PART
FORTY-THREE
The
Staffordshire
Updated September 2009
This is the family line of
first generation of the file, and
whose ancestors are denoted by the names in capital letters
It
is also the line of Groff Collett (Ref. 43R11) of Wisconsin Rapids who kindly
provided
a
vast amount of information relating to his American branch of this family
It is also possibly the line of Barry
Collett of Iowa who has been conducting a DNA Study
of the Colletts and who provided
additional information for the December 2008 update
Details of Barry‘s actual line are
included in Appendix Two and closely match the
DNA of the “single strand” line from
Benjamin Collett (Ref. 43L1) which
is identified by the underlined names,
this being the family line of Bill Collett (Ref. 43R2)
It
was Bill’s two sisters, Sue (Ref. 43R3) and Sandra Collett (Ref. 43R5) in the
USA,
who
kindly provided their family details for the August 2009 update
When first produced, this line started
with Thomas Collett who was born in 1742.
More recent information has since come to hand that confirms the details
for two earlier generations.
For the earlier generations the focal
point seems to be the area to the immediate south and east of Rugeley which
includes the villages of Mavesyn Ridware, Armitage and Longdon, all of which
lie within about three miles of each other.
Whilst this confirms the existence of
Colletts in this part of Staffordshire in the seventeenth century, it may also
be of interest to note that in the nineteenth century there were members of the
Collett family at Colwich three miles north-west of Rugeley.
It
should be noted that some records spelt the surname with just one t, while
others used an i in lieu of the e.
However, in this file the more usual spelling is used throughout.
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43H1 |
UNKNOWN COLLETT parents |
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43I1
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William Collett |
Born circa
1640 |
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43I2
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THOMAS COLLETT |
Born in 1646 |
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43I1 |
William Collett was possibly born around 1640 and
he later married Joyce possibly around 1660 and their only known son was born
at |
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43J1
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William Collett |
Born in
1665 |
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43I2
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THOMAS COLLETT was born at Mavesyn Ridware in 1646 and it was there that
he married Maria in 1671. All
of the couple’s known children were baptised at Mavesyn Ridware, although the
parish register for the youngest child Marie did not specify her parents’
names, as it did for the others. |
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Interestingly
the baptism of another William (Guilielmus) Collett on 03.12.1682 at Mavesyn
Ridware also did not given the name of his parents, so William and Marie may
have been siblings of this or another Collett family. |
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43J2
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Anthony
Collett |
Baptised on
20.06.1672 |
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43J3
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Thomas Collett |
Baptised on
30.12.1673 |
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43J4
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Anna Collett |
Baptised on
22.04.1676 |
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43J5
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Baptised on
04.12.1680 |
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43J6
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WILLIAM COLLETT |
Baptised on
16.12.1682 |
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43J7
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Baptised on
16.08.1685 |
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43J8
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Marie
Collett |
Baptised on
25.03.1690 |
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43J1 |
WILLIAM COLLETT was baptised on 18.01.1666 at |
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43J3
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Thomas Collett was baptised at Mavesyn Ridware on
30.12.1673, the son of William and Maria.
It is believed
that he later married Mary Garbett at St Mary’s Church in Brewood in
Staffordshire on 14.02.1696. |
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43J4
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Anna Collett was baptised at Mavesyn Ridware on
22.04.1676 and it is
possible that she married Thomas King at nearby Lichfield Cathedral on
14.02.1704. |
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43J5
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George Collett was baptised at Mavesyn Ridware on
04.12.1680. When he was almost twenty-one he married Maria
Goodwin at nearby Croxall just over the Staffordshire county boundary in
Derbyshire. The wedding took place on
30.06.1701 and George was recorded as Georgius Collet. |
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43J6
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WILLIAM COLLETT was baptised at Mavesyn Ridware on
16.12.1682 where he later married Maria Jolley on 01.03.1714. |
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They
were named as the parents of sons William Collet and Thomas Collet who were
baptised at Mavesyn Ridware and on both occasions the parish register
referred to them as Gulielmi and Maria Collet. |
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43K1
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William Collett |
Baptised on
04.01.1715 |
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43K2
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THOMAS COLLETT |
Baptised on
14.04.1717 |
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43J7
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There
is no evidence to suggest that there were any other children born during the
first ten years of the marriage and it is possible that |
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43K3
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Elizabeth Collett |
Baptised on
17.07.1714 |
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43K4
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Maria Collett |
Baptised on
20.10.1716 |
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43K1
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William Collett was baptised Gulielmus Collet at
Mavesyn Ridware on 04.01.1715, the son of Gulielmi and Maria Collet. And it was as William Collet that he married Mary Bold at Stowe by
Chartley in Staffordshire on 02.03.1735 at the age of twenty years. |
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43K2 |
THOMAS COLLETT was probably born around 1715 and
was baptised at Mavesyn Ridware on 14.04.1717. He later married Ellen Perkin at Rugeley in
Staffordshire on 10.02.1735. |
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Thomas
Collett made a statement in a boundary dispute for the Brereton and Longdon
area of Staffordshire in 1796 in which he indicated that he came to live in
Brereton at the age of ten years. |
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43L1
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Benjamin Collett |
Born circa
1740 or 1744 |
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43L2
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THOMAS COLLETT |
Baptised on
13.06.1742 |
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43K3
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Elizabeth Collett was baptised at Mavesyn Ridware on
17.07.1714. She later married John Arnold at Tamworth on
10.06.1739. |
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43K4
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Maria Collett was baptised at Mavesyn Ridware on
20.10.1716. It is possible that she was later married as
Mary Collet at Lichfield Cathedral to William Bentley on 03.12.1736. |
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43L1
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Benjamin Collett
was possibly born
at Mavesyn Ridware sometime immediately before or shortly after 1742. This has been deduced simply by working
back from the date that he was married. |
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He
married Sarah Malpas at Kings Bromley in Staffordshire on 01.03.1764, Kings
Bromley being just over two miles from where Benjamin’s brother Thomas
(below) was baptised. |
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Sarah
Malpas was baptised at Kings Bromley on 05.11.1744. It seems very likely that the marriage
produced more than just the one known child listed below who was born in
Staffordshire. |
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Appendix
Two at the end of this family line provides details of one such ‘possible’
child, William Collett born in 1762, whose DNA matches closely with this
Benjamin Collett and his subsequent descendents, plus William’s date of birth
corresponds closely with Benjamin’s known son John. |
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43M1
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Born on 10.11.1764 |
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43L2 |
THOMAS COLLETT was very likely born around
1742. The IGI includes the baptism of
a Thomas Collett at Armitage on 13.06.1742 who was the son of Thomas
Collett. Thomas later married Mary
Yeates on 27.02.1759 at Rugeley parish church, where all of their children
were later baptised. |
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It
seems likely that he died on 26.08.1814 as there is a headstone to that
effect in the ruined chancel of Rugeley’s old church, opposite the current
parish |
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The
burial record taken from the Bishop’s Transcript for Rugeley stated “Thomas
Collett of Brereton buried |
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43M2
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Baptised on
15.06.1766 |
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43M3
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William (Collyer) Collett |
Baptised on
11.09.1768 |
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43M4
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Baptised on
24.02.1771 |
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43M5
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GEORGE COLLETT |
Baptised on
06.12.1772 |
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43M6
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unnamed Collett |
Baptised on
16.04.1775 |
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43M7
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Mary
Collett |
Baptised on
22.03.1778 |
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43M8
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Edward
Collett |
Baptised on
27.10.1779 |
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43M9
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Hannah Collett |
Baptised on
27.01.1785 |
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43M10
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Joseph Collett |
Baptised on
04.07.1787 |
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43M11
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Elizabeth Collett |
Baptised on
27.09.1789 |
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43M12
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Henry Collett |
Born in
1791 |
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43M1
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It would also appear that John was
either a farmer or a farm labourer as his eldest son John was born at Snead
Farm in Staffordshire, which may have been in Colwich.
