PART
FORTY-EIGHT
The
Dudley West Midlands
Updated October 2009
This is the family line of cousins John
Collett (Ref. 48Q2)
and Elizabeth Trenchard nee Collett
(Ref. 48Q3) of Somerset
as denoted by the names in capital
letters
It is also the family line of Marilyn
Stoddard nee Flanagan
who has kindly provided details of the
fascinating life of
Sarah Collett (Ref. 48N19) of Sedgley
who was married three times
The following information is listed
here in case it can be confirmed at a later date
Questions
have been raised concerning Richard Collett of Dudley who would appear to have
been married three times. Recent
research has revealed that there were two Richard Colletts born around the same
time who came from the Dudley area, both of whom were living in Dudley in April
1871. The only one previously shown here
in this family line is the Richard (Ref. 48M8) who was thought to have been married
three times. The ‘new’ Richard Collett
was baptised at St Bartholomew’s Church in Wednesbury (not far from Dudley) on
25th July 1802. He was the
son of Abraham Collett and his wife Ann Addich who were married at West
Bromwich on 28th March 1796.
So was Abraham Collett (Ref. 48L3) the brother of Samuel Collett (Ref.
48L2) who previously started this family line?
This
recent discovery therefore reveals that Richard (Ref. 48M8) was NOT married three
times, but just once, and that the other ‘two wives’ were in fact the wives of
the second Richard.
In
1871 one Richard Collett, who was a bricklayer, was married to Sarah and they
were living at Walters Row in Dudley while the other Richard Collett, who was a
farmer, was living at St John Street in Dudley with his second wife Hannah and three
of their sons.
This
update therefore includes both Richard Colletts for the first time, in order to
clarify all of the details relating to both of their families, the compilation
of the first one having been aided by the fact that Richard’s brother George,
and his son Noah (also of Walters Row) were also bricklayers.
~~~
Also
in the previous version of this family line there was reference to a Thomas
Collett in the introduction who, at that time could not be placed within the
family. However, the new information
gratefully received from Lavinia Phillips (see Ref. 48P5), which prompted this
update, includes the fact that Esther Collett (Ref. 48N9) married Benjamin Moss
and in that previous introduction Thomas Collett married Mary Moss who, it
turns out was the sister of Benjamin Moss.
This
information has therefore helped to tie in the family of Thomas Collett,
although not as accurately as one would like.
The father of Thomas Collett, who married Mary Moss, was another Thomas
Collett, and his father has been revealed as John Collett, and it is he that
starts this family line alongside Samuel Collett from where the original line
started.
~~~
There are two other Collett families with
a Dudley connection that have not yet been located within this family line and
these are (a) William 45, his wife Ann 45, and their children Henry 18, Charles
16, and Eliza 14 who appear in the Dudley Census of 1841, and (b) the large
family of Thomas Collett of Colborn Brook near Stourbridge which was living in
Dudley in 1891. Thomas was 41, his wife
Catherine was 39, and their Dudley born children were Thomas 14, Caroline 13,
Clara 11, Samuel 10, Sydney 7, and George 2.
~~~
In addition to this line, there was
another Collett family whose children were all born at Dudley after 1860, the
details of which can be found in Part 14 – The Bourton-on-the-Water Line (Ref.
14N24).
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48K1 |
The parents of Samuel Collett, who
previously started this family line, have not been determined. The only Samuel Collett so far found who
was born around 1773 was baptised at Upper Slaughter near Bourton-on-the-Water
in Gloucestershire on 25th October 1773 to parents Samuel Collett
and Ann Clifford. |
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This Samuel Collett and Ann Clifford
were married at Upper Swell (near Upper Slaughter) on 9th June
1767 and are featured in Part 5 – The Tewkesbury Line (Ref. 5L34). Therefore, if this link was ever proved, it
would mean that The Dudley Line can be traced back through Part 5 to Part 1
and Thomas Collett in 1485. |
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In the absence of any other
information, and bearing in mind the confirmed link between Dudley and Bourton-on-the
Water, referred to in the introduction above, it is probably worthwhile
including this information at this time. |
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In addition to this, it must be made
clear that no evidence has been found to suggest that Samuel and Abraham were
brothers, or even some other relation, but that they are primarily included
because of the conundrum with the two Richard Colletts referred to in the
introduction above. |
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48L2
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SAMUEL COLLETT |
Born around
1773 |
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48L3
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Abraham
Collett |
Born around 1776 |
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48L1 |
John Collett may also have been born around 1770
and he may have been a cousin to Samuel and Abraham Collett (above), although
there is a possibility that he was a brother.
There is a common occupation that could link John with Abraham, since
it is established that John’s son Thomas was a master gardener, while
Abraham’s son Richard was a farmer and gardener. |
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Around 1790 or just after, John
Collett married Susannah and their known son Thomas was baptised at
Throckmorton in Worcestershire. There
was very likely other children born in this family, but so far none has been
discovered. |
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48M1
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Thomas
Collett |
Born in 1796 |
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48L2 |
SAMUEL COLLETT was born around 1773 and this may
have been at Dudley or elsewhere. He
married Esther Southall on 13.01.1794 at St Thomas’ Church in Dudley with
whom he had twelve children and all of them were born at Dudley. |
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The
wedding was conducted by banns and the witnesses to the church ceremony were
W Bridgewater and Joseph Bond. It was
also at St Thomas’ Church that all of their children were baptised. |
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Esther
Southall was the daughter of Joshua Southall and Elizabeth Evans and was
baptised at St Thomas’ Church in Dudley on 30.05.1773 when she was about five
years old. |
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Double
baptisms were carried out at the church in 1796, 1802, and 1806. However, there is no evidence to indicate
that the children involved were twins, and it is more likely that they were born
separately when taking into consideration the years in between. |
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Therefore
the dates of birth of the early children listed below are only an
approximation in the absence of better information. |
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During
his life Samuel Collett was a carpenter, as confirmed in the marriage
register for his youngest daughter Elizabeth, and it was three years after in
the second quarter of 1842 that he died while still living at Dudley. |
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Exactly
when Samuel died has not been determined.
What is known is that his wife Esther Collett died at Dudley on
29.07.1837 at the age of 69. The cause
of death was inflammation of the bowels and the informant for the family was
her son John Collett, who was a carpenter. |
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48M2
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Ann Collett |
Born in
1794 |
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48M3
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Sarah Collett |
Born in
1795 |
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48M4
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Mary Maria Collett |
Born in
1797 |
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48M5
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John Collett |
Born in
1799 |
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48M6
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Richard Collett |
Born in
1801 |
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48M7
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Mary Maria Collett |
Born in 1803 |
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48M8
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Richard
Collett |
Born in 1805 |
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48M9
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William Collett |
Born in
1807 |
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48M10
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George Collett |
Born in
1810 |
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48M11
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Joseph Collett |
Born in
1813 |
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48M12
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Mary Collett |
Born in
1818 |
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48M13
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Elizabeth Collett |
Born in
1820 |
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48L3 |
Abraham Collett was born around
1776 although no records of his birthplace or parents have been found at this
time. What is known is that on
28.03.1796 Abraham Collett married Ann Addich at West Bromwich. |
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Their known son Richard Collett was baptised
at St Bartholomew’s Church in Wednesbury on 25.07.1802, Wednesbury being just
a short distance from Dudley. |
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It would also be unreasonable to accept that Richard
was their only child, so further work on investigating a possible Wednesbury
branch of the Collett will be required at sometime in the future. |
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48M14
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Richard
Collett |
Born in 1802 |
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48M1
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Thomas Collett was born in 1796
and was the son of John and Susannah Collett who was baptised at Throckmorton
on 16.10.1796. By 1841 Thomas was
married to Elizabeth and living with them at Dudley was their son
Charles. Thomas had a rounded age of
forty, while his wife was older with a rounded age of fifty, and their son
was fifteen. |
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It would appear that Elizabeth died
during the following decade, at which time Thomas married the much younger
Phoebe with whom he had another son born at Dudley in 1849. No record of the family, or Thomas’ son
Charles, has been found in the census of 1851, but by 1871 the family of
three was living at 7 Rowley Road in Dudley. |
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Thomas Collett of Throckmorton was 73
and his occupation was that of a master gardener at a local nursery. His wife Phoebe from Dudley was 63, and
their twenty-one years old son Thomas was working as a whitesmith. |
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As with the family of Abraham’s son
Richard (Ref. 48M14), this Collett family also employed a servant at the
house in Rowley Road, and this was William Wilkinson aged sixteen from Market
Harborough in Leicestershire. |
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During the 1870s Thomas Collett
senior died and also during this period his son married Mary Ann Moss, the
daughter of Reuben and Mary Moss of Dudley.
Following the death of her husband, his widow Phoebe Collett, together
with her widowed sister Mary Girzell, were recorded in 1881 as living with
Thomas Collett and his wife Mary Ann at Wolverhampton Street in Dudley when
Phoebe was 74. |
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Phoebe Collett died during the next few years. |
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48N1
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Charles
Collett |
Born in 1825 |
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48N2
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Thomas
Collett |
Born in 1849 |
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48M2
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Ann Collett was born at Dudley and possibly in
late 1794. She was baptised at St
Thomas’ Church in Dudley on 27.03.1796 in a joint ceremony with her sister
Sarah (below). |
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She
later married Joseph Smith and this took place at St Thomas’ Church in Dudley
on 24.04.1814 and happened two months after the birth of their first
child. The marriage is known to have
produced at least three children for the couple and all of them born at
Dudley and baptised at the Church of St Thomas. |
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48N3
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William
Smith |
Baptised on
20.02.1814 |
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48N4
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Joseph
Smith |
Born on
31.07.1818; bapt. on 16.08.1818 |
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48N5
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Samuel
Smith |
Baptised on
26.12.1819 |
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48M3
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Sarah Collett was born at Dudley around late
1795. She was baptised in a joint
ceremony with her sister Ann (above) on 27.03.1796 at St Thomas’ Church in
Dudley. |
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48M4
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Mary Maria Collett was born at Dudley possibly in late
1797. She was baptised at the Church
of St Thomas in Dudley on 04.02.1798.
Sadly she died during that same year. |
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48M5
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John Collett was born at Dudley around 1799 and
was baptised with his brother Richard (below) in a joint ceremony at St
Thomas’ Church in Dudley on 19.09.1802.
