PART
FORTY-SEVEN
The
Fyfield & Eastleach Martin
Updated May 2025
This
is the family line of Timothy Mark Collett [47R6] of Cirencester, which is
denoted by the names in capital letters, and Frances Francis (see Ref. 47O14)
The
settlement that this line centres on is ‘Fifield’
near Eastleach Martin in Gloucestershire, very close to the county boundary
with Oxfordshire. Today it is spelt
Fyfield, and is NOT the Fifield in Oxfordshire which is situated midway between
Burford and Upper Slaughter in Gloucestershire.
Being a hamlet, Fyfield did not have a church of its own in those early days
and this was why baptisms, marriages and burials were conducted at the parish
church of St Michael & St Martin in nearby Eastleach Martin
The
research so far has not revealed any links to any of the other Gloucestershire
lines and the only common ground is the village of Cowley. In 1881 members of this branch of the family
were living there with Colletts from Part 3 - The Chedworth Line
GEORGE
COLLETT [47L1] was born
around 1760 and possibly at Fyfield, the older brother of Richard Collett (below),
whose parents are not known. George
later married Mary and their two known sons were baptised in a joint ceremony
at Eastleach Martin. It has not been
determined if the boys were twins, but it is more likely that they were not
because George would have been thirty-six years of age on the day they were
baptised. Previously listed as a child
of this family was Richard Collett, but it has since been discovered that he
was not the child of George and Mary, nor was he born at Fyfield in
Gloucestershire, but at Fifield in Oxfordshire.
His details have therefore been removed and placed in the Appendix the
end of this file for future reference
47M1
– George Collett was
born circa 1792 at Fyfield
47M2
– CHARLES COLLETT was
born in 1795 at Fyfield
Richard
Collett [47L2] was born
at Fyfield in 1763, the younger brother of George (above) who, with his
brother, may have been the first Collett name recorded for that area of
Gloucestershire. Around 1790 he married
Mary who was ten years younger than Richard, having been born in 1773, with all
of their children probably born at Fyfield, although they were all baptised at
Eastleach Martin. Mary died at Fyfield
and was buried at Eastleach Martin on 24th July 1822 at the age of
49. Eleven years later Richard died and
was buried with his wife on 17th April 1833. The entry in the parish register described
Mary as being ‘of Fifield’, while her
husband was recorded as ‘Richard Collett
of Eastleach Martin alias Burthorpe’.
47M3
– Thomas Collett was
born in 1794 at Fyfield
47M4
– Henry Collett was
born in 1798 at Fyfield
47M5
– Jane Collett was born
in 1800 at Fyfield
47M6
– Eleanor Collett was
born in 1803 at Fyfield
47M7
– Mary Collett was born
in 1807 at Fyfield
47M8
– Richard Collett was
born in 1811 at Fyfield
47M9
– Elizabeth Collett was
born in 1814 at Fyfield
George Collett[47M1] was born around 1792 at Fyfield, the son
of George and Mary Collett. He was
baptised at Eastleach Martin on 12th October 1796, the same day that
his brother Charles (below) was baptised there. It is his brother Charles’ connection with
Alvescot, three miles east of Eastleach Martin, which may be confirmation
enough that George also moved east into Oxfordshire, where he met and married
Elizabeth Shayler. Elizabeth may have
been a few years old when she was baptised at Bampton, midway between Faringdon
and Witney, on 9th June 1805, the daughter of William and Elizabeth
Shayler. It was also at Bampton that
George Collett married Elizabeth Shayler on 12th April 1819, and that
was also where all of their children were born
Just
over six months after they were married Elizabeth presented George with their
first child, who was baptised at Bampton, as were the couple’s subsequent
children. Tragedy seems to have struck
the family between the birth of the last child and the census in June 1841
because, by then, there would appear to be no record of George or his wife
Elizabeth. Likewise, no record has been
found of their eldest three children, while their two youngest sons, William
and George, were living apart but within the Witney & Bampton registration
district. The couple’s two youngest
daughters were inmates at Witney Union Workhouse, where they were presumably
orphans
471N1
– Mary Anne Collett was
born in 1819 at Bampton
471N2
– Job Collett was born
in 1821 at Bampton
471N3
– Joseph Collett was
born in 1823 at Bampton
471N4
– William Collett was
born in 1825 at Bampton
471N5
– George Collett was
born in 1827 at Bampton
471N6
– Esther Elizabeth Collett
was born in 1830 at Bampton
471N7
– Martha Collett was
born in 1835 at Bampton
CHARLES COLLETT [47M2] was born at Fyfield in 1796 and was
baptised at Eastleach Martin on 12th October 1796. He later married Sophia during 1830 when she
was 20 years of age, having been born at Alvescot around 1810. The marriage produced eleven children for
Charles and Sophia and all of them were born at Fyfield within the parish of
Eastleach Martin to the west of Lechlade.
It is also confirmed that the baptism of the couple’s first two children
was conducted at the parish church in Eastleach Martin. According to the first national census held on
6th June 1841, Charles was given the rounded age of 40, while his wife Sophia
had a rounded age of 30. Charles was
employed as an agricultural labourer and living with the couple at Fyfield were
their first six children. They were Mary
aged 11, Charles junior who was 10, Robert who was eight, Eleanor who was six,
Luanna who was four, and Enos who was two years old. The family was extended by a further three
children during the next decade, although the family suffered the loss of one
of those children with the death of seven-year-old Josiah in 1850
On
the day of the next census for Fyfield in 1851 Charles and Sophia were listed
more accurately as being aged 53 and 40 respectively. Their children on that occasion were named as
Mary Collett who was 21, Charles Collett who was 20, Robert Collett who was 18,
Eleanor Collett who was 16, Susanna Collett who was 14, Enos Collett who was
12, John Collett who was 10, Obadiah Collett who was five, and Emmanuel Collett
who was three years of age. Five and a
half years after the census day in 1851, Sophia Collett made the mark of a
cross as one of the witnesses at the Bibury wedding of her daughter Eleanor
(Ellen) Collett, the other witness being Sophia’s son Enos
During
the remaining half of that decade the format of the family changed and, by the
time of the census in 1861, they were residing at Bowthorpe village (in
Eastleach Martin) where 63-year-old Charles Collett from Eastleach Martin
was still working as an agricultural labourer. Sophia Collett from Alvescot was 51, and living
with the couple that day were their three sons Obadiah Collett who was 16,
Emanuel Collett who was 12, and Nehemiah Collett who was nine years old. All three sons were confirmed as having been born
at Eastleach Martin, and all were employed as agricultural labourers, most
likely working alongside their father.