The only other known fact about John is that he died in 1828 and was
buried at St Michael’s and All Angels Church in Colwich at the age of 64. |
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John’s wife Ann Winfield was born in
1772 and she died on 13.02.1846 and was buried with her husband, the shared
headstone in the churchyard at Colwich gave her age as 74. |
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The same headstone also included the
name of their daughter Sarah Collett who died aged 12 on 14.02.1826. It would appear that Sarah may have been
the second child of the family with this name since and earlier one was born
to John and Ann in 1798 who, it must be assumed, also died while still very
young; both girls being named after John’s mother. |
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43N1
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Born on 25.10.1796 |
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43N2
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Sarah Collett |
Born in 1798 at Colwich |
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43N3
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Robert
Collett twin |
Baptised on 18.07.1801 |
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43N4
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Ann Collett twin |
Baptised on 18.07.1801 at Colwich |
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43N5
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Mary
Collett |
Born in 1807 |
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43N6
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Sarah
Collett |
Born in 1814 |
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43N7
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William
Collett |
Born in 1820 |
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43N8
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Benjamin Collett |
Born in 1822 at Colwich |
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43M3
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William (Collyer)
Collett was born in
the parish of Brereton and Rugeley in the diocese of |
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Again
he was simply William Collett in the census and was living at Glovers Hill in
Brereton where he was listed as being of ‘independent means’. Just over two years after the census, he
died on 22.08.1843 aged 75 as detailed on his headstone of his grave on the
south side of St Michael’s Church in Brereton, which also gave his name as
William Collyer Collett. |
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43M5
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GEORGE COLLETT was baptised on 06.12.1772 at
Rugeley in the parish of Brereton and Rugeley which lies in the diocese of |
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In
1844 George sold his house to the Church Commissioners for the sum of £1,770
for them to use as a vicarage for what was then the recently created Parish
of Brereton. The house was later
demolished in 1963 to make way for the present vicarage. |
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He
took up a relationship with the much younger Elizabeth Harris around 1813 for
which there is no evidence that they ever married. This begs the question -
did George already have a wife that prevented his marriage to Elizabeth
Harris? Certainly Pallott’s Marriage
Index and the IGI include the marriage of a Geo. Collett to an Arabella
Lawman at St Marylebone in |
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Either
way, by 1841 George and Elizabeth were living at Glovers Hill in
Brereton. This indicated that |
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The
children listed as living with them in 1841 were, Georgiana aged 22, Augustus
aged 17 and ‘Rubria aged 16’ which must refer to Rebecca. None of the children were listed as Harris
Collett. |
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There
is a possibility that |
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George
made two Wills, the first on |
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Within
his Will, George referred to his wife as Elizabeth Harris Collett ‘my reputed
wife’, whereas in her Will she was referred to as ‘Elizabeth Harris, the
reputed widow of George Collett late of Brereton’. |
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It
was as Elizabeth Harris that died on 08.06.1875 and was buried at Brereton
using that name but not with George Collett.
In her Will dated |
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All
of the couple’s children, with the exception of |
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43N9
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William Harris Collett |
Born circa
1813 |
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43N10
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Amelia Harris Collett |
Born in
1816 |
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43N11
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Georgiana Harris Collett |
Born circa
1818 |
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43N12
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Frederick Harris Collett |
Born in
1821 |
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43N13
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Augustus Harris Collett |
Born in
1823 |
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43N14
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REBECCA HARRIS COLLETT |
Born in
1825 |
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43M9
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Hannah Collett was born at Rugeley where she was
baptised on 27.01.1785. It would
appear that she never married and in 1841 her ‘rounded age’ was 60. |
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Hannah
died in July 1854 and was buried on the south side of St Michael’s Church in
Brereton where she shared a headstone with her younger sister Elizabeth
Collett (below). |
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43M10
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Joseph Collett was born at Rugeley and was baptised
there on 04.07.1787. He married
Elizabeth Joice (Joyce) with whom he had a daughter who was born at |
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In
1861 Elizabeth Collett born at Rugeley was still living there and was aged
65, placing her date of birth around 1795 so an assumption perhaps can be
made that she was Joseph’s wife and the mother of Elizabeth. |
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43N15
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Elizabeth Collett |
Born on
08.06.1818 |
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43M11
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Elizabeth Collett was born at Rugeley where she was
baptised on 27.09.1789. She never
married and died on 27.12.1857 aged 68 and was buried on |
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43M12
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Henry Collett was born at Rugeley around 1796 but so far no
baptism record so therefore no proof has yet been found to confirm him as the
son of Thomas and Mary Collett. What
is known is that he married Mariah Higgott at Rugeley on 23.03.1818 and that,
when they died, they were buried very near the graves of siblings William,
George, Hannah and Elizabeth Collett (all above). |
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His
wife Mariah was born at Rugeley between 1785 and 1789 and at the time of her
marriage she was living at |
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During
the year following their wedding Mariah presented Henry with a daughter. By the time of the 1841 Census ‘Enery’ said
he was 49, while Maria was 51 and they were still living at Rugeley with
their daughter. |
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Mariah
died on 06.01.1848 aged 63 leaving Henry as a widower for the next three
years. According to the 1851 he was
living at Brook End in Longdon in the Lichfield & Yoxall registration
district and was aged 63. |
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Six
months later Henry died on 11.10.1851 aged 64 and was buried with his wife in
the churchyard of St Michael’s in Brereton and adjacent to the graves of his
likely siblings William, George, Hannah and Elizabeth. |
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A
large flat marble tombstone placed over the shared grave has the following
inscription “In affectionate memory of Henry Collett formerly of Longdon who
died 11th October 1851 aged 64 and Mariah his wife who died 6th
January 1848 aged 63”. |
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This
is followed by a further inscription that reads “Also of William Eagles
husband of their only child Harriett of Stourton Villa, |
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43N16
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Harriett Collett |
Born in
1819 |
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43N1
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He was married by licence in
Wolverhampton to Mary Elizabeth Barrow on 25.06.1828 who was the daughter of
Thomas and Hannah Barrow. Mary was
born on 02.06.1804 and was later baptised on 09.03.1806 at St Peters Church
in Wolverhampton. All of John’s and
Mary’s children were born at Great Haywood, just one mile north of Colwich. |
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It would appear that |
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The cause of death was noted as a
fracture of the spine, and a report in the Staffordshire Advertiser read as
follows: “October 10th much
respected and deeply lamented by his family and friends Mr. John Collett,
Great Haywood. His death was caused by a spinal fracture in consequence of
being thrown out of his gig on the 7th September. He has left a wife and six
children to mourn their bereavement.” |
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His wife Mary died nearly forty years
later from a heart attack, when she passed away on 30.09.1879 at the age of
75 and was buried with her husband in the churchyard of St Michael’s and All
Angels Church in Colwich. |
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During the years in between, the