He was the eldest son of carpenter Samuel Collett and it would be
logical that he followed in his father’s footsteps by becoming a carpenter. |
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This
was later confirmed in the death certificate for his mother Esther Collett
who died at Dudley in 1837. Her son
John Collett, a carpenter, was named as the informant of her death. |
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Details of two possible extensions of
this family line are included in an appendix at the end of this file. |
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48M6
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Richard Collett was born in 1801 at Dudley where he
was baptised in a joint ceremony with his brother John (above) at St Thomas’
Church on 19.09.1802. Sadly within the next six
months Richard died at Dudley on 06.03.1803. |
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48M7
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Mary Maria Collett was born at Dudley around 1803 and
was named in the memory of her sister who had already passed away. She was baptised with her brother Richard
(below) on 06.04.1806 at St Thomas’ Church in Dudley. Mary was the third child of the first six
children of Samuel and Esther Collett to die within the space of just a few
years. |
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48M8
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Richard
Collett (the bricklayer)
was born at Dudley and most likely around 1804. He was named after his brother who had died
just one year earlier and was baptised at the Church of St Thomas in Dudley
on 06.04.1806 in a joint ceremony with his sister Mary (above) when his
parents were confirmed as Samuel and Esther Collett. |
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It was originally thought that
Richard may have been married more than once during his life. However, the discovery of another Richard
Collett with a similar age and birthplace has led to a complete review of the
life of Richard the bricklayer. |
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It
is established that Richard the bricklayer Collett of Dudley did married
Sarah Pearson on 27.02.1827 at Kingswinford just two miles west of Dudley. A further link between the two families
happened in 1864 when Joseph Collett, the son of Richard’s brother Joseph
(below), married Mary Jane Pearson at nearby Stourbridge just south of
Kingswinford. |
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In
addition to these two connections, there was a further much later link to the
Pearson family. This happened after
Richard’s youngest sister Elizabeth Collett (below) married Thomas
Whitehouse, and it was their granddaughter Emily Whitehouse who married James
Pearson around the end of the century. |
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The
marriage of Richard Collett and Sarah Pearson initially produced three
daughters and two sons prior to the census of 1841. In an earlier version of the family history, it was suggested that
Sarah may have died after the birth of the fifth child and that Richard then
married Sarah Bedall with whom he had a further two children, the first of
which was born before the census of 1841, the other the year after. |
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However, this has been discounted in
the light of new research which shows that Sarah Bedall married James Norris
at Kidderminster on 8th September 1839, the same day and place she
was previously believed to have married Richard Collett. So it must be assumed that Richard was only
ever married to Sarah Pearson. |
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Although this new information shows that
Sarah Pearson survived to old age,
there had been two known deaths in the Collett family between 1832 and 1841. These were Richard’s and Sarah’s two sons
Samuel and Matthew, both of whom were missing from the family listed at
Dudley in 1841. |
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No
actual record of the death of Samuel Collett has been found, but Matthew Collett
was just over one year old when he died at Dudley on 8th April in
1838, when his parents were confirmed as Richard and Sarah Collett. |
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For the process of updating this
version of the family history, it has been assumed that the Richard Collett
who married Sarah Bedall during the third quarter of 1839 was Richard the
farmer Collett (Ref. 48M14). The
wedding of this couple took place at Kidderminster and this does not
correspond to the details given in later census records which indicate that
Sarah was of Dudley and not Kidderminster. |
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By
the time of the first national census in June 1841 the family of Richard and
Sarah Collett was living at Church Field Row in Dudley. This comprised Richard and Sarah, both with
a rounded age of 35, and their five surviving children, Sarah aged 14, Eliza
aged 12, Esther who was six, and baby son Noah who was only three months old. |
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Unfortunately the census of 1851 is
not reliable but there two Richard Colletts of the right age, one living in
the Wolverhampton & Bilston area, and one in the Wolverhampton &
Tettenhall area, but neither with any apparent connection to Dudley. |
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Ten years later in the census of 1861,
the family was incorrectly listed under the name ‘Collin’. Richard of Dudley was 57 and his occupation
was that of a bricklayer, while his wife was Sarah who was also 57 and from
Dudley. |
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Only the couple’s two youngest children
were listed as living with them at Vicarage Prospect on West Wellington Road
in Dudley, and these were twenty-one years old Noah and nineteen years old
Maria, both of them confirmed as having been born at Dudley. |
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By this time Richard’s and Sarah’s
three daughters Sarah, Eliza, and Esther were all married with families of
their own. See their individual
records for exact details. |
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All of their children had left the
family home by 1871, leaving Richard Collett of Dudley aged sixty-seven who
was still working as a bricklayer.
During the years since the previous census the couple had left Vicarage
Prospect, and instead Richard and Sarah were living at Walters Row in Dudley,
where Sarah Collett of Dudley was sixty-nine (sic). |
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Again no record has been found of the
deaths of Richard and Sarah who are understood to have died during the next
decade, since neither of them feature in the census of 1881. |
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48N6
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Sarah Collett |
Born in
1827 |
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48N7
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Eliza Collett |
Born in
1829 |
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48N8
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Samuel Collett |
Born in
1832 |
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48N9
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Esther Collett |
Born in
1835 |
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48N10
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Matthew Collett |
Born in
1837 |
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48N11
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Noah Collett |
Born on
27.02.1841 |
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48N12
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Maria Collett |
Born in 1842 at Dudley |
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48M9
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William Collett was born at Dudley possibly in late
1807 and he was baptised there at St Thomas’ Church on 06.03.1808, the son of
Samuel and Esther Collett. |
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William
later married Ann and by June 1841 the couple had had three children and were
living in Dudley. William and Ann both
had rounded ages of 30, while their children were Elizabeth aged 9, Ann aged
5 and three years old Emma. |
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48N13
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Elizabeth Collett |
Born in 1831 at Dudley |
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48N14
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Ann Collett |
Born in 1835 at Dudley |
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48N15
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Emma Collett |
Born in 1837 at Dudley |
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48M10
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George Collett was born at Dudley in 1810 and was
baptised on 21.10.1810 at St Thomas’ Church in Dudley. When he was twenty-seven he married (1)
Jane Brickes and the marriage took place on 27.12.1837 at Tipton just one
mile from Dudley. |
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Around
nine months later and during the third quarter of the following year Jane
presented George with the first of their two children, both of which were
born at Dudley. So by June 1841 the
family of three were recorded in the census as living in the Cross Guns to
Freebodies Lane district of Dudley. |
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George
had a rounded age of 30, Jane was 25, and their son Thomas was two years of
age. All three were simply listed as
having been born within the county of Worcestershire. |
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Within
two years of the census day in 1841 the size of the family was increased with
the arrival of the couple’s second son in the first three months of
1843. Tragically when the new baby was
just over two years old George’s wife Jane died leaving her husband with his
two young sons to look after. |
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The
Dudley census of 1851 confirmed that George aged 39 was a widower and that
living with him was his two sons Thomas aged 12 and Samuel aged 6. |
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It
is of interest that on the occasion of the census of 1841 and 1851, and at
the registration of his wife’s death, the surname was recorded as Cullett
whereas on all other occasions it was Collett. |
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It
would appear that George remained a widower for almost nine years that is,
until he married (2) Eliza Turner at Dudley during the first three months of
1854. Eliza was the daughter of Arthur
and Sarah Turner of Dudley. |
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It
is worth pointing out at this stage that Eliza Turner was baptised at St
Thomas’ Church in Dudley on 28.03.1802 and that she was around two years old
at the time. It is very likely that
she gave a much younger age in the census records because she was ten years
older than George and that this was done to save embarrassment for the couple. |
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Her
greater age would also account for the reason why their marriage produced no
further children for George, as Eliza would have been 54 compared to her
husband who was 44. |
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Six
years later, at the time of the census of 1861, George was 49 and was working
as a bricklayer. He and his family
were living at Angel Street in Dudley where his wife was listed as Eliza who was
48 and born at Dudley. With the couple
were George’s two sons Thomas 21 and Samuel 17. |
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Also
staying with the family at that time was George’s nephew, eleven years old
Thomas Whitehouse of Dudley. He was
the son of George’s younger sister Elizabeth Collett (below) and her late
husband Thomas Whitehouse senior who had died in the early 1850s. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
It
is interesting to note in both 1861 and 1871 that George’s sister Elizabeth
Hill nee Collett, formerly Elizabeth Whitehouse (below) was also living in
Angel Street in Dudley |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
It
seems very likely that during the 1860s George died at Dudley since no record
of him has so far been found in the census of 1871. Instead his widow Eliza ‘Cullett’ was still
living at Dudley, and on this occasion she gave her age more accurately as
being 70 years old. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
On
that occasion, in April 1871, Eliza was living with her stepson Samuel and
his wife Elizabeth at Dock Lane Court in Dudley, where Elizabeth’s mother Ann
Haden was also living at that time.
Eliza only survived for a further three and a half years when she died
at Dudley during the last quarter of 1874 aged 74, thus confirming her year
of birth as 1800. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
48N16
|
Thomas Collett |
Born in
1838 |
||||||||
|
|
48N17
|
Samuel Collett |
Born in
1843 |
||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48M11
|
Joseph Collett was born at Dudley in late 1812 or
early in 1813 and was baptised there at St Thomas’ Church on 28.03.1813. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Joseph
married Esther Hartshorn by banns at the parish church in Kingswinford on
12.09.1838. The marriage certificate
confirmed the following details for the couple. Joseph was a carpenter and bachelor of full
age and was residing at Buck Pool prior to the wedding. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Buck
Pool was an area between Brierley Hill and Wordsley and was formerly known as
Brewer Street. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Joseph’s
father was acknowledged as Samuel Collett carpenter deceased. Spinster Esther’s father was Edward
Hartshorn a collier deceased, and her address was also stated as being Buck
Pool. The witnesses at the ceremony
were Joseph’s youngest sister Elizabeth Collett (below), and William Taylor. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
By
June 1841 the marriage had produced the couple’s first child. At that time the family of three was living
with Esther’s widowed mother sixty years old Hannah Hartshorn and her sister
Sarah Hartshorn at Grave Yard in
Sedgley just north of Dudley and within the Dudley, Wolverhampton and Seisdon
registration district. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Joseph
and Esther were both listed with a rounded age of 25, while their son Samuel,
who was named after the child’s grandfather, was one year old. It is possible that Esther was with child
on the day of the census, since later than same year she gave birth to a
daughter Sarah who was born at Sedgley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
The
next child was also born at Sedgley but after that the family moved to Dudley
where the couple’s fourth child was born.