Also staying with the family at that time was the couple’s grandson
William Collett, who was four years old and born at Northleach, who was the
base-born son of Charles and Sophia’s daughter Luanna Collett
According
to the next census for the Northleach & Bibury registration district in
1871, the family of Charles and Sophia Collett was still living in
Fyfield. Charles from Fyfield was 75 and
described as ‘out of employ’, while his wife Sophia from Alvescot was
63. Living with the couple was their son
Nehemiah Collett, aged 19 and from Fyfield, who was an agricultural labourer,
and their grandson William Collett who was 14 and from Northleach, who was also
an agricultural labourer
Twelve
months before the next census in 1881, the death of Charles Collett was
recorded at Northleach (Ref. 6a 283) during the first three months of 1880,
when he was 83. His passing was
confirmed in the census the following year, when Sophia Collett was a widow at
the age of 69 (sic) who was still living in Eastleach as the head of the
household and formerly the wife of a labourer.
Living with her that day, was her granddaughter Ellen Silman of Black
Bourton in Oxfordshire, the daughter of Charles and Sophia’s now married
daughter Luanna, who was attending the nearby school. Ten years later in April 1891, Sophia gave
her age as being 80 at a time when she was a visitor at the Black Bourton home
of her daughter Luanna Silman. Sophia
died at Eastleach near the start of the following year and was described as
being 'of Fifield' in the burial
register for 1892. Her death was
subsequently recorded at Northleach (Ref. 6a 332) during the first three months
of 1892 at the age of 84 (sic), the informant not knowing the year in which she
was born
47N8
– Mary Ann Collett was
born in 1829 at Fyfield
47N9
– Charles Collett was
born in 1831 at Fyfield
47N10
– Robert Collett was
born in 1832 at Fyfield
47N11
– Eleanor Collett was
born in 1835 at Fyfield
47N12
– Luanna Collett was
born in 1837 at Fyfield
47N13
– Enos Collett was born
in 1839 at Fyfield
47N14
– John Collett was born
in 1841 at Fyfield
47N15
– Josiah Collett was
born in 1843 at Fyfield
47N16
– Obadiah Collett was
born in 1845 at Fyfield
47N17
– Emanuel Collett was
born in 1849 at Fyfield
47N18
– Nehemiah Collett was
born in 1851 at Fyfield
Thomas Collett [47M3] was born at Fyfield and was baptised at
Eastleach Martin on 11th day of a month in 1794, the name of which
is illegible in the parish record. He
was the eldest child of Richard and Mary Collett of Fyfield and is believed to
have married Ann
Henry Collett [47M4] was born at Fyfield and was baptised at
Eastleach Martin on 18th March 1798.
He only survived for a short while and died during the following year
Jane Collett [47M5] was born at Fyfield and was baptised at
Eastleach Martin on 3rd August 1800.
When she was twenty-seven years old, she gave birth to a base-born baby
daughter and two years later she married John Stanton at Eastleach Martin on 19th
September 1829. Jane Stanton born in
Gloucestershire was 47 (sic) and a married woman, one of five domestic servants
employed at Suffolk Lawn in Cheltenham in 1851.
Suffolk Lawn and Lypiatt Terrace lie within the affluent area of the
town. It was also in Cheltenham, three
years later, that the marriage of Mary
Jane Collett and William Houlder was recorded (Ref.
6a 857) during the last three months of 1854, when she was 26
47N19 - Mary Jane Collett was born in 1827 at Fyfield
Eleanor Collett [47M6] was born at Fyfield and was baptised at
Eastleach Martin on 16th October 1803, a daughter of Richard and
Mary Collett. Sadly, Eleanor died in
1820 when she was only seventeen years of age
Mary Collett [47M7] was born at Fyfield and was baptised at
Eastleach Martin on 19th April 1807, another daughter of Richard and
Mary Collett
Richard Collett [47M8]
was, according to the Family Bible compiled by his son George Collett, born
on 17th June 1811 at Fyfield and was initially recorded as Richard
Collat. In addition to which the IGI
listing includes Richard Collett who was baptised at Eastleach Martin on 15th
July 1810, the son of Richard and Mary Collett.
However, as the Bible date has been confirmed by the Gloucestershire
Records Office, it must therefore be assumed the IGI entry is in error and
should read as 15th July 1811 for the date of his baptism. Richard later married (1) Priscilla Brown on
15th March 1840 at Cowley, just south of Cheltenham in
Gloucestershire, but not before she had given birth to their first child one
year earlier. Curiously, Richard was recorded
as having been born at Eastington near Northleach, rather than Eastleach. Priscilla was the daughter of Joseph and Mary
Brown and at the time of their wedding Priscilla was expecting the birth of the
couple’s second child
Less
than three months after they were married, Priscilla presented Richard with his
first son and, by the time of the June census of 1841, Richard, Priscilla and
George were living right next door to Priscilla’s parents in Cowley. The absence of their daughter Emily was
confirmation that she had suffered an infant death, having died during the
previous year. Exactly three years after
the birth of the couple’s first son Priscilla presented Richard with a second
son, from which it would appear she never recovered. Tragically, just over two months after that
happy event of the birth of their second son, Priscilla died on 16th
September 1843, the cause of death stated as being ‘decline’, this
presumably being the decline in her health since giving birth. The death of Priscilla Collett was recorded
at Cheltenham (Ref. xi 124) during the third quarter of 1843
Richard
spent the rest of his life at Cowley where his two surviving sons from his
first marriage were born. And it was
also at Cowley nearly seven years later, on 9th March 1850, that
Richard Collett married (2) Esther Broad who was born in 1816 and the daughter
of Thomas Broad. Their wedding day was
recorded at Cheltenham (Ref. xi 241) during the spring of 1850. His second married produced no children for
Richard and, a year after they were married, Richard and Esther were living
together in Cowley, as recorded by the 1851 Census. Richard from Fyfield was aged 37 and an
agricultural labourer, his wife Esther from Cowley was 35, and his two sons
George and James were aged ten, and seven years respectively, and both of them
were already working on the land as plough boys. Within the next ten years Richard and Esther
seem to have parted company due to Esther’s mental state, since in the Cowley
census of 1861, Richard was 49 and only had living with him his two sons George
who was 20 and James who was 17. At that
same time in 1861, Esther Collett was a patient at the County Lunatic Asylum in
the North Hamlet area of Gloucester, where she was listed as being aged 45 and
born at Cowley, the wife of a labourer
During
the next ten years the couple were reunited and were living together again at
Cowley by 1871, when agricultural labourer Richard Collett from Fyfield was 61
and Esther from Cowley was 55. Living
with them, and listed as a visitor, was Richard’s widowed younger sister
Elizabeth Lafford, who was 59 and a nurse, who had also been born at Fyfield. Another separation of Richard and his wife
appears to have taken place over the next decade since the 1881 Census only
listed Richard Collett ‘of Fifield in Gloucestershire’
aged 70, an agricultural labourer living at Hill Cottages in Cowley. Still living with him was his sister
Elizabeth Lafford, while Richard was still recorded as being married, while his
estranged wife Esther Collett, aged 66 and born at Cowley, was living at the union
workhouse in nearby Cheltenham, where she was recorded as a widow and a
pauper. In exchange for her
accommodation, Esther was employed at the workhouse as a general servant. Just seven years after the census day Richard
Collett died at Cowley in 1888, his death recorded at Cheltenham (Ref. 6a 257)
during the second quarter of 1888, when he was 78 years old. The later death of Esther Collett aged 79 was
recorded at Cirencester register office (Ref. 6a 312) during the first three
months of 1895
47N20
– Emily Collett was
born in 1839 at Cowley
47N21
- George Richard was
born in 1840 at Cowley
47N22
- James Collett was
born in 1843 at Cowley
Elizabeth Collett [47M9] was born at Fyfield in 1814 and was the
youngest child of Richard and Mary Collett.