widow Mary Collett was living within the Wombourne area of Wolverhampton with
some of her children. In April 1861
she was 56 years old and living with her at that time was Mary A Collett 32,
Elizabeth Collett 23, and James Collett who was 21. |
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Mary’s two sons Robert and John were
absence from the family home in the census return for 1861 simply because
both of them were married with families of their own by that time. |
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43O1
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Mary
Ann Collett |
Born on 31.03.1829 |
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43O2
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Robert Collett |
Born on
1831 |
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43O3
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John
Collett |
Born on 09.12.1832 |
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43O4
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William
Collett |
Born in 1836 |
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43O5
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Elizabeth
Collett |
Born on 31.01.1838 |
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43O6
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James
Collett |
Born on 30.03.1839 |
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43N3
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Robert Collett, who was one half
of a set of twins born in 1801 to John Collett and Ann Winfield, was baptised
at Colwich church on 18.07.1801 is a joint ceremony with his twin sister
Ann. He was twenty-two years old when
he died in 1823. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43N5
|
Mary Collett was born at Colwich in 1807 and she,
like her brother Robert (above) died in 1823, perhaps even from the same
cause or illness. She was 16 years of
age at the time of her death. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43N7
|
William
Collett was born at Colwich in 1820 and he was sixteen
years old when he died in 1836. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43N9
|
William Harris Collett
was born in |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
As
William Harris Collett he married Mary Whittingham at St Mary’s Church in |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The
couple were still living in |
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|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Twenty-nine
months later on |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Living
with him was his wife Mary also aged 25 (rounded age) and the couple’s first
born child Georgiana. Within the next
ten years William progressed from being a carpenter to a cabinet maker. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The
1851 Census listed William as aged 38 and born in |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Sometime
over the following years the family moved again, this time to |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The
younger of the couple’s two surviving daughters Fanny was listed in the
census as still living in Rugeley aged 13, while their eldest daughter
Georgiana aged 22 had moved north and was living in the Greengate area of |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
It
would appear that William, with or without his wife, later returned to
Rugeley where he died while living at |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Whether
William and Mary separated at the time he returned to Rugeley is not
known. However, eighteen months after
his death and at the time of the 1871 Census, Mary aged 60 was living at |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Sadly,
fourteen months later, Mary died at |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
43O7
|
Georgiana Collett |
Born on
03.11.1838 |
||||||||||
|
|
43O8
|
Alfred Collett |
Baptised on
01.09.1841 |
||||||||||
|
|
43O9
|
Fanny Collett |
Born in
1846 |
||||||||||
|
|
43O10
|
Harriet Collett |
Baptised on
12.05.1850; infant death |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43N10
|
Amelia Harris Collett was born on 24.11.1816 at |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
She
was baptised nearly three years later on 30.09.1819 at St Philip’s in |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Tragically
Amelia failed to reach her fifteenth birthday when she died on
21.05.1831. Her name appears on a
horizontal headstone in the churchyard of |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43N11
|
Georgiana Harris
Collett was born at
Rugeley around 1818 and was baptised there on 02.08.1820. She was still living at Rugeley with her
family on |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Almost
exactly two years after that census day Georgiana married George Tunnicliffe
at Rugeley by licence on 20.06.1843.
The witnesses were Rebecca Collett, Georgiana’s sister, and Robert
Tunnicliffe who in all likelihood was George’s father or possibly his
brother. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The
marriage was a short one, lasting for around two and a half years before the
untimely death of Georgiana at the end of 1845. However, during those thirty months Georgiana
had presented her husband with two daughters and it was very likely that it
was during the birth of the second child that she lost her life. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Her
death was mentioned in the 1846 Will of |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The
infant Louisa died in March 1846 and was buried at Rugeley on 23.03.1846. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
From
what is known, it would appear that Georgiana’s husband never remarried and
in 1881 he was living at |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
43O11
|
Alice
Tunnicliffe |
Baptised on
18.09.1844 |
||||||||||
|
|
43O12
|
Louisa
Tunnicliffe |
Baptised on
04.01.1846; infant death |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43N12
|
Frederick Harris Collett was baptised on
28.03.1821. Sadly he died on
07.05.1830 just as he was approaching his ninth birthday. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The flat
headstone in the graveyard of |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43N13
|
Augustus Harris
Collett was born at
Brereton but baptised at Rugeley on 12.09.1823. She never married and died in 1851 aged 28
and was buried at St Michael’s Church in Brereton on |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43N14
|
REBECCA COLLETT was born at Brereton and baptised
on 16.09.1825. She is believed to have
run away from home with the family’s gardener after her father attempted to
stop the couple getting married. The
gardener was in fact threatened with a gun by Rebecca’s brothers. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
This
course of action on the part of Rebecca resulted in her being disowned by her
family. However less than two months
after the death of her father, Rebecca married James Clare by licence on
08.06.1846 at Rugeley parish church and not the family’s local church in
Brereton. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
No
member of Rebecca’s immediate family was present to witness the wedding
ceremony. James gave his profession as
labourer in censuses but for the marriage register he stated he was a miller.
The entry for Rebecca simply stated that she was ‘of full age’ even though
she had not yet reached her twenty-first birthday. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The
marriage produced eight children for the couple, one of which was Alice Clare
who later married Benjamin Price of Hednesford in Staffordshire. And it was their son Benjamin Price that
supplied the story of the disownment of his grandmother Rebecca. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
He
recalled how he had visited his grandparents in Brereton in order to hear the
story first-hand. Although Rebecca’
father George was fairly wealthy and did in fact leave her one of his houses
for her to live in, she and her husband James lived a fairly simply life. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
At
the time of the 1881 Census, Rebecca was aged 55 while James was 58 and was
employed as a coal pit banks man. They
and their family were living at |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Just
three of their eight children were living with them and these were James aged
23 and born at Brereton who was working as a boiler minder, Albert aged 21
born at Alrewas who was a fireman, and the aforementioned Alice who was aged
18 and born at |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Five
years later Alice Clare, who was baptised at |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Rebecca
Clare nee Collett died at |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Rebecca
was the great great grandmother of John Bennett who kindly provided the basic
family details that has enabled this family line to be constructed. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43N15
|
Elizabeth Collett was born on 08.06.1818. The baptism was recorded at |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43N16
|
Harriett Collett was born at Rugeley in 1819 and was
aged 20 in the 1841 Census. She was an
only child and during the next ten years both of her parents passed away. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
She
married William Eagles who was born at |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The
couple were supported by two servants, indicating a degree of affluence. These were Annie Sanders aged 23 of Rugeley
who was the cook, and Alice Cope aged 25 of Longdon who was their housemaid. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Less
than four years later William Eagles died on 06.01.1885. Harriett lived the next seven years as a
widow and during this time she funded a memorial window in her home town |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Harriett
was confirmed as being aged 72 in the 1891 Census of Leamington but, just
over fifteen months later, she died on 19.08.1892. She too was buried at St Michael’s Church
in Brereton and the marble tombstone over the plot shared with her husband
and her parents carried a fitting epitaph.
