PART
SEVENTY-THREE
The
Leeds (Armley-Wortley-Drighlington-Morley) Line
Issued
March 2019
This is the family line of Mark Patrick
Blackburn (Ref. 73T5), formerly Collett,
the line denoted by the names in
capitals, and was previously included (in error) in Part 36 -The Barwick-in-Elmet
(Leeds) Line.
Some information was also included in
Appendix 5 of that family line.
73L1 |
WILLIAM
COLLETT
was referred to as William Collett of Morley when his son William Collett was
baptism in the town of Morley, near Leeds.
The town also has a close proximity to Drighlington and Birstall, both
of which feature in this family line. |
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73M1
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WILLIAM COLLETT |
Born in 1749
at Morley |
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73M1 |
WILLIAM
COLLETT was
baptised on 5th January 1750 at Morley, the son of William Collett
of Morley. William was 38 years old when he married Hannah Masker at St Peter’s
Church in Leeds on 31st January 1788. |
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73N1
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SARAH COLLETT |
Born in 1792
at Morley |
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73N1 |
SARAH
COLLETT was baptised
at the Morley Congregational Church on 10th June 1792, the
daughter of William Collett. She was
also the unmarried
mother of Frederick Collett who was born at Drighlington and baptised at
Birstall on 16th September 1810.
Sarah would have
been only 18 years of age when she gave birth to her son. |
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73O1
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FREDERICK COLLETT |
Born in 1810
at Birstall |
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73O1 |
FREDERICK COLLETT (previously
Ap5/2 in Part 36) was born at Birstall, near Batley, where he was baptised
on 16th September 1810, the base-born son of unmarried Sarah
Collett. Fred, as he was named in many
records, married (1) Kezia Burnett during 1829 and they and had three children
before the untimely death of Kezia in 1837 at the age of 23. A year later Frederick Collett married (2) Maria
Grayson Jackson at Bradford (Ref. 23 258) during the last three months of
1838. She was born at Wortley on 3rd
September 1812. That new relationship
was confirmed in the Leeds census of 1841, albeit under the surname of
Collitt, when the family was residing at Silver Royd Hill in Wortley, Leeds. Frederick and his wife Maria had a rounded
age of 25, even though Fred was actually 30, while their children were Thomas
Collett who was 11, Burnett Collett who was nine, Mary Collett who was six
and William Collett who was two years old.
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After
a further ten years, the family was living nearby at Stonebridge Lane in
Wortley, where Frederick Collett was a master tailor aged 40 and Maria
Collett was 38. Their seven children
that census day in 1851 were Burnett Collett aged 17, Mary Collett aged 14
and born at Drighlington, William Collett aged 11, Edna Collett who was
eight, Emma Collett who was five, Simeon Collett who was two and Edmund
Collett who was one year old. All of
them born at Wortley. By 1861, the
family was residing at Barracks in Wortley, where tailor Frederick was 49 and
Maria was 44, Edna Collett was 17, Emma Collett was 15, Simeon Collett was 13,
Edmund Collett was 12 and new arrival Emily Collett was eight years of age. |
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Curiously
it was Frederick Collett who gave his place of birth as Drighlington. He was 58 and still working as a tailor,
while his wife Maria was also said to be 58, but from Wortley, as were the
three children who were still living with the couple at Wortley in 1871. They were Simeon Collett who was 23, Edmund
Collett who was 21, plus grandson Frederick Collett who was seven years of age.
Ten years earlier, young Frederick’s parents,
William and Lydia Collett, were residing at Hill Top in Armley, when William
was a collier who was 31 and born at Wortley and his much younger wife Lydia
was 19 and from Wortley. Their daughter
Mary Ann Collett, who had been born at Wortley, was under three months old
and sadly died within the next six months. |
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In
the next census of 1881, the family was again living in Wortley when, on that
occasion Fred said he was born at Adwalton, very close to Drighlington. Living with the tailor that day were his
wife, simply M Collett who was 69, as was her husband, their unmarried son
Simeon Collett who was 33 and their grandson Fred Collett who was 17. Most of their children had been born at Wortley
in Leeds, as was their grandson. It
seems very likely that the grandson was the child of their son William, whose
mother Lydia Collett was working as a housekeeper at the Wortley home of
William Todner on the day of the census in 1881. |
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Frederick
Collett died in 1888, as recorded at Bramley (Ref. 9b 234) during the second quarter
of that year, when he was 77 years old. The Wortley census of 1891 identified the
widow Maria Collett, aged 79, living at Silver Royd Hill, where her late
husband’s Collett family had been living in 1841. Still living with her was her unmarried son
Simeon and her grandson Frederick Collett, who had been living with her for
over twenty years. Seven years later the
death of Maria Grayson Collett, simply named as Mary Collett, was recorded at
Hunslet register office (Ref. 9b 213) during the last three months of 1898,
at the age of 80. |
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73P1
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THOMAS COLLETT |
Born in 1831
at Drighlington |
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73P2
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Burnett Collett |
Born in 1832
at Drighlington |
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73P3
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Mary Collett |
Born in 1836
at Drighlington |
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The
following are the children of Frederick Collett by his second wife Maria Grayson
Jackson: |
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73P4
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William Collett |
Born in 1839
at Wortley, Leeds |
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73P5
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Edna Collett |
Born in 1843
at Wortley, Leeds |
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73P6
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Emma Collett |
Born in 1845
at Wortley, Leeds |
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73P7
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Simeon Collett |
Born in 1848
at Wortley, Leeds |
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73P8
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Edmund Collett |
Born in 1849
at Wortley, Leeds |
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73P9
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Frederick Collett |
Born in 1853
at Holbeck, Leeds |
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73P1
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Thomas
Collett was born on
25th May 1831 in the village of Tong, just north of Drighlington,
according to the census in 1851, while later on his place of birth was said
to be Birstall, to the south of Drighlington.
It was at Birstall where Thomas Collett was baptised on 29th
May 1831, the son of Frederick Collett and Kezia Burnett. In the Wortley census of 1841, Thomas
Collett was 11 years old, when living with his family was Silver Royd Hill. Sometime during the first three months of
1851 he married (1) Rachel Helstrip (1830-1880) who was born at Wortley in
Leeds. On the day of the census in
1851, the childless couple was residing at Windmill Hill in Wortley (Leeds), from
where Thomas Collett, aged 19 and from Tong, was employed as a labourer at a
nearby brick works. His wife Rachel,
from Wortley was 21 and expecting the imminent birth of her first child, who
was born during the next couple of months and named after Thomas’ mother. Between 1851 and 1867 the marriage produced
a total of seven children, all of whom were born at Wortley in Leeds, with their
births recorded at Hunslet. |
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Whilst
no obvious record of the family has been found in the census of 1861, ten
years later the completed family was still living at Windmill Hill in
Wortley. On that occasion Thomas Collett
from Birstall was 40 and working as a coal and clay miner. His wife Rachel Collett from Wortley was
41, and their seven children were Robert Collett who was 19, Clara Collett who
was 18 and a woollen weaver, Kezia Collett who was 14, Lavinia Collett who
was 12, Albert Collett who was 10, (Sarah) Ann Collett who was seven and Flora
Collett who was four years old. |
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Nine
years later Rachel Collett died, her death recorded at Bramley (Leeds) during
the third quarter of 1880 (Ref. 9b 253), at the age of 50. She was closed followed by her husband,
when the death of Thomas Collett was also recorded at Bramley (Ref. 9b 272) after
he passed away on 17th September 1880, also at the age of 50, from
cerebral disease and exhaustion. The
informant of his death was Sarah Ann Kinder, who made the mark of a cross. Four years early, their unmarried daughter
Kezia had given birth to a base-born daughter which was named after her mother. The birth of that child, Rachel Ann Collett,
at Batley, was not unsurprisingly recorded away from the family, at Dewsbury early
in 1877. |
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The
census in 1881, raises a question for the family living at 146 Hill End Road
in Armley. Why was it that, from
eldest child Robert Collett down to the youngest, they were all described as ‘son’
or ‘daughter’, inferring that one or both of their parents was still alive. On that day Robert Collett was 29, Kezia
Collett who was 25, Lavinia Collett who was 22, Albert Collett who was 20, (Sarah)
Ann Collett who was 17 and Flora Collett who was 14 years old. Completing the family group was Rachel A Collett who was only four years of age, but described as
daughter rather than granddaughter.
All of the children of Thomas Collett were once again recorded as
having been born at Wortley, whereas his granddaughter Rachel A Collett had been born at Batley. |
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73Q1
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Robert Burnett Collett |
Born in 1851
at Wortley, Leeds |
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73Q2
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Clara Collett |
Born in 1853 at
Wortley, Leeds |
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73Q3
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Kezia Collett |
Born in 1855 at
Wortley, Leeds |
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73Q4
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Lavinia Collett |
Born in 1858 at
Wortley, Leeds |
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73Q5
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Albert Collett |
Born in 1860 at
Wortley, Leeds |
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73Q6
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Sarah Ann Collett |
Born in 1862 at
Wortley, Leeds |
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73Q7
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Flora Collett |
Born in 1866 at
Wortley, Leeds |
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73P2
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Burnett Collett (previously
Ref. 36P26) was born
at Drighlington on 4th July 1832, the second child of Frederick
and Kezia Collett. When he was four
years old his mother died and, shortly thereafter, his father re-married and
settled in Wortley area of Leeds. It
was at Silver Royd Hill in Wortley where Burnett Collett was living with his
father and stepmother in 1841 when he was nine years of age. He was still living with his family in 1851,
but at Stonebridge Lane in Wortley, when he was 17 and working as a clay
miner. Five years later, the marriage
of Burnett Collett and Elizabeth Wightman was recorded at Leeds (Ref. 9b 302)
during the second quarter of 1856. That
was confirmed by the next census in 1861, when Burnett was 29 and Elizabeth was
27 and, living with them at Wortley were their two children, Frederick Collett
who was four and Lavinia Collett who was one year old. |
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Ten
years later the family had been increased by the birth of a further two
children. The Wortley census of 1871 recorded
the family as Burnett Collett from Drighlington who was 39 and a coalminer, Elizabeth
Collett from Morley who was 37, Frederick Collett who was 14, Lavinia who was
11, Annie Collett who was five and Jonas Collett who was three. All of the children were confirmed as
having been born at Wortley. By 1881,
Burnett was a widower at 49, who was a clay miner. Living with him at Ashley Road in Upper
Wortley, were his five children. His
son Fred was 24 and also a clay miner, while younger son Jonas was a ‘putter’
at the clay pit. A putter was someone
who took (put) into the mine an empty container to be filled by the clay
miners and, whose job it was, to remove the one that had been filled. Burnett’s eldest daughter Lavinia Collett
was 21 and working as a ‘piecener’ at the local wool mill, meaning she was
the person who supplied the rolls of wool for the slubbing machine. Her sister Anne Collett was 14 and may have
been working with her sister on that occasion, as her occupation was that of a
cloth burler. Completing the family was
Esther Collett aged nine years. |
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The
later death of Burnett Collett aged 58, was recorded at Bramley (Ref. 9b 295)
during the fourth quarter of 1890.