She later married George Lafford at
Eastleach Martin on 27th October 1832 when she was already carrying
his child. George was born at Broughton
Poggs in Oxfordshire around 1808, the base-born son of Sarah Lafford who was
baptised as Sarah Lawford on 30th August 1778 at Eastleach
Turville. Sarah appears to have married
Joseph Titchener when George was around five years of age. Their son Thomas Titchener was baptised at
Broughton Poggs on 3rd March 1816.
The marriage of Elizabeth and George produced only one known child for
the couple, Mary Ann Lafford who was born at Fyfield not long after they
were married. Sometime after her birth,
the family of three settled in Broughton Poggs, where they were living on the
day of the census in 1841. On that
occasion George Lafford had a rounded age of 30, his wife Elizabeth was 27, and
their daughter Mary Ann was eight years old.
Living with the family was George’s widowed mother Sarah Titchener who
was 60, together with George’s half-brother Thomas Titchener who was 25 – whose
death was recorded at Witney at the end of 1875 when he was 60. Completing the household was Thomas’ son
Thomas junior who was four
Ten
years later, agricultural labourer George Lafford from Broughton Poggs was
still living there at the age of 42.
Recorded there with him was his wife Elizabeth Lafford aged 38 from
Fyfield, as was their daughter Mary Ann Lafford who was 18. Still living with the family was George’s widowed
mother Sarah Titchener, another agricultural labourer and a pauper of 71
years. The couple was still residing
there in 1861 when George was 52 and Eliz Lafford 48. Just over two years later, the death of
George Lafford was recorded at Cheltenham (Ref. 6a 372) during the third
quarter of 1863. As result of her loss,
widow Elizabeth Lafford was working as a nurse in 1871 when she was 59 and living
with her brother Richard Collett (above) and his wife Esther at Cowley
near Cheltenham
By
the time of the Cowley census of 1881 the widow Elizabeth Lafford, who was 68,
was continuing to live with her brother Richard Collett at Hill Cottages in
Cowley, when her place of birth was confirmed as being ‘Fifield in Gloucestershire’.
Also living at Hill Cottages in Cowley at that same time was baker Henry
Collett (Ref. 3O33), aged 33 and of Painswick, together with his wife Sarah Ann
Collett from Huntley who were living at the home of Henry’s mother-in-law Sarah
Long of Cowley. Henry was the son of
John Collett of Chedworth, all as detailed in Part 3 – The Chedworth Line
Elizabeth
Lafford nee Collett may have moved into Cheltenham following the death of her
brother in 1888, since her death was recorded there (Ref. 6a 301) during the
first three months of 1896 when she was 82.
Where she was in 1891 has not yet been discovered. Her daughter Mary Ann Lafford would have been
18 or 19 when she married James Farmer at Witney, where the event was recorded
during the third quarter of 1851. James
came from the village of Langford near Broughton Poggs and in the subsequent
census returns for 1861, 1881, and 1891 James and Mary Ann were residing in
Langford, Faringdon, when her birthplace was recorded as Broughton Poggs. However, in the census of 1871, Mary Ann's
birthplace was recorded in error as Fyfield.
By April 1911, and following the death of her husband in 1906, Mary Ann
Farmer was a widow living alone in Langford, when once again her birthplace was
recorded as Fyfield. The couple’s
first-born child was Sarah Ann Farmer, while their second child was named
George. Their fourth child was born in
1859 and he was Joseph Farmer, the grandfather of Shirley Kinniburgh’s
stepfather. And it was Shirley who
kindly provided the information for the file update in December 2015
Mary Anne Collett [47N1] was born at Bampton in 1819, where she
was baptised on 24th October 1819, just six months after her parents
George Collett and Elizabeth Shayler were married there. The baptism record gave her name as Mariann
Collett. If Mary Anne survived it is
very likely that she was married by the time of the census in 1841
Job Collett [47N2] was born at Bampton during1821, the
second child and eldest son of George and Elizabeth Collett who was baptised at
Bampton on 5th May 1822. No
further record of Job has been found in any of the census returns for Great
Britain, whereas his brothers William and George (below) were still
living in the Bampton area in 1841 following the probable deaths of both of
their parents between 1836 and 1840
Joseph Collett [47N3] was born at Bampton in 1823, the third
child of George and Elizabeth Collett. Curiously no record of him or his
parents have been found in 1841, when his two youngest siblings were inmates at
Witney Union Workhouse. This may
indicate that his parents had died by then, when Joseph would have only been
around seventeen years old. In addition,
no record of him has been found in either of the census returns for 1851 and
1861 although, it was around two or three years later that he married Susan who
had also been born in Bampton, but around 1835, she being twelve years younger
than Joseph
It
seems likely that they were married at Bampton, or possibly at Cirencester
where all their children were born and where they were living in 1871. From his occupation it is clear that Joseph
had been a professional soldier, and that was most likely the reason for his
absence in the earlier census records.
The census in 1871 listed Joseph Collett from Bampton as being 47, his
wife Susan A Collett was 35 and from Bampton, and their four Cirencester born
children were Victor George Collett, who was five, whose second name was from
his grandfather, Eliza Ann Collett, who was three, her name being that of her
grandmother, Sidney Joseph Collett, who was one-year-old, and Wilfred Harry
Collett who was still an infant
One
more child appears to have been added to the family five years later, although
there may have been others born to the couple during the intervening years who
did not survive. According to the census
in 1881 the family was living at 15 Church Street in Cirencester, where Joseph
as 57 and a Chelsea pensioner, Susan Ann was 45, Victor G Collett was 15, Eliza
Ann Collett was 13, Sydney J Collett was 11, Wilfred H Collett was 10, and
Harold W Collett was four
Ten
years later Joseph and Susan only had two of their children still living with
them at Cirencester. By that time Joseph
was 67, Susan was 55, Eliza was 23, and Harold was 14. After a further ten years the Cirencester
census in March 1901 recorded Joseph Collett from Bampton as an army pensioner
at the age of 77, his wife Susan A Collett from Bampton as 65, and still living
with them was their eldest daughter, unmarried Eliza Ann Collett aged 33. It was just over two years later that Joseph
Collett died at Cirencester, when his death at the age of 80 was recorded at
the register office there during the third quarter of 1903 (Ref. 6a 201). It would also appear that his widow Susan
passed away not long after that, because she was not listed in the census of
1911
47O1
- Victor George Collett was born in 1865 at Cirencester
47O2
- Eliza Ann Collett
was born in 1867 at Cirencester
47O3
- Sydney Joseph Collett was born in 1869 at Cirencester
47O4
- Wilfred Harry Collett was born in 1871 at Cirencester
47O5
- Harold William Collett was born in 1876 at Cirencester
William Collett [47N4] was born at Bampton in either late 1824
or early in 1825 and was baptised there on 30th January 1825, the
son of George and Elizabeth Collett.