See Henry and Mariah Collett (Ref. 43M12). |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43O1
|
Mary Ann Collett was born at
Great Haywood on 31.03.1829. Some
records give the place of birth as being Essington (and Essington Snead)
which is near Wolverhampton where her mother was born. This was further complicated by Mary
herself, who gave her place of birth as being Bloxwich near Essington in all
of the later census records. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
It is established from the subsequent
census returns that Mary Ann never married, although her whereabouts in three
of the first four census records has not been discovered so far. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Following the death of her father,
Mary’s mother moved to Wombourne to the west of Wolverhampton accompanied by
some of her children. In 1861 Mary A
Collett was 32 and was recorded in the census that year with her mother and
her sister Elizabeth and youngest brother James (both below). |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
By April 1881 Mary A Collett was the
unmarried head of the house aged 52, at which time in her life she was living
on the ‘income from Railway Dividends under Trustees’. Curiously her place of birth on this
occasion was stated as being Bloxwich in Staffordshire which is not far from
Wombourne or Essington where other members of this family line were born. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
At this time in 1881 Mary was
residing at a house in Moreton Road in Colwich and living with her was her
younger widowed sister Elizabeth Hopkins nee Collett (below) of Great Haywood
and her daughter Mary E Hopkins. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The house was supported by domestic
servant Sarah Willetts aged 16 who came from Armitage in Staffordshire. Mary Ann Collett of Colwich was listed as
being 62 in April 1891, and was 72 by the time of the census of 1901. Again in this she gave her place of birth
as Bloxwich, while still living at Colwich where she was ‘living on her own
means’. On both occasion Mary
Elizabeth Hopkins was living with Mary after her mother died in 1896. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Ten years later in April 1911 Mary
Ann Collett was 82 and by then was living at Bishton, Wolseley Bridge in
Staffordshire and still living with her was her niece Mary Hopkins. Mary Ann Collett passed away later that
same year on 09.12.1911 and was buried in the churchyard at Colwich. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43O2
|
Robert Collett
was born in 1831 at Great Haywood in
Staffordshire. He was the son of John
Collett and Mary Elizabeth Barrow.
Robert’s father sadly died in Staffordshire when he was only nine
years old and only a year after the birth of his and Mary’s youngest child. During his life Robert was a soldier, a farmer, and a railroad man. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Robert married Elizabeth Martha Simons
who was born in 1835 at Essington midway between Cannock and Wolverhampton,
where the couple’s first two children were born. The wedding took place at Marston Trussell
in Northamptonshire on 06.10.1860. Some
records indicate that the children were born at Essington Snead, this being a
reference to Essington Woods and Snead Common. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Curiously no record of the family has
so far been found in the 1861 Census even though it is well-known that it was
later in that decade that they emigrated to America. The crossing of the Atlantic Ocean took
place on board the ship ‘City of Baltimore’ which sailed out of Liverpool and
arrived in New York on 24th April 1867. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The ship’s passenger list included
the names of Robert Collett aged 38, his wife Mrs E Collett aged 35, and their
two children, these being Arthur 7, and Mary who was one year old. The listing of Robert’s wife provides an
indication that she was Elizabeth Collett. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
In addition to Robert Collett and his
family, also travelling on the same crossing was Robert’s sister-in-law Mary
E Collett aged 36, the wife of Robert’s brother John Collett (below). She was Mary Elizabeth Heuston and she was
accompanied by just two of her children, William 8, and Eliza 6. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
It is therefore possible that John
Collett had taken an earlier sailing across the Atlantic, taking with him his
two oldest children Dorothy and Elizabeth, since all three of them are known
to have been living in America later in their lives |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Once there, the two families
completed a one thousand mile overland trek to Missouri where they initially settled
in Moberley. It was also in Missouri
where the couple’s last known three children were born, the last of which was
known to have been born after the family had moved to Millard in Missouri. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
And
it was while the family was living at Millard that Robert died just prior to
the census of 1880. Following his death it would
appear that Elizabeth took her family to live three miles away at Pettis in
Adair County in Missouri where they were recorded as living in the 1880
Census. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The census return confirmed that
Elizabeth was a widow aged 36 from England.
Listed with her were her six children, Arthur 16, Minnie 14, Katie 11,
Robert 8, Nellie 5, and Willie 2. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Of her children Arthur and Minnie
were born in England, while Katie, Robert, Nellie, and Willie were born after
the family had settled in Missouri. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Later that same year Elizabeth,
together with children Katie 12 and Robert 8, was boarding at the home of her
brother-in-law John Collett (below) at Atchison in Kansas, and again both
children were confirmed as having been born in Missouri. Where her other children were at this time
has not been determined. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
It would appear that in 1894 Robert’s
in-laws back in Leicester in England, set up a trust that would benefit his
six children later in their lives.
With his children eventually going there own separate ways it became
difficult to trace their whereabouts, and it was not until 1925 that the
inheritance was realised. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The newspaper article that announced
the inheritance published in 1925 (see Appendix One), indicated that Robert’s
wife Mrs Elizabeth M Collett had died ‘several years ago at Moberly in
Missouri’. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
43P1
|
Arthur
Collett |
Born in 1864 ) born in Staffordshire |
||||||||||
|
|
43P2
|
Mary
Elizabeth (Minnie)Collett |
Born in 1866 ) ditto |
||||||||||
|
|
43P3
|
Katherine
Louise (Katie) Collett |
Born in 1868 } born in Missouri, USA |
||||||||||
|
|
43P4
|
John
Robert Thomas Collett |
Born in 1871 } ditto |
||||||||||
|
|
43P5
|
Helen
Maude (Nellie) Collett |
Born in 1874 } ditto |
||||||||||
|
|
43P6
|
William Francis (Willie) Collett |
Born in 1877
} ditto |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43O3
|
John Collett was born at Great Haywood in
Staffordshire on 09.12.1832. He was
later baptised on 11.05.1834 at nearby Colwich and his parents confirmed as
John and Mary. At some time in his young life he
lived and worked in Liverpool where he was employed as a merchant, a broker,
and commercial traveller. It was around 1857 that John married
Mary Elizabeth Heuston who was born on 19.11.1837. Mary was the daughter of Robert Heuston of
Tipperary and his wife Elizabeth Tydd of England. It is established that the marriage of
John and Mary produced four children for the couple and all of them were born
within a few miles of the River Mersey in the Liverpool area of England,
prior to the family emigrating to America. |
|
|||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
It would appear that John first
sailed to America before or around 1865, taking with him his first two
children, since all three of them were missing from the ship’s passenger list
when his wife and the two youngest children crossed the Atlantic. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
This second crossing of the ocean
took place on board the ship ‘City of Baltimore’ which sailed from Liverpool
to New York, where it arrived on 24th April 1867. The passenger list included the names of
Mary E Collett aged 36, and her two children William 8, and Eliza 6. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The family did not travel alone, but
was accompanied on the journey by an Irish nursemaid and by John Collett’s
older brother Robert (above) and his family. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Once in America the two families
embarked on a difficult one thousand miles journey across six states to
Missouri where Robert Collett and his family settled, with John Collett and
his family establishing themselves at Kirkwood in Missouri. While living there John became a station
agent and Mary managed the station hotel.