Following that sad event, it was his daughter Annie who took over the
role of housekeeper and head of the householder, as recorded in the Wortley
census of 1891. In addition to her
domestic chores at their Ashley Road home, Anne was also earning a living as
a knotter in a woollen mill at the age of 24.
The two brothers still living with her were Jonas Collett who was 21
and curiously Walter Burnett Collett who was only six years of age. His birth was recorded at Bramley (Ref. 9b
363) during the second quarter of 1885, when Burnett Collett was a widower
and 54 years old. It is therefore more
likely that Walter Burnett Collett was the base-born son of either unmarried Annie
herself, or her older sister Lavinia – who married in 1886, with the eldest
son in the family being married in 1888. |
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73Q8
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Frederick Collett |
Born in 1856
at Wortley, Leeds |
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73Q9
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Lavinia A Collett |
Born in 1859
at Wortley, Leeds |
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73Q10
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Anne Collett |
Born in 1865
at Wortley, Leeds |
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73Q11
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Jonas Collett |
Born in 1868
at Wortley, Leeds |
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73Q12
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Esther Collett |
Born in 1871
at Wortley, Leeds |
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73P3
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Mary Collett was born at Drighlington in 1836, the
third child of Frederick Collett by his first wife Kezia Burnett. It may have been the unexpected death of
her mother shortly after she was born, or during the birth, that was the reason
she was not baptised until after her father had remarried and settled in
Wortley. She was therefore around five
years of age, when the baptism of Mary Collett at Bramley Church took place
on 23rd January 1842. The
baptism recorded indicated that she was the daughter of Frederick Collett and
Maria Collett (his second wife). Interestingly, the couple’s first child,
William (below), was baptised there one year later on the same day. It is therefore possible that they were
baptised together. |
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73P4
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William Collett (previously
Ref. 36P28) was born at Wortley and his birth was recorded at Leeds (Ref.
23 453) during the third quarter of 1839. His baptism, like that of his older half-sister
was delayed and took place at Armley on 23rd January 1843. If the
year had been 1842, it may very well have been a joint ceremony with his
sister Mary (above). He was the eldest
child from the second marriage of Frederick Collett by his second wife Maria
Grayson Jackson. In 1841, when he was
two years of age, he and his family were living at Silver Royd Hill in
Wortley, where he may have been born. He
was 11 years old in 1851, by which time his family’s address was Stonebridge
Lane in Wortley. Less than nine years
later, the marriage of William Collett and Lydia
Stead, who was born at Lower Wortley in 1843, was recorded at Leeds (Ref. 9b
420) during the fourth quarter of 1859.
Just over a year later Lydia gave birth to a daughter, following which,
according to the census in 1861, the three of them were residing in a dwelling
on Hill Top Road in Armley, where William Collett was 21 and a collier from
Wortley, his wife Lydia was 19 and also from Wortley, where their daughter
Mary Ann Collett, aged two month, had also been born there. |
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Their son Frederick was born over two years later and was named
after his grandfather but, shortly after that, William and Lydia seemed to
have ceased living together, at which time son Frederick was taken into the
care of William’s parents. On the day
of the census in 1871, William Collett, aged 32, a married miner from Wortley,
was a boarder at the Leeds home of spinster Jane Elwood who was 30 and a flax
spinner from Leeds. Two years later, William’s
third child, Simeon, was born and was named after William’s brother (below). It is highly likely that the child’s mother
was the aforementioned Jane Elwood who, in 1881, was living with coal miner
William Collett, aged 42, at 12 Canal Road in nearby Armley with son Simeon
Collett who was nine years old. Spinster
Jane Elwood from Leeds was 40 years of age and working as a flax spinner. |
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On that same day, William’s former wife, Lydia Collett was working as a housekeeper at the home
of iron foundry model maker William Henry Todner, aged 68 and from Sunderland,
at his home at 1 Hedley Street in Wortley.
In addition to her housekeeping duties, Lydia’s occupation was stated
as being a dressmaker which was a similar occupation to that of her father-in-law,
who was a tailor. She may have been
using her skills in that field to work with William Todner’s unmarried niece
Eliza Pickard, aged 27, who was also living at 1 Hedley Street and who was
described as a tailoress of Upper Wortley.
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Lydia
Collett was also said to be 40 years of age, when her death was recorded at
Bramley (Ref. 9b 238) during the second quarter of 1882. Six years later, during the fourth quarter of
1888, the marriage of William Collett and Emma Taylor was recorded at Wortley
(Ref. 9c 381). Whether he was the
former husband of Lydia Stead has still to be determined. Thirteen years later, clay miner William
Collett was again living in Wortley, when he was 61 and working alongside his
two sons Frederick and Simeon, while his daughter, unmarried Mary Ann Collett
was acting as their housekeeper. No
further record of William or his three children have been found after that
time. |
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73Q13
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Mary Ann Collett |
Born in 1861
at Wortley, Leeds |
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73Q14
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Frederick Collett |
Born in 1863
at Wortley, Leeds |
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73Q15
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Simeon Collett |
Born in 1871
at Holbeck, Leeds |
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73P5
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Edna Collett was born at Wortley in 1843, her
birth recorded at Leeds (Ref. xxiii 452) during the first quarter of the year. |
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73P6
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Emma Collett was born at Wortley in 1845, with her
birth recorded at Hunslet (Ref. xxiii 408) during the second quarter of the
year. The marriage of Emma Collett and
James Cook was recorded at Leeds (Ref. 9b 443) during the second quarter of
1864. It was at Wortley where the
couple settled and where all of their children were born. The Wortley census of 1871 provided details
of the family as follows; James Cook was 28, Emma Cook was 26, Simeon Cook
was four, Levey Cook was three and Abel Cook was one year old. Ten years later the family was residing at
Marsden Street in Wortley when James was 37, Emma was 36 and working as a
machine filler, Simeon was 14, Levi was 13, Abel was 12 and the latest
edition to the family was Harry, who was nine years of age. |
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Twenty
years after that, when the children had all left the family home on Western
Terrace in Wortley, it was just James and Emma Cook who were still living
there, aged 57 and 56 respectively, in 1901.
The next census in 1911 confirmed that married Emma Cook from Wortley
was 66 and an inmate at the Bramley Union Workhouse in Armley-with-Bramley. Just over four years later, the death of
Emma Cook, nee Collett, was recorded at Bramley register office (Ref. 9b 332)
during the third quarter of 1915, at the age of 70 years. |
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73P7
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Simeon Collett (previously
Ref. 36P31) was born
at Wortley in 1848, his birth recorded at Hunslet (Ref. 23 374) during the
second quarter of the year. He was a
coal miner like his brother William (above) and, in 1881, was unmarried at
the age of 33 when he was still living with his parents at Wortley in Bramley. Following the death of his father in 1888,
Simeon Collett was unmarried and 43 years old, when he was again living at
the family home on Silver Royd Hill in Wortley with his widowed mother Maria
and his nephew Frederick Collett. Just
over nine years later, the death of Simeon Collett was recorded at Bramley
register office (Ref. 9b 209) during the third quarter of 1900, when he was
53 years of age. |
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73P8 |
Edmund Collett (previously
Ref. 36P32) was born
at Wortley towards the end of 1849, with his birth recorded at Hunslet (Ref. xxiii
337) during the first months of 1850. According
to the census in 1871, unmarried Edmund Collett was 21 when he was still
living with his family at Wortley, where he was a clay miner. Within days of the census that same year, the
marriage of Edmund Collett and Harriet Holdsworth, who was born at Armley around
1849, was recorded at Leeds (Ref. 9b 460) in April 1871. It would appear that the first few years of
their married life was spent living at Armley, where their first child was
born. However, one year later and the family
had moved to Wortley, where their remaining children were born. |
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In
April 1881 the family was living at Albion Street at Wortley in Bramley where
Edmund was described as a clay miner and his wife Harriet as a cloth weaver. Edmund’s brother Burnett Collett (above)
was also a clay miner, as was one of his sons. The whole family was still together ten
years later in 1891, when they were recorded living at Fire Brick Yard in Beeston,
within the Holbeck district of Leeds.
Edmund Collett was 41 and a coalminer, Harriet Collett was 39, sons
Alfred Collett and Arthur Collett were 19 and 16 respectively, and daughter
Amelia Collett was 18. |
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Just
after the turn of the century, all of Edmund’s and Harriet’s children had
left the family home and the couple was living in Wigton Entire in the West
Riding of Yorkshire. Edmund from Wortley
was 51 and employed as a pit deputy, while his wife Harriet from Armley was
49. It was the same situation in 1911,
when mine deputy Edmund Collett was 61 and Harriet was 59, except that by
then they were living in Holbeck.
