PART
FORTY-NINE
The
Kirtlington (Oxon) to California
Updated June 2011
This is the family line of Brian
Richard Collett (Ref. 49R4) of San Francisco,
and Raymond (Ray) Collett of Worcester,
the great grandson of Eli Collett (Ref. 49O7)
The previous version of this family
line commenced with Charles Collett the father of Henry George Collett of
Oxfordshire. New information received
from Brian Richard Collett in the USA in early 2010 has enabled the line to be
extended back one generation to the Oxfordshire village of Kirtlington and to
Charles’ father George Collett.
Additional information has also been gratefully received from Dave Cotty
in Australia relating to the Shoubridge family, and the aforementioned Ray
Collett.
All
of the burial details included in the June 2011 update of this family line have
been kindly provided by Ray Collett.
Where a fit to a specific family could not be found, the details have
been included in an Appendix at the end of this file.
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49M1 |
GEORGE COLLETT was born at Kirtlington around
1778, but so far no record of his parents has been found. It has however been established that George
married Sarah Wakefield and that in the first national census of June 1841 he
was 60 years old, his wife Sarah was 55, and they and their large family were
living at Kirtlington within the Bicester, Brackley, Buckingham & Woodstock
registration district. |
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Listed
with the couple at Kirklington were seven of their ten children, they being James 25,
Caroline 21, Maria 20, Emmanuel 16, Isabella 14, Eliza 13, and Emma who was
12 years old. George’s two missing older
sons had left the family home by then and were both married, while the family had suffered
the loss of daughter Charlotte who had died when she was only nine months old.
Living nearby was his son Charles who
was 24 with his wife Emma and daughter Eunice, the couple’s first child. |
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George
Collett died at Kirtlington on 2nd March 1843, although his death
was not recorded until the start of the second quarter of 1843. By the time of the census in 1851 Sarah Collett
was a widow aged 67. The census return
described her as head of the house and a pauper, who had been born at
Kirtlington. Still living with her at
Kirtlington on that occasion was her unmarried son Emmanuel, who was 28 years
of age. Also living in the same
cottage with Sarah and Emmanuel, was Sarah’s unmarried daughter Eliza Collett
and her base-born daughter Dora Collett who was a year old. |
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Living
nearby, and still within the village of Kirtlington, were Sarah’s three
married sons Richard, James and Charles.
It is very likely that her four other daughters, Caroline, Maria,
Isabella, and Emma were all married by then, since none were recorded with
the Collett surname. |
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What
is of interest is that George’s son Charles married Emma Wakefield who was
the daughter of Joseph Wakefield, Sarah Wakefield’s brother, making Emma the
niece of George’s wife Sarah Wakefield. |
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According to the Kirtlington Parish
Graveyard Survey, the date that George Collett was buried was 2nd
March 1844, when it was also recorded that his was ‘a sudden death’ at the age of 65 years. It was twenty years after the death of her
husband that his widow Sarah Collett died at the age of 78, when she was
buried with George on 8th November 1864, implying that she was
born during 1786. |
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49N1 |
Richard Collett |
Born in
1811 at Kirtlington |
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49N2 |
James Collett |
Born in
1815 at Kirtlington |
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49N3 |
CHARLES COLLETT |
Born in
1817 at Kirtlington |
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49N4 |
Caroline
Collett |
Born in
1819 at Kirtlington |
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49N5 |
Maria
Collett |
Born in
1821 at Kirtlington |
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49N6 |
Emmanuel Collett |
Born in
1823 at Kirtlington |
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49N7 |
Charlotte
Collett |
Born in 1824 at Kirtlington |
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49N8 |
Isabella
Collett |
Born in 1825
at Kirtlington |
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49N9 |
Eliza Collett |
Born in
1827 at Kirtlington |
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49N10 |
Emma
Collett |
Born in
1829 at Kirtlington |
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49N1 |
Richard Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1811, the
eldest child of George Collett and his wife Sarah Wakefield. He was an agricultural labourer and by 1851
he was married to Diana and was living at Kirtlington with three of the couple’s first four
children. It would appear from the
Kirtlington parish records that their first child, Emily, who had been born
in February 1846, was buried there on 22nd November 1846 when she
was just eight months old. It may or
may not be relevant to this family, but two more child deaths were recorded
at Kirtlington in 1849 and 1853. For
more details of Urban Collett and Eli Collett go to the Appendix at the end
of this file. |
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By
the time of the census in 1851 the family comprised Richard, who was 39,
Diana who was 33, and their three surviving children Andrew who was four,
Emily who was three, and Edwin who was under one. Four more children were added to the family
during the next decade, so by 1861 the census for Kirtlington that year
recorded the family as Richard an agricultural labourer at 50, his wife Diana
from Burton Dassett in Warwickshire who was 43, Andrew 14, Emily 13, Edwin
11, Curtis who was nine, Dan who was six, Prudence who was four, and Eli who
was a year old. |
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Sadly it was during May 1867 that Diana
died at the age of 56, following which she was buried at Kirtlington on 19th
May 1867, leaving
Richard a widower with a young family.
This would
indicate that she was the same age as Richard, despite the information
recorded in the census of 1861. What happened to the whole family has
not been determined, but in 1871 Richard was 58 and
was living at Kirtlington with his son Daniel who was 16, his daughter
Prudence who was 14, and his youngest son Eli who was 11. |
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Living
in the cottage next door was Richard’s eldest son Andrew with his wife and
their first child. So far no record
has been found for his daughter Emily, who was very likely married by then,
and his sons Edwin and Curtis. |
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By
the time of the census of 1881 Richard was living on his own in Kirtlington
where he was still working as an agricultural labourer at the age of 70. And it was there also that he was still
living ten years later in 1891 at the age of 78 (sic), but with no further
record in the census of 1901, it must be assumed that he died during the
1890s. |
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It was eight and a half years later
that Richard Collett died and was buried at Kirtlington on 27th
October 1889. His age at the time of
his passing was recorded in error as 87, which would have meant he was born
around 1802, nine years before he was actually born, according to the results
of each of the census returns. |
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49O1
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Emily Collett |
Born in 1846; died in 1846 at Kirtlington |
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49O2
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Andrew Collett |
Born in 1847
at Kirtlington |
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49O3
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Emily Collett |
Born in
1848 at Kirtlington |
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49O4
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Edwin Collett |
Born in
1850 at Kirtlington |
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49O5
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Curtis Collett |
Born in
1852 at Kirtlington |
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49O6
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Daniel Collett |
Born in
1854 at Kirtlington |
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49O7
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Prudence Collett |
Born in
1856 at Kirtlington |
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49O8
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Eli Collett |
Born in 1860
at Kirtlington |
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49N2 |
James Collett was born at Kirtlington in
1815. He was an agricultural labourer
and he married Sarah Lambourne who was born in 1823. Sarah was also born at Kirtlington, the
daughter of agricultural labourer Richard Lambourne from Cumnor to the west
of Oxford. |
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James’
father George Collett died during the 1840s and it was during the middle of
that decade that James married Sarah.
So by 1851 the family living at Kirtlington was made up of agricultural
labourer James Collett of Kirtlington who was 35, his wife Sarah 29 and also
of Kirtlington, and their three children.
They were Arthur who was seven, Fanny who was three, and |
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Living
in the cottage next door to James and his family was his younger brother
Charles Collett (below), with his much larger family. The other next door neighbour to James was
his father-in-law Richard Lambourne a 56 year old agricultural labourer from
Cumnor. Living with him was his
grandson James Lambourne a 12 year old errand boy who was born at
Kirtlington. |
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It
is possible that James eldest child died during the next few years as no
later record of him has been found. Ten
years later in 1861 James and his family, less Arthur, were still living at
Kirtlington where James was a 46 year old agricultural labourer, Sarah was 37,
and their five children at that time were Fanny 13, |
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There
were three other people lodging with the Collett family, and these were
Richard Lambourne who was 67 and an agricultural labourer, this was Sarah’s
father, who had with him Sarah’s two younger brothers James Lambourne who was
20 and Arthur Lambourne who was 17. |
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The
1861 Census also revealed that still living right next door to James and
Sarah on the main road in Kirtlington, was the family of James’ brother
Charles Collett (below) as they had been ten years earlier. |
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The
James Collett family may have suffered the further loss of another two
children since, by the time of the census in 1871 Elizabeth, who would have
been 15, and Harry, who would have been 10, were missing. The remainder of the family was recorded as
James who was 56 and whose occupation was that of a shepherd, his wife Sarah who
was 46, and youngest daughter Anne who was 6. |
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For
the third consecutive census in a row, James’ brother Charles was still
living in the cottage next door, and for the second census in a row Sarah’s
father Richard Lambourne who was 76 was the only other occupant in the
cottage. |
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It
is also established that James’ and Sarah’s three surviving eldest children
were still living in Kirtlington. The
first of these was Fanny Collett who was 23, a grocer like her cousin George
Collett (Ref. 49O20), and was living with dressmaker Elizabeth Davies in the
cottage adjacent to her father’s cottage.