Later in his life John worked as a commercial traveller in meat and
dairy products. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
John had encountered Mary while
visiting Tipperary and it was Mary’s father Robert Heuston who ran a dairy
farm from which meal and dairy products were exported to America for John to
sell. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
By the time of the US Census of 1880
the family had moved across the state boundary into Kansas and was living at 915
North 5th Street in Atchison, about one hundred and fifty miles
west of Millard in Missouri where John’s brother Robert had died around that
same time. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The census return recorded the family
as John Collett 47 of England who was a travelling salesman, his wife Mary 42
from Ireland who was keeping house, and their three children Dorothy 22,
Elizabeth 21, and William 20, all of whom had been born in England. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Their daughter Eliza, who would have
been 18 was absent, and may not have survived the arduous journey from
England to Kansas in 1867. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Living with the family on that
occasion, and listed as boarders, was John’s sister-in-law Elizabeth Collett from
England, and her two children Katie 12, and Robert who was 8. It is likely her other children were at
Millard with their father Robert Collett immediately prior to his passing. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
In 1886 John sold the house at 915
North 5th Street (in Atchison) to his son William Barrow Collett. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
John Collett died at Richland
Township in Vernon County in Missouri on 17.11.1911 and was buried at White
Cemetery near Richards, Missouri on 18.11.1911. The cause of death was a clot in his
coronary artery. He was followed sixteen
years later by his wife Mary who died at Kansas City on 15.12.1927. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Just prior to his passing in the
summer of 1906 it is know that John was living at Bide-a-Wee Cottage in
Woodbine, Kansas where he was working as a property speculator and
broker. During this time, his wife
Mary was living at Edgewood Farm near Richards, Missouri, where their
daughter Elizabeth was also living. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
However, a few years later John was
reunited with Mary and by 1910 the couple were both living with their
daughter Elizabeth at her home in Richland Township in Missouri. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
43P7
|
Dorothy
Louise Collett |
Born on 03.06.1858 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P8
|
Elizabeth
Copeland Collett |
Born on 15.06.1859 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P9
|
Robert
William Barrow Collett |
Born in 1860 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P10
|
Eliza
Collett |
Born in 1862 |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43O4
|
William Collett was born at
Great Haywood near Colwich in Staffordshire in 1835. He was baptised on at St Michael’s and All
Angels Church in Colwich on 15.03.1835 when his parents were confirmed as
John and Mary Collett. He married
Ellen Miller on 17.04.1860 with whom he had 13 children who were all born at
Ashby-de-la-Zouch in Leicestershire. Ellen was born 1838 at Uttoxeter in Staffordshire. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
At sometime after he was married,
William took over running of The Castle Inn at Ashby-de-la-Zouch which he
operated until around 1885 when the family moved to Burton-on-Trent. The photograph on the right shows The
Castle Inn during the early 1880s and prior to the family moving to
Burton-on-Trent. William and Ellen are
believed to be the couple standing in the archway. The building was still there in 2002,
although it was no longer an inn, but was being used by the Coop for their
Travel Agency. The census of 1871 for
Ashby-de-la-Zouch confirmed that William was 35 and his wife Ellen was 32,
and that they were living at The Castle Inn with their younger family. By that time the couple had had eight
children, although only five of them were listed as being with their parents
on that occasion |
|
|||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The five children were Mary Ellen
Collett who was 10, Annie 9, Agnes 3, William H Collett 2, and Frederick who
was under one year old. However, daughters
Charlotte and Alice were missing and there may have been an infant death in
the family, since Lottie was also missing from this census and all census
records. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Ten years later, according to the
census of 1881, William was still the inn keeper at The Castle Inn at 70
Market Street in Ashby-de-la-Zouch. He
was 43 and from Great Haywood, while his wife Ellen was 41 and from Uttoxeter. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Their eldest daughter Mary was 20 and
was a draper’s assistant, Annie was 19, Charlotte 17, Alice 15, and Agnes was
13. Next came sons were William 11,
Frederick 10, and Robert 9, followed by Kate 6, John 4, Robert 2, and last
was baby Walter who was not yet one year old.
Once again daughter Lottie was absent and it must be assumed she had
died as a child. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The family’s move from
Ashby-de-la-Zouch to Burton-on-Trent happened in the mid 1880s when William
took over management of the Albion Hotel and that was where they were living
at the time of the census of 1891. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The census returns listed William as
56 and Ellen as 53. The children still
living with them were Annie 28, Charlotte 26, William H Collett 21, Frederick
C Collett 20, Robert 17, John B Collett 14, Richard E Collett 12, and Walter
who was aged ten years. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
William was still the proprietor of
the Albion Hotel at Burton on Trent in March 1901 when he was 65. Still living with him was his wife Ellen who
was 63 and born at Uttoxeter and five of their children. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
By April 1911 William’s occupation
was still that of a hotel proprietor when he was living at Burton-on-Trent,
and on that occasion he confirmed his place of birth was Great Haywood. Still living with him was his wife Ellen
74, and their unmarried daughters Charlotte 47, Agnes 43, and Kate Elizabeth
aged 36, and their son Richard Edward Collett who was 33. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Two grandchildren were also living
with the family at the Albion Hotel in April 1911, and these were Ivy Ellinor
Collett who was 9, and John Edwin Collett aged 6, both of whom had been born
in Burton-on-Trent. To date, it has
not been determined as to which of William’s and Ellen’s children these two belonged. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
It was almost exactly four years
later that William died at the age of 80 in March 1915. During his life William and his family are
reputed to have been brewers and produced a brew called Burton Beer. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
43P11
|
Mary
Ellen Collett |
Born in 1860 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P12
|
Annie
Collett |
Born in 1862 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P13
|
Charlotte
Collett |
Born in 1864 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P14
|
Alice
Collett |
Born in 1865 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P15
|
Lottie
Collett |
Born in 1866 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P16
|
Agnes
Collett |
Born in 1867 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P17
|
William
Henry Collett |
Born in 1869 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P18
|
Frederick
Charles Collett |
Born in 1870 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P19
|
Robert
Collett |
Born in 1871 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P20
|
Kate
Elizabeth Collett |
Born in 1874 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P21
|
John
B Collett |
Born in 1876 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P22
|
Richard
Edward Collett |
Born in 1878 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P23
|
Walter
Collett |
Born in 1880 |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43O5
|
Elizabeth Collett was born at
Great Haywood in Staffordshire on 31.01.1838.