Edmund lived an usually long life, when the death of Edmund Collett
was recorded at Bradford register office (Ref. 9b 164) during the last quarter
of 1942, when he was 92 years old. |
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73Q16
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Alfred Collett |
Born in 1871
at Armley, Leeds |
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73Q17 |
Amelia Collett |
Born in 1872
at Wortley, Leeds |
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73Q18
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Arthur Collett |
Born in 1873
at Wortley, Leeds |
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73P9 |
Frederick Mann Collett (previously
Ref. 36P33) was born at Holbeck, near Leeds in 1853, his birth recorded
under the name of Fred Mann Collett at Hunslet (Ref. 9b 267) during the
second quarter of the year. He was a
joiner and carpenter and he married Martha Oliver who was three or more years
younger than her husband and born at Copley in County Durham. The wedding of Fred and Martha was recorded
at Leeds (Ref. 9b 684) during the second quarter of 1877. In 1881 the young couple was living alone
together at 3 Albert Street in Holbeck, they having no children. Ten years later, it was at Londesborough
Street in Wortley that Fred Collett was 38 and Martha Collett was 32. By that time in his life, Fred was employed as
a carter. |
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After
a further ten years, the childless couple was still living in Wortley, but at
Armley Road, where Fred Collett was 48 and was a carting agent, while his
wife Martha was described as being 42 and born at Durham. The next census in 1911, confirmed that
they had been married in 1877, by which time they were residing within the Armley-with-Bramley
area, when Fred Collett was 58 and his wife Martha Collett was 55. Fred was described as employed by a general
carter, where he was continuing to work as a carting agent. It was fifteen years later that the death
of Fred Collett was recorded at Bramley register (Ref. 9b 288) during the
last three months of 1926, when he was 72. |
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73Q1
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Robert Burnett Collett was born at Windmill Hill in Wortley (Leeds)
in 1851, the eldest child of Thomas and Rachel Collett. His birth, using his full name, was recorded
at Hunslet (Ref. 23 415) during the second quarter of the year. Curiously, no member of the family has been
found within the census of 1861, but ten years later Robert Collett from Wortley
was 19 and was still living with his family at Windmill Hill in Wortley. The census in 1871 stated that he was
working as a brick-maker, his father having been a labourer at the brick works. Following the death of his mother and his
father in 1880, he and his siblings were living at the family home at 146 Hill
End Road in Armley in 1881. Robert
Collett – incorrectly given the census status of son, was 29 and a bachelor from
Wortley who, by then, was employed as a labourer at the local brickyard, working
with his younger brother Albert (below). |
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73Q2
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Clara Collett was born at Windmill Hill in Wortley in
1853, her birth recorded at Hunslet (Ref. 9b 210) during the second quarter
of the year. With no record of her, or
her family, in the next census, Clara was 18 and a woollen weaver in 1871 when
she was living with her family at Windmill Hill in Wortley. The only other record for Clara Collett was
the recording of her death at Bramley (Ref. 9b 265), less than three years
later, during the first three months of 1874, when she was only 21. Her early death eliminates Clara from being
the mother of base-born Rachel Ann Collett and places that role on her
younger sister Kezia (below). |
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73Q3
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Kezia Collett was born at Wortley in 1856, the third
child of Thomas and Rachel Collett, whose birth was recorded at Hunslet (Ref.
9b 230) during the second quarter of that year. She was 14 years of age in the Wortley census
in 1871, when she was living with her family at Windmill Hill, from where she
was employed as a woollen mule piecer.
Her mother and father both died nine years later so, in 1881, the
family was living at 146 Hill End Road in Armley was headed by her older brother
Robert (above). Unmarried Kezia
Collett from Wortley was 25 when she was working alongside her younger sister
Lavinia (below), both of them described as woollen weavers. Living at Hill End Road with the family,
was Rachel A Collett aged four years, who was most likely Kezia’s base-born
daughter. Tragically, it was just over
three years later, that the death of Kezia Collett was recorded at Bramley
(Ref. 9b 246) during the second quarter of 1884, when she was 29 and just a couple
of months after her father had passed away. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
Just over one year earlier, another Collett child was born at
Armley who may well be the second base-born daughter of Kezia Collett. That assumption has been made purely from
the fact that Kezia’s only surviving sister Lavinia was married in 1886 and
had a family of her own, while Ada Collett was living with Rachel Ann Collett
(her sister?) in 1891, following Kezia having passed away in 1884. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
36R1
|
Rachel Ann Collett |
Born in 1877
at Batley |
||
|
36R2
|
Ada Collett |
Born in 1883
at Armley |
||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73Q4
|
Lavinia Collett was born at Wortley in 1858 and, like
all of her siblings, her birth was also recorded at Hunslet (Ref. 9b 188) during
the third quarter of the year. She was
12 years old in the Wortley census of 1871 but by 1881, and after the death
of her parents during the previously year, Lavinia Collett was 22 and a
woollen filler living at 146 Hill End Road in Armley with the rest of her family.
After a further five years, the
marriage of Lavinia Collett and John Henry Stead was recorded at Bramley
(Ref. 9b 560) during the last three months of 1886. Her father had passed away by then, so it
was very likely one of her brothers who gave her away during the wedding
ceremony. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
It was at Wilson Street in Bramley that John and Lavinia were
living with two children in 1891. John
H Stead was 34, Lavinia Stead was 33, Alfred Stead was four and Ada Stead was
two years of age, both of them born at Bramley. There was then a nine-year
gap before the couple’s next child was born although the records at Bramley
confirm that many Stead children born between 1891 and 1901 did not survive beyond
infancy. The family’s address in 1901 was
simply Town Street in Bramley, where shoe maker John Henry Stead was 44,
Lavinia Stead was 43, Alfred Stead was 14, Ada Stead was 12 and John Thomas Stead
was just three years old. The same
family members were still together ten years later, according to the Armley
& Bramley census of 1911. John was
54, Lavinia was 53, Alfred was 24, Ada was 22 and John junior was 13. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73Q5
|
Albert
Collett (previously Ref. 36Q5) was born at Wortley in Leeds in 1860,
the fifth child and the youngest son of Thomas and Rachel Collett. His birth was recorded at Hunslet (Ref. 9b 196)
during the third quarter of that year.
He would have been under one year old in 1861 when, unfortunately, no
record of him or his family has been discovered. In 1871 Albert was 10 years of age when he
was attending school and living with his family at Windmill Hill in Wortley. One of his first jobs was that of a
brickyard labourer working with his older brother Robert (above), both of
whom were still living together in 1881 at Armley with most of their other
siblings, following the death of both of their parents during the previous
year. On that occasion, Albert was 20 when
he was residing at 146 Hill End Road in Armley with the rest of his family. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
Two
years later the marriage of Albert Collett and Mary Ellen Lawton of Leeds,
daughter of David and Mary Lawton, was recorded at Leeds (Ref. 9b 615) during
the second quarter of 1883. Their marriage
produced a total of nine children, with the likely hood that Mary Ellen died
during the birth of a tenth child, who also did not survive. In 1891 the family was living at Bosnia
Terrace in Armley, where Albert Collett was 30 and a worker at the Fireclay
Company. His wife Mary Ellen Collett was
25 and their three sons on that day were named as Arthur Collett who was five,
Albert Edward Collett who was three and William Lawton Collett who was one year
old. Ten years later the family was
recorded as living at Bosnia Grove in Armley when 40-year-old Albert was
working as a brick-maker. His wife
Mary E Collett was 35 and their seven sons were Arthur aged 15, Albert aged 13,
William aged 11, David who was seven, Harold who was five, Walter who was three
and Norris Collett who was one year old, all having been born at Leeds. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
Albert’s
wife was probably expecting the imminent arrival of the couple’s eighth child
on the day of the census in 1901, because, later that same year, she gave birth
to their only daughter. A further
child was added to the family five years after that and two years later the
death of Mary Ellen Collett, aged 43, was recorded at Bramley register office
(Ref. 9b 224) during the last quarter of 1908. Therefore, the census return completed in
1911 described the family residing at Cedar Mount in Armley-with-Bramley as widower
Albert Collett who was 50 and employed by the Fireclay Company as a furnace-man,
sons David Collett aged 17 and Harold Collett aged 15, who were also working
for the Fireclay company, Walter aged 13, Norris aged 11, Lily who was nine
and Clarence who was four years old. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
During
the Great War, Albert Collett was still living at Armley, according to the military
records of two of his sons who tragically lost their lives during the
campaign. However, having already
suffered the loss of his wife, by the time the news of the deaths of two of
his sons was reported by the War Office, Albert Collett had already passed away
at Armley. Albert died at Armley on
23th August 1916, his death was recorded at Bramley register office (Ref. 9b
276). His third son William died
during the summer of the following year, with his second son Albert having died
of his injuries in November 1918. In
both cases, the reference to their parents was recorded as “the late Albert and
Ellen Collett of Armley in Leeds”. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
73R3
|
Arthur Collett |
Born in 1885
at Leeds |
||
|
73R4
|
Albert Edward Collett |
Born in 1887
at Leeds |
||
|
73R5
|
William Lawton Collett |
Born in 1889
at Leeds |
||
|
73P6
|
David Collett |
Born in 1893
at |
||
|
73R7
|
Harold
Collett |
Born in 1895
at Leeds |
||
|
73R8
|
Walter Collett |
Born in 1897
at |
||
|
73R9
|
Norris Collett |
Born in 1899
at Leeds |
||
|
73R10
|
Lily Collett |
Born in 1901
at Leeds |
||
|
73R11
|
Clarence Collett |
Born in 1906
at Leeds |
||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73Q6
|
Sarah Ann Collett (previously
Ref. 36Q6) was born at Wortley, either at the end of 1861 or within the
first few weeks of 1862, with her birth recorded at Hunslet (Ref. 9b 292)
during the first quarter of 1862. She
was seven years of age in 1871 when, as Ann Collett, she was living at Wortley
with her family. Although she was 17
in 1881, the Armley census that year recorded that she was still a scholar,
living at 146 Hill End Road with her sibling after both of her parents had
passed away around six months earlier. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73Q7
|
Flora Collett (previously
Ref. 36Q7) was the last of the seven known children of Thomas and Rachel
Collett. She was born at Wortley in
1866 and was four years old in the Wortley census of 1871. Her mother died when Flora was 14 years of age,
after which her father took the family to nearby Armley, where she and her
orphaned siblings were living in 1881 at 146 Hill End Road. Flora Collett, still aged 14 years, like
her sister Sarah Ann (above), was described as a scholar. Sadly, just over eight years after that
day, the death of Flora Collett was recorded at Bramley (Ref. 9b 289) during
the fourth quarter of 1899, at the age of only 23. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73Q8
|
Frederick Collett (previously
in Appendix 5) was
born at Wortley in 1856, his birth recorded at Hunslet (Ref. 9b 203) during the
third quarter of the year. He was four
years old at the time of the 1861 for Wortley. By the age of 14, he and his family were
living in the Bramley & Wortley district of Leeds. Shortly after, he left school and started
work as a clay miner with his father, which he was still doing by April 1881. At that time Fred Collett was 24 and a
bachelor who was still living and working with his widowed father at the
family home on Ashley Road, in Upper Wortley. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
When
Fred was in his early thirties, he met and married Ann Welldon,
who was born at Thurlby in Lincolnshire, their wedding day recorded at Bramley
(Ref. 9b 413) during the first quarter of 1888. Just over one year later the first of their
three known children was born at Wortley.