William may have been only ten years old when his mother died, possibly
during the birth of his sister Martha (below). Apart from him being listed in the Witney
& Bampton census of 1841, as William Collitt at the age of 16, no later
record of him has been found in England after that time
George Collett [47N5] was born at Bampton during 1827 and it
was there also that he was baptised on 20th May 1827, the youngest
of the four sons of George and Elizabeth Collett. Following the death of his mother when he was
only eight, and the subsequent death of his father shortly thereafter, George
Collett, aged 15, was still living in Bampton in 1841, but not with any member
of his family, although his brother William (above) was also living
there at that same time
Esther Elizabeth Collett
[47N6] was born at
Bampton in 1830 where she was baptised under her full name on 7th
March 1830, the daughter of George and Elizabeth Collett. Esther would have only been five years old
when her mother died, and not long after which her father also passed away,
since by the time of the census in 1841 Esther Collett, aged 10 years, and her
younger sister Martha were inmates at the Witney Union Workhouse in the village
of Curbridge to the south-west of the town.
This, and the absence of any record of their parents at that time, more
or less confirms that the two girls were orphans
It
was possibly around nine years later that the two sisters became separated,
when Esther returned to live in Bampton where she gave birth to a base-born
daughter towards the end of 1850. From
the child’s baptism record it is likely that the surname of unnamed father was
Steptoe. So, by the end of March in
1851, the Bampton Census that year included Esther Collett, aged 20 and from
Bampton, with her baby daughter Elizabeth, who was only six months old. Esther was still a spinster when she gave
birth to three more children during the 1850s, although there is speculation
that the father may have been Alfred Corke with whom she was living at Bampton
in 1861 and to whom she was later married in 1868
The
census that year recorded Esther as unmarried Ester Collett, aged 30 and from
Bampton, who was the housekeeper of bachelor and agricultural labourer Alfred
Corke, aged 38 and also of Bampton, at his home at 4 Bridy Anns Cottage in
Bampton. Esther, who was also described
as an agricultural labourer, had with her three Bampton born children, and they
were Elizabeth Collett, aged 10 and another agricultural labourer, Alfred
Collett who was six, Ann Collett who was four, and Walter Collett who was
one-year old. Her two daughters had both
been baptised at Bampton, although no similar record has been found for her
sons Alfred and Walter, and on both occasions the parish record only gave the
name of the mother, that being Esther Collett
After
a further seven years together the marriage of Esther Collett and Alfred Corke
was recorded at Witney (Ref. 3a 951) during the second quarter of 1868. By that time the three children born since
1861 had been given the surname of Corke.
In addition to this, Esther’s earlier Collett children had also taken
the Corke name by the time of the next census in 1871. Alfred Corke had been baptised at Bampton on
5th October 1825 and was the son of Edmund and Mary Corke. Therefore, he would have been nearer 36 years
of age in 1861, rather than the 38 recorded in the census return. Certainly, in the later census returns, his
age was given more realistically as 66 and 76
According
to the Bampton census of 1871, agricultural labourer Alfred Corke was 42
(instead of 46), his wife Hester was 40 and was also an agricultural labourer,
as was her son Alfred Corke, formerly Collett, who was 16, and her daughter Ann
Corke, formerly Collett, who was 14. On
that occasion the family was living in a dwelling on Mill Lane in the hamlet of
Weald midway between Bampton and Clanfield.
The other children completing the family were Ada Corke who was nine,
Alma Corke, who was four, and Florence Corke who was two years old. Missing was Walter Corke, formerly Collett,
who would have been eleven years of age had he been alive. However, living with the family was another
Walter Collett who was one-year old and born at Bampton who was described as
Esther’s grandson. He was most likely
the base-born son of Esther’s eldest daughter Elizabeth Steptoe Collett
During
the following year, another child was added to the Corke family with the birth
at Bampton of Edith M Corke in 1872, who was most likely the last child of
Esther Collett and Alfred Corke. For
whatever reasons, most of the family had left home by 1881, when the Bampton
census that year only recorded Alfred as an agricultural labourer at 59 (sic),
his wife Esther who was 55 instead of 50, and their daughter Alma who was
14. What is of immense interest is that
the only other person living with them was Esther’s grandson John Collett, who
was 11 and also born at Bampton
By
the time of the next census in 1891 Alfred Corke was 66 and his wife Esther was
60 and all of their children had left the family home by then, and it was the
same situation in 1901 when the census that year only recorded at Bampton,
Alfred Corke, aged 76, who was still working as a general labourer, and Esther
Corke who was 70. It was just less than
two years later that the death of Alfred Corke was recorded at Witney register
office (Ref. 3a 595) during the first quarter of 1903 when he was 77, and he was
survived by his wife for a further seven years.
Esther Elizabeth Corke nee Collett was 79 years old when she died, her
death recorded at Witney register office (Ref. 3a 559) during the last three
months of 1910
As
regards the children of Alfred Corke and Esther Collett, their details are as
follows:
Ada Corke was born at Bampton during 1861 and was
the first child legally born to Esther Elizabeth Collett and her husband Alfred
Corke. By 1871 the family was residing
in Mill Lane in the hamlet of Weald to the south of Bampton where Ada Corke was
nine years old. Upon leaving school Ada
entered into domestic service and at the time of the next census in 1881 she
was working as a live-in servant at the home of the Gray family at Folly Bridge
in North Hinksey, to the west of the City of Oxford. Ada Corke from Bampton was 19 and was
described as a dairy maid and agricultural labourer who was employed by
dairyman Job Gray. It was towards the
end of the following year that Ada Corke married Charles Lay, their wedding recorded
at Witney (Ref. 3a 1267) during the fourth quarter of 1882. The marriage produced a total of eight
children who were all born at Bampton.
Ada Lay died in 1947, while her husband Charles, who had been born in
1860, had passed away three years earlier in 1944
Alma Louisa Corke was born at Bampton during 1866, the
second child of Alfred and Esther Corke.
By 1871, when Alma was four, she was living with her family in Mill Lane
within the hamlet of Weald close by Bampton, and it was simply at Bampton that
she was living in 1881 when she was 14 and the only child still living with her
parents. After a further ten years, the
census in 1891 revealed that Alma L Corke, aged 25 and from Bampton, was living
on her own means while a boarder at the Meadow View, Wolvercote home of her
older half-sister Ann Marie Collett (above) and her husband and their
three children. Six years later the
marriage of Alma Louisa Corke and Thomas Tanner was recorded at Witney (Ref. 3a
1555) during the fourth quarter of 1896.