The other two were her brothers |
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The
1881 Census for Kirtlington described James as 65 and an agricultural
labourer, and son-in-law to head of the house Richard Lambourne. On that occasion James and his wife Sarah,
who was 57, were living with Sarah’s father who was a retired agricultural
labourer of 86. Also still living with
them was their unmarried son |
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James’ wife Sarah died eight years
later and was buried at Kirtlington on 3rd July 1889, when her age
was recorded as being 67. So by the time of the census in 1891 James
Collett, age 80, was a widower, still living in the dwelling adjacent to that
of his brother Charles in the village of Kirtlington. |
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It was just six months later that
James died at the age of 80, following which he was buried with his wife on 7th
September 1891. Both his age at the
time of his death and recorded in the census that year, would indicate that
he may have been born around 1811, this scenario was the same for his older
brother Richard, whose age at his death differed from his age calculated from
the ages given in the various census returns. |
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Once again, it may or may not be
relevant to this family, but there were two child deaths recorded at
Kirtlington in 1849 and 1853. For more
details of Urban Collett and Eli Collett go to the Appendix at the end of
this file. |
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49O9
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Arthur Collett |
Born in
1843 at Kirtlington |
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49O10
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Fanny Collett |
Born in
1847 at Kirtlington |
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49O11
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John Collett |
Born in
1850 at Kirtlington |
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49O12
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Thomas Collett |
Born in
1852 at Kirtlington |
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49O13
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Elizabeth Collett |
Born in
1855 at Kirtlington |
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49O14
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Harry Collett |
Born in
1860 at Kirtlington |
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49O15
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Anne Collett |
Born in 1864
at Kirtlington |
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49N3 |
CHARLES COLLETT was born at Kirtlington in 1817 and,
just like his older brothers Charles was also an agricultural labourer. It would appear that he lived the whole of
his life at Kirtlington, where he was twice married. |
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Around
the time he was 20, Charles married (1) Emma Wakefield, the daughter of Joseph
and Mary Wakefield. Emma was baptised
at nearby Bletchington (today
Bletchingdon) on 21.12.1817. By
the time of the census in June 1841 the marriage of Charles and Emma had
produced the couple’s first two children. |
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The
census return for Kirtlington listed the family as Charles at the age of 24,
Emma 23, and their two daughters Ann who was 3, and Emma who was 1 year
old. Over the next ten years a further
four children were added to the family while they were still living in
Kirtlington. The youngest of these was named after Charles’ father George
Collett. |
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At
the time of the next census in 1851 Charles and his large family were living
in the cottage right next door to his brother James Collett (above). The census return confirmed that Charles
was an agricultural labourer of 34, his wife Emma was 32, and their six
children were Ann who was 14, Eunice who was 11 and previously listed as
Emma, Julia 8, Clara 6, William 4, and George who was 2 years old. |
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Living
with the family as a lodger was Emma’s younger brother James Wakefield who
was 31 and described as a pauper and a cripple. Like his sister James was baptised at
Bletchington on 21.03.1819, the son of Joseph and Mary Wakefield. |
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Every
member of the family was recorded as born at Kirtlington, and two years later
a final child was born into the family, but tragically this happy event may
have been the reason for Emma’s death, since she was buried at Kirtlington on 21st
May 1853, at the age of 35. Widower
Charles was left with a young family to look after, and just prior to the
census of 1861 he married (2) Emily who was 23 years younger than Charles and
also born at Kirtlington. |
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The
Kirtlington census of 1861 recorded that Charles Collett was 44 and that his
wife Emily was just 21 years of age. Living
with the couple were two children from Charles’ first marriage. These were son William who was 14, and
daughter Ruth who was eight years old.
It is not clear as to where his two eldest daughters were by that time,
although it is possible that both girls were married by then. |
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Charles’
two other daughters Julia and Clara had already left Kirtlington by
then. Clara Collett was 16 and was
living and working in Oxford city, while her older sister Julia had made her
way to London where at the age of 19 she was living and working in the St
George district of Hanover Square. |
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As
regards his missing son George, he was still living in Kirtlington in 1861
and was a live-in servant at the home of farmer William Goodenough. The census also indicated that he was 13
years old and living next door to his uncle Emmanuel Collett (below) who was
also very likely employed on the Goodenough’s farm. |
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Over
the next twenty years, while they continued to live in Kirtlington, Emily
presented Charles with five further children, with the first three of these
being listed with the couple at the time of the census in 1871. Charles was 54, Emily was 32, and their
three children were Thirza who was 8, Edith who was 4, and baby Charles who
was only 2 months old. |
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In
addition to the aforementioned census of 1851, the following two census
returns for 1861 and 1871 also confirmed that living in the cottage right
next to Charles’ dwelling on the main road in Kirtlington, was his brother
James Collett (above) and his family. |
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However,
by the time of the census of 1881 for Kirtlington, the family comprised
Charles who was 64, his wife Emily who was 41, and their four children, Edith
13, Charles 10, Albert 6, and Evelyn who was just 3 months old. |
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At
this time in his life Charles was still working as an agricultural
labourer. The census also confirmed
that every member of his household had been born at Kirtlington. It also confirmed that his immediate next
door neighbour was his brother James Collett with his family. |
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Ten
years later the Kirtlington census return for 1891 recorded the family as
Charles 74, Emily 51, Edith 24, Charles 20, Albert 16, and Evelyn who was 10
years old. And once again his brother
James (above) was living next door. (It was only just over three
years after that, when Charles Collett, aged 77, was buried at Kirtlington on
12th August 1894, confirming his year of birth as being around 1817. |
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By
March 1901 Charles’ widow Emily Collett was still living in Kirtlington at
the age of 61. Living with her was her
daughter Edith who was 34 and her son Charles who was 30. Living nearby was her other son Albert who
was married with a daughter of his own by then. Also living just four doors away was
Emily’s stepson William W Collett and his family, the eldest son from her
husband’s first marriage. |
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Emily
was also still living at Kirtlington ten years later in April 1911 when she
was 71. Living with her at this time
was her son Charles who, by then, was married to Ethel, although they had no
children of their own. |
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Emily Collett remained a widow for
the rest of her life and it was fifteen years later, when she was 86, that she died at Kirtlington, where she was buried on
10th April 1926, which once again indicated that she was born in
1840. |
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49O16
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Ann Collett |
Born in
1837 at Kirtlington |
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49O17
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Emma Eunice Collett |
Born in
1839 at Kirtlington |
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49O18
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Julia Collett |
Born in
1842 at Kirtlington |
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49O19
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Clara Collett |
Born in
1844 at Kirtlington |
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49O20
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William W Collett |
Born in
1846 at Kirtlington |
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49O21
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GEORGE COLLETT |
Born in
1848 at Kirtlington |
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49O22
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Ruth Collett |
Born in
1853 at Kirtlington |
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The
following is the list of the children of Charles Collett and his second wife
Emily. |
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49O23
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Thirza Collett |
Born in
1862 at Kirtlington |
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49O24
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Edith Collett |
Born in
1866 at Kirtlington |
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49O25
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Charles Collett |
Born in
1871 at Kirtlington |
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49O26
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Albert Edwin Collett |
Born in 1875
at Kirtlington |
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49O27
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Evelyn E Collett |
Born in
1880 at Kirtlington |
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49N5 |
Maria Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1821 and
had a rounded age of 20 years at the time of the Kirtlington census of 1841
when she was still living with her parents George and Sarah Collett and the
rest of her family. |
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With
no record of a Maria Collett born at Kirtlington around 1821 ten years later
in 1851, it must be assumed that she was married during the 1840s. |
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49N6 |
Emmanuel Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1823 and
was 16 years old at the time of the Kirtlington census in 1841. He was yet another agricultural labour like
his brothers before him and, at the time of the next census in 1851, he gave
his age as being 28 and was still a bachelor living with his widowed mother
Sarah Collett at Kirtlington. |
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Also
living with Emmanuel and his mother was his unmarried sister Eliza Collett
(below) with her base-born daughter Dora. |
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It
was a few years after this that he married Emily who was also born at
Kirtlington, and with whom he had three known children who were all born at
Kirtlington. At the time of the census
in 1861 Emmanuel was 37 and was an agricultural labourer living at Park Lodge
in Kirtlington. Park Lodge was very
likely a cottage on the farm of the Goodenough family where Emmanuel was
employed. |
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His
wife Emily said she was 30, even though she was ten years younger than her
husband, and with them on that occasion was their son Thomas who was five
months old. However, the boy only survived for a further
three and a half years, when he died and was buried at Kirtlington as Thomas
Emmanuel Collett on 8th November 1864. Although the entry in the parish records
gave his age as three years, he was actually born in December 1860, so was
nearly four years old when he died. |
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In
addition to their own son, Emmanuel and Emily also had living with them ‘Dozia
Collett’ who was described as Emmanuel’s niece. She was Dora Collett, age 12 years, the base-born
daughter of Emmanuel’s sister Eliza, who had been living with Emmanuel and
his mother ten years earlier. Living
next door to Emmanuel and his family in 1861, and in service with the Goodenough family, was his nephew George Collett, age 13,
the son of Emmanuel’s older brother Charles Collett (above). |
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During
the next five years Emily presented her husband with two further
children. So by 1871 Emmanuel was 46
and Emily was 37, and with them were their two surviving children. These were William who was seven, and Mary
who was four, all four members of the family confirmed as having been born at
Kirtlington. |
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At
that time in their lives, Emmanuel and Emily were living in a cottage on
Northbrook Farm, from where Emmanuel was employed as a gardener. |
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Ten
years later the family of four was still living at Kirtlington in the spring
of 1881. Emmanuel Collett was 57, his
wife Emily was 47, and their two children were once again confirmed as
William J Collett who was 17 and working as an agricultural labourer like his
father, and Mary A Collett who was 14. |
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The
family was still living at Kirtlington in 1891 when Emmanuel Collett was 67. However, on that occasion his wife was
listed in error as Eliza, and still living with them was their son William
who was 25. |
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William
Collett left the family home at Kirtlington during the next few years and by
1901 Emmanuel and Emily were living there alone. On that occasion their ages were
incorrectly quoted, when Emmanuel said he was 70, and Emily said she was 60,
at a time in their lives when they were in fact more like 77 and 67. |
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Sixteen months after the census day,
Emmanuel Collett, aged 79, died at Kirtlington and was buried there on 17th
July 1902. It therefore seems highly
likely that his age in March 1901 was in fact 78, but misinterpreted as
70. No record of his widow Emily Collett
has been found in the census return for 1911, so it may be safe to assume
that she died around the time of her husband, or shortly thereafter. |
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49O28
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Thomas Emmanuel Collett |
Born in
1860 at Kirtlington |
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49O29
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William J Collett |
Born in
1863 at Kirtlington |
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49O30
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Mary Ann Collett |
Born in
1866 at Kirtlington |
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49N7 |
Charlotte
Collett was born at Kirtlington during the summer of
1824, but tragically only survived for nine months when she died there and
was buried in the churchyard of the parish church of St Mary the Virgin on 27th
March 1825. |
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49N9 |
Eliza Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1827 and
according to the census in June 1841, she was 13
years old and living with her family at Kirtlington. Around nine years later she was unmarried
and gave birth to a base-born daughter. |
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|
|
At
the time of the census in 1851 Eliza Collett was 25 (sic) and she and her one
year old daughter Dora Collett were living at the Kirtlington home of her
widowed mother Sarah Collett nee Wakefield.
Also living there was Eliza’s older unmarried brother Emmanuel Collett
(above). |
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|
|
According to the Kirtlington Parish
Graveyard Survey, Eliza Collett died when she was 26, following which she was
buried there on 10th April 1854.
Her premature death would have been the reason why her daughter Dora
Collett, aged just five years at the time of her mother’s passing, was taken
into the family of Eliza’s brother Emmanuel Collett (above). |
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49O31
|
Dora Collett |
Born in
1849 at Kirtlington |
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49O2
|
Andrew Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1847,
and was the eldest son of Richard and Diana Collett. In 1851 he was four years old, and in 1861
he was 14. On both occasions he was
living with his family in the village of Kirtlington. Six year after the census in 1861 Andrew’s
mother died when he was around 21 years of age. |
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|
|
It
may have been two years after that sad event when Andrew married Sarah who
was born at nearby Tackley in Oxfordshire.