The census of 1851 recorded the family living at Dudley where Joseph
was 37, Esther 35, their daughter Sarah was 9, and sons Joseph and Richard were
aged 7 and 4 respectively. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
The
couple’s first born child Samuel was not listed with the family on this
occasion as he had died almost exactly one year after the previous census. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
At
the time of the 1861 Census the name was spelt with just one ‘t’. The family was confirmed as living at
Vicarage Prospect on the West Wellington Road in Dudley and comprised Joseph
47, his wife Esther 46, and their two sons Joseph of Sedgley who was 17 and
Richard of Dudley who was 15. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Joseph’s
occupation was that of a carpenter and his place of birth was confirmed as
Dudley, whereas his wife had been born at Sedgley. Living with the family was their married,
and already widowed, daughter Sarah Guest aged 19 and her one year old son
Thomas Guest. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
The
next census of 1871 confirmed that Joseph was 56, that Esther was 54, and
that their son and his wife and their first child were living with them at
Dudley. Richard was 24, his wife
Elizabeth was 23, and their daughter Sarah was not yet one year old. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Six
years later on 10.03.1877 Joseph died while he and Esther were living at 24
Cromwell Street on Kates Hill in Dudley.
He was 63 and a carpenter and the cause of death was cancer in the
stomach. Esther was present at his
passing and it was she also that informed the authorities. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Following
the death of her husband, Esther went to live with her son Richard and his
family. This was recorded in the 1881
Census when Esther was listed as a widow and a servant aged 66 while living
at the Dudley home of Richard Collett.
Also living in the house at 29 Price Street was two of Esther’s
grandsons. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
The
first was Joseph Guest aged 19, the second child of her daughter Sarah from
her first marriage, while the other grandson was John Bowen, the son from her
daughter Sarah’s second marriage. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Just
over ten years later Esther died at 16 Price Street on Kates Hill in Dudley
on 24.12.1890 at the age of 74. The
death certificate revealed that the cause of death was paralysis and
bronchitis, and that the informant was her daughter Sarah Flanagan of 29
Stone Street in Dudley who was present at the death. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
48N18
|
Samuel Collett |
Born in
1839 |
||||||||
|
|
48N19
|
Sarah Collett |
Born in
1841 |
||||||||
|
|
48N20
|
Joseph Collett |
Born in
1843 |
||||||||
|
|
48N21
|
Richard Collett |
Born on
06.11.1846 |
||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48M12
|
Mary Collett was born at Dudley in 1818 and was
named after her two older sisters, both of whom had died while very
young. She was baptised at Dudley in
the Church of St Thomas on 01.11.1818. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48M13
|
Elizabeth Collett was born at Dudley in late 1819 or
very early in 1820 and like all of her eleven siblings before her she was
baptised there in St Thomas’ Church on 09.01.1820. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
During
her life she had two husbands. On the first occasion she married (1) Thomas
Whitehouse at the Parish Church in Rowley Regis in Staffordshire on
08.07.1839, the witnesses being John Breasier and Edward Bridgewater. The parish register confirmed she was a
spinster of Tividale (between Dudley and West Bromwich) and that her father’s
name was Samuel Collett. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
This
marriage produced three children for Elizabeth and Thomas, Samuel, Emily, and
Thomas. The census for Dudley of 1851
listed the family living at 183 Minories as Elizabeth 30, Thomas 33, and
their children Samuel 5, Emily 3, and one year old Thomas junior. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
However,
not longer after the census day Thomas Whitehouse senior died. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Elizabeth
then married (2) Eli Hill on 06.02.1854 at Netherton within the parish of
Dudley. On that occasion Elizabeth was
recorded as being a widow aged 34, while Eli was a bachelor of 35 and his
occupation was that of a miner. Both
were listed as being residents of Queen’s Cross. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Elizabeth’s
father was again confirmed as carpenter Samuel Collett (deceased), and
likewise Eli’s father was named as tailor William Hill (deceased). The witnesses at the wedding were James
MacKay and Elizabeth Binal. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
This
second marriage produced just one child for Elizabeth and Eli with the birth
of a son. By 1861 the family was
living at 21 Angel Street in Dudley and comprised Elizabeth 42 and coal miner
Eli also 42 of Wolverley, and their son William aged 4. Also living with the family were two of
Elizabeth’s three children from her first marriage, these being Samuel Whitehouse
and Emily Whitehouse. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
It
was also in Angel Street that Elizabeth’s brother George Collett (above) was
living at that time in 1861 and staying with him was Elizabeth’s other son
Thomas Whitehouse. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Elizabeth
and Eli Hill were still living at Angel Street in Dudley in April 1871 when
both of them were 52 and their son William Hill was then 14. Also living at the same house in Angel
Street but as boarders was Elizabeth’s son Thomas Whitehouse and his wife and
child. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
During
the next decade Elizabeth Hill passed so by April 1881 her husband Eli was
living as a widower at number five 2 Court, Queens Cross in Dudley with his
son William. Both were listed as being
unemployed coal miners, Eli at the age of 62 and William as a bachelor of 24. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
48N22
|
Samuel Whitehouse |
Born in
1845 at Dudley |
||||||||
|
|
48N23
|
Emily
Whitehouse |
Born in
1847 at Dudley |
||||||||
|
|
48N24
|
Thomas Whitehouse |
Born in
1849 at Dudley |
||||||||
|
|
48N25
|
William H
Hill |
Born in
1856 at Dudley |
||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48M14
|
Richard Collett (the farmer) was born in 1802 and was baptised at
St Bartholomew’s Church in Wednesbury on 25.07.1802. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Richard was married when in his late
forties and seems to have been a man of mystery in his younger years, since
no record of him has been found in the census of 1841, or 1851 by which time
it is known that he was married. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Richard
married (1)
Esther Broad at Cheltenham during the first three months of 1850. Tragically it would appear that Esther died
before the marriage produced any children for the couple, perhaps even during
childbirth. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Following
the loss of his wife it would seem that prior to 1854, or at the start of
that year, Richard married (2)
Hannah Day with whom he had four children.
According to the Dudley census of 1861, Richard was 58 and his wife
was listed as Hannah aged 48, although the surname was recorded in error as
Callett and not Collett. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Just
three of their four children were listed with them on that occasion and these
were Mary 7, John 5, and William 3.
The couple’s fourth and last child was born at Dudley later that same
year, which may indicate that Hannah was probably with child on the day of
the census. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
On
that day, April the seventh in 1861, the family was living at Dixons Green in
Dudley. Richard was no longer working
as a farmer and his occupation was that of a gardener and day worker. His wife Hannah had been born at Himley
just south of Wombourne in Staffordshire, and their three children Mary, John
and William, had all been born at Dudley.
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Richard’s
place of birth was curiously listed as Thomastown in Worcestershire which was
a reference to the area of Dudley known as St Thomas Town, so named after the
parish church. It was perhaps
Richard’s former occupation as a farmer that had brought some wealth to the
family, since the census of 1861 also listed a nurse / housemaid living with
the family. This was 16 years old
Ellen Hartill of Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
By 1871 the family was living at St
John Street in Dudley where Richard was 67 and of Worcestershire, his wife Hannah
was 58 and from Staffordshire, and the children still living with them on
that occasion were their sons John 14, William 13, and Thomas who was nine
years old, and all of Worcestershire. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Richard
died just prior to the census in April 1881.
The census return stated that Hannah was a widow aged 67 and that she
was living at 47 St John Street in Dudley with her two youngest sons, William
who was 23 and Thomas who was 19.
Hannah’s place of birth was confirmed as Himley in Staffordshire. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Ten
years later in 1891 widow Hannah Collett from Himley was seventy-seven and
was still living at 47 St John Street, and still living with her were her two
bachelor sons William and Thomas. Also
living with the family at that time was Amelia Lloyd aged 13 of Dudley who
was employed as a general servant. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
It
must be assumed that Hannah passed away during the next few years, since no
record of her has been found in the census of 1901. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
48N26
|
Mary Collett |
Born in
1854 |
||||||||
|
|
48N27
|
John
Collett |
Born in
1856 |
||||||||
|
|
48N28
|
William Collett |
Born in
1857 |
||||||||
|
|
48N29
|
Thomas Collett |
Born in
1861 |
||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48N1
|
Charles Collett was born in 1825
and was the son of Thomas Collett and his first wife Elizabeth. Charles was fifteen at the time of the
census on 1841 when he was living with his parents in Dudley, where it is
likely that he was born, although no later census records have been found to
verify this. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48N2
|
Thomas Collett was born at
Dudley in 1849 and was the son of Thomas Collett and his second wife Phoebe. He first appeared in the Dudley census of
1861 at the age of thirteen, and ten years after he was twenty-one when he
was living at 7 Rowley Road in Dudley with his parents. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
It seems highly likely that, prior to
this date, he was introduced to the Moss family by his cousin Esther Collett
(below) through her married in 1855 to Benjamin Moss the son of Reuben
Moss. The Moss family comprised father
Reuben who was baptised in Dudley at the Church of St Thomas on 29.10.1809,
his wife Mary who was born in 1810, and their two children Benjamin who was
born in 1833 and Mary who was born in 1836. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Reuben Moss was a whitesmith and, on
leaving school Thomas Collett was probably employed by Reuben who taught him
the trade of a whitesmith. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
A whitesmith is a person who works
with "white" or light-colored metals such
as tin
and pewter.
While blacksmiths
work mostly with hot metal, whitesmiths do the majority of their work on cold
metal, making things such as tin or pewter cups, water pitchers, forks,
spoons, and candle holders. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
In 1871 the Moss family was recorded
living in Dudley where Reuben was sixty-one, his wife Mary was sixty, and
living with the couple was their daughter Mary Moss who was thirty-four. Thirty years earlier the complete family
comprised Reuben 30, Maria 30, Benjamin 8, and Mary who was five. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Through his working relationship,
Thomas Collett became friendly with Reuben’s much older daughter Mary Moss whom
he eventually married during the 1870s, possibly around the time of the death
of his father. Perhaps because of her
advanced years, the marriage did not produce any children for the couple. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
By the time of the census of 1881
Thomas Collett of Dudley was 31 and by then he had taken over a draper’s shop
at 177 and 178 Wolverhampton Street in Dudley. Living there with him was his wife Mary Ann
Collett who was 44, together with his father-in-law Reuben Moss aged 71 who
was described as a whitesmith. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Also living with Thomas and Mary was
Thomas’ widowed mother Phoebe Collett who was 74 and from Dudley, and her
widowed sister Mary Girzell who was 71.