She was just two years old when her father died. Sometime following this tragic loss to the
young family, Elizabeth’s mother moved to living in the Wombourne district of
Wolverhampton. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
This was confirmed by the census of
1861 when Elizabeth was 23 and living there with her mother, her older sister
Mary Ann (above), and her younger brother James (below). |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Towards the end of the next decade
Elizabeth married Mr Hopkins with whom she certainly had at least one child. The wedding ceremony took place at Penn in
Wolverhampton on 06.01.1870 and their daughter was born later that same year. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
By the time of the census of 1881
Elizabeth Hopkins of Great Haywood was 43 and although she was recorded as
being married, it is likely that he husband had died, perhaps while working
on the railways – see note below. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The census return recorded that she
was surviving on an ‘income from Railway Dividends under Trustees’ which was
very likely a pension from her late husband, and she and her ten years old daughter
Mary E Hopkins were living with Elizabeth’s older sister Mary Ann Collett
(above) at her home in Moreton Road in Colwich.. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Ten years later Elizabeth and her
daughter were still living in Colwich at the home of Mary Ann Collett. Elizabeth was 52 and daughter Mary E
Hopkins was 20. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Elizabeth Hopkins nee Collett died at
Colwich in 1896 and five years later her daughter was still living with her
aunt Mary Ann Collett at the age of 30.
Her place of birth was confirmed again as Newport in Monmouthshire and
following the death of her mother she was living on her own means. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The census taken in April 1911 again
confirmed that Mary Elizabeth Hopkins of Newport was living with Mary Ann
Collett at Wolseley Bridge in Bishton, Staffordshire at the age of 39. With the death of Mary Ann Collett later
that same year, it is not known what became of Mary Hopkins except that it is
known that she never married. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
43P24
|
Mary Elizabeth Hopkins |
Born in 1870 at Newport in Wales |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43O6
|
James Collett was born at Great Haywood in
Staffordshire on 30.03.1839 and during the following year his father
died. Twenty years later he was still
living with his mother who had moved to the Wombourne area of Wolverhampton
where James was recorded as being 21. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Many years after, when he was nearly
thirty, he married Sarah Georgia Hopkins from Newport in Wales who was born
there in 1848, making Sarah only twenty years of age when they were wed. Over the next ten years the couple were
blessed with six children, the first born at Wolverhampton and the remainder
in Birmingham. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
It was Sarah Hopkins’ brother Frank
Hopkins who married James’ sister Elizabeth Collett (above). |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
According to the census of 1881 the
family was living at Canterbury Villa, in the Warwick Road in Solihull from
where James was working as a commercial traveller. His place of birth was listed as being
Heywood in Staffordshire. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The family listed with him was made
up of his wife Sarah G Collett 32 of Newport in Monmouthshire, and their five
children. These were James 11,
Frederick 9, Mary 8, Rosa 6, and three years old Nelly. Where baby Hilda was at that time has not
yet been discovered. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
James must have been a man of some
status since he employed a domestic servant Annie J Andrews who was 18 and
from Warmington in Shropshire. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Ten years later the family was still
living at Solihull where James was 51, Sarah was 42, sons James and Frederick
were 21 and 19 respectively, and the three daughters were Mary G 18, Rosa P 15,
and Nellie M who was 13. Sadly before
the end of the century Sarah died in 1899 leaving James a widower. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Following the death of his wife,
James took his three youngest and unmarried daughters with him to Newport
where he was living in both 1901 and 1911. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
According to the census return for
1901 James was 61 and a traveller in hardware. He gave his place of birth as being Little
Haywood in Staffordshire. Living with
him was Rosie Polly 25, Nellie Mabel 23, and Hilda Ann who was 21. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
By April 1911 James Collett was 71 and
was living alone at Newport, his daughters all presumably married by that
time. And it was six years later at
the age of 77 that he died on 10.10.1917. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
It is believed from other records
found that, during his life and in addition to working as a commercial
traveller, James was also a salesman, a brass founder, and that he and his
brother William (above) had a cheese and a candle factory. It is know that he suffered with paralysis
from around the age of 60. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
43P25
|
James
Henry Collett |
Born on 06.11.1868 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P26
|
Frederick
John Collett |
Born on 19.07.1870 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P27
|
Mary
Georgia Collett |
Born on 14.03.1872 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P28
|
Rosa
Polly Collett |
Born on 27.04.1874 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P29
|
Nellie
Mabel Collett |
Born on 04.08.1877 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P30
|
Hilda
Ann Collett |
Born on 11.09.1880 |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43O7
|
Georgiana Collett was born in the town of |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Upon
leaving school, and when given permission by her parents, Georgiana made the
big move north to Manchester and by 1861 was aged 22 and living in the
Greengate district of Salford. The
census also confirmed that her place of birth was |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The
child may or may not have been the illegitimate son of John Shawcross whom
Georgiana married around 1861 and 1862 judging by the name of her second
child. There is certainly a mystery
surrounding this lady and the origins of the four children listed below only
two of whom were recorded as living with her in 1881 Census (see below). |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
However
before then, at the time of the birth of her youngest daughter, Georgiana was
working as a seamstress and living at |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
By
the time of the 1881 Census Georgina was a widow aged 45 (as opposed to 42)
and was living at |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Living
with her was her son Peter Shawcross aged 18 and her daughter Mary Shawcross
aged 12, both having been born at |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
What
is of particular interest is that |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Sometime
during the next decade Georgiana’s son Peter adopted the Collett name, since
there was no Peter Shawcross listed in 1891, but there was a |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Mary
Shawcross was recorded that same year as living at |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Also
by the time of the 1891 Census Georgiana’s youngest child |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
She
was listed in error as ‘ |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Ten
years on and Georgiana was still living in |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
43P31
|
Alfred Shawcross Collett |
Born in
1861 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P32
|
Peter Shawcross |
Born in
1862 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P33 |
Mary Shawcross |
Born in
1868 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P34 |
|
Born on
05.06.1869 |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43O8
|
Alfred Collett was born at Rugeley and was baptised
there on 01.09.1841. In 1851 he was
aged 9 and was living with his family at Yoxall, and a further ten years
after that he was aged 18 and still living with his family who had then
settled in |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
At
the age of 28 according to the census of 1871, Alfred was working in |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
By
April 1881 Alfred was a married man, but had moved to the north of |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
His
occupation at that time was that of a grinder, although the record also
referred to him as an artisan, thus making him a ‘skilled’ grinder. The record also confirmed he was born at
Rugeley but, to date, no record has been found of his wife. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
During
the following years it must be assumed that his wife died because, in June
1885, at the age of 44 he married Jane Cunningham at |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
In
1891 the couple were living in the Chorlton-upon-Medlock district of
Manchester, where Alfred of Rugeley was aged 48 and his wife was 46. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Whatever
happened to Alfred and Jane over the next ten years is not known but neither
of them has been identified in the 1901 Census. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Rather
interestingly though in 1891, and also living in Manchester but in the
Chorlton & Hulme registration district, was one Lunn Collett aged six
years who was born at Barwick-in-Elmet in 1884. She is believed to have been Lina Collett
the daughter of William Richard Collett of Barwick and Mary Hannah Todd of
nearby Thorner, both on the outskirts of |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
No
other Collett was listed in the Chorlton & Hulme area of Manchester on
that occasion so there is a mystery surrounding what a six years old child would
be doing there without other members of her family. Ten years later as Lina Collett she was
aged 16 and was working as a servant in |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Further details of Lina Collett and
her family can be found in Part 36 - The |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43O9
|
Fanny Collett was born at Rugeley in 1846 and was
4 years old in 1851 and living with her family at Yoxall. Ten years later the family had returned to
live at Rugeley where Fanny was now aged 13.