By the time of the next census in April 1871 the couple were living at
Kirtlington in a cottage immediately adjacent to Andrew’s widowed father
Richard, who still had three of Andrew’s younger siblings living there with
him. |
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|
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|
|
The
census return for 1871 confirmed that Sarah had already presented Andrew with
their first child. Andrew Collett, age
23 and from Kirtlington, was a miller’s labourer, while his wife Sarah was 24
and from Tackley, and their son was Richard William Collett who was eleven
months old and had been born at Kirtlington. |
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|
Shortly
after that the family of three moved to the village of Knightcote in the
parish of Burton Dassett in Warwickshire, midway between Banbury and Southam,
where Andrew’s mother had been born, and where the remainder of Andrew’s
eight children were born. |
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|
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|
|
Initially
the family was extended by a further four children during the 1870s, as
confirmed by the next census in 1881.
This placed the family at Burton Dassett and stated that the four new
children had been born there, which conflicts with later records. |
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|
|
Andrew
Collett from Kirtlington was an agricultural labourer of 36 years, and living
with him was his wife Sarah aged 37 and from Tackley, and their five
children. These were Richard who was
10 and born at Kirtlington, Emily six, Andrew three, Eli two, and baby Thomas
Collett who was just one month old. |
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|
|
Andrew
and Sarah would appear to have spent the remainder of their lives together
living at Knightcote, since it was there that the couple’s last three
children were born, and where they were still living in 1901 and 1911. |
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|
|
During
the 1880s another son and two daughters were born into the family, but by the
time of the census in 1891 the couple’s eldest daughter Emily, who would have
been 16, was no longer living with her family, nor has any trace of her been
found after that time. It is therefore
possible that she may have died before 1891. |
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|
||||
|
|
The
census return for the village of Knightcote listed the family as Andrew 45
and an agricultural labourer of Kirtlington, Sarah 46 of Tackley, Richard 20
of Kirtlington, and Andrew 13, Eli 12, Thomas ten, Henry six, and Elizabeth P
V Collett who was three years old, all of whom were born at Knightcote. |
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|
|
The
following year Sarah presented Andrew with their final child and over the
next few years up until the end of the century some of the older children
left the family home to make their own way in life. |
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|
|
|
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|
|
According
to the census for Knightcote in March 1901, Andrew at 55 was a roadsman
labourer, and once again his place of birth was confirmed as
Kirtlington. His wife Sarah from
Tackley was 56, and only four of their eight children were still living with
them. |
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|
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|
|
Their
son Eli who was 22, was very likely working with his
father since his occupation was that of a stone-breaker, son Thomas was 20
and an agricultural labourer, daughter Victoria at 13 was described as a
school teacher, while the couple’s youngest son William was eight and was
probably attending the school where his older sister was employed. |
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|
||||
|
|
Missing
from the family home was Andrew’s and Sarah’s eldest son Richard, who would
have been 30, for whom no record has been found anywhere in Britain at that
time, so he may have been abroad, and possible fighting with the army in
South Africa. |
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|
||||
|
|
Their
two other sons, Andrew 23 and Henry 16, were both living in the Aston area of
Birmingham from where they were employed by the London North Western Railway. |
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|
||||
|
|
By
April 1911 only the couple’s youngest son was still living with them at
Knightcote. Andrew was then 66, Sarah
was 67, while William Collett was 18 and his place of birth was stated as
being Burton Dassett instead of Knightcote. |
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|
||||
|
|
Just
over five years later, in May 1916, and assuming that they were both still
alive, Andrew and Sarah received the sad news of the death of their son John
Henry Collett, who was killed in action while serving with the Royal Navy. |
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|
||||
|
|
49P1
|
Richard William Collett |
Born in
1870 at Kirtlington |
||
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|
49P2
|
Emily Collett |
Born in
1874 at Knightcote, Warws. |
||
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49P3
|
Andrew Collett |
Born in
1877 at Knightcote, Warws. |
||
|
|
49P4
|
Eli Collett |
Born in
1878 at Knightcote, Warws. |
||
|
|
49P5
|
Thomas Collett |
Born in
1881 at Knightcote, Warws. |
||
|
|
49P6
|
John Henry Collett |
Born in
1884 at Knightcote, Warws. |
||
|
|
49P7
|
Elizabeth P Victoria Collett |
Born in
1887 at Knightcote, Warws. |
||
|
|
49P8
|
William Collett |
Born in
1892 at Knightcote, Warws. |
||
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||||
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|
||||
49O3
|
Emily Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1848 the
eldest surviving daughter of Richard and Diana Collett. Her parents’ first child had also been Emily, who was born and died
in 1846, after whom Emily was named.
Emily was three years old and 13 years old in the two censuses of 1851
and 1861 when she was living with her family at Kirtlington. During the month of May in 1867 Emily’s mother died at Kirtlington,
following which it seems very likely that Emily, age 19, took over the role
of housekeeper for her father, her older brother Andrew (above), and her five
younger siblings. |
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||||
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|
||||
49O4
|
Edwin Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1850 and
was under one year old at the time of the census in 1851. Ten years later he and his family were
still living in Kirtlington where Edwin was eleven years of age. It was just over three years later that
first Edwin died, to be followed by his mother Diana, who passed away three
years after. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
According to the Kirtlington Parish
Graveyard Survey, Edwina Collett (sic), was buried there on 9th
July 1864, aged 14 years. With the
complete absence of any Edwina Collett of Kirtlington in any other records,
it would seem very likely that the entry contained a basic error, in that it
should have been written as Edwin Collett, although it may simply have been
an error in transcription. |
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|
|
||||
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|
|
||||
49O5
|
Curtis Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1852 and
was nine years old in the Kirtlington census of 1861. Just like his brother Edwin (above), no
further trace of Curtis after this time has been found, which again, may
indicate that he too had suffered a premature death. |
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|
|
||||
|
|
|
||||
49O6
|
Daniel Collett was born at Kirtlington in
1854. By 1861 Daniel was six years old
was living at Kirtlington with his family and was described as Dan
Collett. Following the death of his
mother Diana, during the 1860s, Daniel was living with his widowed father
Richard at Kirtlington in 1871 by which time he was 16. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Curiously
no record of Daniel Collett has been found in England after this time. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
|
||||
49O7
|
Prudence Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1856 and
was four years old and living at Kirtlington with her family in 1861. She was still living there with her father
and two brothers Daniel (above) and Eli (below) in 1871 at the age of 14,
following the death of her mother Diana. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
It
is very likely that she had become a married lady by the time of the census
in 1881, since no record of a Prudence Collett has been discovered after
1871. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
|
||||
49O8
|
Eli Collett was born at Kirtlington in
1860. In the Kirtlington census of
1861 he was one year old and was living with his parents Richard and Diana
Collett and the other members of his family.
Sadly his mother died while he was still very young, although Eli
remained living with his father until at least 1881. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
The
census that year place Eli, at 11 years of age, living at Kirtlington with
his widowed father Richard, and his two older siblings Daniel and Prudence
(above). |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Although
absent from the census returns in 1881, when he would have been 21, Eli
Collett was living and working in London by 1891. The census that year confirmed that he had
been born at Kirtlington and that he was still a bachelor at the age of 31,
when he was recorded as living with the Lambeth & Brixton area of the
city. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Shortly
after this he married Emily Elizabeth and before the end of the century the
marriage had produced two sons for the couple. By the time of the census in 1901 the
family of four was living in the Fulham district of London. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Once
again the census confirmed that Eli had been born at Kirtlington and that, at
the age of 41 his occupation was that of a police constable. His wife Emily from Surrey was many years
younger at the age of 28, and their two sons were listed as having been born
in Fulham and were six years and five years respectively. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Ten
years later in April 1911, the family was still together and living in
Fulham. Eli Collett from Kirtlington
was 51 and a police constable, his wife Emily Elizabeth Collett was 38, and
their two sons were William who was 16, and Harry who was 15. It was just three years later that he
retired. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
From
the information kindly provided by his great grandson Ray Collett in 2011, it
is evident that Eli Collett served with the Metropolitan Police Constabulary,
and the information received from the Metropolitan Police Museum makes
interesting, and provides an insight into the man. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Eli
first became a police constable on 22nd April 1889, just prior to
his twenty-ninth birthday, his age at entry being stated at 28. Prior to that date, the record shows that
he was previously employed as a musician, and that he had served with the
King’s Liverpool Regiment. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
He was five feet, nine and a quarter inches
tall, and was assigned the divisional number W586, with a warrant number
74427. His place of birth was
transcribed in error as Hillington in Oxfordshire,
when it should have been Kirtlington. |
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|
|
||||
|
|
His interest in music must have prevailed,
since it is established that he was a member of the Metropolitan Police Band,
with whom he played the drums. Eli
Collett left the police service on 27th April 1914 at the age of
53, and with an annual pension of Ł60 13s 3d.
Upon his retired he was presented with a medallion bearing the
following inscription in relation to his police service: |
||||
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|
|
||||
|
|
"Ex-PC
E Collett, B Division. As a memento
from his comrades of the North Fulham Sub-Division, after 25 years service,
pensioned 26 April 1914" |
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|
|
|
||||
|
|
49P9
|
William Collett |
Born in
1894 at Fulham |
||
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|
49P10
|
Harry Albert Collett |
Born in
1895 at Fulham |
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||||
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||||
49O9
|
Arthur Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1843 and
was the first child of James Collett and Sarah Lambourne. In 1851 Arthur was seven years old but with
no trace of him found after this time, it may be safe to assume that he did
not survive to adulthood. |
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||||
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|
||||
49O10
|
Fanny Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1847, the
eldest daughter of James Collett and Sarah Lambourne. Fanny was three years old in 1851, and 13
years in 1861, and on both occasions was living with his parents at
Kirtlington. |
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||||
|
|
During
the next ten years she moved out of the family home and by 1871 Fanny was a
grocer in the village of Kirtlington and was living there on the main road
with dressmaker Elizabeth Davies and her daughter, six years old April
Davies. At that time in her life Fanny
was unmarried at the age of 23. |
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||||
|
|
Just
a year or so after the 1871 census day Fanny Collett married Thomas Francis
Norridge. Thomas was a stonemason and
came from the village of Combe where many members of the Collett family were
also stonemasons – see Part 38 – The Oxford Stonemasons Line. |
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||||
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|
Over
the next five years Fanny presented her husband with three children, the
first being born at Kirtlington before the family moved to a private house in
the village of Yarnton, to the south-west of Kidlington. The census in 1881 still recorded the
couple living there with their three children. |
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|
|
||||
|
|
Thomas
Norridge was 29 and four years younger than his wife Fanny from Kirtlington
who was 33. The three children were
Francis T Norridge of Kirtlington, who was six, Frederick H Norridge, who was
four, and Florence F Norridge, who was one year old. Frederick and Florence were both born at
Yarnton. |
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|
|
||||
|
|
Also
visiting the family at that time was Fanny’s younger sister Anne Collett
(below). She was described as Annie
Collett of no occupation, aged 16 and from Kirtlington, and sister-in-law to
head of the house Thomas Norridge. |
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||||
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|
||||
49O11
|
John Collett was born at Kirtlington in June 1850
and was nine months old by the time of the census in 151. Most of his life was spent living and
working in Kirtlington where he was ten years old in 1861, and 21 years old
in 1871. However, by 1871 he had left
the family home and was living at the home of his uncle Arthur Lambourne, his
mother’s younger brother. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
John
Collett was described as a boarder and his occupation was that of an
agricultural labourer. Sharing a room
with him in the Lambourne household was John’s younger brother Thomas (below)
with whom he was also presumably working.