By 1901 the pair of them was residing at Church View in Bampton where
Thomas Tanner from Walford in Herefordshire was 29 and Alma Tanner from Bampton
was 33
Florence Ellen Corke was born during 1868 at Bampton, the
third child of Alfred and Esther Corke, whose birth was recorded at Witney
(Ref. 3a 669). Florence may have been
born in the hamlet of Weald near Bampton, since it was there that she and her
family were living at Mill Lane in 1871 when Florence Corke was two years
old. When Florence E Corke from Bampton
was 12 and still attending school in 1881, she was staying with her older
half-sister Elizabeth Steptoe Collett (above) at her cottage in South
Hinksey who, by then, was Elizabeth Smith with a husband and five children
Edith Mary Corke was very likely born in the hamlet of
Weald near Bampton where her family was living at Mill Lane in the census of
1871. It was during 1872 that she was
born, her birth recorded at Witney (Ref. 3a 665), the last child born to Alfred
Corke and his wife Esther Elizabeth Collett.
On the occasion of the next census in 1881, Edith M Corke was nine years
old and was a visitor at the Wolvercote home of her older married half-sister Ann
Marie Collett who was expecting her first child. After a further ten years Edith M Corke, aged
20 and from Bampton, was a servant at a house in the St John the Baptist
district of Oxford, after which, it is assumed, she was married
These
are the four children of unmarried Esther Collett:
47O6
– Elizabeth Stokes Collett
was born in 1850 at Bampton
47O7
– Alfred Thomas Collett
was born in 1854 at Bampton
47O8
– Ann Maria Collett was
born in 1857 at Bampton
47O9
– Walter Collett was
born in 1859 at Bampton
Martha Collett [47N7] was born at Bampton in 1835, the last of
the seven children of George Collett and Elizabeth Shayler, as confirmed by her
baptism at Bampton on 3rd January 1836. It seems highly likely that Martha’s mother
died during the birth or shortly after, and that tragedy may also have been a
contributing factor to the later death of her father, since by 1841 at the age
of six years she was an inmate at the Witney Union Workhouse in Curbridge with
her older sister Esther (above).
Ten years later, the only Martha from Bampton was recorded in the census
of 1851 as Martha Collett who was 17 and a house servant at the Long Hanborough
home of the Bullock family near Witney
Mary Ann Collett [47N8] was born at Fyfield and was baptised at
Eastleach Martin on 25th December 1829, the eldest of the eleven
known children of Charles and Sophia Collett. At the time of the first national
census in 1841 Mary was 11 years old and was living with her family in the
Eastleach Martin registration district.
In 1851 Mary was still living with her parents at Fyfield when she was
21. By that time in her life, she was an
unmarried mother, having given birth to a base-born daughter during the
previous year. It was during the
following year that her daughter was baptised at Eastleach Martin, in a joint
ceremony with Mary Ann’s youngest brother Nehemiah Collett (below)
Sometime
thereafter Mary Ann married Luke Carter who was born in 1828, just two miles
away in the village of Filkins in Oxfordshire.
By 1881 Luke was 52 and Mary was 51 and they were living at Gardiners
Row in Filkins, where both Luke and Mary were listed as being general
labourers. Living with them on that
occasion were the couple’s three youngest children, Robert Carter, aged 14 and
another general labourer, Elizabeth Carter who was 11, and James Carter who was
eight years old, and all of them born at Filkins. What happened to Mary’s daughter Ann Collett
has not been determined at this time, while widow Mary Ann Carter from Fyfield
in Gloucestershire was 80 years old and a pensioner in the census of 1911 when
she was residing at Rouses Lane in Filkins and Broughton Poggs near Lechlade
47O10
– Ann Collett was born
in 1850 at Fyfield
Charles Collett [47N9] was born at Fyfield and baptised at
Eastleach Martin on 6th February 1831, the eldest son of Charles and
Sophia Collett. By June 1841 he was
recorded as being 10 years old, when he was living with his family in
Fyfield. By the time of the census in
1851, Charles was 20 and was still living at the family home in Fyfield, from
where he was working as an agricultural labourer. His place of birth was confirmed as being
Fyfield. Four and a half years after the
census day, and at the age of 24, Charles married Elizabeth Newman on 29th
October 1855 at the parish church in Kempsford, where their children were
subsequently baptised. Elizabeth was the
daughter of Whelford agricultural labourer William Newman and his wife
Elizabeth
Just
over five years later the marriage had produced three children for Charles and
Elizabeth, all of which had been born at Kempsford. The 1861 Census for Kempsford confirmed that
agricultural labourer Charles Collett, aged 28 and of Southrop (next to
Fyfield), was married to Eliza, aged 23 and of Whelford, and that their three
children were Sophia Collett who was four, Sarah Collett who was three, and
William Collett who was only nine months old
One
further child seems to have been added to the family four years later, so by
1871 the family was still living within the Kempsford area and comprised
Charles Collett, aged 41 and from Fyfield, who was working as an agricultural
labourer, his wife Elizabeth, aged 32 and from Whelford, and three of their
four known children. They were their
daughters Sophia Collett, aged 12, and Kate Collett, who was five years old,
and their son William who was 10. All of
them on that occasion were recorded as having been born at Whelford. With the passing of another decade the family
was reduced in size by the departure of the two eldest daughters, who left home
to be married
So,
by April 1881 the family was made up of Charles, aged 49, who was an
agricultural labourer, his wife Elizabeth, aged 39, and their son William who
was 20 and who was also working as an agricultural labourer. No trace has so far been found of the
couple’s youngest daughter Kate. On that
occasion the census return recorded Charles’ place of birth was as ‘Fifield in
Gloucestershire’, while his wife and son had both been born at Kempsford, where
they were living at that time
t
would appear that Charles and Elizabeth spent the rest of their lives living at
Kempsford, where they were recorded as still living in March 1901. Charles Collett of Fyfield in Gloucestershire
was still employed as an agricultural labourer at the age of 69, while his wife
Elizabeth Collett of Kempsford was then 59.
Also still living with the couple in Kempsford at that time was their
son William who was also still working as an agricultural labourer with his
father. By April 1911 Charles had died
leaving Elizabeth as a widow aged 73.
The census return confirmed that she had been born at Whelford and that
she was living at Horcott near Fairford with her son William who was also a
widower. Also living with them was
William’s daughter Kate Collett who was 15
47O11
– Sophia Collett was
born in 1856 at Whelford
47O12
– Sarah Ann Collett was
born in 1858 at Whelford
47O13
– William Collett was
born in 1860 at Whelford
47O14
– Kate Collett was born
in 1865 at Whelford
Robert Collett [47N10] was born at Fyfield in 1832 and was
listed as being eight years old in the June census of 1841, when he was living
there with his family. He was still
living with his parents at Fyfield in 1851 when he was 18, by which time he was
employed as an agricultural labourer like his father and his older brother
Charles (above). His place of
birth was confirmed as Fyfield (under three miles west of *Lechlade),
while it was six years after that when he married Mary Ann Woodward at Charlton
Kings on 10th October 1857. Mary Ann was the daughter of
Joseph and Mary Ann Woodward and was baptised at Charlton Kings on 9th
February 1840. Perhaps because of the
eight years difference in their ages, the ages credited to them in each of the
subsequent census returns were rarely correctly stated
On their wedding day, Robert Collett
would have been 25, when he was recorded as a labourer and the son of labourer Charles
Collett, when Mary Ann Woodward would have been 17, but was simply described as
a laundress. Their wedding day was
recorded at Charlton Kings (Ref. 6a 743) during the last three months of 1857,
where all their children were born and baptised. According to census in 1861 the young family
was residing at Ryeworth Field in Charlton Kings, when Robert was 33 (28)
and Mary was 27 (20). However,
living there with them were just three children, the eldest of whom was
possibly Mary’s base-born daughter who was born three or four years before the
couple was married. They were Elizabeth
Collett who was seven, Ann Collett who was two, and Charles Collett who was
one-year-old. Today, Ryeworth Field is
the home of Charlton Kings Cricket Club
Six more children were added to the
family during the following decade, although two of them did not survive; twin Miriam
and Sarah. That loss was reflected in
the next census of 1871 for Charlton Kings.