By the day of the census in 1891, the three of them were living at
Copley Street in Wortley. Frederick Collett
was 33 and a miner of clay or coal, Ann Collett who was 36 and daughter Edith
Collett who was two years of age. Ann
was expecting the birth of her second child on that census day, and three
years after that she gave birth to her last child at Wortley. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
The
couple’s second child was named jointly after his Frederick’s father and grandfather. Where Frederick was seven years after the
birth of his last child remains a mystery, since no listing has been found
for him in 1901. The census that year
confirmed that the remaining members of the family were still living at Copley
Street in Wortley where Ann Collett, from Thurlby in Lincolnshire, was 46,
her daughter Edith Collett was 12, and her sons Fred B Collett and Laurence
Collett were nine years old and six years old respectively. Visiting the family was Agnes Wightman who was
17 and from Leeds, Elizabeth Wightman having been the mother of Frederick Collett.
Eight years later, the death of
Frederick Collett was recorded at Wortley register office (Ref. 9c 152)
during the third quarter of 1909. By
1911, his widow Ann Collett was 56 and was living in Armley-with-Bramley with
her two sons Fred Burnett Collett who was 19 and Lawrence Collett who was 16.
Her daughter Edith was also living
nearby at the Bramley Union Workhouse, where she was described as being 22
years of age and a sick inmate. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
73R12
|
Edith Collett |
Born in 1889
at Wortley |
||
|
73R13
|
Fred Burnett Collett |
Born in 1891
at Wortley |
||
|
73R14
|
Lawrence Collett |
Born in 1894
at Wortley |
||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73Q9
|
Lavinia A Collett (previously
in Appendix 5) was
born at Wortley in 1859 and in 1881 she was still living at the family home
in Ashley Road in Upper Wortley, from where she was working at a local wool
mill as a piecener. Just over one year
later, the marriage of Lavinia Collett and Ben Hartley Stanhope was recorded
at Holbeck (Ref. 9b 412) during the second quarter of 1882. By 1891, Ben and Lavinia were living at Vine
Street in the Kimberworth area of Rotherham, and by which time they had a daughter. Ben H Stanhope was 35 and a mechanic,
Lavinia Stanhope was 31 and their daughter Sarah H Stanhope was nine years of
age. After a further ten years, the
three of them were residing at Walter Street in Headingly-cum-Burley on the
day of the census in 1901, where Ben Hartley Stanhope was 45 and a forge
labourer, Lavinia Stanhope was 41 and Sarah Hannah Stanhope was 18, all of
them born at Leeds. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
During
the first decade of the new century, the family returned to Leeds, where they
were living in 1911. That year, Ben
was 56 and a labourer for a boiler maker, Lavinia was 51 and Sarah was
28. Completing the family was
eight-year-old Edna Stanhope, whose was also named as daughter, when it is
more than likely she was the base-born child of their daughter Sarah. It was at Leeds register office (Ref. 9b
577) that the death of Ben H Stanhope was recorded during the first quarter
of 1927, when he was 71. Lavinia survived
as a widow for just four years, when the death of Lavinia Stanhope was also
recorded at Leeds (Ref. 9b 455) during the second quarter of 1931, when she
was 71. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73Q10
|
Anne Collett (previously
in Appendix 5) was
born at Wortley in 1865 and was listed as Annie Collett aged five years in
1871. Ten years later she was probably
working with her older sister Lavinia (above) at the local wool mill, where
she was employed as a cloth burler while living at Ashley Road in Upper
Wortley. After her father, Burnett
Collett, died in 1890, Annie who took over the role of housekeeper and head of
the household, as recorded in the Wortley census of 1891. In addition to her domestic chores at their
Ashley Road home, she was also earning a living as a knotter in a woollen
mill at the age of 24. The census return
that year, claimed the two males living with her were her brothers. They were Jonas Collett who was 21 and, curiously,
Walter Burnett Collett who was only six years of age. He had been born in 1885, when Annie’s
father was 54 and had been widowed for many years. It is therefore more likely that Walter
Burnett Collett was the base-born son of unmarried Annie Collett, who was married
just after the census day that year. The
marriage of Annie Collett was recorded at Leeds register office (Ref. 9b 552)
during the second quarter of 1891, when her husband was either Jim Hobson or
Arthur Stainton. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
73R15
|
Walter Burnett Collett |
Born in 1885
at Wortley |
||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73Q11
|
Jonas Collett (previously
in Appendix 5) was
born at Wortley in 1867, his birth recorded at Kirkstall (Ref. 9b 232) during
the last three months of that year. He
was three years old in the Wortley census of 1871 and, on leaving school in
1881, he worked as a putter in a clay pit, while living with his parents at
Ashley Road in Upper Wortley. Whilst it
is not clear where he was in 1891, it was at Bramley register office (Ref. 9b
652), during the third quarter of 1897, that the marriage of Jonas Collett
and Harriet Zillah Peart was recorded. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
According
to the census of 1901, Jonas Collett was 30 and a labourer in a stone quarry,
when he was living at Silver Royd Hill in Wortley. His wife Harriet Zillah Collett was 27 and
had been born at Bramley. The couple’s
two children were Frederick Harold Collett who was three years old and
Clifford Collett who was under one year old, both sons having been born at
Wortley. Harriet was probably pregnant
with the couple’s third child on the day of the census, since it was just
months later, that the child was born.
Two further children were added to the family over the following ten
years, the second of them born after they had settled in nearby
Armley-with-Bramley. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
By
1911, the family was residing at Armley-with-Bramley and comprised Jonas
Collett who was 41 and working as a driller in an engine shop foundry,
Harriet Z Collett who was 37, and their five children, Frederick H Collett
who was 13, Clifford Collett who was 10, Louisa F Collett who was nine,
Edmund Collett who was seven and Ernest Collett who was two years old. It was many years later, that the death of
Jonas Collett was recorded at Leeds register office (Ref. 9b 274) during the
third quarter of 1944. It may be of
interest that, unlike her siblings, no record of the birth of Louisa F Collett,
together with no later record of her, has been found anywhere. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
73R16
|
Frederick Harold Collett |
Born in 1898
at Wortley |
||
|
73R17
|
Clifford Collett |
Born in 1900
at Wortley |
||
|
73R18
|
Louisa F
Collett |
Born in 1901 at
Wortley |
||
|
73R19
|
Edmund Collett |
Born in 1903
at Wortley |
||
|
73R20
|
Ernest Collett |
Born in 1908
at Armley |
||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73Q12
|
Esther Collett (previously
in Appendix 5) was
born at Wortley in 1871 (after 3rd April) and very likely at
Ashley Road in Upper Wortley, where her parents had been recorded on the
census day that year. She later
married and became Esther Walton and, at the age of 30, she was living in
Bradford and was confirmed as born in Wortley in the 1901 Census. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73Q13
|
Mary Ann Collett (previously
in Appendix 5) was born at Wortley in January 1861, the first of the
three children of William Collett, her mother being Lydia Stead, to whom he
was married at the end of 1859. The
birth of Mary Ann Collet was recorded at Hunslet (Ref. 9b 208) during the
first quarter of 1861. She and her parents
were living at Hill Top Road in Armley on the day of the census in 1861, when
Mary Ann was two months old. Her parents
appear to have separate after the birth of her brother Frederick (below) and
Mary’s location over the following decades has not been revealed. However, by 1901 she was reunited with her
father, brother Frederick and half-brother Simeon, when unmarried Mary Ann
Collett was 40 years of age and residing at Morris Row in Wortley. No record of any member of the family has
been found within the census of 1911. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
Rather interestingly, the death of a Mary Ann Collett was also
recorded at Hunslet (Ref. 9b 167) during the third quarter of 1861 which, if
she was the daughter of William and Lydia, raises the question as to how she
could be living with her family in 1901. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73Q14
|
Frederick Collett (previously
in Appendix 5) was
born in 1863, his birth recorded at Kirkstall (Ref. 9b 222) to the north of
Leeds, during the last quarter of the year.