Arthur Lambourne was 28 and he and his 31 year old wife, Anna E
Lambourne, already had a son, George A Lambourne, who was three months
old. |
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|
|
||||
|
|
During
the next few years John secured work as steam plough driver and agricultural
machine attendant but for some reason this appears to have only lasted for a
limited period. On losing his job and
becoming unemployed, John returned to live with his parents who, by 1881 were
living with his grandfather, Richard Lambourne, on the main road in
Kirtlington. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
John
Collett of Kirtlington, who was 29, was described as an out-of-work steam
plough driver and agricultural machine attendant. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
It
is unclear where John was living by 1891, but just after the turn of the
century John Collett of Kirtlington was living in the North Devon village of
North Molton, midway between Barnstaple and Tiverton. His occupation was that of a steam engine
driver on the road, and he gave his age as being 46 instead of 49 although
this may have been an error in translation. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
John
was also still a bachelor at the time of the census in April 1911, but by
then was living and working in the Uppingham area of Rutland. The census return recorded him as John
Collett of Kirtlington who was 60 years old. |
||||
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||||
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|
||||
49O12
|
Thomas Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1852 and
was eight years old in 1861 when he was still living there with his
family. Towards the end of the next
decade Thomas left school and began work on the land. By 1871 he was living with his brother John
(above) at the Kirtlington home of the boys’ uncle Arthur Lambourne, from
where they were both working as agricultural labourers. |
||||
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|
|
||||
|
|
The
brothers parted company when John was taken on as a steam plough driver in
Kirtlington, and Thomas left the village to take up employment as a groom in
Middleton Stoney three miles north of Kirtlington. In the census of 1881 Thomas Collett was
one of four stablemen, domestic servants, boarding in The Grooms’ Cottage at
The Stables on the Middleton Park estate in Middleton Stoney. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
The
head coachman was Frederick Chappell from High Cross in Hertfordshire age
23. He was supported by Thomas Collett
who was 28, Alexander Veitch 27 from Edinburgh, Harry Rumbold 27 from
Britford in Wiltshire, and Frederick Edgington 29 from Kirtlington. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Ten
years later Thomas Collett was married to Mary, but in 1891 he was working
away from the family home in Middleton Stoney. At the time of the census that year he was
listed within the Kenilworth registration district of Warwick. He was 37 and his place of birth was
confirmed as Kirtlington. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
It
seems likely that he married Mary shortly after the 1881 Census, and that it
was while he was working at Middleton Stoney that he had met his future wife,
who came from the neighbouring village of Caulcott near Lower Heyford. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
By
1891 their marriage had produced the couple’s first three of their seven
children. Mary Collett, who was listed
under her second name of Jane, was 32, her daughters were Helen A Collett who
was five and Violet Collett who was four, and her son was Harry Collett who
was two years old. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
On
the day of the census in 1891 it is possible that Mary Jane was with-child,
since later that year the couple’s second son was born at Middleton
Stoney. During the next year or so,
the family moved to Kirtlington for a short while, and it was there that
their third son was born. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Another
family moved took place over the following year when they moved to the
village of Bucknell just north of Bicester.
And it was there that they were living in March 1901. The whole family was together at that time,
except for eldest daughter Violet who was absent. It would appear that she was already in
domestic service, since a solitary Violet E Collett aged 15 was living and
working at Evenley Hall in Northamptonshire at that time. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
The
remainder of her family comprised Thomas Collett, 48 year old domestic groom
from Kirtlington, his wife Mary J Collett age 42 from Caulcott, Helen who was
15, Harry who was 12, John age nine, George age six, Cecil three, and
Reginald who was two years old. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Over
the following years eldest daughter Helen left home to be married, daughter
Violet went to work in Croydon, and son Harry moved out but stayed living in
the Bicester area. By then Thomas 58,
and Mary Jane 52, were living in the Woodfield district of the town of
Bicester with their four sons William John 19, George Francis 16, Cecil
Joseph 13, and Reginald Arthur who was 12. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
49P12
|
Helen Ada Collett |
Born in
1885 at Middleton Stoney |
||
|
|
49P11
|
Violet E Collett |
Born in
1886 at Middleton Stoney |
||
|
|
49P13
|
Harry Collett |
Born in
1888 at Middleton Stoney |
||
|
|
49P14
|
John William Collett |
Born in
1891 at Middleton Stoney |
||
|
|
49P15
|
George Francis Collett |
Born in
1894 at Kirtlington |
||
|
|
49P16
|
Cecil Joseph Collett |
Born in
1897 at Bucknell, nr Bicester |
||
|
|
49P17
|
Reginald Arthur Collett |
Born in
1898 at Bucknell, nr Bicester |
||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
|
||||
49O13
|
Elizabeth Collett was born at Kirtlington in
1855. She was five years old in the
census of 1861 when she was living at Kirtlington with her family. However, with no further listing of her in
any later census it has been assumed that she did not survive beyond childhood. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
|
||||
49O14
|
Harry Collett was born at Kirtlington during
August in 1860 and was recorded as being eight months old in the Kirtlington
census of 1861. Presumably like his
sister Elizabeth (above), Harry
also suffered with some childhood illness, since it was on 13th
December 1864, that he was buried at Kirtlington, at the age of just four
years. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
|
||||
49O15
|
Anne Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1864 and
was six years old in 1871 when she was living with her family at
Kirtlington. Sometime during the 1870s
Anne’s parents James and Sarah moved in with her elderly grandfather Richard
Lambourne. It is not clear from the
census in 1881 if Anne was part of this arrangement. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Instead,
at that time Annie Collett, who was 16 and from Kirtlington, was a visitor at
the Yarnton home of her older married sister Fanny Norridge nee Collett. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
|
||||
49O16
|
Ann Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1837 and
was the first child of Charles Collett and Emma Wakefield. In June 1841 Anne was three years old and
was living at Kirtlington with her parents and her sister Emma (below). Ten years later her age was given as being
14. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Thereafter
it is not clear what happened to Ann, since no further record of an Ann
Collett has been found, which might indicate that she was married by 1861
when she would have been 24. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Although
not proved, it is possible she married William Simmonds of Kirtlington with
whom she had two children, and in 1881 the family of four was still living at
Kirtlington. Agricultural labourer William
was 47, his wife Ann was 45, and their two children were Herbert, a groom of
19, and Clara who was eight, both born at Kirtlington. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
|
||||
49O17
|
Emma Eunice Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1839 and
was named after her mother. She
originally appeared in the census record of 1841 as Emma Collett age one
year. However, in the later census
returns she used the name Eunice, when in 1851 she was 11 and living with her
family in Kirtlington. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
It
was also as Eunice Collett that she married William Varney Elliott. This may have taken place just prior to the
census in 1861, since no record of Eunice Collett has been located, although
this seems highly unlikely bearing in mind the age of her two known children. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
An
essential clue to resolving this family line was the fact that William Varney
Elliott was listed as one of the two witnesses at the marriage of Eunice’s
younger brother George Collett (below) in 1866 in London. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
According
to the census in 1881, William V Elliott from Wendlebury near Bicester in
Oxfordshire was 38 and a glazier living at 61 Hanover Street in the St George
Hanover Square district of London.
Living there with him was his wife Eunice Elliott who was 41 and from
Kirtlington, and their two children.
