, but at 12 Kirkdale Road in South
Wigston. In the second of the census returns, Emily’s occupation
was that of an elementary school teacher.
It was eleven years later that Emily Collett married Percy A Lamb, the
event recorded at Blaby register office (Ref. 7a 64) during the first three
months of 1922. |
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70P18 |
Alfred Basil Collett was born at Bassett Street in South Wigston in 1892, a son of Harry
and Ellen Collett, whose
birth was recorded at Blaby (Ref. 7a 29) during the first quarter of the year.
It was within the Wigston census of
1901 that Alfred B Collett was nine years old, while after a further ten
years it was as Basil Alfred Collett, aged 19, that he was still living with
his family, but at 12 Kirkdale Road in South Wigston in 1911, by which time he was working
as a printer’s apprentice. The
only other information currently known about Alfred is that acquired from the
records available at the time of his death.
Alfred B Collett died on 19th August 1952 while a patient
in Leicester General Hospital. He was
61 years old and his home address was 52 Healey Street in South Wigston, with
his death recorded at Leicester register office (Ref. 3a 424) during the
third quarter of 1952. Administration
of his personal effects valued at £104 was granted to his widow Florence
Collett at Leicester on 9th September 1952. |
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New
information discovered in 2015 also confirms that Alfred Basil Collett held
the rank of corporal with the Leicestershire Regiment, service number 23170,
and that he married Florence
Pentney at South Wigston, the event recorded at Blaby register office
(Ref. 7a 62) during the first quarter of 1916. Florence was born at Blaby (Ref. 7a 48) in 1891, the daughter of
Henry and Sarah Pentney, who was 20 and a hosiery hand linker in 1911, when
she was living at Orange Street in South Wigston with her widowed father. Perhaps because he was away on military
service, the only known child so far found is their son Basil who was born in
the spring of 24, when his mother’s maiden name was confirmed as Pentney. |
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70Q6 |
Basil
R Collett |
Born in 1924 at Blaby |
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70P19 |
Frank Edward Collett was born at South Wigston on 7th
May 1897, the youngest child of Harry and Ellen Collett, his birth recorded at Blaby
(Ref. 7a 35) during the second quarter of the year. He was Frank E Collett aged three years at
Kirkdale Road in the South Wigston census of 1901 and was Frank Edward
Collett who was 13 and still attending school in 1911 when he and his family
were still residing at 12 Kirkdale Road.
The marriage of
Frank E Collett and Doris Bardgett was recorded at Blaby register office
(Ref. 7a 114) during the second quarter of 1930, when Frank was 33. The marriage was blessed by the birth of
two children, whose births were recorded at Blaby (Ref. 7a 51) during the
second quarter of 1934 and (Ref. 7a 51). During the last three months of
1941. On both occasions the mother’s
maiden name was confirmed as Bardgett.
The only other detail currently known about him is that he appears to
have lived out his life in the Leicester area, since it was at Leicester Central
register office (Ref. 6 1762) that the death of Frank Edward Collett was
recorded in September 1980 at the age of 83. |
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70Q7 |
Pamela Collett |
Born in 1934 at Blaby |
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70Q8 |
Barry Collett |
Born in 1941 at Blaby |
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70P20 |
Ethel Annie Collett was born at Leyton
in Essex in 1884, her birth recorded at West Ham (Ref. 4a 199) the three
months of 1884. It was also as Ethel
Annie that she was baptised at Leyton on 11th January 1885, the
daughter of Ambrose and Elizabeth Collett.