Working for Thomas Collett in his draper’s shop was draper’s assistant
Emily Ward who was twenty-eight and from Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
What happened after 1881 is not known
precisely but, in addition to the deaths of Thomas’ mother and his
parents-in-law, it would appear that his wife Mary also died. All of this prompted Thomas to leave Dudley
and he moved to Bradford. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
However, following the death of his
first wife Thomas married another Mary Ann of Dudley who was four years
younger than Thomas. It seems
logically that the couple met while they were in Dudley, but whether they
were married there has not been discovered. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Thomas and Mary were living in
Bradford from around 1885 and it was there during the following year that the
first of their four children was born.
All four children were born at Bradford where the family appeared to
have settled for the rest of their life. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
In 1891 Thomas Collett of Dudley was
41, while his wife Mary Ann also of Dudley was 37, and with them were their
two sons Frederick William who was four and one year old Harry, and their daughter
Edith Annie who was three. During the
next ten years three more children were added to the family. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Although one more child was added to
the family before the end of the century, there was a tragedy in the family
when son Harry died since he was not listed with the family in either 1901 or
1911. According to the Bradford census
of 1901, Thomas Collett was 51, Mary A Collett was 47, and their children
were Frederick Wm Collett 14, Edith A Collett who was 13, and Sidney was
seven years old. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Thomas’ occupation on this occasion
was stated as being that of a commercial traveller in steel, so during his
working life he had gone from whitesmith, to manager of a draper’s store, to selling
steel items, perhaps the tin or pewter cups, water pitchers, forks, spoons, and candle holders,
previously mentioned. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
By April 1911 the family was still
living in Bradford where Thomas Collett from Dudley was 61, his wife Mary Ann
Collett was 57, and the three children still living with them were Frederick
William Collett who was twenty-four, Edith Annie who was twenty-three, and
seventeen years old Sidney Collett. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
48O1
|
Frederick William Collett |
Born in 1886 at Bradford |
||||||||
|
|
48O5
|
Edith Annie Collett |
Born in 1887 at Bradford |
||||||||
|
|
48O3
|
Harry Collett |
Born in 1889 at Bradford |
||||||||
|
|
48O4
|
Sidney Collett |
Born in 1893 at Bradford |
||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48N6
|
Sarah Collett was born in 1827 according to the
census of 1841 in which she was listed with her family living at Church Field
Row in Dudley at the age of fourteen.
Whilst baptism records have been found at St Thomas’ Church in Dudley
for her next three siblings, no such record has been found for Sarah. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
No record Sarah or her family have
been found in the 1851 Census, but thirty months later she married Richard
Hawkins at Dudley where the marriage was registered during the third quarter
of 1853. Over the next decade Sarah
presented her husband with the first four of their six known children. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
All of the children were born at Dudley,
and in April 1861 Sarah and her family were living at Vicarage Prospect in
West Wellington Road in Dudley, where her married sister Eliza (below) and
their parents Richard and Sarah Collett were also living at that time. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
The census return listed the family
as Richard Hawkins, a coalminer who was 38, and his dressmaker wife Sarah who
was 34. The couple’s four children at
that time were Sarah 6, Eliza 4, Samuel 2, and Alma who was just two months
old, with every member of the family having been born at Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Sadly baby Alma Hawkins did not
survive beyond infancy, but the loss to the family was partially compensated
by the birth of another daughter just after.
So by the time of the next census in 1871 the family comprised Richard
48, Sarah 44, and daughters Sarah 16, Eliza 14, and Myra who was seven. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
By that time the family had left
Vicarage Prospect and was living at Furnace Row in Dudley, and although their
son Samuel was not included with the family, he was back living with his mother
by 1881. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
According to the Dudley census of
1881, Sarah Hawkins was a widow of fifty-four, and living with her was her
son Samuel, who was 22 and a bachelor working as a nail warehouseman, and her
daughter Myra who was 17 and a machinist working in the boot trade. On that occasion the family was living at
14 Himley Street in Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48N7
|
Eliza Collett was born at Dudley in 1829 where she
was baptised at St Thomas’ Church on 25.10.1829, the baptism record
confirming that she was the daughter of Richard and Sarah Collett. By the time of the census of June 1841
Eliza was recorded with her family aged twelve years when living at Church
Field Row in Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
During the second quarter of 1853
Eliza married James Castle at Dudley but it would appear from the subsequent
census returns that the marriage never produced any children for Eliza and
James. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
By 1861 the couple were living at
Vicarage Prospect in Wellington Road in Dudley, where Eliza’s sister Sarah
Hawkins (above) and their parents were also living at that time. James Castle of Dudley was a shoeing-smith
aged 35, and his wife Eliza was 31 and employed as a boot binder. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Ten years later in 1871 the childless
couple were 45 and 41 respectively and by then had moved to Furnace Row in
Dudley, where Eliza’s sister Sarah and her family were also living on that
occasion. By 1881 James and Eliza were
still living at 5 Furnace Row where James was 55 and was still working as a
shoeing-smith, while Eliza was 51 and was still working in the boot trade. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
The couple later moved house and
ended up living very close to Eliza’s widowed sister Sarah. Sarah was living at 14 Himley Street in
1881, and it was at 45 Himley Street in Dudley that James 65 and Eliza 60 were living in 1891, when
James was described as a blacksmith. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48N8
|
Samuel Collett was born at Dudley on 31.08.1832 and
it was there that he was baptised at the church of St Thomas on
16.09.1832. His absence from the
family in the 1841 Census probably indicates that he suffered an infant
death, although no actual record has been found to confirm this. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48N9
|
Esther Collett was born at Dudley in 1835 and she
was baptised at St Thomas’ Church in Dudley on 25.01.1835. By the time of the 1841 in June that year
Esther was aged 6 and was living with her family at Church Field Row in
Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Esther married Benjamin Moss in
Dudley during the third quarter of 1855 and by 1861 the marriage had produced
two children for the couple, who were living at Dixons Green in Dudley. The census that year described Benjamin as
being of Dudley, aged 27, and with an occupation as a draughtsman working
within a fire fender iron manufacturing company. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
His wife Esther of Dudley was 25, and
their two children on that occasion were Reuben Moss who was two years and
one year old Milton Moss, both sons having been born at Dudley. Two more boys were born into the family
during the next decade, and during this period the family left Dixons Green
and moved to Vicarage Prospect in Dudley where Esther’s two sisters had been
living ten years earlier. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
According to the 1871 Census, Benjamin
was 37, Esther 36, and their eldest son Reuben who would have been 12 was not
with them on this occasion. The only
children with the couple were Milton 11, and the two newest members of the
family, Benjamin W Moss who was 8, and William H Moss who was 6. The couple’s last child was born at Dudley
during the following year. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
By 1881 the Moss family had moved
again, this time to Furnace Row in Dudley, near to where Esther’s sister
Eliza was also living in 1881. At this
time the complete family was listed in the census return, this being Benjamin
47 and a whitesmith, Esther 46, Reuben 22, Milton 21, Benjamin 18 – the three
sons working as a whitesmith working with their father, William 16, and nine
years old Frederick Eli Moss. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Within the passing of the next ten
years, all bar one of the children of Benjamin and Esther left the family
home to make their own way in the world.
Another family move also took place during this time in their life,
when the couple left Furnace Row to live at 91 King Street in Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
And it was there that they were
living in April 1891. Head of the
house Benjamin was 57 and was still working as a whitesmith, while his wife
Esther was 55. The only child still
living with then was their youngest son Frederick who was 19 and a whitesmith
like his father. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48N10
|
Matthew Collett was born at Dudley on 21.01.1837 and
was the last of the five children born to Richard Collett and Sarah Pearson. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Matthew
was baptised at St Thomas’ Church in Dudley on 05.03.1837 but he died just
over a year later, his death being recorded at Dudley on 08.04.1838. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48N11
|
Noah Collett was born at Dudley on 27.02.1841 where
he was baptised in St Thomas’ Church on 21.03.1841, the baptism record
confirming that he was the son of Richard and Sarah Collett. By the time of the census in June 1841,
Noah was recorded as being three months old and living with his family at
Church Field Row in Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
By
the time of the census of 1861 Noah, who was twenty-one and was working as a
bricklayer with his father Richard, was still living his family at Vicarage
Prospect in West Wellington Road in Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Just
over six years later Noah married Elizabeth Davies who was born at
Kidderminster in 1837. The wedding
took place at Dudley during the third quarter of 1867 following which they
are known to have had at least three children born at Dudley, the first named
after Noah’s father and the second after his mother. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Three
and half years after they were married the family was confirmed in the Dudley
census of 1871 as Noah aged 31, Elizabeth was 34, and their two children at
that time were Richard aged 2 and Sarah who was one year old. It seems very likely that Noah and his
family were living at Walters Row at that time, with his parents Richard and
Sarah living close by also at a Walters Row address. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
By
1881 the family was living at 33 Walters Row in Dudley and whilst their new
son was listed with them, there was no trace of daughter Sarah. Noah was confirmed as working as a
bricklayer at the age of 40, his wife Elizabeth was 44, and his two sons were
Richard aged 12 and four years old Noah. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
The
family was still living at Dudley in 1891 and, although they were at a
different address, they were still living in Walters Row. Their new address was Back 7 in Walters Row
where Noah was 51 and a cow keeper, his wife Elizabeth was 50, and the only
children still living with them were sons Richard 21 and Noah who was 14. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
It
can perhaps be assumed that Noah’s daughter Sarah was married by 1891, and
had since left the family home in Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
It
would appear that Noah died during the 1890s since in 1901 Elizabeth was a
widow living in Dudley. She was listed
in the census that year as being sixty years of age and was working as a milk
cow keeper. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
48O5
|
Richard Collett |
Born in
1869 |
||||||||
|
|
48O6
|
Sarah
Collett |
Born in
1870 at Dudley |
||||||||
|
|
48O7
|
Noah Richard Collett |
Born in
1876 |
||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48N16
|
Thomas Collett was born at Dudley during the third
quarter of 1838 and by the time of the 1841 census he was listed as living
with his parents in the Cross Guns to Freebodies Lane area of Dudley. It seems highly likely that the Cross Guns
may have been an inn or a public house since there are three establishments
with this name in that area of the West Midlands today. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Sadly
Thomas’ mother Jane died in 1845 when he was seven years old and his brother
Samuel (below) was two. Thereafter for
the next nine years the two boys were brought up by their father. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Six
years after his mother died, according to the 1851 Census, Thomas was 12 and
was still living at Dudley with his younger brother Samuel (below) and the
boys’ father George. The family name
was once again recorded as Cullett, as it had been ten years earlier in the
census of 1841. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Three
years later in 1854 when Thomas was 15 his father marriage Eliza Turner at
Dudley so, by 1861 Thomas was living at Angel Street in Dudley with his
father George and his brother Samuel, together with his stepmother
Eliza. Thomas was 21 and his
occupation was that of a vice maker. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Thomas
has been difficult to locate in the years following 1861 simply because he
left the family home in Dudley and moved to Manchester. He also changed his occupation and seemed
to be confused as to when he was born, giving varying ages in the subsequent
census records, in addition to which his surname was incorrectly spelt in the
1881 Census. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
In
the first of these in 1871 he was a lodger at premises in Crown Street in
Manchester, but by which time he was a carriage spring maker. On this occasion he gave his age as being
28 rather than 31 although his place of birth was correctly given as Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Ten
years later in 1881 Thomas was still a bachelor and was still living in
Manchester where he was still working as a carriage spring maker. At this time his name was recorded as
Thomas Colit of Dudley but his age was more accurately recorded as 43. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
The
address at which he was staying in Manchester on this occasion was 7
Gaythorne Street. The premises were
managed by the widow Mary Smith nee Hooley aged 35 and her two younger
brothers William and George Hooley. It
must have been an enormous property since in addition to the three Hooleys
there were also sixty-one male lodgers.