He was the son of William Collett and Lydia Stead who, for some
reason, was living with his paternal grandparents in 1871 when he was seven
years of age. At the age of 17 he was
a coal miner when, according to the 1881 Census, he was still living with his
grandparents at Wortley, while his mother Lydia was housekeeper at nearby
Hedley Street in Wortley. Seven years
later his grandfather passed away so, in 1891, the Wortley census that year
recorded him still living with his widowed grandmother Maria Collett at
Silver Royd Hill in the town, at the age of 27. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
Frederick
Collett was working with his father and half-brother Simeon (below) as a clay
miner in 1901, when he was 39 and living at Morris Row in Wortley with his father
and siblings Mary Ann Collett (above) and Simeon Collett. He became a married man later that same
year although, by then, there was no chance of them having any issue, as
confirmed by the Holbeck census in 1911 when the childless couple of Frederick
and Sarah Elizabeth Collett – from Hull, were both 47, Frederick being a clay
miner and Elizabeth being a clothiers’ machinist, making trousers. The death of
Frederick Collett was recorded at Hunslet register office (Ref. 9b 1076)
during the first three months of 1919, when he was 55 years of age. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73Q15
|
Simeon Collett (previously
in Appendix 5) was born
at Holbeck in Leeds around 1871/72 and was the son of William Collett, but
possibly not by his wife Lydia, but by unmarried landlady Jane Elwood, with
whom William was lodging in 1871. On
the day of the census in 1881, Simeon Collett was nine years old when he was living
with his father William Collett and Jane Elwood at 12 Canal Road in Armley. Twenty years later, according to the Wortley
census of Wortley, unmarried Simeon Collett was 28
and working as a clay miner, like his father and brother Frederick (above), with
whom he was living at Morris Row in Wortley, together with his two older unmarried
siblings Mary Ann Collett, aged 41, and Frederick Collett who was 39. No record of Simeon has been found after that
day. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73Q16
|
Alfred Collett (previously
in Appendix 5) was born
at Armley in 1871, his birth recorded at Bramley (Ref. 9b 351) during the
third quarter of the year. He was nine
years of age in 1881 and was living with his family at Albion Street in Wortley. In 1891 he was still living with his family
at Fire Brick Yard in Beeston when he was 19, by which time he was working as
a clerk. Five years later, the
marriage of Alfred Collett and Beatrice Whitaker was recorded at Bramley
(Ref. 9b 631) during the last quarter of 1896. Four years after that day, Alfred and
Beatrice were residing at Beckett Street in Leeds, from where Alfred Collett was 29 and was employed as a butcher shopkeeper. His wife Beatrice Collett wife was 28. It seems likely that the couple never had
any children since, according to the next census in 1911, they were living at
Barrowford within the Burnley area of Lancashire where
Alfred Collett from Armley was 39 and a butcher and his wife Beatrice Collett
from Huddersfield was 38. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73Q17 |
Amelia Collett (previously
in Appendix 5) was born
at Wortley, either at the end of 1872 or very early in 1873, with her birth
recorded at Bramley (Ref. 9b 391) during the first three months of 1873. She was eight years old when she was living at
Albion Street in Wortley with her parents in 1881. Ten years later she was still living with
her parents at Fire Brick Yard in Beeston when she was eighteen and working
as a woollen weaver. It was during the
first quarter of 1892 that Amelia Collett married Albert
Roberts from Leeds, the event recorded at Leeds (Ref. 9b 495). By the end of the century their family was complete
with two children but, on the day of the census in 1901, the family was
staying with Amelia’s younger brother Arthur (below) at his home on Armley
Road in Armley. Head of the household
was Arthur Collett, brother-in-law Albert Roberts was 30 and a general
labourer, sister Amelia Roberts was 28, and the couple’s two children were Harold
Roberts who was eight and Beatrice Roberts who was still under one year old. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
Sometime after that day, the family acquired a home of their own
in Armley-with-Bramley, where the four of them were living in 1911. That year, Albert Roberts was 40 and
working for a clothing manufacturer as a woollen and worsted weaving over-looker
(inspector), Amelia Roberts was 38, Harold Roberts was 18 and Beatrice
Roberts was 10 years of age. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73Q18
|
Arthur Collett (previously
in Appendix 5) was born
at Wortley either at the end of 1874 or early in 1875, since his birth was recorded
at Bramley (Ref. 9b 407) during the first three months of 1875. He was six years old in 1881 when he was
living with his family at Albion Street in Wortley. In 1891 he was still living with his family
but at Fire Brick Yard in Beeston, where he was 16 years of age and a pupil
teacher. By March 1901, and at the age
of 26, he had followed the same profession as his older brother Alfred
(above) and was a shopkeeper with a butcher’s shop on Armley Road in Armley,
where he had living with him, his married sister Amelia Roberts (above), her husband
and their two children. Towards the
end of that same year, the marriage of Arthur Collett and Nellie Hampshire was
recorded at Bramley register office (Ref. 6b 612) during the last three months
of 1901. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
The next census in 1911, revealed that the childless couple was
living in Armley-with-Bramley, where Arthur Collett was still working as a
butcher at the age of 36, while his wife Nellie Collett was 32, both of them
born in Leeds. By the end of the Great
War, Arthur would have been thirty-four years of age and therefore, he may
have been involved in some way. The
death of Arthur Collett was recorded at Leeds register office (Ref. 9b 564)
during the first quarter of 1918, although no age or date of birth is known,
so it cannot be positively identified as Arthur Collett the husband of Nellie
Hampshire. More certain, though, is
the death of Nellie Collett, which was also recorded at Leeds register office
(Ref. 2c 132) during the third quarter of 1954, when she was 76 years old. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73R1
|
Rachel Ann Collett was born at Batley on 11th
January 1877, the base-born daughter of unmarried Kezia Collett, her birth recorded
at Dewsbury (Ref. 9b 678) during the first three months of 1877. In 1881 she was living at the home of her widowed
grandfather, with her mother, who died three years later. Seven years after being orphaned, Rachel A
Collett was 14 working as a nurse maid when she was living at the home of Robert
and Cordelia Helstrip at Tower Lane in Armley. With her was her potential sister Ada
(below), both girls described as the nieces of Robert and Cordelia. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
After a further seven years, the marriage of Rachel Ann Collett
and Henry Armitage was recorded at Bramley register office (Ref. 9b 657) during
the third quarter of 1898. By 1901,
the childless couple was residing at Ivy Terrace in Hill End, Armley, where
Henry Armitage from Leeds was 28 and a postman, and Rachel A Armitage was 24
and from Batley. Their only known child,
Connie Armitage, was born at Armley in early 1903 and was eight years of age in
the Armley census of 1911. By that
time Rachel Ann Armitage was 34 and her husband Henry was 38 and a postman
employed by the Leeds Government Post Office. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73R2
|
Ada Collett was born at Armley in 1883, most likely
at the home of her grandfather Thomas Collett at Hill End Road, where her potential
mother, unmarried Kezia Collett, was also living, as was her possible sister Rachel
A Collett (above). The birth of Ada Collett
was recorded at Bramley (Ref. 9b 371) during the first quarter of 1883 and just
over a year after that Ada was orphaned when her mother and grandfather both
passed away. It was following that
double tragedy, that Ada and her sister Rachel were taken into the home of
Robert and Cordelia Helstrip at Tower Lane in Armley, where the two girls
were described as their nieces. Ada
Collett from Armley was eight years old, while Rachel A Collett was 14 and a
nurse maid. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
Ten years later the marriage of Ada Collett and Thomas Collinson
Sheffield was recorded at Bramley register office (Ref. 9b 403) during the
first three months of 1901. A few weeks
later the pair of them were recorded together in the Pudsey census of 1901
when Thomas Collinson Sheffield from Pudsey was 22 and a plumber and a glazier,
and his wife Ada Sheffield from Armley was 18 and a woollen cloth weaver were
living at Dover Street. Ada may have
already been pregnant by the time, since the first of their three children
was born at the end of that year at nearby Farsley. Five months prior to the next census in
1911, the death of Thomas C Sheffield at Farsley was recorded at North
Bierley register office (Ref. 9b 47) during the fourth quarter of 1910. It was also at Farsley where widow Ada Sheffield,
aged 28, was a charwoman from Armley, who had living there with her, Phyllis
Sheffield who was nine, Harry Sheffield who was six and Kathleen Sheffield
who was four, all three born at Farsley. |
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|
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|
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73R3
|
Arthur Collett (previously
Ref. 36R1) was born
at Leeds on 27th August 1885 and his birth was recorded at Bramley
(Ref. 9b 388) during the third quarter of the year. He was five-years-old and 15 years of age in
the two following Armley census returns where, for the latter, he was living
with his family at Bosnia Grove in Armley.
The marriage of Arthur Collett and Minnie
Jowett from Leeds, conducted at St Peter Church in Leeds, was recorded there
(Ref. 9b 567) during the second quarter of 1910. Nine months later their only known child was
born. The next census in 1911 placed
the family still living in Armley. On
that day the family was recorded as Arthur Collett from Leeds, who was 25 and
a clay worker at a brick works, his wife Minnie, also from Leeds, who was 26,
and their son William Arthur Collett who was only one month old. Also living with the family at that time,
was Arthur’s younger brother William Lawton Collett (below) aged 21. |
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|
|
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|
Very sadly, their son only survived for seventeen years. The birth of William Arthur Collett at
Armley in March 1911 was recorded at Bramley register office (Ref. 9b 218) during
the second quarter of that same year.