That day the family of Robert Collett aged 39 comprised his wife Mary A
Collett of Charlton Kings who was 37 (31), and their nine surviving children. They were Harriet J Collett aged 17 (Elizabeth
aged 7 in 1861), Ann S Collett who was 12, Charles Collett who was 11,
Ellen (Helen aged 20 in 1881) Collett who was nine, Rosa Collett who was
seven, Jessie Collett who was five and female, Frederick Collett who was three,
and Frank Collett who was one-year-old.
After a further ten years Robert Collett gave his place of birth as *Lechlade
when he said he was only 44 (48), with Mary Collett from Charlton Kings being
40, when they were living in Cheltenham.
All their children were confirmed as born at Charlton Kings and, on that
day, they were Charles Collett who was 21, daughters Helen Collett and Rosa
Collett, who were 20 and 18 respectively, Jessie Collett who was 15 a male but previously
female (?), Frederick Collett who was 13, and Frank Collett who was 11
Robert Collett died during 1882 with
his passing recorded at Cheltenham (Ref. 6a 299) when his age was more
accurately recorded as 48. Nine years
later, widow Mary Ann Collett was 55 (50) and living in Cheltenham who had just
three of her children on the day of the census 1891. Charles was 30, Jessie was 24 but recorded as
son George, Frank was 19 and soon to be married, and Ellen who was already
married and recorded as Ellen Ireland who was 28, who had returned home after
being made a widow. Seven years later
the death of Mary Ann Collett aged 62 (actually 58) was recorded at
Cheltenham register office (Ref. 6a 305) in 1898
47O15 – Elizabeth/Harriet J Collett
was born in 1854 at Charlton Kings
47O16 – Ann Sophia Collett
was born in 1858 at Charlton Kings
47O17 – Charles Collett
was born in 1859 at Charlton Kings
47O18 – Ellen Collett
was born in 1861 at Charlton Kings
47O19 – Rosa Elizabeth Collett
was born in 1863 at Charlton Kings
47O20 – Miriam Collett
was born in 1865 at Charlton Kings
47O21 – Sarah Collett
was born in 1865 at Charlton Kings
47O22 – Jessie/George Collett
was born in 1866 at Charlton Kings
47O23 – Frederick Collett
was born in 1868 at Charlton Kings
47O24 – Frank Collett
was born in 1870 at Charlton Kings
Eleanor Collett [47N11] was born at Fyfield in 1835 and was six
years old by the time of the census of 1841, and was 16 years old in the census
of 1851, when she was still living with her parents Charles and Sophia Collett
at Fyfield. However, when she married
John Smith at St Mary’s Church in Bibury on 11th October 1856, she
was recorded as Ellen Collett, aged 20, a spinster residing at Arlington in
Bibury, and the daughter of labourer Charles Collett. John Smith was described as a bachelor of
full age, also a resident of Arlington, whose occupation was that of a
shepherd, the son of labourer William Smith.
John signed the register in his own hand, with Ellen making the mark of
a cross. The two witnesses were Ellen’s
mother Sophia Collett, and her younger brother Enos Collett, both of whom made
the mark of a cross. No record of the
couple has so far been found in any census after the day of their wedding
Luanna Collett [47N12] was born at Fyfield in 1837 and appeared
in the 1841 Census as Luanna Collett aged four years, while ten years later she
was referred to as Susanna Collett who was 14 in 1851. She was also addressed as Luanna in the later
census of 1881, although it is thought that her name may have actually been
Louisiana or Louisa. Before Luanna
reached her twentieth birthday she gave birth to a base-born son at Northleach,
although previously thought to have been at Fyfield, following which the child
was brought up by his grandparents. In
the Fyfield census return for 1861, the family of Luanna’s parents, Charles and
Sophia Collett, included their grandson William Collett who was four years old
and from Northleach. However, no such
record has so far been found for his mother on that census day
Shortly
after April 1861 it would appear that Luanna Collett married Alfred Silman when
she became Luanna Silman of Black Bourton in Oxfordshire. Over the next decade the marriage produced
three known children for Luanna and Alfred and they were Charles Silman who was
born in 1865, Sarah Silman who was born in 1867, and Ellen Silman who was born
in 1875, and all of them born at Black Bourton.
However, sometime after 1875 and before 1881 Alfred Silman died
According
to the next census in 1881 Luanna Silman was a widow, when she was listed as
the only occupant of a house in Black Bourton, from where she was employed as
an agricultural labourer. Luanna Silman
was 45 and her place of birth was confirmed as Fyfield in Gloucestershire. Her son Charles Silman, who was 16, was a
lodger at the Black Bourton home of shepherd George Giles. Luanna’s youngest child Ellen Silman was
living with Luanna’s widowed mother Sophia Collett within the Eastleach Martin
census district which included Fyfield, where she was confirmed as being six
years old and born at Black Bourton. No
trace has been found of daughter Sarah Silman in 1881, although she was back
living with her mother by 1891
Luanna
Silman remained living at Black Bourton for the rest of her life. In 1891 she was 54 and was listed in that
year’s census as Hannah Silman. Recorded
as living with her were her two daughters Sarah Silman, aged 24, and Ellen
Silman, who was 15. Also living with
them was Luanna’s grandson, five years old James Silman who may have been
Sarah’s child, and her elderly mother Sophia Collett, who died during the
following year. Just after the turn of
the century Luanna was referred to as Louisa Silman of Fyfield in
Gloucestershire in the census of 1901.
At that time, she was 63 and was living at Black Bourton with just her
young grandson for company. James Silman
was 15 and was working as a horseman working on a local farm
It
is particularly interesting that Luanna’s son Charles Silman married Minnie
Wise (Ref. 28P60), the eldest daughter of William Wise by his wife Mary Ann
Collett (Ref. 28O51), Minnie being the great aunt of Jennie Cordner. Charles and Minnie’s daughter Louisa Silman
married John William Cox whose mother was Edith Jane Wise (Ref. 28P62), so
making Louisa and John first cousins. More
details on this branch of the family can be found in Part 28 – The Faringdon
Line
47O25
– William Edward Collett
was born in 1856 at Northleach
Enos Collett [47N13] was born at Fyfield in 1839 and was
recorded as being just two years of age in the 1841 Census for the registration
district of Eastleach Martin. It was two
months later, on 22nd August 1841 that he was baptised at Southrop
near Fyfield in a joint ceremony with his brother John (below). The parish record confirmed that they were
the sons of Charles and Sophia Collett.