These were Henry Charles Elliott, age five, and Frederick George
Elliott who was one year old, both boys being born at Pimlico. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
|
||||
49O18
|
Julia Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1842 and
was eight years old in the census for that village in 1851. By 1861 Julia had left Oxfordshire to seek
work in London. The census that year
placed Julia Collett of Kirtlington at 19 years of age living and working in
the St George Hanover district of London, although another source states the
place as St Giles St George Bloomsbury. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
|
||||
49O19
|
Clara Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1844 and
was six years old in 1851 when she was with her family at Kirtlington. After leaving school Clara sought work in
Oxford where she was recorded in 1861 at the age of 16. Over the following decade it is very likely
that she became a married woman since there are no records for an equivalent
Clara Collett in the subsequent census returns |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
|
||||
49O20
|
William W Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1846 and
was recorded as living there with his family in 1851 when he was four and
again in 1861 when he was 14. When he
was in his early twenties he married a girl from Kirtlington by the name of
Sarah. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
By
the time of the Kirtlington census in 1871 the marriage had resulted in the
birth of the couple’s first child. The
census that year listed the family of three as William W Collett who was 24,
his wife Sarah who was 23, and their daughter Emma W Collett who was just one
year old. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Five
more children were added to the family during the next ten years, and all of
them born while William and Sarah continued to live in Kirtlington. This was confirmed by the census in 1881
when agricultural labourer William was 34, Sarah was 33, and their six
children were Emma 11, George nine, Clara seven, Ann five, William two, and
baby Fanny who was only five months old. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
During
the next decade the number of children born into the family still living at
Kirtlington increased from six to ten, although by the time of the census in
1891 only the six youngest children, together with the couple’s eldest son
George were still living with William and Sarah in the family home. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
The
Kirtlington census in 1891 listed the family as William 44, Sarah 43, George
19, William 12, Fanny ten, Margaret eight, Jessie seven, Frederick three, and
Eva who was one year old. It is not
clear where the three eldest daughters were on this occasion, but all three
have certainly been located in 1901. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
According
to the census in March 1901 the family comprised William W Collett 54, who
was a general agricultural labourer, Sarah 53, sons George 29 and Frederick
13, and youngest child Eva F Collett who was eleven. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Living
just four doors away in Kirtlington was 61 years old widow Emily Collett with
her daughter Edith and her son Charles. This was William’s stepmother and his
half-sister and half-brother from his father’s second marriage. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
By
April 1911 only daughter Eva was still living with her parents in
Kirtlington, so that family was simply William Collett who was 64, Sarah
Collett who was 63, and Eva Collett who was 21. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
49P18
|
Emma W Collett |
Born in
1869 at Kirtlington |
||
|
|
49P19
|
George Collett |
Born in
1871 at Kirtlington |
||
|
|
49P20
|
Clara Collett |
Born in
1873 at Kirtlington |
||
|
|
49P21 |
Ann Collett |
Born in
1875 at Kirtlington |
||
|
|
49P22
|
William Collett |
Born in
1878 at Kirtlington |
||
|
|
49P23
|
Fanny Collett |
Born in
1880 at Kirtlington |
||
|
|
49P24
|
Margaret M Collett |
Born in
1882 at Kirtlington |
||
|
|
49P25
|
Jessie Elizabeth Collett |
Born in
1883 at Kirtlington |
||
|
|
49P26
|
Frederick Collett |
Born in
1887 at Kirtlington |
||
|
|
49P27
|
Eva Collett |
Born in
1889 at Kirtlington |
||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
|
||||
49O21
|
GEORGE COLLETT was born at Kirtlington around 1848,
the son of Charles Collett and Emma Wakefield. At the time of the census in 1851 George
was three years old and was living with his family at Kirtlington. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
It
should be noted that during his married life it would appear that he let his
wife believe that he was one year old than her so, when she composed his
obituary, the age she gave indicated he was born in 1845 or early 1846. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
While
George was still a young boy he suffered the loss of his mother who
tragically died around the time that his sister Ruth was born in 1852. This sad event left his father with seven
children between the ages of one and 13 to look after. Unable to cope with this, it would appear
that the children were looked after by other members of the Collett family in
Kirtlington. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
However,
some little time after the death of his mother, George’s father was married
again, this time to a young lady who was half his age. From the census in 1861 only George’s
brother William and sister Ruth were living with their father Charles and his
new wife. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
George
on the other hand, who was 13 by then, was living with the family of farmer
William Goodenough in Kirtlington, next door to his uncle Emmanuel Collett
(above), his father’s younger brother.
The Goodenough family was sufficiently affluent to employ six
servants, of which George Collett was the youngest. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
No
baptism records have been so far been found for any members of this line of
the Collett family but, sometime after the census of 1861, George started to
refer to himself as Henry George Collett.
The first actual recording of this name was at the time of his marriage
just five years later. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
While
still living in Kirtlington it is likely that George began working with his
cousin Fanny Collett (Ref. 49O9), who was roughly the same age as George,
since both of them were recorded as being grocers. It was also during his later teenage years
George left Oxfordshire and made his way to London to seek a new life, and it
was there that he worked in a grocer’s shop.
The shop was in a good area of London and very likely served a high
class clientele, through which he may have met his future wife. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
In
order to create the right impression George Collett, now Henry George
Collett, gilded the lily a little by saying that he was the son of builder
Charles Collett. Another falsehood was
that he stated was three years older than his actual age, a fact that he apparently
never revealed to his future wife. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
It
would have been either in 1865 or 1866, when he was actually around 18 years
old, that he met Selina Sarah Shoubridge.
She was the daughter of artist William Shoubridge and Selina Mott who
were married at St Paul’s Covent Garden on 09.04.1844. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
In
1861 William Shoubridge and his family were recorded as living in Hounslow
within the Brentford & Isleworth registration district of London, when
his eldest daughter was listed as Selina Sarah Shoubridge age 13 years. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
The
full Shoubridge family at that time comprised William 49, his wife Selina 36,
and their children William 15, Selina 13, Sydney Garrett nine, Lucy Ann five,
Walter George three, and Beatrice Emily who was under one year old. Sadly just one year later, William’s wife
died on 29.04.1862 when the family was living at Staines Road in Heston. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
The
informant for the death of Selina Shoubridge was an Ann Chapman who may have
been related to William Shoubridge, since his mother Sarah’s maiden name was
Chapman. Curiously the cause of death
was given as ‘suffering from the brain for five months’. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Selina’s
daughter, Selina Sarah Shoubridge was 14 when her mother died in 1862,
following which she was looked after by her grandmother, Sarah Shoubridge who
died two years later in 1864 at the age of 86. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
It
is understood that upon the death of his wife, William Shoubridge returned to
Italy and this was the reason why his daughter Selina Sarah was left in the
care of her grandmother. Therefore
Selina Sarah Shoubridge was once again left on her own following the death of
her grandmother at only 16 years of age.
So it is perhaps not surprising that she agreed to marry Henry Collett
in 1866. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Her
father William Shoubridge was baptised on 30.10.1811 at St George’s Church in
Hanover Square, and was the son of James Shoubridge Esquire. He was educated at Cheam School and later
went to Caius College in Cambridge where he studied architecture under the prolific
British architect Decimus Burton who designed some of the buildings at London
Zoo, and the Palm House at Kew Gardens which was the first large structural
use of wrought iron. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
William
Shoubridge received his Bachelor of Arts Degree in 1841, but then pursued a
career as an artist in oil painting.
And it was his interest in art that took him and his wife Selina to
Florence where their daughter Selina Sarah Shoubridge was born in 1847. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
By
the time of the census in 1871 widower William Shoubridge had returned to
England from Italy and was living in London with his son Walter. Ten years later in 1881 he was living at 1
Colne Villa in Teddington in Middlesex.
Living there with him were his three youngest children, all of whom
had been born at Hounslow. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
William
Shoubridge was 69 years old and was described as a widower and an ‘artist
with a BA in oil painting’. The three
children with him were Walter George age 23, who was a civil engineering
draughtsman, and Lucy Anne 24, and Beatrice Emily 20, who were both described
as housekeepers. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Just
over ten years after that William Shoubridge died on 12.11.1891 when he was
living at ‘Piercefield’ on the Emmerdale Road in Richmond. The informant was his unmarried daughter
Lucy Anne Shoubridge who had been looking after him, and the cause of death
was angina pectoris syncope. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Because
of his superior education and standing in the community, it seems highly
likely that William Shoubridge may have been opposed to the marriage between
his daughter Selina and young Henry George Collett. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
It
may have been for this reason that Henry George Collett and Selina Sarah
Shoubridge were married quite quickly and without any of the bride’s family
being present, and it is this combination of the facts that give rise to the
idea that they did not receive the approval of the Shoubridge family. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
The
wedding took place on 12.10.1866 at St Michael’s Church within the parish of
St Peter Pimlico in London. The record
of the event confirmed that Henry George Collett age 21 (when he was actually 18), a bachelor and a grocer of 13 Upper
Ebury Street, and the son of builder Charles Collett, married 19 year old
Sarah Shoubridge also of 13 Upper Ebury Street, whose father was artist
William Shoubridge. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
It
is highly significant that the two witnesses to the wedding ceremony were
William Varney Elliott and Anne Sinclair.
Had the young couple married with the consent of Selina’s father, one
might have expected to see a member of the Shoubridge family as a witness. What is known is that William Varney
Elliott was the husband of Eunice Collett, who was Henry George’s older
sister and, it is also possible, that Anne Sinclair was his eldest married
sister. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
The
address at 13 Upper Ebury Street may have been where the young couple were
lodging, or may have even been the shop where Henry worked as a grocer. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
It
is interesting to note that the parish of St Peter Pimlico is situated on the
north side of the River Thames and adjacent to the Westminster area of the
city. Not far away is Ebury Street which
runs parallel to Buckingham Palace Road.
From old maps, Upper Ebury Street refers to the section of the road to
the south-west, near to Pimlico Road and Chelsea Barracks. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Another
discrepancy on the marriage certificate is related to the bride’s name. The name is given as Sarah, even though she
was originally named Selina Sarah Shoubridge after her mother Selina
Shoubridge nee Mott. It should be
noted that in all later records she used another name, that of Salina
Collett. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Henry
and Sarah were blessed with the birth of their first child in London just
under eighteen months after they were married, the child being named after
the town in Italy where Sarah had been born.
The registration of the child’s birth confirmed the father was Harry
Collett, a proprietor of houses, and his wife as Selina Sarah Collett, both
of 43 Sewardstone Road West in Bethnal Green. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Shortly
after the arrival of baby Florence Emily Collett, the couple were making
plans to emigrate to a new life in New Zealand. And so it was that on 14th
November 1868 the family of three sailed out of Gravesend on the clipper ship
‘Percy’, skippered by Captain James Cooper. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
The
ship’s passage list recorded the family as Henry George Collett aged 22, his
wife Selina Sarah aged 21, and their daughter Florence who was described as
one to two years old. The voyage lasted three and half months, and they
finally docked at Auckland on the 3rd of March 1869. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Shortly
after their arrival in New Zealand, Salina gave birth to the couple’s second
child Helen Wakefield Collett. The
child’s second name was a tribute to Henry’s mother Emma Wakefield. Tragically though the child was killed in a
freakish accident when she was just fifteen months old. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
It
would appear that the motivation for their move to a new life on the other
side of the world was driven by the New Zealand gold rush of the 1860s. Certainly it has been established that
Henry brought sufficient money with him from England to purchase five hundred
shares of a mining company stock, this considerable sum of money was very likely
acquired from Salina’s side of the family. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Henry
and Selina lived in New Zealand for nearly two years, during which time their
third daughter, Salina, was born. It
was in the latter half of 1872 that they sailed from New Zealand to the west
coast of America, arriving at San Francisco in early 1873. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
The
family then settled in San Francisco and it was there that eight more
children were born into the family.
This was in part confirmed by the 1880 Census for San Francisco which
also included the name of the couple’s oldest son who was named after Henry’s
own father, Charles Collett. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Henry
G Collett of England was 33 and a ‘col in a cigar factory’. His wife was Salina S Collett aged 32 and
from Italy, who was described as ‘keeping house’. Of the six children born into the family by
that time, only five were listed with their parents, following the death of
baby Helen ten years earlier. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
These
were Florence E Collett from England who was 12 and attending school, Salina
E Collett from New Zealand who was nine, Charles W Collett six, Harry G
Collett two, and Clara L Collett who was just two months old. All of the three youngest children had been
born in California. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Also
living with the family on that occasion was James P McSweeney
age 35 and from Ireland, and a widower who was working as a lithographer. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Over
the next seven years two further children were added to the family, and these
were also born while Henry and Salina were still living in San Francisco. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Tragically
when the couple’s youngest child Richard was only three years old, Henry
George Collett died in a wagon accident on 05.04.1891 and the age of 46. The obituary notice in a local San
Francisco newspaper stated that he had been born in Oxfordshire in 1845. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
His
wife Salina would have been 44 at that time, and unbeknown to her, her
husband was actually 43 when he died.