Strangely, no record of their children has been revealed in the census
of 1891, but by 1901 the family was residing at 4 St Thomas Square in
Hackney, where Annie Collett was 16, albeit with no occupation stated. Ten years later Ethel and her family were
living in Edmonton, where Ethel Collett from Leyton was 27 and a skirt
machinist. |
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The marriage of Ethel Annie Collett
and Ernest Harry Howells (born 1887) took place at All Saints Church in Edmonton
on 12th July 1913. Their
son Ernest Henry Howells was born at Edmonton on 26th August 1917
and just four years later the death of Harry Howells was recorded at Barnet
register office during the third quarter of 1921. Many years later, Ethel was working as the
housekeeper for George Henry Hartshorne, whom she married at Epping on 2nd
August 1952. At the time of her death
on 20th June 1971 at Enfield, her date of birth was recorded as 13th
October 1884, when she was referred to as Ethel Annie ‘Nanny Rex’ Collett. |
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70Q1 |
George Harold Collett was born at South Wigston near
Leicester on 14th March 1906, the eldest known child of George
Henry Collett and his wife. Just after
he was born his parents moved to Nottingham and in 1911, when George Harold
was five years old, it was just him and his father living at Factory Lane in
the town. Nothing is known about his
life except that it was in Knighton Park Nursing Home at 25 Knighton Park
Road in Leicester that retired dispensing chemist died on 24th
July 1996. He was 90 years of age and
his death was recorded at Leicester register office (Ref. 6001F 239) during
July 1996. It was stated that, in the
event of his death, the persons to be contacted were named as Evan Barlow Son
& Poyner, Solicitors of 1 Berridge Street in Leicester, and in particular
Francis John Poyner, Gwendolen Olive Cherry and Alan Charles Cherry. In 2018 it was discovered that Gwendolen was originally Gwendoline
Olive Jones, who was born at Leicester in the last three months of 1925, her
mother’s maiden name being Allen. And
it was at Leicester that Gwendoline Olive Cherry passed away in June 2001 at
the age of 75. |
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70Q2 |
Vera Patricia Collett was born at Bellary in India on 25th
September 1912 and was the eldest of the three daughters of Ambrose Collett
and Kathleen Gladys Kiddle. She
married William Charles Frederick
Carroll with whom she had two children; Colleen Mary Carroll was born at
Taunggyi in Burma during 1936; and Derrick John Carroll who was also born
there in 1938. Vera and her two young
children were fortunate to leave the country on 10th February 1942
when the Japanese bombed Burma, destroying homes and killing many in
Taunggyi. Vera Patricia
Carroll nee Collett was staying at the home of her son John Carroll in
Australia when she passed away in 1996.
John was still residing in Australia in 2015 when he provided this
information. John also confirmed that
his mother visited her cousin Harry Collett in England during the latter
years of her life. |
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70Q3 |
Iris Winifred Collett was born at Kirkee in India on 21st
January 1914, the second daughter of Ambrose and Kathleen Collett. Upon being married Iris became Iris
Winifred Baines who gave birth to a son Philip Baines. And it was Philip who provided some of the
details in this family line. |
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70Q4 |
Freda Joan Collett was born at South Wigston in
Leicestershire, England, on 5th May 1921, the youngest child of
Ambrose and Kathleen Collett. Freda
later became Freda Joan Grey and she and her husband had two children, Walter Grey and Vera Grey. Vera Grey eventually married to become Vera
Bergensen. |
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70Q5 |
Harry Collett, whose
date of birth has not been determined, may have been the son of Harry and
Jane Collett, and may have been born in Leicestershire after his assumed
father saw active service during the First World War. In 1944, and recorded at Leicester register
office (Ref. 7a 514) during the second quarter of that year, was the marriage
of Harry Collett and Constance Smith. |
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70Q6 |
Basil R Collett was born at Blaby
in 1924, the only known child of Alfred Basil Collett and Florence Pentney,
his birth recorded at Blaby register office (Ref. 7a 467) during the second
quarter of that year. It was during
the second quarter of 1948 when he married one of his mother’s relatives Joan
Pentney, the event recorded at Blaby register office (Ref. 3a 1305). Once married, the couple settled in
Leicester, where all four of their known children were born. Their first child was a honeymoon baby,
whose birth was recorded at Leicester register office (Ref. 3a 874) during
the first three months of 1949. Just
over three years later Joan presented Basil with their second child, whose
birth was recorded (Ref. 3a 935) during the third quarter of 1952. Four years later their daughter was born,
her birth recorded (Ref. 3a 7) during the first three months of 1957. The birth of the couple’s last child was
also recorded at Leicester register office (Ref. 3a 810) during the first
quarter of 1961. In each case the
mother’s maiden name was confirmed as Pentney. |
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70R1 |
Michael R Collett |
Born in 1949 at Leicester |
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70R2 |
Christopher R Collett |
Born in 1952 at Leicester |
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70R3 |
Caroline A Collett |
Born in 1957 at Leicester |
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70R4 |
Nicholas P Collett |
Born in 1961 at Leicester |
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