Tragically, it was during the first three months of 1929 that his death
was recorded at Leeds register office (Ref. 9b 878). Of his parents, Minnie Collett died in 1950
at the age of 65, while the death of Arthur Collett was also recorded at
Leeds register office (Ref. 2c 490) during the first quarter of 1959, when he
was 73. |
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|
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|
73S1
|
William
Arthur Collett |
Born in 1911
at Armley |
||
|
|
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|
|
||||
73R4
|
Albert Edward Collett (previously
Ref. 36R2) was born at Leeds in 1887, his birth recorded at Bramley
(Ref. 9b 345) during the last four months of the year. He was three years of age in 1891, when
living at Bosnia Terrace in Armley and was 13 years old in 1901 when he was
living with his family at Bosnia Grove in Armley. Eight years later,
in 1909 and at the age of 22, Albert Edward Collett married Margaret Hunter
MacDonald at St Bartholomew’s Church in Armley, the event recorded at Bramley
register office (Ref. 9b 708). Margaret
was the eldest of four daughters of |
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|
|
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|
In the earlier census of 1901, 15-years-old Margaret was employed
as a cotton weaver while living at Fulstone in West Yorkshire with her
family. Within the first eighteen
months of their married life together Margaret gave birth to a daughter, who
may have been their only child. In earlier
April 1911, the family of three was living at Armley, where Albert Edward Collett
from Leeds was 24 and employed by the Leeds City Tramway Company as a tramways’
conductor. His wife Margaret Collett
was 25 and also born in Leeds, while their daughter Elsie Roma Collett was
just three months old. |
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|
|
||||
|
A second child was added to their family in 1916, when the birth
of John P Collett was recorded at Bramley (Ref. 9b 395) during the second
quarter of that year, when his mother’s maiden name was confirmed as McDonald.
It was during the previously year Albert he joined the 2nd
Battery of the Army Service Corps, at the age of 28, and became Driver
Collett T/327134. It is very
interesting that he gave his place of residence as Naas (?) in Yorkshire where,
it is known, his younger brother Norris Collett was living in 1917 and 1919. Although not confirmed, it would appear that
Albert saw active service during the Great War, but later died of the injuries
he sustained. His military records confirmed
that he was the son of the late Albert and Ellen Collett of Armley. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
The War Graves Commission recorded the following information. Albert Edward Collett aged 31, the husband
of Margaret Collett of 67 Esplanade, Kaiti, Gisborne in New Zealand and the son
of the late Albert and Ellen Collett of Armley in Leeds, died at the Royal Herbert Military Hospital in Greenwich on 9th November 1918 and afterwards,
was buried in the Leeds Wortley Cemetery.
From this, it is therefore assumed that Albert’s wife had moved to the
safety of New Zealand after the birth of their son, who died there in 1955. See the separate entry for daughter Elsie,
for more details about their life in New Zealand. |
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|
|
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|
73S2
|
Elsie Roma Collett |
Born in 1910
at Armley |
||
|
73S3
|
John Percival (Jack) Collett |
Born in 1916
at Armley |
||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73R5
|
William Lawton Collett (previously
Ref. 36R3) was born at Leeds in 1889. It was as William Lawton Collett that he appeared
in the 1891 Census aged one year, when he and his family were recorded at Bosnia
Terrace in Armley. The birth of
William Lawton Collett was recorded at Bramley (Ref. 9b 364) during the third
quarter of 1889. In the subsequent census
of 1901, he was simply named as William Collett aged 11 and born at Leeds when
he was again living with his parents at Armley. According to the next
census in 1911, William Lawton Collett from Leeds was 21 and was living at Armley
with his married brother Arthur Collett (above) and his wife and child. At that time in his life, he was working at
the local brickworks on the production of glazed bricks. It was two years later, that William became
a married man. |
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|
|
||||
|
He married Ada Blanche Nicholson at St Peter’s Church in Leeds in
1913, their marriage recorded at Leeds register office (Ref. 9b 574) during the
first quarter of that year. Ada was
born at Armley and was a similar age to William, being aged 12 years in 1901,
when she was still living at Armley with her parents Thomas and Elizabeth
Nicholson. Their marriage provided William
and Ada with a son and a daughter, although the latter was born around the time
her father was killed in the service of the King. Ada was well advanced with her first pregnancy
when she married William, their son Norris Collett being born within a couple
of months of their wedding day. Four years
later, Ada gave birth to a daughter and her birth, like that of her two sons,
was also recorded at Bramley, when once again the mother’s maiden name was confirmed
as Nicholson. |
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|
|
||||
|
The couple’s
last child was William Lawton Collett (junior) who was born at Bramley on 29th
June 1922, his mother’s maiden name also confirmed as Nicholson, when the
birth was recorded (Ref. 9b 409) during the second quarter of the year. The death of Ada B Collett, nee Nicholson,
was recorded at Leeds register office (Ref. 2c 288) during the third quarter
of 1960, when she was 71 years old. William Lawton Collett (senior) died at 15 Whincover Bank
in Leeds in 1965, but with his death recorded at Wakefield (Ref. 2d 566) during
the second quarter of 1965, at the age of 75.
Just nine years later, it was at Wakefield, where he died on 7th
March 1974, the death of William Lawton Collett
(junior) recorded at Wakefield register office (Ref. 5 1404), when he was 52
years old. . |
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|
|
||||
|
73S4
|
Norris Collett |
Born in 1913 at
Bramley |
||
|
73S5
|
Violet Collett |
Born in 1917
at Bramley |
||
|
73S6
|
William Lawton Collett |
Born in 1922
at Bramley |
||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73R6
|
David Collett (previously
Ref. 36R4) was born at
Leeds on 6th May 1893, with his birth recorded at Bramley (Ref. 9b
409) during the second quarter of the year.
He was seven years of age in 1901 when his family was residing at
Bosnia Grove in Armley. After his
mother died, his father moved the family to Cedar Mount in Armley-with-Bramley
where David Collett of Leeds was 17 in 1911 when he was working with his younger
brother Harold (below) as a brickmaker with the Fireclay Company. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
Seven years after that
day, David Collett married Mabel March in Leeds, with the wedding recorded at
Bramley register office (Ref. 9b 465) during the first three months of
1918. Later that same year, the couple
was blessed with the birth of their first child, when the birth of Walter
Collett was recorded at Leeds register office (Ref. 9b 431) during the last
three months of 1918. Tragically, the boy
was only seven years old when he died, following which his death was recorded
at Bramley register office (Ref. 9b 293) during the fourth quarter of
1925. By that time, Mabel already had
a daughter, Emily, who birth was recorded at Bramley (Ref. 9b 422) during the
third quarter of 1921, the mother’s maiden name confirmed as March. Around the time of the death of her first
child, Mabel was expecting the birth of another child; the birth of son
George W Collett recorded at Bramley register office (Ref. 9b 346) during the
second quarter of 1926. Once again,
the child’s mother’s maiden name was confirmed as March. The later death of Harold Collett was
recorded at Leeds register office (Ref. 2c 376) during the last three months
of 1965, when he was 72. Two years
later, the death of Emily E Collett was also recorded at Leeds (Ref. 2c 303) during
the third quarter of 1967, when she was 45 years old. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
73S7
|
Walter Collett |
Born in 1918 at
Leeds |
||
|
73S8
|
Emily E Collett |
Born in 1921 at
Leeds |
||
|
73S9
|
George W Collett |
Born in 1926 at
Leeds |
||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73R7
|
Harold
Collett (previously Ref. 36R5) was born at Armley on 22nd
July 1895 and was five years of age in the census of 1901, while he was living
with his family at Bosnia Grove in Armley. It was also at Armley-with-Bramley,
at Cedar Mount, that he was still living with his widowed father in 1911, when
Harold Collett was 15 and already working as a brickmaker at the Fireclay
Company. Nine year later, Harold
married widow Elsie, with whom he had a son.
The marriage of Harold Collett and Elsie Goodchild was recorded at
Leeds register office (Ref. 9b 1266) during the second quarter of 1920. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
As Elsie Bladen, she was born in 1893 at Carlton, just south of
Leeds, and was the daughter of |
||||
|
|
||||
|
73S10
|
Kenneth Collett |
Born in 1929
at Leeds |
||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73R8
|
Walter Collett (previously
Ref. 36R6) was born at
Leeds in 1897, his birth recorded Bramley register office (Ref. 9b 389) during
the third quarter of the year. In 1901,
when Walter Collett from Leeds was three years old, he and his family were residing
at Bosnia Grove in Armley. Ten years
later, following the death of his mother, Walter’s family was living at Cedar
Mount in Armley-with-Bramley, from where he was employed as a worsted cloth finisher
at the age of only 13 years. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
Walter
Collett enlisted with the 14th Foot Battalion of Prince of Wales’
Own West Yorkshire Regiment and was Rifleman 30647725. In the days approaching the Third Battle of
Ypres aka The Battle of Passchendaele, which was planned to commence on 31st
July 1917, General Sir Hubert Gough led the allied troops to secure the strategic
vantage point of Gheluvelt Plateau overlooking Ypres. That involved a four-day bombardment by field
guns, to which the Germans retaliated by bringing in more troops to reinforce
their defences and to introduce, for the first time in warfare, the use of
the deadly mustard gas. It was during
that offensive that William was killed on 25th July 1917. The War Graves Commission
record of his death referred to his parents as Albert and Ellen Collett of Armley
and included the note that he was aged 28 and that he was buried at Coxyde Military
Cemetery in Belgium. |
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|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73R9
|
Norris
Collett (previously Ref. 36R7) was born at Bosnia Grove in Armley on 17th
July 1899 and was just one year old at the time of the 1901 Census, when he
was living there with his family. His
birth, like some of his siblings, was recorded at Bramley register office (Ref.
9b 387) during the third quarter of 1899. He was another child of Albert and Mary Collett
and was 11 years of age in the next census of 1911, when he and his father
were residing at Cedar Mount in Armley-with-Bramley after his mother has
passed away. He was around thirty-four
years old when he married Amy Russell in 1933, the
event recorded at the Leeds South register office (Ref. 9b 1047) during the
fourth quarter of that year. So far, no
record of any children has been found. Amy Collett nee Russell died on 6th
October 1980, when she was 79. Eight
years after being widowed, Norris Collett died on 15th December 1988
aged 89, his passing recorded at Leeds register office (Ref. 5 477). |
||||
|
|
||||
|
It
is now established that Norris Collett, aged 18 and from Leeds, initially served
with the 4th Battalion of the Duke of Wellington’s West Riding Regiment
in 1917. It was at Naas (?) in Yorkshire
where he was residing in 1917 and again 1919, where his eldest brother Arthur
Edward Collett (above) had been residing in 1915. By 1919, Norris Collett was 19 and was serving
with the Durham Light Infantry |
||||
|
|
||||
|
A
gravestone for Norris and Amy Collett, in the Lower & Upper Wortley
Graveyard, is placed in front of the war memorial headstone for Norris’ older
brother Albert Edward Collett (above) who died in 1918. It reads: “Beloved Aunt Amy Collett died 6th October 1980 aged 79, and
Beloved Uncle Norris Collett died 15th December 1988 aged 89 – R I
P” |
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|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73R10
|
Lily Collett (previously
Ref. 36R8) was born at
Leeds on 22nd July 1901, her birth recorded at Bramley register
office (Ref. 9b 371) during the third quarter of the year. She was only a few years old when her mother
died and was nine years old in the census of 1911, when living with her
family at Cedar Mount in Armley-with-Bramley.