Selina was living in San Francisco with her daughter Selina Edith and
Selina Edith’s husband Frank Gumper at the time of
her death in 1907, having survived the Great Earthquake of 1906. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
A
single combined family burial site has been located in a cemetery in Colma, a town just south of San Francisco, and this
contains the final resting place for George Collett, his wife Selina, and
their children Florence Emily Collett , Selina Edith Gumper
nee Collett (and her husband Frank Gumper), and
Henry George Collett. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
49P28
|
Florence Emily Collett |
Born in
1868 at Bethnal Green, London |
||
|
|
49P29
|
Helen Wakefield Collett |
Born in
1869 in New Zealand |
||
|
|
49P30
|
Selina Edith Collett |
Born in
1871 in New Zealand |
||
|
|
49P31 |
Charles William Collett |
Born in
1874 in San Francisco |
||
|
|
49P32
|
Henry George Collett |
Born in
1877 in San Francisco |
||
|
|
49P33
|
Clara Lucy Collett |
Born in
1880 in San Francisco |
||
|
|
49P34
|
Walter Sydney Collett |
Born in
1881 in San Francisco |
||
|
|
49P35
|
Edgar H
Collett |
Born in
1882 in San Francisco |
||
|
|
49P36
|
Alfred E
Collett |
Born in
1884 in San Francisco |
||
|
|
49P37
|
Richard Claude Collett |
Born in
1885 in San Francisco |
||
|
|
49P38
|
Albert Victor Collett |
Born in
1887 in San Francisco |
||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
|
||||
49O22
|
Ruth Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1853, the
last daughter from the marriage of Emma Wakefield and Charles Collett. This was because her mother died either
during the birth or shortly after, and was buried at Kirtlington on 21st May 1853 aged 35. Following this tragic event Ruth’s father
re-married and by the time of the census in 1861, when Ruth was eight years
old, she was living with her father and her stepmother Emily Collett at
Kirtlington. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Ten
years later Ruth was living and working in the Kensington area of
London. She gave her age as being 20
and she gave her county of birth as Oxfordshire. Over the following years she is likely to
have married since no further records of Ruth Collett have been found. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
|
||||
49O23
|
Thirza Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1862 and
was the first child from the second marriage of widower Charles Collett to
his new wife Emily, following the death of his first wife during the 1850s. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Thirza
was eight years old in 1871 when she was living with her parents at
Kirtlington. Upon leaving school she
sought work in the city of Oxford. By
1881 she was working as a live-in general servant at the home of Frederick
Lovegrove MA, a private tutor from Over Norton in Oxfordshire, at 15 St
John’s Street in the St Mary Magdalen district of the city. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
At
18 years of age, Thirza Collett from Kirtlington was the only servant
employed by the Lovegrove family. No
further record of Thirza Collett has been found after this time which
probably means that she was eventually married. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
|
||||
49O24
|
Edith Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1866 and
by 1871 she was four years old and living with her parents in Kirtlington
where she continued to live into her middle age. Edith was 13 in 1881 and 24 in 1891, and on
both occasions she was still living with her parents at Kirtlington. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Following
the death of her father Charles Collett in the 1890s, Edith and her brother
Charles (below) were the only members of the family still living with her
widowed mother Emily Collett in 1901.
Edith was unmarried and 34 years old at that time. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
During
the first decade of the new century Edith Collett married Walter William
Boddington, and by April 1911 the couple were living in Bicester where Edith
Boddington from Kirtlington was 44 and her husband Walter was 49. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
|
||||
49O25
|
Charles Collett was born at Kirtlington during the
month of February in 1871, and was just two months old on the second of April
1871, the census day. Charles was ten
years old in the next census in 1881 when he was living at Kirtlington with
his family. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
When
he was 20 he was still living with his parents Charles and Emily at the
family home in Kirtlington. However,
during the next few years his father died and by March 1901 it was only
Charles and his older sister Edith (above) who were still living there with
their widowed mother. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Charles
was described as working as an ordinary agricultural labourer at the age of
30. Sometime after this Charles’
sister Edith left the family home to be married, at which point in his life
Charles also became a married man. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
According
to the April census in 1911, Charles Collett of Kirtlington was 40, while his
wife Ethel was only 30. At that time
in their lives the couple had living with them Charles’ 71 year old widowed
mother, Emily Collett, but no children of their own. It is therefore possible, in view of
Ethel’s age, that she and Charles may have had children that were born after
this time. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
By the time Charles was nearly twice
his age in 1911, he died at Kirtlington, where he was buried on 2nd
December 1950, at the age of 79, thus confirming his year of birth as having
been 1871. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
|
||||
49O26
|
Albert Edwin Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1875 and
was living there with his family in 1881 when he was six years old and again
in 1891 when he was 16. Not long after
that, his father Charles died at Kirtlington and, a few year later, towards
the end of the century Albert married Ann who was around five or six years
older than Albert. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
The
couple’s first child was born prior to the census in 1901, since this
recorded the family of three living at Kirtlington as domestic gardener
Albert Collett who was 26, his wife Ann who was 32 and from Northend near
Burton Dassett in Warwickshire, and their daughter Ethel who was not yet one
year old and had been born at Kirtlington, where all the couple’s subsequent
children were born. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Three
further children were added to the family during the next decade, so by April
1911 the family still living at Kirtlington comprised Albert who was 36, Ann
who was 42, and their four children Ethel Collett who was 10, Linda Collett
who was nine, Albert Collett who was seven, and Constance Collett who was two
years old. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Albert Edwin Collett, who was born
around 1875, was buried at Kirtlington on 18th March 1936, aged
61. It was nearly five years after the
death of Albert that his widow Ann Collett was buried there on 3rd
February 1941. Her age at the time of
her death, being 72, corresponds exactly with the ages that she gave in both
of the census returns of 1901 and 1911. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Their son Albert Edwin Collett, who
was born at Kirtlington on 31st January 1904, was baptised at the
parish church of St Mary the Virgin on 27th March 1904, when his
name was simply recorded as Edwin Collett.
Although nothing further is known about him at this time, it is
established from the burial records at Kirtlington that he died in 1986 and
was buried there on 9th October 1986 at the age of 82. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
49P39
|
Ethel Collett |
Born in 1900 at Kirtlington |
||
|
|
49P40
|
Linda Collett |
Born in 1902 at Kirtlington |
||
|
|
49P41
|
Albert Edwin Collett |
Born in 1904 at Kirtlington |
||
|
|
49P42 |
Constance Collett |
Born in 1908 at Kirtlington |
||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
|
||||
49O27
|
Evelyn E Collett was born at Kirtlington during
December in 1880 and was the last child born to Charles Collett and his
second wife Emily. The census on the
second of April the following year listed Evelyn E E Collett as being just three
months old. Ten years later at the age
of ten Evelyn was still living in Kirtlington with her family. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Two
things appear slightly odd in the next two census returns. The first in 1901 placed Evelyn E E Collett
of Kiddington, rather than Kirtlington, working as a parlour maid in the
Headington district of Oxford at the age of 23. |
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The
second, ten years later in 1911, identified an Evelyn Townsend from
Kirtlington, age 31, living in the Islington area of London with her
children. However, with no husband
listed Evelyn was described as being a male, when perhaps she was a widow. |
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One
other possibility in the census of 1911 is an Evelyn Tyler of Kirtlington who
was married to Harry Tyler of Little Haseley near Oxford who, together with
their two sons, was living in Oxford.
Harry was 42 and a labourer, Evelyn was 33, Lionel Tyler was 13, and
Clarence Tyler was ten years old. |
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49O28
|
Thomas Emmanuel Collett was born at Kirtlington during December
in 1860 and, as Thomas E Collett, he was five months old at the time of the
Kirtlington census in April 1861. On
that occasion he was living there with his parents; his father being Emmanuel
Collett, who was in his mid to late thirties when he married his mother Emily,
who was around twelve years younger. |
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Apart from his inclusion in the
census of 1861, the only other record for the child that has been found was
the details of his burial at Kirtlington, which took place on 8th
November 1864, when his full name of Thomas Emmanuel Collett was used. Curiously his age at the time of his death
was recorded as only three years, when in fact his was just short of his
fourth birthday. |
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49O29
|
William J Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1863,
and was most likely the only surviving son of Emmanuel and Emily
Collett. In 1871 and 1881 he was seven
years old and 17 years of age respectively while living at Kirtlington with
his father, mother and sister Mary (below).
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By
1891, sister Mary had moved out of the family home in Kirtlington leaving
just William as the only child still living with his parents. William was recorded as being 25 rather
than 26 or 27, but after this no trace of him has been found anywhere in the
United Kingdom in either 1901 or 1911, so it seems likely that he had
possibly emigrated by the end of the nineteenth century. |
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49O30
|
Mary Ann Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1866 and
was four years old at the time of the Kirtlington census in 1871. In 1881 she was still living there with her
family at the age of 14, but thereafter no record of her has been found,
which may suggest that she became a married lady. |
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Just
before 1891 Mary Ann Collett of Kirtlington married Amos John George of
Kirtlington and shortly after they were married the couple moved into the St
Aldates area of Oxford. The census in
1891 recorded the couple as Amos J George 31, and his wife Mary A George 25. |
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The
following year their only son Frederick John George was born in Oxford during
1892 as confirmed in the Oxford census of 1901. This stated that Amos J George of Kirtlington
was a temperance secretary at 41, his wife Mary also of Kirtlington was 35,
and their son was eight years old. |
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By
April 1911 Mary Ann George from Kirtlington was living still living in the St
Aldates district of Oxford at the age of 45, and with her was her husband 51
year old Amos John George, and their son Frederick who was 18. |
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49O31
|
Dora Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1849, and
was the base-born daughter of unmarried Eliza Collett of Kirtlington. By the time Dora was one year old the
Kirtlington census of 1851 placed her living with her mother at the home of
her grandmother Sarah Collett nee Wakefield. |
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It
is likely that Dora’s mother was married during the following years but did
not take her daughter into the marriage.