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Disgrace
fell upon the family for a second time in six years when, in 1867, Fanny was
found to be with child and left Rugeley to travel north to |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
By
the time of the 1871 Census Fanny aged 23 and of Rugeley was living with her
mother widowed Mary Collett aged 60 at 12 Corporation Square in Salford with
her three years old son. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
In
1878 when Fanny was aged 32 she married Thomas Lowe who was born at |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Three
years later, according to the national census, Fanny and Thomas Lowe were
living at |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Thomas
gave his aged as 34 and his occupation as that of a cotton spinner. However, his wife stated she was 32 and
born at Rugeley, when in fact she was slightly older than her husband. Living with them were sons Alfred Thomas
Lowe aged 13 and born at |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
All
that is known of the family after this time is that Thomas Lowe died prior to
the end of the century. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
43P35 |
Alfred |
Born in
1868 |
||||||||||
|
|
43P36 |
William
Lowe |
Born in May
1880 |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43O10
|
Harriet Collett was born at Rugeley where she was
baptised on 12.05.1850. She appears
not to have survived for more than eleven months as she was not listed in the
1851 Census, nor is she recorded in any census return thereafter. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43P1
|
Arthur Collett was born on 10.08.1864
and this is likely to have taken place at Essington in Staffordshire. In 1867 his parents emigrated to America,
sailing from Liverpool on the ship ‘City of Baltimore’ which docked in New
York on 24th April. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The passenger list included Arthur’s
name with his mother and father and brother James (below), but indicated that
he was seven years old instead of being three, which may have been a simple
transcription error. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
By 1880 and following the death of
his father, Arthur was 16 and was working as a ticket agent with the Wahask Railway. On the day of the census that year he was living
with his widowed mother at Pettis in Adair County in Missouri and his place
of birth was confirmed as England. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Arthur married Emma Fulton and the
married produced two sons for the couple, the first boy being named after
Arthur’s father who died around 1880. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
In 1923 he became a naturalised
American citizen, and during completion of the records he stated he was born
in Wolverhampton on 10th August 1864. Essington, where it is believed that
Arthur was born, lies on the northern edge of Wolverhampton. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Two years later in 1925, Arthur
learned that he and his brother and sisters were to receive an inheritance
amounting to $200,000 from their grandparents at Leicester in England. Apparently the money had been left in trust
in 1894 but it had taken many years to track the family eventually to
Arthur’s brother William in San Antonio.
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
A formal announcement was made in the
San Antonio Express on 4th February 1925, a transcript of which
can be found in Appendix One at the end of this family line. The article refers to Arthur Collett being
a resident of Seattle at that time. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Arthur Collett later died whilst he
was living at 11032 Sand Point Way in Seattle in the state of Washington. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
43Q1 |
Robert Collett |
Date of birth unknown |
||||||||||
|
|
43Q2 |
Arthur Collett |
Date of birth unknown |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43P2
|
Mary Elizabeth Collett, who
was referred to as Minnie, was born
at Essington on 09.07.1866 and curiously was not listed with her parents when
they sailed from Liverpool to New York in 1867. However, she was listed with her widowed
mother Elizabeth in the US Census of 1880 when she was 14 and was confirmed
as having been born in England. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
The census was conducted just after
her father Robert Collett had died at Millard in Missouri and placed Minnie
and the remainder of her family as living three miles from Millard at Pettis
in Adair County in Missouri. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
In 1925 Miss Minnie Collett, who was
then 59 and living in Moberly, discovered that she and her four surviving
sibling were beneficiaries under the terms of trust set up in 1894 at
Leicester in England by the parents of her mother. The estate was believed to be $200,000 and
this was announced in the San Antonio Express on 4th
February. See Appendix One for
newspaper article about the inheritance. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Mary Elizabeth Collett never married
during her life and died while she was still living in Missouri. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43P3
|
Katherine Louise Collett, who
was referred to as Katie, was born
on 30.10.1868 after her parents had emigrated to America and the birth very
likely took place at Millard in Missouri to where her parents initially
settled. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Around ten years later Katie was
still living at Millard when her father died.
The Missouri census of 1880 placed Katie aged 11 living with her
widowed mother Elizabeth at Pettis in Adair County, just three miles from
Millard. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Also at a later time that same year
Katie was 12 years of age and was boarding with her mother and younger
brother Robert (below) at the Atchison home of her uncle John Collett, the
brother of her late father, and she was described as being the niece of John
Collett who was born in England. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Katie married Boon Barker with whom
she had five children and all of them born in Mexico. She and Boon later lived at Tucson in
Arizona. She is thought to have died while
living there or at Phoenix in Arizona. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
On 4th February 1925 the
San Antonio Express printed an article that announced the heirs to a $200,00
fortune had at long last been found.
Katherine Barker of Crystal City in Texas was named as one of five
Collett children to benefit. See
Appendix One for a copy of the front page announcement. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
43Q3 |
Robert Barker |
Date of birth unknown |
||||||||||
|
|
43Q4 |
Helen Barker |
Date of birth unknown |
||||||||||
|
|
43Q5 |
Howard Barker |
Date of birth unknown |
||||||||||
|
|
43Q6 |
William Barker |
Date of birth unknown |
||||||||||
|
|
43Q7 |
Frances Barker |
Date of birth unknown |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
43P4
|
John Robert Thomas Collett,
who was known as Robert, was born in Missouri on 11.12.1871 and this probably
happened at Millard where his father Robert Collett died when he was around
seven years old. At the time of the US
Census of 1880 Robert was 8 years old and was living with his widowed mother
and the rest of his family at Pettis in Adair County in Missouri. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
A little while later during that same
year Robert was recorded as boarding with his mother and sister Katie (above)
at the Atchison home of his uncle John Collett. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
According to the record, Robert was
eight years old and was born in Missouri.
He was attending school in Atchison and was described as nephew to
head of the household John Collett. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Robert married May Edna Hoolan in the
early 1920s with whom he had a daughter.
The date of birth for their daughter may suggest that May was much
younger than Robert, since he would have been 55 when the child was
born. The alternative may be that the
date of 1927 is incorrect. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Two years earlier Robert was living
at St Louis when he heard the news that he and his brothers and sisters were
to share in a considerable amount of money left to them by their grandparents
back in England. |
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The full details were printed in the
San Antonio Express on 4th February 1925 and are re-produced in
Appendix One at the end of this family line. |
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Joan, as their daughter was better
known, lived in Texas and was very keen on genealogy and is believed to have
spent some time researching her family roots.