By 1851 he was 12 years old, when he was still living with his family at
Fyfield. Together with his mother
Sophia, Enos was a witness at the married of his older sister Eleanor (Ellen)
at Bibury in October 1856, when both of them made the mark of a cross. However, no record of Enos Collett has been
found in 1861, by which time he may have died or left England
John Collett [47N14] was born at Fyfield in 1841 and was
baptised at nearby Southrop not long after he was born. The baptism took place on 22nd
August 1841 and was a joint naming ceremony with his older brother Enos (above). He was 10 years old in 1851 when he was still
living with his family at Fyfield. By
the time of the census in 1881, John was recorded as being married at the age
of 38, and from Fyfield. He was working
as a shepherd, while he was living at Kempsford. Living there with him was unmarried domestic
housekeeper Jane Bates of Lechlade and her son
And
so it was, that the three of them were still living in Kempsford in 1891. Their dwelling was within that part of the
village known as Dudgrove, where married John Collett, aged 48 and from
Fyfield, was continuing his work as a shepherd.
Still living with him was single Jane Bates who was 46, and her son John
Bates who was 12. It would appear that
sometime after 1891 John officially married Jane and around that same time the
family of three left Kempsford and returned to Lechlade, where they were living
in 1901
At
the age of 58, John Collett of Fyfield was recorded in the census return for
the Lechlade area as still working as a shepherd. With him was his wife Jane Collett who was
also 58, and their son John Collett who was 22 and employed as a machine man at
a local dairy. The birthplace of both
mother and son was once again confirmed as Lechlade. John and Jane continued to live their lives
together at Lechlade, since it was there at Mount Pleasant that they were still
living in April 1911. John Collett from
Fyfield in Gloucestershire was 69 and was still working as a cowman on a farm,
while his wife Jane from Lechlade was 68.
By that time their son was married and was living in the Faringdon area
Not
long after that John and Jane also moved to Faringdon, and it was there that
their deaths were recorded before the end of the next decade. Jane Collett nee Bates passed away during
1915 when her passing at the age of 73 was recorded at Faringdon register
office (Ref. 2c 377) during the last quarter of that year. John Collett was 78 when he died and again
his death was recorded at Faringdon (Ref. 2c 410) during the first three months
of 1918
47O26
– John Collett,
formerly John Bates, was born in 1878 at Lechlade
Josiah Collett [47N15] was born at Fyfield in 1843, a son of
Charles and Sophia Collett, whose
birth was registered at Northleach (Ref. xi 372) during the last quarter of
that year. Tragically, he never lived to
celebrate his seventh birthday, with his premature death recorded at
#northleach (ref. xi 296) in 1850
Obadiah Collett [47N16] was born at Fyfield in 1845, another son
of Charles and Sophia Collett, his birth recorded at Northleach (Ref. xi 353)
during the last three months of 1845. In
the census of 1851, he was living with his family at Fyfield at the age of five
years. Curious, ten years later he was
listed as Henry Collett aged 16 in the census of 1861 when he still living at
the family home in Fyfield. However,
thereafter there is a mystery with the age that he gave in subsequent census
returns. In 1871 he was recorded as Obed
Collett of Fyfield who was 20 years old and was working as a farm servant at
the Elkstone home of
He
was still lodging with John Coss at Old Whitlenge in 1891, when once again he
was recorded in the census as Abadiah Collett who was 45, nearer his correct
age than ten and twenty years earlier.
Where he was at the time the census was conducted in 1901 has still to
be discovered. However, it was within
nine months of that particular census day that he died, when the death of
Obadiah Collett was recorded at Bromyard register office in Hereford (Ref. 6a
351) during the last quarter of 1901 when he was 57
Emanuel Collett [47N17] was born at Fyfield in 1849 and was
three years old and 12 years old in the census returns in 1851 and 1861, while
living with his parents at Fyfield.
Twenty years later Emmanuel was still a bachelor at the age of 32 and
was living with his widowed mother Sophia at Fyfield where, he was working as a
farm labourer
NEHEMIAH COLLETT [47N18] was born at Fyfield in 1851 and was
baptised at Eastleach Martin in 1852, the eleventh child of Charles and Sophia
Collett. He was baptised at Eastleach
Martin on the same day as his niece Ann Collett, the base-born daughter of
Nehemiah’s oldest sister Mary Ann Collett (above). By the time of the 1861 census Nehemiah was
aged nine years and was still living with his parents in Fyfield, although no
record for him has so far been found ten years later in the census of 1871. Previously it was assumed that he was married
during the first few years of the 1870s since his son Charles was born at
Fyfield around the middle of that decade.
However, new information discovered in 2013 may suggest that he was
married on two occasions, even though only one record has so far been found
It
is now known that Nehemiah Collett married Elizabeth A Hackling, the daughter
of Robert and Mary Ann Hackling, at Eastleach Martin with their marriage
recorded at Northleach (Ref. 6a 799) during the last three months of 1877. The birth of Elizabeth Ann Hackling was
recorded at Northleach (Ref. 6a 289) during the last three months of 1856. The witnesses at the wedding were James
Baxter and Ann Jeffries, and Elizabeth entered the marriage having already
given birth of a daughter. The couple’s
first child was born at Fyfield around nine months after their wedding date,
although no baptism record has been found for any of their children, whose ages
were not accurately recorded in subsequent census returns
The
census of 1881 revealed that the family was living at Fyfield within the
Eastleach Martin registration district and that Nehemiah of Fyfield was 29 and
was working as an agricultural labourer.
His wife Elizabeth A Collett of Southrop was 25, and their son Charles E
Collett of Fyfield was two years old.
The census also raises the question as to the whereabouts of the
couple’s daughter Mary Collett, who would have been two years of age. The only other child living with the Collett
family on that day, was five-year-old Edith Hackling of Fyfield, who was described
as the stepdaughter of Nehemiah Collett, being Elizabeth’s base-born daughter
It
would appear that Elizabeth presented her husband with a further two children
while they were stilling living at Fyfield, after which the family moved to the
Cirencester area of the county where a further four children were born. According to the census return for 1891 the
family was residing at Town End in Meysey Hampton, within the Fairford &
Cirencester registration area, and comprised Nehemiah Collett who was 40 and an
agricultural labourer who had been born at Fyfield, as was his wife Elizabeth
who was 37, together with their seven surviving children. Their son William had already suffered an
infant death shortly after he was born in 1880
The
seven children were recorded as follows: Charles who was born at Fyfield was
actually 12 years old, but was recorded in error as being 16, when he was still
attending school; where Mary had been born who was said to be 12 and a scholar,
although she was actually 10 years old; Sarah who was eight and also born at
Fyfield, Henry who was five and born at Slade Down, William who was four and
born at Langford Down, the three of them also attending school; John who was
two; and George who was under one-year old.