Instead, in 1861 Dora Collett, listed in that year’s Kirtlington
census at Dozia Collett, was 12 years old and was
living with her uncle, Emmanuel Collett and his family. |
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Ten
years later Dora was no longer living with her uncle and, being over 20 years
of age, may have been married by the time of the 1871 Census. |
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49P1
|
Richard William
Collett was born at
Kirtlington in May 1870 and was recorded as being 11 months old in the
Kirtlington census of 1871. He was the
eldest child of Andrew Collett of Kirtlington and his wife Sarah from Burton
Dassett in Warwickshire. |
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When
Richard was just a couple years old his parents moved to Warwickshire and
settled in the village of Knightcote within the parish of Burton
Dassett. And it was there that all of Richard’s
seven siblings were born over the following years. By 1881 he was ten years old and after a
further ten years Richard was working as an agricultural labourer at the age
of 20. |
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At
that time in his life, in 1891, he may have been working with his father and
his two younger brothers Andrew and Eli (below), since all four of them were
recorded in the census return as agricultural labourers. However, it is possible that Richard later
joined the army as no record of him has been found in 1901 at the time of the
Boer War, or again in 1911 when he may have moved abroad. |
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49P2
|
Emily Collett was born at Knightcote in 1874 after
her parents moved there from Kirtlington.
By the time of the census in 1881 Emily was six years old and was
living with her family at Knightcote.
No further record of her after this time has been found, and she was
certainly not living with her family in 1891, so it may be safe to assume
that she died as a result of some childhood illness. |
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49P3
|
Andrew Collett was born at Knightcote in 1877 where
he was living with his family in 1881 at the age of three years, and again in
1891 when he was 13 and was working as an agricultural labourer with his two
brothers Richard (above) and Eli (below), and their father. |
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Eventually
Andrew left Knightcote and move to Birmingham where in 1901 he was recorded
as living within the Aston area of the city.
Living with him on that occasion was his younger brother Henry (below)
and both of them were employed by the London North Western Railway. Andrew was 23 and his occupation was that
of a plate layer, while his place of birth was confirmed as Knightcote. |
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|
Towards
the end of the next decade Andrew married Ada and this produced two children
for the couple prior to April 1911. Andrew
was 32 and once again living in the Aston district of Birmingham. His wife Ada was 25, and their two children
were Alfred Sidney Mos Collett who was two, while Samuel Mos Collett who only
four months old. |
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49Q1
|
Alfred
Sidney Mos Collett |
Born in 1908
at Birmingham |
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49Q2
|
Samuel Mos
Collett |
Born in
December 1910 at Birmingham |
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49P4
|
Eli Collett was born at Knightcote in 1878 and
was two years old in 1881. Within ten
years he had left school and in 1891 he was already working with his father and
two older brothers as an agricultural labourer at the age of 12. |
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Eli
was still living in the family home at Knightcote in March 1901, and by that
time he was 22 and his occupation was that of a stone-breaker, possible
working with his father who was a roads man.
Unfortunately, just like his older brother Richard (above), no trace
of Eli Collett has been found in the census of 1911, and both of them may
have emigrated by that time. |
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||||
49P5
|
Thomas Collett was born at Knightcote in early
March in 1881 since he was only one month old for the census that year on
third April. He was still living with
his family at Knightcote in 1891 and 1901.
For the first of these Thomas was ten years old and was still
attending the village school. |
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|
On
leaving school a few years later he began his working life as an agricultural
labourer like his father and his older brothers. Just after the turn of the century Thomas
who was born at Knightcote was still living there with his parents at the age
of 20, when he was confirmed as an agricultural labourer. |
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It
was some time after March 1901 that Thomas married Edith, and by April 1911
the childless couple were living at Knightcote not far from Thomas’
parents. He was confirmed in the
census return as 30 years old although his place of birth was stated as being
Burton Dassett rather than Knightcote.
His wife Edith was 29. |
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49P6
|
John Henry Collett was born at Knightcote in 1884, the
son of Andrew and Sarah Collett. It
would appear from the records that he was more commonly known as Henry, when
he was recorded as living with his parents in the Knightcote census of 1891
at the age of six years. Upon leaving
school around six years later it would appear that Henry went to live at
Aston in Birmingham with his older brother Andrew (above). |
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|
It
also seems likely that it was Andrew who secured work for his young brother
as a railway porter with the London North Western Railway. This was verified by the census in 1901
when Henry Collett, age 16 and of Knightcote, was living in the Aston
district, and where he was described as a porter lad. |
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|
Rather
curiously in the census of 1911, the only male Collett born at Knightcote
around 1884 was serving with the Royal Navy at Devonport in Devon, and was
described as A W Collett aged 26. So
the only query is over the use of the initials, which may have been an error
in transcription. In addition to that,
it is known from the First World War military records that John Henry Collett
of Knightcote served with the Royal Navy.
The records also show he was born in 1884 and that he was the son of
Andrew and Sarah Collett of Knightcote. |
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Private
John Henry Collett was Private PLY/14601 serving with the Royal Marine Light
Infantry when he was killed on 31.05.1916 at the age of 32. His next-of-kin was named as his wife
Katherine T Collett of 6 Bishop’s Buildings in Exeter. The name of John Henry Collett appears on
the Plymouth Naval Memorial. |
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49P7
|
Elizabeth P Victoria
Collett was born at
Knightcote in 1887. It was as
Elizabeth P V Collett aged three years that she was recorded in the
Knightcote census of 1891 when she was living there with her large
family. |
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|
Ten
years later she completed her education, but went back to the village school
in Knightcote to train as a school teacher.
In the census return for March 1901 she was described as 13 years old
Victoria Collett of Knightcote whose occupation was that of a school
teacher. |
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|
Elizabeth
was still living with her parents and at the same village school was her
younger brother William (below).
Elizabeth Collett was still unmarried ten years later when she was
living and working in London. The
census in 1911 listed her as being 24 and from Warwickshire. |
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49P8
|
William Collett was born at Knightcote in 1892 and
was the last child born to Andrew Collett of Kirtlington and his wife Sarah
from Tackley in Oxfordshire. In March
1901 he was eight years old and was attending the village school in
Knightcote where his sister Elizabeth (above) was working as a teacher. |
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|
William
was the only child still living with his parents in April 1911 when he was 18
years old. Although the earlier
records showed he was born at Knightcote, on this occasion his place of birth
was given as Burton Dassett. |
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Additional
information: There were two other Colletts living in
Knightcote in April 1911. The first of
these is featured in Part 46 – The Charlton-on-Otmoor Line and this is Eliza
Collett who was 55 and living alone, the widow and second wife of Henry
Collett (Ref. 46O12) of Murcott. |
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The
second unfortunately has not yet been placed in any of the other Collett
families featured on the Collett website.
He was bachelor William Collett who was 25 and his little known
details have therefore been included here, in the hope that his full family
background can be identified at some time in the future. |
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William Collett living at Knightcote in April 1911
was an agricultural labourer who was born at Bishop’s Itchington in
Warwickshire in 1885. His parents were
William Collett of Shutford near
Banbury, who was also an agricultural labourer, and his wife Elizabeth
Collett of Bishop’s Itchington. |
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|
Four
years before he was born William’s parents were 33 and 31 respectively and
were living at Bishop’s Itchington with their daughter Jane A Collett. William’s
sister Jane was four years old in 1881 and the census return stated that she
had been born at Thornhill Lees near Dewsbury in Yorkshire. Living with the family on that occasion
were general labourers Edward Gardner 37 of Burton Dassett and Edward Randall
27 of Bishop’s Itchington. |
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|
By
the time of the next census in 1891 the family comprised William Collett 44,
Elizabeth 41, and their two children William J Collett who was five, and Ruth A Collett who was three. It would appear from the census that their
daughter Jane Collett was already living and working in Leamington Spa by
then at the age of 15, when her place of birth was confirmed as Bishop’s
Itchington. |
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|
Ten
years later in March 1901 the family had moved to nearby Burton Dassett. William Collett from Shutford was 55, his
wife Elizabeth from Bishop’s Itchington was 51, and their two children were
William who was 15 and Ruth Ann who was 13, both of them born at Bishop’s
Itchington, and both father and son working as agricultural labourers. |
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|
Ruth Ann Collett, the daughter of William Collett of
Shutford, was married in 1908 to Frederick William Glenn at Christchurch in
Coventry. The church record also
confirmed that Ruth was 21 and a spinster, and that Frederick was 22 and a
grocer. |
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|
In
1911 a Ruth Ann Glenn from Warwickshire was 23 and was living in Coventry
with her husband Frederick William who was 26, together with their two sons
Frederick William John Glenn who was two, and Ernest George Glenn who was
one. |
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|
William’s
father, William Collett who was
born at Shutford in 1847, was the son of Ann Collett nee Mander
of Stretton-on-Fosse. In 1851 Ann was
29 and was married, but a pauper working as an agricultural labourer, which
might suggest that her husband was away at that time. She was living with her son William, who
was three, at the Radway home of her widowed father, Charles Mander from Avon Dassett. |
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|
In
the following two censuses she was listed as Ann Collett 38, and Annie Collett
47, while living within the Swalcliffe & Banbury area with her son
William who was 13 and 23 respectively. |
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49P9
|
William Collett was born at Fulham in 1894, the
eldest son of Eli Collett of Kirtlington and his wife Emily Elizabeth Collett
from Surrey. In both the census of
1901 and 1911 William was living at Fulham with his parents and younger
brother Harry (below). |
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|
It
is understood that at the outbreak of the First World War William joined 61st
Company Machine Gun Corps of the Infantry as Private 65691. Tragically it was towards the end of the
war that he was killed in frontline action in Belgium on 15.04.1918. Panel 11 of the Ploegsteert Memorial bears
his name. |
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|
By
that time in his life it would appear that he had moved out of London and was
living in Leagrave near Luton. With no
next-of-kin listed within his army records, it may be assumed that he was not
married. |
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||||
49P10
|
Harry Albert Collett was born at Fulham in 1895, the
youngest son of Eli and Emily Collett.