Mary Smith was the only female living there. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
During
the next decade Thomas may have lost his job as a carriage spring maker in
Manchester and this may have prompted his return to the West Midlands. By the end of the decade he was in
Wolverhampton where he married Ann Glover during the first quarter of 1891. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
His
wife Ann was six years older than Thomas, having been born at Broseley in
Shropshire around 1832. From 1841 when
she was 11 until 1871 when she was 38 and a milliner she had remain living
with her parents in Broseley High Street until their deaths, following which
she took over looking after the family. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
By
April 1881 Ann had moved to Barbers Row in Broseley where she was a dressmaker
aged 52. The only relative still
living with her was her nephew Edward Eyre aged 16 who was an unemployed
general labourer from Bilston. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
The
1891 Census took place just a few weeks after Thomas and Ann were married and
this placed the couple as lodgers at Court 7 on the High Street in
Willenhall. Thomas’ occupation at that
time was that of a blacksmith and on this occasion he gave his age as 48
instead of 53, although this might have been an error in transcription. Ann gave her age correctly as being 59. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
The
couple were still together ten years later and had settled in Wednesfield
near Willenhall. Thomas was listed in
the 1901 Census as being 59 and from Wolverhampton (sic), while Ann gave her
age as 64 which may have been a misinterpretation of 69, which would have
been her correct age. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Thomas
was still working as a blacksmith, but this was then at a local colliery and
the full description for him was ‘coalmine blacksmith’. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
The
1911 Census may reveal that Ann had died by then, since there was a Thomas
Collett aged 70 who had been born at Dudley and who was living there at that
time. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48N17
|
Samuel Collett was born at Dudley during the first
quarter of 1843. Just over two years
after he was born his mother Jane died at Dudley so by the time of the 1851
Census Samuel (aged 6 - sic) was living with his father George and older
brother Thomas (above). His correct
age should have been eight. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
In
1854 Samuel’s father married for a second time so by 1861 the family living
at Angel Street in Dudley comprised George and his two sons Thomas and
Samuel, and their stepmother Eliza. By
that time Samuel was working as an agricultural labourer and was 17 years of
age. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Towards
the end of 1867 Samuel married (1) Elizabeth Haden who was the daughter of
William and Ann Haden, the event being recorded at Dudley in the final
quarter of that year. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Just
over three years later Samuel and Elizabeth were living at Dock Lane Court in
Dudley, although as before in 1841 and 1851 the couple’s surname was recorded
as Cullett. At that time in April
1871, Samuel was 28 and Elizabeth was 30, and living with the childless
couple were Samuel’s widowed mother Eliza Cullett and Elizabeth’s widowed
mother Ann Haden. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
No
record of Samuel or his wife Elizabeth has been found in the census of 1881. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Sadly
it would appear that Elizabeth died sometime during the latter part of the
1880s, following which Samuel married (2) Mary Jane Pettifer, the marriage
being recorded at Walsall during the December quarter of 1890 under the name
of Collett. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
However,
as before, the census carried out during the next year recorded the couple’s
surname as Cullett and listed them living at 24 New Hall Street in
Dudley. Samuel was 48 and a labourer
from Dudley, while his wife Mary who was born at Claverley in Shropshire was
six years older at 54. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Neither
Samuel Collett nor Samuel Cullett has been located in the 1901 Census, and no
trace has been found of his wife Mary Jane. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48N18
|
Samuel Collett was born at Sedgley during April
1839 and was the eldest child of Joseph Collett and Esther Hartshorn. In June 1841 he was listed with his parents
and was one year old. Tragically, just
over one year later he died at Dibdale Bank in Sedgley on 26.06.1842. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
His
death certificate confirmed he was two years and ten months at the time he
died, and that he was the son of carpenter Joseph Collett. The cause of death was ‘hydrophobia caused
the bite of a mad dog’, or rabies. The
informant was Henry Smith, the Coroner for Wolverhampton. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48N19
|
Sarah Collett was born at Sedgley on 02.10.1841
when her parents were living at the Grave Yard. They were carpenter Joseph Collett and
Esther Harthorn. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
At
the time of the Dudley census of 1851 she was aged 9 and was living with her
parents and two brothers (below).
Towards the end of the next decade she married (1) Isaac Guest and
this took place at Dudley during the third quarter of 1859 and around nine
months later she gave birth to a son Thomas Guest who was born at
Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
By
the time of the 1861 Census as Sarah Quest she was 19 and was living with her
parents at Vicarage Prospect, West Wellington Road in Dudley. Sarah’s occupation was that of a dressmaker
and with her was her son Thomas Guest aged one year. It would also appear that Sarah was
expecting her second child by Isaac Guest even though he had only just
recently died. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Shortly
after the census day in April 1861, Sarah gave birth to her second son Joseph
Guest. Around four years later she married
(2) Mister Bowen with whom she had a son and a daughter before 1869. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
In
1871 Sarah Bowen 29 was living at Dudley with her daughter Rachel Bowen aged
4 and her son John Bowen who was one year old. Also living with her at that time were her
two earlier sons Thomas Guest who was 11 and nine years old Joseph
Guest. With no husband present, one of
two things may have happened. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Firstly
her second husband may have died, but it seems more likely that they were
separated since she was not able to re-marry until 1894 and that this was
only possible after the death of Mr Bowen.
In the years between 1874 and 1894 Sarah is known to have lived with
John Patrick Flanagan at his home at 29 Stone Street in Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
And it was
in 1875, 1876 and 1879 that Sarah gave birth to her three children by John
Flanagan. These were Elizabeth,
Patrick Michael, and Roderick who were all born at 29 Stone Street. A fourth child Mary was added to the family
after April 1881. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
It
is therefore not surprising that in 1881, Sarah’s two sons Joseph Guest 19
and John Bowen 11 were living with her brother Richard Collett and his family
at 29 Price Street in Dudley. Also
living there was Sarah’s widowed mother Esther Collett, but no record has
been found of Sarah’s other two children. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
The
census of 1881 also recorded that ‘Sarah Flanagan’, who was actually Sarah
Bowen, was the wife of upholsterer Patrick Flanagan at 29 Stone Street even
though the couple did not marry until 1894.
Sarah was 38 and stated she was born at Gornal – Upper Gornal is an
area to the south of Sedgley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Living
with the unmarried couple at 29 Stone Street were their three children,
Elizabeth aged six, Patrick who was five, and two years old Roderick. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
And
it was at that same address nine years later that Sarah was still living when
she reported the death of her mother in December 1890. The death certificate confirmed the address
of the informant Sarah Flanagan as being 29 Stone Street in Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Following
the likely death of her second husband, Sarah married (3) John Patrick
Flanagan on 17.06.1894 at St John’s Church in Dudley. The marriage certificate confirmed that
mattress maker John was a widower of 65, and that Sarah was indeed the widow
Sarah Bowen who was 50. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
John’s
father was named as Patrick Flannigan, a farmer deceased, while Sarah’s
father was Joseph Collett, a carpenter deceased. The witnesses at the wedding were Benjamin
Grundy and Elizabeth Williescraft. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
John
Flanagan, who was born at Tulsk in County Roscommon in Ireland in 1830, was
well-known in the Dudley area for establishing with his brother Michael the
mattress factory that made Hushabye and Easibed, the company being passed
down through three subsequent generations of the Flanagan family until its closure
in 1970. Sadly John passed away just
shortly before the census day in 1901.
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
It
was at 29 Stone Street (next door to the mattress factory) that he died from
bronchial asthma and exhaustion on 08.03.1901 at the age of 70. The death certificate confirmed he was a
mattress manufacturer, and that it was his daughter Elizabeth Paskin who was
present at his death, she also being the informant. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Just
over three weeks later Sarah Flanagan was recorded as being 58 in the census
held on the thirty-first of March 1901.
She was still living at 29 Stone Street and with her was her married
daughter Elizabeth Paskin and her husband Samuel Paskin. Sarah’s occupation was stated as being a
case maker with her own account working at home, which indicated that she was
producing the cases for the mattress factory.