She married Robert Draper (1897-1983) in 1922, with whom she had two children,
Robert William Draper (1922-1999) and Daisy Phyllis Draper (1923-2003). It was on 21st June 1983 that
Lily Draper nee Collett passed away. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73R11
|
Clarence Collett (previously
Ref. 36R9) was born at
Leeds on 11th March 1907, the last child of Arthur Edward Collett and
Mary Lawton, with his birth recorded at Bramley register office (Ref. 9b 323)
during the second quarter of the year. It is possible that his mother died during,
or very shortly, after the birth. He
was four years of age in the Armley-with-Bramley census of 1911, when living
with his widowed father at Cedar Mount.
It was during the last three months of 1932 that he married Ethel
Padgett, the event recorded at Leeds South register office (Ref. 9b 932). It was only after the Second World War that
their son Gordon was born, his birth recorded at Leeds register office (Ref.
2c 641) during the first three months of 1947. Just over fifty years later, the death of Clarence
Collett was recorded at Leeds (Ref. 0921a a21c) early in 1999. |
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|
|
||||
|
73S11
|
Gordon Collett |
Born in 1947
at Leeds |
||
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|
||||
|
|
||||
73R12
|
Edith Collett was born at Wortley in 1889 and
possibly at Copley Street in Wortley, where she was living with her parents
in 1891. The birth of Edith Collett,
the eldest child of Frederick Collett and Ann Welldon,
was recorded at Brampton (Ref. 9b 379) during the second quarter of 1889. She was two years old in 1891 and was 12 in
1901, when the family was still residing at Copley Street in Wortley. Ten years later, and following the death of
her father, Edith Collett aged 22 years was suffering with her health, when
she was described as a sick inmate at the Bramley Union Workhouse. Also on that day, her mother and two younger
brothers were living nearby in Armley-with-Bramley. It was just two years later, when the death
of Edith Collett was recorded at Bramley register office (Ref. 9b 320) during
the third quarter of 1913, when she was only 24 years old. |
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|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73R13 |
Fred Burnett Collett was born at Copley Street in Wortley in
1891, his birth recorded at Bramley (Ref. 9b 380) during the third quarter of
the year. He was the second of the
three children of Frederick Collett and Ann Welldon
and, in 1901, he and his two siblings were recorded at Copley Street in
Wortley with just their mother, when Fred B Collett was nine years old. Following the later death of his father, it
was just Fred and his younger brother Lawrence who were still living with
their widowed mother Ann in Armley-with-Bramley. By then Fred Burnett Collett was a stable assistant
working on the railway. The death of
Fred B Collett was recorded at Leeds North register office (Ref. 9b 469)
during the quarter of 1933, when he was 40 years old. The lack of any marriage record suggests
that he remained a single man all of his short life. |
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|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73R14
|
Lawrence Collett was born at Copley Street in Wortley
in 1894, where his parents were living in 1891 and 1901. His birth was recorded at Bramley register
office (Ref. 9b 383) during the final quarter of 1894. He was six years of age in 1901, although
by 1911, when he was 16, he had left school and was working as an errand boy for
a local newsagent in Armley-with-Bramley, where he was living with his
widowed mother and older brother Fred (above). It seems that he lived in the Leeds area for
the whole of his life as a single man, with the death of Lawrence Collett
recorded at Leeds register office (Ref. 2c 231) during the fourth quarter of
1966, when he was 73. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73R15
|
Walter Burnett Collett was born at Wortley in 1885 and was
most likely the base-born son of Annie Collett, the third daughter of Burnett
Collett and Elizabeth Wightman. His
birth was recorded at Bramley (Ref. 9b 363) during the second quarter of 1885
and, in 1891, Walter B Collett was six years of age, when he was living at Ashley
Road in Upper Wortley with unmarried Annie Collett and her brother Jonas Collett
who was 21. Both Jonas and Walter were
said to be Annie’s brother. What
happened to Walter after Annie was married just a few weeks later, is not known,
nor has he been identified within the census of 1901. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
However,
by the time the next census was conducted in 1911, Walter B Collett was 26,
unmarried and working as a plasterer in the building industry, when he was a
boarder at the Bingley home of widower and boarding housekeeper John Kinder. Eighteen months later, the marriage of
Walter B Collett and Adeline Hewitt was recorded at Halifax register office
(Ref. 9a 1051) during the last three months of 1912. Adeline had been born in 1892 and was the
daughter of Robert and Mary Hewitt of Kirkby Moorside in North
Yorkshire. Significantly, the only child
of Walter and Adeline was named after Walter’s mother and possibly Adeline’s,
when the birth of Annie M Collett was recorded at Halifax register office
(Ref. 9a 904) during the third quarter of 1913, with the mother’s maiden name
confirmed as Hewitt. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
The
couple appear to have lived out their lives in the Halifax area, since it was
at Halifax register office (Ref. 2b 930), during the first three months of
1951, that the death of Walter B Collett was recorded. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
73S12
|
Annie M
Collett |
Born in 1913
at Halifax |
||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73R16
|
Frederick Harold Collett was born at Wortley in 1898, his
birth recorded at Bramley register office (Ref. 9b 351) during the second
quarter of the year. He may have been
born at Silver Royd Hill in Wortley where he was three years of age in 1901. It was at Armley-with-Bramley that he was
living with his family in 1911, when Frederick H Collett was 13 and already
working as an errand boy for a shoe shop (boot dealer). He was 26 when the marriage of Frederick H
Collett and Elsie Nason was recorded at Bramley
register office (Ref. 9b 697) during the second quarter of 1924. Nine months later the first of the couple’s
two known children was born, while seven years after that, Elsie gave birth
to a daughter. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
73S13
|
Ernest H Collett |
Born in 1925
at Bramley |
||
|
73S14
|
Margaret J Collett |
Born in 1932
at Leeds |
||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73R17 |
Clifford Collett was born at Silver Royd Hill in Wortley
in 1900, with his birth recorded at Bramley register office (Ref. 9b 387)
during the third quarter of that year, making him around six months old on
the day of the census in 1901. At the
age of 10 years, Clifford was still attending school, while living with his family
at Armley-with-Bramley. It was very
late in his life when he married Mary Gale in 1947, the event recorded at
Leeds (Ref. 2c 787) during the first three months of the year. They were only married for five years when Clifford
Collett died at the age of 52, his death recorded at Leeds register office
(Ref. 2c 223) during the last quarter of that year. Two years after being widowed, the death of Mary
Collett was also recorded at Leeds register office (Ref. 2c 483) during the
first quarter of 1954, when she was 48. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73R19
|
Edmund Collett was born at Wortley in 1903, with his
birth recorded at Bramley register office (Ref. 9b 364) during the first quarter
of the year. During the next three or
four years the family moved the short distance to Armley-with Bramley, where
Edmund was seven years of age in the census of 1911, when he was attending
school, while living there with his family.
Edmund was 29 years old when me married Florence Sawdon,
their wedding recorded at Leeds South register office (Ref. 9b 1184) during
the second quarter of 1933. At the end
of that same year, their daughter was born at Leeds. Less than seventeen years after that day,
the death of Edmund Collett was recorded at Leeds register office (Ref. 2c
193) during the first three months of 1950, when he was 46 years old. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
73S15
|
Joan F Collett |
Born in 1933
at Leeds |
||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73R20
|
Ernest Collett was born at Armley-with-Bramley on 29th
December 1908, his birth was recorded at Leeds register office (Ref. 9b 431)
during the first three months of 1909. It was there also where the family was
living in 1911 when Ernest was two years old.
In was at the Leeds North register office, twenty-three years later,
that the marriage of Ernest Collett and Mildred Milner was recorded (Ref. 9b
712) during the third quarter of 1934. They were married for just of fifty years,
when the death of Ernest Collett was recorded at Leeds register (Ref. 5 261)
during the summer quarter of 1985.
Their marriage produced two children.
Elaine M Collett, whose birth was recorded at Leeds North register
office (Ref. 9b 596) during the second quarter of 1937. Who married Clive E
Riches in 1961 at Leeds (Ref. 2c 555).