And it was at Fulham that he was living with his family in both 1901,
when he was five years old, and again in 1911, when he was 15. At the onset of war in 1914, Harry joined
the British Army and very likely suffered from the ill-effects of the gas
warfare during the Great War. |
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||||
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|
After
the war Harry was employed as a railwayman, although he did not enjoy good
health and suffered from a pulmonary illness said to been caused by his
exposure to the gas used in the First World War. He was a married man, although no details
are available at this time, and his marriage produced three children for the
couple, two sons and a daughter. |
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49Q3
|
a Collett
son |
Date of
birth unknown |
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49Q4
|
Ernest William Collett |
Born in
1921 |
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49Q5
|
a Collett
daughter |
Date of
birth unknown |
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49P12
|
Helen Ada Collett was born in 1885 at Middleton Stoney
which is just three miles north of Kirtlington. She was the eldest daughter and first child
of Thomas and Mary Jane Collett. In
1891 Helen A Collett was five years old and was living at Middleton Stoney
with her parents and siblings Violet and Harry (below). |
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|
Shortly
after the census day in 1891 Helen and her family left Middleton Stoney when
they moved to Bucknell to the north of Bicester. And it was there that Helen was living in
March 1901 at the age of 15. |
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|
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||||
|
|
By
1911 an Ada Helen Freeman, age 25 who was born at Middleton Stoney, was
living there, although no husband or any children were listed with her at
that time. It is therefore possible
that this was, or was not, Helen Ada Collett. |
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||||
49P11
|
Violet E Collett was born at Middleton Stoney in
1886, where she was living with her family at the time of the census in 1891
at the age of four years. During the
following year Violet and her family moved to Bucknell near Bicester, but by
1901 she had started work and was living in the Evenley area of south
Northamptonshire where she was recorded as Violet E Collett aged 15 and from
Middleton Stoney. |
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||||
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|
One
of the major establishments in the Evenley area was the children’s home of
Evenley Hall, and this may have been where she first worked before moving
south to London. According to the
April census of 1911, Violet Collett from Middleton Stoney was 24 and was
living and working in the Croydon district of Surrey. |
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||||
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||||
49P13
|
Harry Collett was born at Middleton Stoney in 1888
and was two years old at the time of the Middleton Stoney census of
1891. Ten years later, after the
family had moved to Bucknell, Harry Collett was listed with his family living
there at the age of 12. |
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||||
|
|
After
another ten years Harry Collett from Middleton Stoney was an unmarried man of
22, who was still living and working within the Bicester registration
district. |
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||||
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|
||||
49P14
|
John William Collett was born at Middleton Stoney in 1891
but this took place after the fifth of April that year. Not long after he was born he and his
family left Middleton when they moved to Bucknell near Bicester. At the time of the Bucknell census in March
1901 he was simply listed as John Collett aged nine years. |
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||||
|
|
Ten
years after this, in April 1911, he and his family were still living in the
Bicester area but on this occasion he was recorded as William John Collett of
Middleton Stoney who was 19. |
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||||
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||||
49P15
|
George Francis Collett
was born at
Kirtlington in 1894, although before this his parents had been living at
Middleton Stoney, and after his birth they were living at Bucknell. The Bucknell census in 1901 included the
Collett family of George Collett who was six years old. |
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|
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||||
|
|
The
next census in April 1911 listed George, again with his family, under his
full name of George Francis Collett of Kirtlington who was 16. |
||||
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||||
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||||
49P16
|
Cecil Joseph Collett was born at Bucknell near Bicester
in 1897 and, as Cecil Collett age three years, he was living there with his
family in 1901. It was as Cecil Joseph
Collett age 13 that he was recorded in the next census of 1911. |
||||
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||||
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||||
49P17
|
Reginald Arthur
Collett was born at
Bucknell in 1898, the youngest child of Thomas and Mary Jane Collett. He was living with his family at Bucknell
in 1901, when the census that year listed him as two years old Reginald
Collett of Bucknell. Ten years later
in the Bicester area census on 1911 he was Reginald Arthur Collett of
Bucknell who was 12 years old. |
||||
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||||
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||||
49P18
|
Emma W Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1869, the
eldest child of William W Collett and his wife Sarah who was one year old in
the Kirtlington census of 1871. By
1881 Emma was 11 years old and was still living at Kirtlington with her
family. |
||||
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|
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||||
|
|
The
whereabouts of Emma has not been discovered in 1891, but a few years after
this she married William Rogers of Kirtlington and the couple settled in the
village of Lower Heyford just three miles north of Kirtlington. And it was at Lower Heyford where their
children were born and where the family was living in 1901. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
William
Rogers aged 34 was a plate-layer on the railway, his wife Emma Rogers was 31,
and their two children at that time were Elsie Rogers who was four, and
William Rogers who was two. It would
also appear from the census that Emma’s young sister Jessie Collett (below)
was also living with the Rogers family at that time. However, no trace of the family has been
found in 1911. |
||||
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|
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||||
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||||
49P19
|
George Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1871, the
eldest son of William and Sarah Collett.
He was nine years old in 1881 and nineteen years old in 1891, and on
both occasion he was living with his family at Kirtlington. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
According
to the census in March 1901, George Collett from Kirtlington was still living
there at the age of 29, where he was working as a domestic gardener. Ten years later in 1911 he was back living
and working in the Bicester area at the age of 39. |
||||
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|
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||||
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||||
49P20
|
Clara Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1873 and
was seven years of age in the census of 1881.
By the age of 17 Clara had already left the family home in Kirtlington
and in March 1901 she was employed as a lady’s maid in the Chelsea area of
London at the age of 27. |
||||
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|
|
||||
|
|
Her
place of birth was confirmed as Kirtlington, and living and working in the
house with her was her younger sister Margaret M Collett (below), also of
Kirtlington. |
||||
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|
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||||
|
|
Clara
was not married ten years later in 1911, when she was recorded in the census
that year as Clara Collett from Kirtlington in Oxfordshire who was 37 and
still living and working in the Chelsea registration district of London. |
||||
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||||
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||||
|
49P21 |
Ann Collett was born at Kirtlington in
1875. She was five years old at the
time of the census in 1881 when she was still living at Kirtlington with her
family, although ten years later in 1891 she had already moved away from the
village. |
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
Like
two of her earlier ancestors, Ann married a member of the Wakefield family of
Kirtlington, who may have been a direct descendent from the earlier family of
Joseph and Mary Wakefield. Ann Collett
married Fred Wakefield sometime during the latter half of the 1890s and by
1901 the childless couple were living in Kirtlington where Fred was a bread
baker. |
||||
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|
|
||||
|
|
He
was 28 and his wife Annie Wakefield was 25.
Ten years later the couple were still living in Kirtlington when Fred
was 38 and Annie was 35. |
||||
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||||
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||||
49P22
|
William Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1878 and
he was two years old by the time of the Kirtlington census of 1881. He was still there with his parents ten
years later at the age of 12. Curiously
no further record of William has been found in either 1901 or 1911. |
||||
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||||
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||||
49P23
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Fanny Collett was born at Kirtlington during
November 1880 and was recorded as being five months old in the census of
1881. She was ten years old in 1891,
and by the time she was 20 in 1901 Fanny was living in the St Giles district
of Oxford city. |
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Fanny’s
place of birth was confirmed as Kirtlington, but rather oddly for an
unmarried lady, she was not credited in the census return as having an
occupation. No record of her has been
found in 1911, so it might be assumed that she was married by then. |
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49P24
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Margaret M Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1882 and
was eight years old by the time of the Kirtlington census of 1891 when she
was living there with her family. |
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By
the time of the next census in March 1901, Margaret M Collett was 18 and was
working as a parlour maid at a house in the Chelsea area of London where her
older sister Clara Collett (above) was also employed. Both girls were recorded as having been
born at Kirtlington in Oxfordshire. |
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49P25
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Jessie Elizabeth
Collett was born at
Kirtlington in 1883. By 1891 she was
seven years old and was living with her family at Kirtlington, although by
1901 she had left the family home and was living with her married sister Emma
Rogers nee Collett (above) and her family at nearby Lower Heyford. The census return listed her as Jessie
Collett from Kirtlington who was 15 and employed as a housemaid. |
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It
would seem likely that the lure of work in London, where her two sisters
Clara and Margaret (above) were working in 1901, was sufficient enough to
persuade Jessie to try to seek her fortune there, since it was there that she
was recorded in the census of 1911. |
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At
that time her sister Clara was still living and working in the Chelsea area,
while Jessie was living and working within the Paddington census registration
district. The census return for
Paddington confirmed that she was Jessie Elizabeth Collett from Kirtlington,
who was 26 years old and unmarried. |
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49P26
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Frederick Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1887
where he was listed as being three years old in 1891. He was still living there with his parents
in 1901 when he was 13 years of age. |
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49P27
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Eva Collett was born at Kirtlington in 1889 and
was the youngest child of William and Sarah Collett. Eva was one year old in 1891 and was 11
years old in March 1901. On both
occasions she was living with her parents at Kirtlington, and was the only
one of the couple’s ten children still living with them in April 1911 when
she was 21. |
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49P28
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Florence Emily Collett
was born at Bethnal
Green in London on 15.03.1868. At that
time her father was referred to as Harry Collett and her mother was recorded
as Selina Sarah Collett, and they were living at 43 Sewardstone Road West in
Bethnal Green. Her father’s occupation
was stated as being that of a proprietor of houses, and this could well be a
link back to the building business of his father. |
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By
the time Florence was eight months old, she and her parents were sailing to
New Zealand, eventually arriving at Auckland in March 1869. The family only stayed in New Zealand for a
short few years before moving onto America.
Sadly, Florence died in San Francisco in 1897 at the age of 29. |
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Florence
Emily Collett was buried in the family grave at the cemetery in Colma, to the south of San Francisco, where her parents
and two of her siblings were also buried. |
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49P29
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Helen Wakefield
Collett was born in
New Zealand in 1869 and the birth appears to have taken place within a few
months of her parents’ arrival in New Zealand. Three years after she was born her family
left New Zealand and sailed to America.
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However,
Helen did not make the journey with them as she had died when she was just
fifteen months old. Tragically, Helen
died in a freak accident involving a horse drawn wagon carrying quarried
material from a nearby mine. |
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49P30
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Selina Edith Collett was born in New Zealand during 1871,
and so made the long journey with her parents and sister to San
Francisco. Later, going by her middle
name Edith, she married Frank Gumper in 1905 and
then had one child Norma R. Gumper born in 1908. |
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Sadly,
both Edith and Frank met a tragic end as they were killed in single car
accident in which the car that Frank was driving plunged off a winding
mountain road south of San Francisco and disappeared into the steep canyon
below. A search party led by Edith’s
brother Albert eventually found the wreckage. |
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Selina
Edith Gumper, and her husband Frank were buried in
the Collett family grave at Colma, to the south of
San Francisco, where her parents and two of her siblings were also buried. |
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49P31
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Charles William
Collett was born at San Francisco in 1874 shortly after his
parents arrived there from New Zealand.
As the oldest son, it can be assumed that Charles was pressed to find
employment, as his father died suddenly when Charles was only 16. |
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Eventually
he successfully established a tailoring business, partnering with his brother
Albert Victor Collett (below) and R. McDonald. Charles was ultimately the
proprietor of three tailor shops – two in San Francisco and one in Seattle. |
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He
later married Henrietta Driscoll and the marriage produced two children for
Charles and Henrietta, both born while the couple were living in San
Francisco. |
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49Q6
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Charles Elmer Collett |
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