And again she gave her place of birth as Gornal near Sedgley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
John’s
widow Sarah survived for another sixteen years when she died on 12.08.1917 at
the age of 73. At that time she was
living at 81 Park Lane in Tipton and the cause of death was pernicious
anaemia. The informant on this
occasion was her daughter Rachel Curthrop nee Bowen at whose house Sarah had
been living. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
John
Patrick Flanagan was also the great great grandfather of Marilyn Stoddard nee
Flanagan who kindly provided the details of her family back to Samuel Collett
and Esther Southall, the grandparents of Sarah Collett. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48N20
|
Joseph Collett was born at Sedgley in 1843 and was
listed as being aged 7 and 17 in the Dudley census records for 1851 and
1861. In the latter he was living with
his family at Vicarage Prospect in West Wellington Road in Dudley and around
three years later he married Mary Jane Pearson at Stourbridge in the first
quarter of 1864. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Mary
Jane was born at Dudley during the June quarter of 1845. She was the daughter of John Pearson
(deceased) and his wife Ann Hodgetts who in 1861 was a tailoress and a widow
living with her widowed mother Mary Hodgetts, a house proprietor, at her home
at Vicarage Prospect in Wellington Road in Dudley – the same address as her
future son-in-law. Mary Jane Pearson
was listed as being aged 15 and a dressmaker. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
By
1871 the marriage of Joseph and Mary Jane had produced three children for the
couple and all of them were registered with the name Pearson, as were all of
the following children. Two years
earlier Joseph and his brother Richard (below) were baptised at St Thomas’
Church in Dudley during April 1869. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
The
census in April 1871 revealed that Joseph and his young family were living in
Dudley where he was aged 28, his wife Mary Jane was 26, and their three
children were Martha 4, Sarah 2, and Mary who was under one year old. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
During
the next ten years a further four children were added to the family so by
1881 the family living at Occupation Street in Dudley comprised Joseph aged
36 who was a carpenter, Mary Jane also of Dudley who was 34, and their seven
children. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
These
were Martha 14, Sarah 12, Mary 10, Joseph 8, Richard 5, Ada 2, and baby John
who was only eight months old. Four
more children were added to the family during the next seven year, although
it was also during this time that the three eldest daughters left the family
either to be married or to seek work. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
So
by early April in 1891 the family was still living at 10 Occupation Street in
Dudley and was made up of Joseph 47, Mary Jane 46, Joseph 18, Richard 16, Ada
14, John 11, and new arrivals Ruth who was 9, Alice who was 8, Mabel aged 5,
and son Horace who was three years old. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Head
of the house Joseph was still employed as a carpenter, and working with him
was his two sons Joseph and Richard.
It was stated that every member of the family, with the exception of
daughter Ada, was born at Dudley.
According to the census record Ada was born at Birmingham. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
It
is not certain that Mary Jane died during the 1890s but by 1901 Joseph was
living in South Wimbledon with his son John and daughter Ruth. Joseph was a 56 years old carpenter, while
his son was 20 and his daughter 19. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
48O8
|
Martha Pearson Collett |
Born in
1866 |
||||||||
|
|
48O9
|
Sarah Ann Pearson Collett |
Born in
1868 |
||||||||
|
|
48O10
|
Mary Pearson Collett |
Born in
1870 |
||||||||
|
|
48O11
|
Joseph Pearson Collett |
Born in
1872 |
||||||||
|
|
48O12
|
Richard Pearson Collett |
Born in
1875 |
||||||||
|
|
48O13
|
Ada Pearson Collett |
Born in 1877 |
||||||||
|
|
48O14
|
John Jabez Pearson Collett |
Born in
August 1880 |
||||||||
|
|
48O15
|
Ruth Pearson Collett |
Born in
1881 |
||||||||
|
|
48O16
|
Alice Pearson Collett |
Born in
1883 |
||||||||
|
|
48O17
|
Mabel Pearson Collett |
Born in
1885 |
||||||||
|
|
48O18
|
Horace Pearson Collett |
Born in
1887 |
||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48N21
|
Richard Collett was born at Dudley on 06.11.1846 and
was four years old in March 1851. Ten
years later he was fifty years of age according to the census in 1861, when
he was living with his parents at Vicarage Prospect in West Wellington Road
in Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Eight
years later in April 1869 Richard and his older brother Joseph (above) were
baptised at St Thomas’ Church in Dudley in a joint adult ceremony and this
event for Richard may have been prompted by marriage of Richard being planned
for the following year. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
And
so it was that less than one year later Richard marriage to Elizabeth Warne
at Stourbridge during the first quarter of 1870. Once married, the couple settled in Dudley
where their first child was born and where the family was living in April
1871. The census recorded that Richard
was 24, Elizabeth was 23, and their daughter Sarah was not yet one year old. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
It
may be worth highlighting that there was another Collett marriage at
Stourbridge during the first quarter of 1870, and that this was between
Richard Collett and Eliza Guest. This
is of interest since Richard’s sister Sarah Collett (above) had married Isaac
Guest at Dudley in 1859. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Over
the next few years two more children were added to the family. According to the census of 1881 Richard of
Dudley was aged 34 and was working as a railway carpenter. He was living at 29 Price Street in Dudley
with his wife Elizabeth who was 33 and who occupation was that of a
laundress. Listed with them were their
three children, Sarah 10, Samuel 7, Elizabeth 2, and all of them born at
Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Also
living with the family was Richard’s widowed mother Esther Collett aged 66
and two of her grandsons. These were
Joseph A Guest a brass caster aged 19, and John Bowen aged 11 both of Dudley,
who were two of the children of Richard’s sister Sarah who was twice married.
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Sometime
later in that same year, but after the April census day in 1881, Elizabeth
presented Richard with their fourth and last child. During the 1880s the family left Dudley and
moved to Stourbridge where the complete family was living in 1891. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
The
census that year recorded Richard as 44, Elizabeth as 43, and their four
children as Sarah 21, Samuel 17, Elizabeth 12, and Joseph who was nine years
old. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
And
it was at Stourbridge that some of the family were still living ten years
later in 1901. Richard of Dudley was
aged 53 and was still working as a carpenter for the railway company. His wife Elizabeth was 52 and her place of
birth was simply stated as London. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
By
that time their eldest daughter Sarah had left the family home and was
married, but still living with their parents were Samuel aged 27, Elizabeth
aged 22 and Joseph who was 19. All
were confirmed as having been born at Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
In
1911 Richard was 64 and Elizabeth was 62 and they were both still living at
Stourbridge. Also still living at
Stourbridge were their two sons Samuel and Joseph. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
48O19
|
Sarah Collett |
Born in
1870 |
||||||||
|
|
48O20
|
Samuel Collett |
Born in
1873 |
||||||||
|
|
48O21
|
Elizabeth Collett |
Born in
1878 |
||||||||
|
|
48O22
|
Joseph Collett |
Born in
1881 |
||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48N22
|
Samuel Whitehouse was born at Dudley in 1845 and was
aged 5 at the time of the 1851 Census when he was living with his family at
183 Minories in Dudley. Only a very
short time after the census Samuel’s father Thomas Whitehouse died around the
age of 34, leaving Samuel’s mother Elizabeth with three young children. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Three
years after the death of his father, his mother married Eli Hill at Dudley
where the family continued to live.
For the census of 1861 Samuel should have been 15. He had left school and was working as a
glass cutter while living with his mother and stepfather at Angel Street in
Dudley. Rather oddly, he gave his age
as being 20, an error he also made ten years later in 1871 and again in 1881. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
According
to the 1871 Census Samuel of Dudley was married to Elizabeth of Wolverhampton
where the childless couple were living at Brook Street and where Samuel’s
occupation was still that of a glass cutter.
On this occasion he gave his age as 32, while his wife was 31 and was
employed as a laundress. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Ten
years later the couple were still living in Wolverhampton but had moved to
Peel Street where they were the residents of Court 4. Both Samuel and his wife gave their age as
being 41 and their respective places of birth were again Dudley and
Wolverhampton. Samuel had now given up
being a glass cutter and instead was working as a gardener. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48N24
|
Thomas Whitehouse was born at Dudley in 1849 and was
just over one year old when his father died shortly after the Dudley census
of 1851. Three years later Thomas’
widowed mother married Eli Hill with whom she had a further daughter and son,
although it appears that the daughter did not survive. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
This
might have been the reason why Thomas at the age of eleven was living at the
home of his uncle George Collett just along Angel Street in Dudley from where
his mother was living in 1861 and 1871. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Towards
the end of the 1860s Thomas married Mary who was born at Stourport in 1847
and by 1871 their marriage had produced a son for the couple. In April 1871 Thomas and Mary, together
with their one year old son William Whitehouse, were boarders at the Angel
Street home of Thomas’ mother in Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Over
the next decade a further four children were born into the family of Thomas
and Mary, the first at Dudley but then around 1876 the family moved to
Wollescote near Halesowen. By 1881 the
family of seven was living at Brook Street in Wollescote from where 31 years
old Thomas was an iron plate worker. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
With
him was his wife Mary who was 33, and their five children – William 11,
Thomas 9, Elizabeth 8, Mark 3, and Emily who was one year old. Shortly after the census day in 1881 the
family moved again and this time it was the very short distance to nearby Lye
where the couple’s last two children were born. Then sometime between 1886 and 1891 the
whole family moved to Mary’s home town of Stourport. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
According
to the census in 1891 Thomas was still working as an iron plate worker and on
this occasion he and his family were living at 26 Bagley Street in
Stourport. Thomas and Mary were both
recorded as being 32, while the couple’s two oldest sons William 21 and
Thomas 19 were both working with their father as iron plate workers, and 13
years old son Mark was a blacksmith’s labourer. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
The
remaining four children were confirmed as Elizabeth 18, Emily 11, Diana 8,
and John Edward Whitehouse aged six years.