Robert Collett died in St Louis in Missouri. |
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43Q8 |
Mary Joan Collett – known as Joan |
Born in 1927 |
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43P5
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Helen Maude Collett, who was sometime
referred to as Ellen Maude but more commonly as Nellie, was born in Missouri on
04.05.1874. This may have taken place
at Millard where her father died, or at Pettis where she was living with her
family in 1880. The 1880 Census for
Pettis in Adair County listed Nellie as being five years of age. |
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Later that year Nellie’s mother was
living with Nellie’s uncle John Collett at Atchison in Kansas with her older
siblings Katie and Robert (above).
This meant that Nellie and her sister Minnie, and brothers Arthur and
William must have been looked after by another family, possibly in Missouri. |
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In 1916 Helen was living at 608 West
Craig Place in San Antonio. Family
legend tells the story that Nellie attempted to take her own life using a
pair of scissors. Apparently she was a
patient at the State Mental Hospital in Kerrville, near San Antonio in Texas
where she died in 1919. |
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The real tragedy of this story is
that six years after she had died she would have been one of the
beneficiaries to the estate of her English grandparents, the parents of her
mother Martha Elizabeth Simons, which had been placed in trust at Leicester
in England since 1894. |
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43P6
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William Francis
Collett was
born in Missouri on 19.08.1877 and he was the son of Robert Collett of
Colwich and Martha Elizabeth Simmons of Essington and was born after the
family had emigrated to America. According
to the US Census of 1920, William was stated as being 42 and of English
parents, but born in Missouri. This
would place his date of birth as 1878, around eleven years after his parents
moved to the USA. |
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It
seems likely that he was born at Millard in Missouri where it is known his
family was living at the time of the death of his father Robert when William
was only one or two years old. The US Census of 1880 for
Pettis in Adair County, Missouri recorded that ‘Willie Collett’ was two years
old and born in Missouri. |
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On that occasion he was living with
his widowed mother Elizabeth and five of his older siblings, Arthur, Minnie,
Katie, Robert, and Nellie. |
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It is not clear what happened to his
family following his father’s death, except that later that same year his
mother, together with sister Katie and brother Robert were living as boarders
with his father’s brother John Collett and his family at Atchison. Where William and his other ‘missing’
siblings were on that occasion has not been resolved, or what happened to
them over the following years. |
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Sometime
later and possibly before the end of the century, William left Missouri and
moved south into Texas where he met Maje L Townsend whom he eventually marriage in
1908. Maje was born in Texas around 1885. Over the next four years
William and Maje lived over the border in Mexico where their first child was
born, before returning to settle in Texas where their remaining children were
born. |
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It
is established that it was at Crystal City in Texas that his son William was
born, and it may have been there also that his second daughter was born. By 1st January 1920 (the US Census Day) the family of five
was living at Alpine in Brewster County in Texas and was recorded as follows: |
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William F Collett of Missouri was 42,
his wife Maje was 35, and their three children were Margaret of Mexico 13,
William 7, and Martha 4 years and 11 months, both of Texas. Shortly after the census the family left
Alpine and move to San Antonio, where the couple’s last child was born. |
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In 1925 William and his family were
living at 104 Haynes Avenue in San Antonio from where he worked for the
Southern Pacific Railroad. It was on 4th
February 1925 that the San Antonio Express (newspaper) published an article
about William and his four surviving siblings inheriting a shared fortune of
$200,00. |
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The full transcript of the article is re-produced
in Appendix One at the end of this family line. |
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By
the time William died at Houston in Texas in 1943 he was 65 and had been separated from Maje for
several years due to his busy work schedule and had been staying in a
boarding house. Maje survived her
husband by twenty-two years when she died at San Antonio in Texas during
1965. |
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43Q9 |
Margaret
Frances Collett |
Born in 1908 |
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43Q10 |
William Bruns Collett |
Born on 09.11.1912 |
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43Q11 |
Martha
Elizabeth Collett |
Born in 1915 |
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43Q12 |
Mary
Belle Collett |
Born in 1921 |
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43P7
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Dorothy Louise Collett, who
was known as Lulu, was born at Aughton Park in Ormskirk, Lancashire on 03.06.1858. Around the ten she was ten years old her
family emigrated to America and by 1880 they were living in Atchison. |
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The census that year listed Dorothy
as being 22 and working at home supporting her mother Mary. Seven years later she married James Waters
McKelvey, who was known as Jim, on 13.04.1887 at Merriam Park in St Paul in
Minnesota. |
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Jim was a ‘scotch tinner’ and their
marriage produced four children for Lulu and James, and these were all born
at Atchison in Kansas. |
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Dorothy died whilst at Kansas City on
23.01.1925 and was buried at Mount Vernon Cemetery in Atchison in Kansas on
25.01.1925. Her husband James
(although referred to as John in Lulu’s obituary) died eighteen months later
on 19.06.1926 at Kansas City and was buried with his wife in Atchison. |
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An obituary in the Atchison Globe
newspaper read: “Mrs. Dorothy Louise
McKelvey, wife of John W. McKelvey, Kansas City, formerly of Atchison, dies
Friday in Kansas City after a long and painful illness. Mrs. McKelvey was a sister of William
Barrow Collett. She spent most of her
girlhood and many years of her married life in Atchison. She was stricken with the illness which
caused her death several years ago, since when she has been almost entirely
helpless. She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Collett who lived in
Atchison for years. Her father died a
number of years ago, but her mother survives and lives in Richards with
another daughter, Mrs Uberrein formerly of Atchison. Besides her husband,
mother and brother and sister, Mrs McKelvey is survived by four children:
John McKelvey, who is editor of a paper in a town in Kansas, James McKelvey of
St. Louis, Mrs. Bessie Mair of Sioux City, and Mrs. Florence Ellis of Kansas
City. Mrs. McKelvey was a staunch
Episcopalian and was instrumental in the building of St. Andrew's Chapel in
West Atchison and it was hoped the funeral might take place from the
chapel. But the main entrance to the
chapel is too small for the casket to be taken through, so the funeral will
take place at 2 o'clock this afternoon from the Hawin & Douglas Chapel” |
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43Q13 |
John (Jack) Francis McKelvey |
Born on 21.07.1888; died on 24.02.1967 |
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43Q14 |
James Brook McKelvey |
Born on 1890 |
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43Q15 |
Florence McKelvey |
Born on 1900; died on 03.02.1925 |
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43Q16 |
Elizabeth (Bessie) McKelvey |
Born on 1902 |
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43P8
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Elizabeth Copeland Collett was
born at Eastham, across the River Mersey from Liverpool, on 15.06.1859. By 1870 Elizabeth and her family had
emigrated to America, and by 1880 they were living at Atchison where
Elizabeth was 21. |
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It was much later in her life that
she married banker Karl Ueberrhein on 19.12.1901 in Atchison, and he was many
years younger than Elizabeth. She was
an accomplished water-colour artist and she died on 14.01.1927 and was buried
in Whites Cemetery nea Richards. The
cause of death was pneumonia with influenza. |
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Following the death of his wife, Kar | ||||||||||||