Malcolm E Collett’s birth was recorded at Leeds (Ref. 9b 605) during
the fourth quarter of 1939 when, as with his sister, the mother’s maiden name
was confirmed as Milner. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
73S16
|
Elaine M
Collett |
Born in 1937
at Leeds |
||
|
73S17
|
Malcolm E
Collett |
Born in 1939
at Leeds |
||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73S2
|
Elsie Roma Collett was born at Leeds on 27th
December 1910, her birth recorded at Bramley register office (Ref. 9b 213) during
the first quarter of 1911. In the Armley
census of 1911, Elsie was three months old, the only daughter of Albert Edward Collett and Margaret Hunter MacDonald, who
eventually gave birth to a son at Leeds, just over four years later. Her father passed away at the age of
only 31, while being treated for his injuries at the Royal Herbert Military
Hospital in Greenwich, where he died on 9th November 1918. The cause was the influenza pandemic of 1918,
otherwise known as Spanish Flu. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
Eighteen
months after the loss of her father, Elsie Roma Collett, aged nine years,
sailed from Southampton to Auckland in New Zealand with her mother Margaret Hunter
Collett who was 35, together with her brother Jack Collett (below) who was
only four years of age. The three of
them were accompanied by Margaret’s mother, Mary Ann MacDonald, who was 57
years old. They crossed the Pacific Ocean
onboard the ship 'Ruahine', which took 48 days to reach its destination. The family’s first address in New Zealand
was 67 Esplanade, Kaiti, Gisborne, as confirmed in her father’s military
records. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
On
the 29th July 1935, when she was nearly twenty-five, Elsie Roma married
Kenneth Norman McGonagle (1905-1986), New Zealand (Ref. 1935/4377), when she
was “given away by her brother Jack”. The
Poverty Bay Herald gave a colourful insight into their wedding. The following year she gave birth to Vivienne
Margaret McGonagle on 25th May 1936. The couple was eventually divorced in 1944 after
nine years of marriage, by which time Elsie was 34. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
That
was the first of two marriages for Elsie Roma Collett who, at the age of 39, married
(2) Kenneth John Flint (1918-1987) in 1949 at the Baptist Manse in Gisborne. The couple lived at 17 Hirini Street in
Gisborne and an article in the Poverty Bay Herald indicated that Kenneth
Flint had been injured during the war.
He was also born in Leeds, England, and was the only son of Mr and Mrs
T Flint of 20 Greenhead Lane in Dalton, Huddersfield. Elsie was 45 when her brother Jack Collett
died in 1955 at the age of 39, the cause of death being tuberculosis. Her mother, Margaret Hunter, who was living
at MT, Albert, Auckland, passed away on 28th July 1967, aged
82. Elsie and Kenneth J Flint had been
married for thirty-eight years when he passed away aged 67 in 1987. Four years later, Elsie Roma Flint died at
Christs Hospital in Selwyn Village on 26th April 1991, when she was
80 years old. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
73S3
|
John Percival Collett, who was known as Jack, was born at Leeds
on 8th March 1916, with his birth also recorded at Armley register
office. He was two years old when his
father died and, within the next two years Jack and his sister Elsie (above),
together with their widowed mother and maternal grandmother sailed to a new
life in New Zealand. |
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73S4
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Norris Collett was born in 1913 with his birth recorded
at Bramley register office (Ref. 9b 477) during the
second quarter of 1913, when his mother’s maiden name was confirmed as Nicholson. It was only eighteen years later that the
premature death of Norris Collett was recorded at Leeds register office (Ref.
9b 547) during the last quarter of 1931. |
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73S5
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Violet Collett was born at Bramley on 12th
July 1917, where her birth was recorded (Ref. 9b
304) during the third quarter of the year, when again Nicholson was confirmed
as the mother’s maiden name. Nine
years after the death of her older brother Norris (above), the marriage of
Violet Collett and (1) Wilfred Jones was recorded at Leeds (Ref. 9b 585)
during the third quarter of 1940. Wilfred
may have been a casualty of the Second World War, since Violet Jones married Harry
Waterson in Leeds during the summer of 1943, with whom she had a son, Stuart
Waterson, who was born in 1944, who married Joyce Harris in 1966. It was at Leeds where Violet was living, when
she died on 14th March 1987. |
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73S6
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William Lawton Collett was born at Bramley on 29th
June 1922, a son of William Lawton Collett and Ada B Nicholson, whose birth
was recorded at Bramley register office (Ref. 9b 409)
during the second quarter of that year.
In addition to that, the death of William Lawton Collett (senior) was
recorded at Wakefield register office (Ref. 2d 566) during the second quarter
of 1965, at the age of 75. At that age,
he was born around 1889, the same time as William Lawton Collett the husband
of Ada B Nicholson. Furthermore, the
death of William Lawton Collett (junior) was also recorded at Wakefield (Ref.
5 1404) during the spring of 1974, when he was 52 years old. |
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The
marriage of William L Collett and (1) Iris Martin was recorded at Leeds
register office (Ref. 2c 694) during the first three months of 1948, with their
only known child born in the following year. The birth of Patricia A Collett was recorded
at Leeds (Ref. c 477) in the last three months of 1949. William and Iris were only married for thirteen
years, when Iris died, the death of Iris Collett being recorded at Leeds
register office (Ref. 2c 503) during the fourth quarter of 1961. Her death certificate stated that she had been
born at Rotherham in 1924. Six years
later, William and his daughter were still living in Leeds, where Patricia A
Collett married Thomas S Francis at the end of 1967 (Ref. 2c 331). |
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However,
although no record of a second marriage has been found, either in Leeds or
Pontefract, it is understood that William fathered two further daughters. Curiously, at the recording of the birth of
the second of the two, Joanne Collett, her mother’s maiden name was again
given as Martin. This raises the
question, was the mother a sister of Iris Martin, his late wife or some
family relative. The birth was
recorded at Pontefract register office (Ref. 2c 912) during the quarter of 1967. |
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More
puzzling is the ‘so say’ birth of the first of those two extra children. The only birth of Tracy A Collett was
recorded at Leeds register office (Ref. 2c 654) but during the third quarter
of 1961 (before the death of Iris Collett nee Martin). However, the child’s mother’s maiden name
as Brayshaw.
Tracy A Collett married Martin Cliff at Pontefract (Ref. 5 959) during
the spring of 1988. Furthermore, in
1957 and 1958, two more Collett children were born in Leeds, to a mother
whose maiden name was Brayshaw, and they were
Anthony S Collett (Ref. 2c 623) and Julie M Collett (Ref. 2c 299). These three births suggest that they belong
to a separate Collett family. |
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73T1
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Patricia A
Collett |
Born in 1949
at Leeds |
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73T2
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Tracy A Collett |
Born in 1964 (?)
at Pontefract |
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73T3
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Joanne
Collett |
Born in 1967
at Pontefract |
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73S10
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Kenneth
Collett (previously Ref. 36S3) was the son of Harold Collett and Elsie
Goodchild, nee Bladen, whose birth was recorded at Leeds North register office
(Ref. 9b 516) during the first quarter of 1929. The birth record also confirmed that his
mother’s previously name was Goodchild.
In June 1951 Kenneth married (1) Sheila Thompson at Barkston Ash,
North Yorkshire, with their daughter born in 1952. He later married (2) Patricia Lockwood who was
born in 1930. That relationship produced
a son for the couple, who was born at home in Armley. By 1972, Kenneth and Patricia were divorced,
after which he married (3) Joan Conlon (1935-1984) with whom he had another daughter,
Victoria Collett. Patricia Collett then
married Peter Blackburn, at which point in time, her son adopted the name Mark
Patrick Blackburn. |
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73T4
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Christine A Collett |
Born in 1952 |
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73T5
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Mark Patrick
Collett |
Born in 1964 |
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73T6
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Victoria Collett |
Born in 1971 |
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73S13 |
Ernest H Collett was born at Armley-with-Bramley in 1925,
his birth recorded at Bramley register officer (Ref. 9b 370) during the first
three months of the year, when his mother’s maiden name was confirmed as Nason. It was
around the time of his twenty-fifth birthday that Ernest H Collett married
Hilda Rogerson, the event recorded at Leeds register office (Ref. 2c 819)
during the first quarter of 1950. |
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73T7
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Jean Collett |
Born in 1951
at Leeds |
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73T8
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Linda Collett |
Born in 1954
at Leeds |
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73S14
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Margaret J Collett was born in 1932 and her birth was
recorded at Leeds South register office (Ref. 9b 535) during the first
quarter of that year, when her mother’s maiden name was confirmed as Nason. It was
during the last quarter of 1954 that the marriage of Margaret J Collett and
James F Greaves was recorded at Leeds (Ref. 2c 323). Their daughter Karen I Greaves was born in
1959, her birth also recorded coincidentally at Leeds with the same ledger
number (Ref. 2c 323) during the last three months of the year, when her
mother’s maiden name was confirmed as Collett. |
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73S15 |
Joan F Collett was born in 1933, the only known
child of Edmund Collett and Florence Sawdon, whose
birth was recorded at Leeds South register office (Ref. 9b 509) during the
last three months of 1933, the year her parents were married. Her birth also confirmed that her mother’s
maiden name was Sawdon. She was barely 17 years old when Joan
married Ronald H Baldwin, their wedding recorded at Leeds register office (Ref.
2c 289) during the second quarter of 1951. |
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73T4
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Christine A Collett was born in 1952, the only child of
Kenneth Collett and Sheila Thompson, her birth recorded at Leeds register
office (Ref. 2c 361) during the third quarter of 1952. It is possible that she was the Christine
Collett who married Malcolm Dawson during the second quarter of 1976, the
event recorded at Leeds register office (Ref. 0124 58). |
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73T5
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Mark
Patrick Collett (previously Ref. 36T1) was born at Armley in February 1964,
but when his mother separated from his father in the 1970s and married Peter
Blackburn, Mark also took the Blackburn surname. It is thanks to Mark that the much revised Collett
families of Leeds were dramatically amended in 2019 with the introduction of
this new branch of The Leeds |
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73T5
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Victoria Jane Collett was born in 1971, her birth recorded
at Leeds register office (Ref. 2c 1045) during the second quarter of that year
when her mother’s maiden name was confirmed as Conlon. She was the third child of Kenneth Collett,
but the only child by his third wife John Conlon. |
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73T7 |
Jean Collett was born at Leeds in 1951, and it was
there that her birth was Recorded (Ref. 2c 616) during the first three months
of 1951, her mother’s maiden name confirmed as Rogerson. It was at North Yorkshire register office
in Cleveland where the marriage of Jean Collett and Ian C Main was recorded
(Ref. 3 2061) during the spring of 1979. |
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73T8 |
Linda Collett was born at Leeds in 1954, where her
birth was recorded (Ref. 2c 488) during the first quarter of the year, when
her mother’s maiden name was confirmed as Rogerson. She was nearly 21 when her marriage to
David F Smith was also recorded at Leeds register office (Ref. 5 0173) during
the autumn of 1974. |
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