Sometime during the 1890s the family moved again, this time from
Stourport back to Wollescote where they were living just after the end of the
century. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
The
1901 Census recorded Thomas as being 52 and from Dudley, living at Wollescote
where he was still employed as an iron plate worker. His wife Mary was 52 and still living with
the couple were sons William, Mark and Edward who were all working with their
father as iron plate workers. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
The
only daughter still living with the family was seventeen years old Diana who
was a tailoress. Also living close by
to the family in Wollescote was Thomas’ and Mary’s married daughter Emily,
now Emily Pearson and married to iron plate worker James Pearson. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
It
may be worth pointing out that the census records for 1891 and 1901 both
indicate the place of birth for Thomas’ last four children was Lye which conflicts
with information in the 1881. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
During the compilation
of this Whitehouse family an interesting discovery has been made. And that is that in 1881 53 years old widow
Mary Whitehouse a dressmaker from Upton Warren south-west of Bromsgrove in
Worcestershire was living at the home of Thomas Collett at Broomfield in
Harborne midway between Halesowen and Birmingham. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Thomas Collett was a
shoe maker of 53 and had been born at Bromsgrove. His wife was Elizabeth Collett aged 50 who
had been born at Upton Warren like her married but widowed sister Mary
Whitehouse. Thomas and Elizabeth had
four children and all of them born at Smethwick just north of Harborne. These were William Collett 18 (a turner),
Laura 13, Jane 10, and Minnie aged six. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48N26
|
Mary Collett was born at Dudley during the third
quarter of 1854. By the time of the
census of 1861 Mary was seven years old and was living with her parents at
Dixons Green in Dudley. Within the
next ten years the family moved to St John Street in Dudley where Mary’s
parents lived for the remainder of their life. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
When
Mary was seventeen in 1871 she was not listed with the family living at St
John Street but was living and working in the West Bromwich area at that
time. It was at Dudley nine years
later during the third quarter of 1880 that Mary Collett married John Vernon
Orchard. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Six
months after they were married the couple were living at a private house in
Rectory Street in Kingswinford. Glass
engraver John Orchard was 27 years old and had been born at Birmingham, while
his wife Mary was 26 and her birthplace was confirmed as having been Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Living
with the couple was Mary’s younger brother John Collett (below). |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48N27
|
John
Collett was born at Dudley during the third quarter of
1856. By 1861 he was listed as living
with his parents at Dixons Green in Dudley when he was five years old. Ten years late the family was living in St
John Street in Dudley by which time John fourteen. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
On
leaving school he entered the world of education and by April 1881 he had
moved to Kingswinford near Stourbridge where he was a schoolmaster at the age
of 24. At that time he was a boarder
at the home of engraver John Vernon Orchard at his home in Rectory Street in
Kingswinford. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Living
with John Orchard was his wife Mary Orchard nee Collett who was John’s older
sister. It is curious though, why the
census record did not refer to him as the brother-in-law of John Vernon
Orchard. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Towards
the end of the following year John married (1) Fanny Mary Holmes during the
October to December quarter of 1882 and this took place at nearby
Stourbridge. Fanny was born at nearby
Clent during the fourth quarter of 1859 and was referred to as Kit by the
family. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Once
married the couple settled in Wordsley where all of their children were
born. The family lived at New Street
in Wordsley from where John was a teacher at Wordsley School. Sometime later, perhaps in the early 1890s
John was made the Headmaster of Wordsley School, a position he was certainly
holding in 1894. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Historical note: The deputy headmaster at the school during
the 1950s was another John Collett who was also a cabinet maker, so perhaps
he was the woodwork teacher. Since
then the school has closed and been demolished. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
The
1891 Census for Kingswinford & Stourbridge, which included Wordsley, list
the family as John aged 34, his wife Fanny 31, and their three children as
Fanny 7, Frederick 6, and Katie G Collett aged 3. By this time their son Richard had already
died two years earlier, while Katie G must have been a reference to their
daughter Gwendolyn. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Tragically
John’s wife died during the birth of the couple’s last child in 1893. No record of John or his family has so far
been found in the census records for 1901.
However, it is known that in 1904 he married (2) Ellen although she
was not readily accepted into the family by John’s children. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Seven
years later in April 1911 only two members of John’s family were still living
with him and Ellen at Stourbridge. At
that time John was 54, Ellen was 52 and the two children were his sons Fred
aged 26 and Tom aged 18. This
photograph of John was taken around 1915, and sitting alongside him is his
son Tom who was very likely preparing to leave home to take up active service
in the Great War. |
|
|||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Because
of the difficulties with their stepmother, Fred and Tom eventually left the
family home shortly after 1911 and emigrated to Australia but they returned
to England just a few years later to serve King and country during the First
World War. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
John
Collett continued his teaching work at Wordsley School up until he died there
in 1931, following which he was buried in the churchyard of Holy Trinity
Church in Wordsley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
48O23
|
Fanny Mabel Mary Collett |
Born in
1883 |
||||||||
|
|
48O24
|
Frederick
John Richard Collett |
Born in
1885 |
||||||||
|
|
48O25
|
Gwendolyn Pauline Collett |
Born in
1887 |
||||||||
|
|
48O26
|
Richard Collett |
Born in
1889 |
||||||||
|
|
48O27
|
Tom Herbert Collett |
Born on
24.03.1893 |
||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48N28
|
William Collett was born at Dudley in 1857 and was three
years old and thirteen respectively in the Dudley census records of 1861 and
1871, when he was living with his family at Dixons Green and St John Street
in Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
William’s
father Richard Collett died around 1880, so in the following year he was
living with his widowed mother Hannah at 47 St John Street in Dudley. William was 23 and was working with his
younger brother Thomas (below) as a shop assistant in a local boot and shoe
shop. Both of the brothers were listed
as bachelors born in Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
By
the time of the census of 1891, William was 33 and was still a bachelor
working with his brother Thomas in the shoe shop while they were both still
living at 47 St John Street in Dudley with their mother Hannah. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Almost
exactly one year later William married Annie Elizabeth Cox at Dudley during
the first quarter of 1892. Annie was
born at Lye Cross in nearby Rowley Regis in 1859 and was the daughter of
licensed victualler Joseph Cox and his wife Sophia. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
In
1881 Annie was 21 and was still living with her family at 35 Oakham
(Road/Street) in Rowley Regis. This
included her sister Mary Sophia Cox aged 19 who, only a few months before
Annie’s own wedding to William Collett had married William’s brother Thomas
Collett (below). |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Sometime
after William and Annie were married, and before the end of the century, the
couple moved to Tipton where, in 1901, William’s brother Thomas and Annie’s
sister Mary were also living with their family. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
According
to the census in 1901 William was aged 43 and from Dudley and was living at
Tipton with his wife Annie E Collett aged 41 of Rowley Regis. Just as he had been ten and twenty years
earlier, William had an occupation within the boot and shoe trade, but on
this occasion he had been elevated to being the manager of a boot shop
manager, the same description given to his brother Thomas (below). |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
The
whereabouts William and his wife after this time has not been discovered and
so far no record of them has been found in the census of 1911. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48N29
|
Thomas Collett was born at Dudley in 1861 but after
the second of April that year as he was not listed with his parents on the
day of the census. It seems very
likely though that his mother Hannah was with-child on that occasion. He first appeared living with his family at
St John Street in Dudley at the time of the census of 1871 when he was nine
years old. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Ten
years later Thomas was 19 and was living with his widowed mother at 47 St
John Street in Dudley. The census
recorded that his place of birth was Dudley and that his occupation was that
of an assistant in a boot and shoe shop where his older brother William
(above) also worked. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
He
was still living with his mother and older brother William ten years later in
April 1891 at the age of twenty-nine, and was still working with William as a
boot shop assistant. It was during the
final quarter of 1891 that Thomas Collett married Mary Sophia Cox the
daughter of Joseph and Sophia Cox of Rowley Regis and the sister of Annie
Elizabeth Cox (above) who married Thomas’ brother William. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Immediately
prior to both weddings, the two Cox sisters were living with their parents at
1 Turners Hill, Wednesbury in Tividale.
Annie was a 31 years old spinster, while her spinster sister Mary was
29. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
The
closeness of the relationship between the two couples continued after they
were married when they both ended up living at Tipton, as recorded in the
1901 Census. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
By
that time Thomas was 39 and had risen to be a boot shop manager, the same as
his brother, and possibly at a shop they ran in joint ownership. Listed with Thomas was his wife Mary Sophia
Collett aged 39 from Rowley Regis and their three children. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
The
first child Anne aged 7 had been born at Dudley, while the next two were born
after the family had moved to Tipton around 1894 and were Nellie 5 and
William aged 3. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
By
1911 Thomas was 49 and was living at Stourbridge with his wife Mary Sophia
who was also 49. However, for whatever
reason their three children were listed at Dudley at that time and were Annie
Gwendoline 17 of Dudley, Nellie Sophia aged 15 of Tipton, and William John
aged of Tipton. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
48O28
|
Anne
Gwendoline Collett |
Born in
1893 at Dudley |
||||||||
|
|
48O29
|
Nellie
Sophia Collett |
Born in
1895 at Tipton |
||||||||
|
|
48O30
|
William
John Collett |
Born in
1897 at Tipton |
||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48O5
|
Richard Collett was born at Dudley in 1869 and was 2
years old in the census of 1871. In
1881 he was living with his family at 33 Walters Row in Dudley where he was
listed as being aged 12. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
By
1891 Richard was 21 and was still living with his parents at Walters Row in
Dudley from where he was working as a coach builder. No record of him has so far been found in
1901 and 1911. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48O7
|
Noah Richard Collett was born at Dudley during the third
quarter of 1877 and he was 4 years old in 1881 when he was living with his
parents at 33 Walters Row in Dudley.
Ten years later in 1891 he was still living with his family at Walters
Row in Dudley at the age of 14. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
By
1901 he was 25 and was still in Dudley where he was working as a brass
bedstead fitter and in 1911 he was 33 and still at Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48O8
|
Martha Pearson Collett
was born at Dudley
in 1866 and like, all of the children of Joseph Collett and Mary Jane
Pearson, was given Pearson as a christian name at the time of the
registration of the birth. However, none of the children was ever recorded
with the name in any subsequent census records. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Martha
was four years old at the time of the Dudley census of 1871 and was fourteen
ten years later when she and her family were living at Occupation Road in
Dudley. A further ten years later in
1891, her family was still living in Dudley at 10 Occupation Street but, by
which time, Martha was not with them and was very likely married. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48O9
|
Sarah Ann Pearson
Collett was born at
Wolverhampton in 1868 and in 1871 she was aged two and was living in Dudley
with her parents. Ten years later and
aged twelve years, Sarah was still living with her family at Occupation Road
in Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
A
few years later, on leaving school, Sarah left the family home and went into
domestic service and according to the April census of 1891 Sarah Ann Collett
was 23 and was employed as a domestic servant by the Gray family who lived at
46A King Edmund Street in Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
During
the third quarter of 1898 she married Alfred Turner and the wedding took
place at St John’s Church in Netherton near Dudley. Sarah was 32 in 1901 but Alfred was not
with her at that time, nor has he been located anywhere in the UK. It therefore seems likely that he may have
been aboard, for example with the army in South Africa. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
Alfred
was born at Netherton in 1871 and he was a bricklayer. By 1911 the couple were living in
Wolverhampton where Sarah was 42 and Alfred was 41 |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48O10
|
Mary Pearson Collett was born at Dudley in 1870 and was
under one year old at the time of the 1871 Census for Dudley. By 1881 she was ten years old and living at
Occupation Road in Dudley with her family.
No further record of her as Mary Collett has been found which probably
indicates that she was married just prior to April 1891. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48O11
|
Joseph Pearson Collett
was born at Dudley
in 1872 and was eight years old in April 1881. At that time he was living with his family
at Occupation Road in Dudley and was still living there ten years later,
although the address was stated as being 10 Occupation Street. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
On
that occasion he was 18 and was a carpenter working with his father and his
brother Richard (below). During the
next decade Joseph’s mother passed away and his father and some of his
younger brothers and sisters moved to South Wimbledon. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
These
events also may have coincided with, or been the reason for, Joseph ceasing
to be a carpenter, since by 1901 at the age of 28 his occupation was that of
a house painter. He was still living
in Dudley at that time as he was ten years later aged 37. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48O12
|
Richard Pearson
Collett was born at
Dudley in 1875. He was five years old
in 1881 when living with his family at Occupation Road in Dudley and was
still living in Dudley ten years later aged 16. On leaving school he had taken up working
with his father and older brother Joseph (above) as all three of them were
listed as being carpenters in 1891.
The family was then living at 10 Occupation Street in Dudley. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
He
entered military service and this may account for his absence in 1901 at the
time of the Boer War, but by 1911 he was still serving with the military at
the age of 34 and was based on the Isle of Wight. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48O13
|
Ada Pearson Collett was born at Birmingham in 1877 but
was living at Occupation Road in Dudley by April 1881 and was three years
old. Ten years later she was 14 and
was still living at the family home in Dudley which was then described as 10
Occupation Street. No record of Ada
has been located after this time so it is assumed that by 1891 she had left
home and was married. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
48O14
|
John Jabez Pearson
Collett was born at
Dudley in August 1880 and was eight months old by the time of the April
census of 1881 when he and his family were living at Occupation Road in
Dudley. Ten years later he was eleven
years old and was still living in the Dudley although the family’s place of
residence was recorded in the 1891 Census as being 10 Occupation Street. |
||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
On
leaving school and following the death of his mother during the 1890s, John
followed the example of his older brother Richard (above) when he joined the
army. By 1901 at the age of 20 he was
a soldier based at South Wimbledon in Surrey.
Listed with him at South Wimbledon was his father Joseph aged 56 and
his sister Ruth (below) aged 19. |
||||||||||
|
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It
was while John was in Surrey that he met his future wife and the following
year, during the fourth quarter of 1902, he married Constance Sarah Dowden at
Kingston-upon-Thames. Constance was
born in 1882. |
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Nine
years after they were married the couple were living at Epsom in Surrey where
John Jabez was 30 and his wife Constance Sarah was 28. Listed in the census with them were their
two known children aged 7 and 5, while it is possible that there were other
children born to the couple in addition to these. |
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48P1
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Constance
Kate Collett |
Born in
1903 at Epsom |
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48P2
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John
William Collett |
Born in
1905 at Epsom |
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48O15
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Ruth Pearson Collett was born at Dudley in 1881 and was
living there with her family at 10 Occupation Street in Dudley at the age of
nine in 1891. Following the death of
her mother sometime during the 1890s, Ruth’s father Joseph, together with the
youngest members of the family, left Dudley and moved to London. |
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By
1901 Ruth was 19 and was living with her father and her brother John (above)
at South Wimbledon. She was not
married and her occupation was that of an ironer at a local laundry. |
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She
later married George Goldsmith and by 1911 the marriage had produced three
children for the couple. The family
was living at Kingston-on-Thames where George was 30, Ruth was 29, and their
children were Grace 4, and twins Joseph and Alice who were both two years of
age. |
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48O16
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Alice Pearson Collett was born at Dudley in 1883 and was
aged 7 at the time of the 1891 Census when she was still living at 10
Occupation Street in Dudley with her family.
When her mother Mary Jane Collett passed away in the 1890s Alice moved
to South Wimbledon with her father and brother John (above) and sisters Ruth
(above) and Mabel (below). |
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By
the time of the 1901 Census Alice was no longer living at South Wimbledon
with her family, but instead had moved to North Wimbledon where she was in
domestic service and was employed as a cook at the age of eighteen. |
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According
to the next census in 1911, Alice was still unmarried at the age of 27 and
was still living in Surrey. But by then she had left Wimbledon and had moved
to nearby Kingston-on-Thames where her married sister Ruth (above) was then
living with her family. |
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48O17
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Mabel Pearson Collett was born at Dudley in 1885, the
birth being registered there during the third quarter of the year. In April 1891 Mabel was 5 years old and was
living at 10 Occupation Street in Dudley with her family. |
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Shortly
after the death of her mother in the 1890s, the family left Dudley for South
Wimbledon where her father was living in 1901. All though no precise details are known,
both Mabel and her sister Alice (above) were employed in domestic service at
North Wimbledon by 1901. Alice was a
domestic cook, while fifteen years old Mabel was employed as a nursery maid. |
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48O18
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Horace Pearson Collett
was born at Dudley
in 1887 and was three years old at the time of the 1891 Census. That year’s census recorded him living with
his family at 10 Occupation Street in Dudley but no further trace of him has
been found in any later records. |
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It
is established that his mother died before the end of the century, and that
his father and other younger siblings left Dudley for South Wimbledon. Curiously though a Horace Dowden aged 13
and born at Dudley was also living at South Wimbledon in 1901. |
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48O19
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Sarah Collett was born at Dudley in 1870 and was
one year old by April 1871. Ten years
later she and her family were living at 29 Price Street in Dudley when
Sarah’s age was given as being ten.
She was still living with her parents in 1891 but by then they had
moved to Stourbridge where she was 21 years of age. |
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Towards
the end of the following year, in the last quarter of 1892, Sarah married
Abraham Merchant at Stourbridge. He
was the son of Edward Merchant and Miriam (Maria) Garbett and was born at
Stourbridge. The birth was recorded
there during the final quarter of 1866 but under the name of Abel Merchant,
even though in 1871 he was listed as Abraham Merchant aged 5 living at
Bowling Green in Stourbridge. |
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And
again in the census of 1881 he was recorded as being Abraham Merchant who was
living with his family at 24 Bowling Green Lane in Stourbridge where he was
already employed as a rope spinner’s labourer at the age of fourteen. |
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Ten
years later, and just eighteen months before he married Sarah Collett, he was
once again referred to as Abel Merchant.
On this occasion he was a bachelor of 24 whose occupation was that of
a bricklayer living with his widowed mother Myra Merchant and younger brother
at 24 Green Street in Stourbridge. |
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After
they were married, Abraham and Sarah continued to live at Stourbridge, and in
1901 the childless couple were recorded as Abel Marchant aged 32 of
Stourbridge, who was still working as a bricklayer, and his wife Sarah
Marchant who was 31 and from Dudley. |
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48O20
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Samuel Collett was born at Dudley in 1873 and was
aged 7 in April 1881 when he was living with his parents at 29 Price Street
in Dudley. Sometime during the
following decade his family moved to Stourbridge where they were living in
1891 and 1901. |
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Samuel
was 17 and 27 respectively in the two census records and for the latter his
occupation was listed as being a general carter. It would appear that he did not marry and
in 1911 was still living with his mother and father, and brother Joseph
(below) at Stourbridge. |
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48O21
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Elizabeth Collett was born at Dudley in 1878 and 2
years old by April 1881 when she was living at the family home at 29 Price
Street in Dudley. By the time she was
12 she and her family had moved to Stourbridge where they were living in
1891. |
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She
was still living with her parents and her two brothers at Stourbridge in 1901
at the age of 22 but may have married not long after as she was not listed in
the 1911 Census as Elizabeth Collett. |
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48O22
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Joseph Collett was born at Dudley after the census
day in 1881, and it may have even been in the first couple of months of
1882. When he was just a few years old
his family left Dudley and moved to Stourbridge where they were recorded as
living from 1891 onwards. At that time
Joseph was aged 9. |
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Ten
years later the Stourbridge census of 1901 confirmed that at 19 Joseph was
still living at the family home with his brother Samuel (above) and his
sister Elizabeth. With the passing of
another decade Joseph was still a bachelor living with his parents at
Stourbridge by 1911. |
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48O23
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Fanny Mabel Mary
Collett, who was known
as Mabel and later as ‘Aunt Mab’, was born at New Street in Wordsley during
the fourth quarter of 1883. She
was listed as being seven years of age in the Kingswinford & Stourbridge
census of 1891. It
looks very much like she had left the family home by 1901 and was living and
working in Wolverhampton where she was a tailoress at the age of 16, while a
further ten years later at the age of 27 she was living at West Bromwich. It
is understood within the family that Fanny’s youngest brother Tom (below) was
blamed by their father for the death of his wife during the birth. |
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Their
father John took the loss particularly badly and in his grief he virtually
rejected his son Tom who, as a result, was cared for and brought up by his
sister Fanny. |
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Fanny
later married Alfred King during the fourth quarter of 1922 and this took
place at Evesham. Alfred was known as
Fred within the family. |
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48O24
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Frederick
John Richard Collett, who was known as Fred, was born at New Street in
Wordsley and his birth was registered at nearby Stourbridge during the second
quarter of 1885. He was listed with
his family in 1891 as being aged six years but has not been found in the
census of 1901. |
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When
he was only eight years old his mother died while giving birth to his brother
Tom (below). A few years later in 1904
Fred’s father was re-married but it was not long before there was turmoil
within the family as the new wife was not welcomed into the family. |
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By
the time of the census of 1911 Fred was 26 and was living at Stourbridge with
his father John, his stepmother Ellen, and his younger brother Tom. According to family stories, the past seven
years had not been a particularly happy time for the ‘new’ family and eventually
Fred and Tom walked out on the family and went to live in Australia. |
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However,
their move ‘down under’ was short-lived when they returned to England to take
an active part in the First World War and during the second quarter of 1915
Fred married Constance Huggett at West Ham in London. Constance was a similar age to Fred having
been born at Mile End in London in 1886. |
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In
1901 Constance Huggett was 14 and was living at Hackney where she had already
started work as a pupil teacher. She
came from a family of teachers with her mother Emily being a school mistress
and her brother Harry Percy, who was referred to as Percy, being a school
master. Ten years later in 1911
Constance was 24 and was living in Lewisham in London. |
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After
they were married Fred took Constance out of London during the war to the
relative safety of Stourbridge where the first of their two children was
born. Once everything settled down
again after the war the family of three returned to London and were living in
Walthamstow when their second child was born. |
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Around
eighteen months after the birth of their son Peter the family elected to
leave London again and this time they moved to Wickhamford just south of
Evesham in Worcestershire where Fred’s brother Tom was living with his new
wife who was born there. |
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48P3
|
John Frederick Collett |
Born in
1917 |
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48P4
|
Peter Harry
Stanley Collett |
Born in
1921 |
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