It is possible, although not yet proved, that Nehemiah was employed on
Langford Downs Farm, near Cirencester, and that it was at ‘Langford Downs’ that
the couple’s three Cirencester children were born, with their youngest son
George known to have been born at Meysey Hampton. Two further children were added to the
Collett family at Duntisbourne Abbotts near Cirencester before the untimely
death of their father who, because of the discrepancy in the dates between his
death and the birth of the family’s final Collett child, could not have been
the father of Frank Collett, the youngest child. So, who the father was is open to
speculation!
The
death of Nehemiah Collett was recorded at Cirencester register office (Ref. 6a
203) during the second quarter of 1894 when his age was recorded in error as
being 41. Just over two years after
losing her husband, Elizabeth gave birth to son Frank Collett while, shortly
thereafter, she was married for a third time when she wed the slightly younger
John Hulbert of Cirencester with whom she had a daughter who was also born at
Cirencester in 1898. The census in 1901
placed Elizabeth Hulbert, aged 43, and her large family living at 73 Watermoor
Road, the Cirencester home of John Hulbert, aged 38, whose occupation was that
of a railway labourer
Living
with the couple, in addition to their daughter Martha Hulbert, who was two
years of age, were four of Elizabeth’s children by Nehemiah Collett. They were Harry Collett who was 16 and a
domestic groom, John Collett who was 12, George Collett who was 11, and Annie
Collett who was seven. Completing the
family was Frank Collett who was five, with all of the children recorded as
having been born at Cirencester
Living in the adjacent
property, at 72 Watermoor Road, was Edwin Collett of Cirencester who was a
widower of 60 and a domestic gardener, the only occupant of the 3-room
dwelling. In 2023 it was established
that he was the youngest son of Richard Collett from Kemble and Ann Collett,
and the husband of Emily Robbins of Cirencester, the parents of Annie, Herbert,
Emily, Lizzie, Louisa and Alice. For
further details of his Collett family go to Part 78 – The Oaksey &
Somerford Keynes Wiltshire Line (78n4), which features in the Appendix all
the known information about the Collett families of Kemble
Elizabeth
Hulbert, formerly Collett nee Hackling, may well have been expecting her second
child by John Hulbert on the day of the census in 1901. However, further tragedy appears to have
struck the family during that first decade of the new century since Elizabeth
had yet another change of name when she married David Dance from Oaksey in
Wiltshire. That fourth wedding for
Elizabeth Ann Hulbert was recorded at Cirencester (Ref. 6a 836) during the last
quarter of 1908, when the sole witness was Obadiah Loveridge. In addition to the loss of her third husband,
Elizabeth she also appears to have suffered the loss of her first child by John
Hulbert, since she was absent from the census in 1911
The
census return that year confirmed that Elizabeth Dance, aged 53, was still
residing at 73 Watermoor Road in Cirencester when the only Hulbert child living
there with her was her daughter Daisy Hulbert who was nine years old. Elizabeth had been married to David Dance,
aged 50, for just two years, while still living with her were the three
youngest children from her marriage to Nehemiah Collett. They were George who was 20 and born at
‘Maisey Hampton’, Annie who was 15 and Frank who was 14, the latter two both
stated to have been born north of Cirencester at Duntisborne Abbots, rather
than at Cirencester as in the previous census
Twenty-two
years later, Elizabeth Dance aged 76, passed away while still residing in
Cirencester, where her death was recorded (Ref. 6a 622) during the first three
months of 1933
47O27
– Charles Edward Collett
was born in 1878 at Fyfield
47O28
– William Collett was
born in 1880 at Fyfield
47O29
– Mary Ann S Collett
was born in 1881 at Fyfield
47O30
– Sarah A Collett was
born in 1883 at Fyfield
47O31
– Henry Collett was
born in 1884 at Slade Down
47O32
– William Collett was
born in 1886 at Langford Down
47O33
– JOHN RICHARD COLLETT
was born in 1888 at Langford Down
47O34
– George Collett was
born in 1890 at Meysey Hampton
47O35
– Annie Collett was
born in 1894 at Duntisbourne Abbotts
47O36
– Frank Ernest Collett
was born in 1896 at Duntisbourne Abbotts
Emily Collett [47N20] was born on 24th March 1839
and this may have taken place at Cowley where her parents were married in March
1840, and where her two brothers were also born. Sadly, Emily Collett died during 1840
George Richard Collett
[47N21] was born at
Cowley on 3rd July 1840 where he was living with his father and his
brother James (below) in 1851 and 1861, when he was aged 10 and 20
respectively. With them in 1851 only was
the boys’ stepmother Esther Collett, their father’s second wife. On 7th February 1866 at the
Elkstone parish church George Collett married Emily Newcombe. Emily, from the neighbouring hamlet of
Winstone, was the daughter of William and Mary Ann Newcombe. And it was at Winstone where George and Emily
settled and where their first five children were born
By
the time of the census of 1871 the marriage had produced two children for the
couple, in addition to which Emily was expecting their third child. The Winstone census of 1871 confirmed that
George, an agricultural labourer of Cowley, was 30 and his wife Emily listed as
‘Emma of Winstone’ was 28. Living with them was their son James who was
three and their daughter Jane who was one-year old. Also living with the family was lodger James
Mitchell who was 19 and an agricultural labourer from Cowley. Their son Richard was born exactly three
months after the census day, but he did not survive
Over
the next ten years Emily presented George with a further four children. The first two of them were born while the
family was still living at Winstone, but shortly after the birth of the second
child, around 1874, the family moved back to George’s home parish of Cowley,
where his last three children were born.
According to the 1881 Census the family were living between The School
and The Lodge in Cowley and it may have been around that time when George began
to compile the Family Bible which later provided valuable clues to his family’s
background
The
census on that occasion recorded that George Collett, aged 40 and of Cowley,
was an agricultural labourer who was probably employed at Cowley Manor. His wife Emily of Winstone was also 40, and
their children at that time were Jim Collett 13, Jane Collett 11, Janet Collett
who was nine, and Charles Collett who was seven, who were all born at
Winstone. The two youngest children at
that time, Richard Collett who was five, and Emily Collett who was three years
old, were both born after the family had moved to Cowley. In the same way that Emily was pregnant on
the day of the 1871 Census, she was also with-child again on 3rd
April 1881 and gave birth to the couple’s last child five months later
Over
the following ten years two of the couple’s four daughters left the family
home, so by 1891 George and Emily, both aged 51, were living at Cowley with
James 22, Charles 17, Richard 15, Emily 13, and Annie who was nine years of
age. Before the end of the century two
of George’s sons, plus one of their cousins, left Gloucestershire and followed
their two sisters south to Cobham in Surrey where they had both settled
By
the census of 1901, only daughter Annie Collett, aged 19, was still living with
her parents at the family home in Cowley.
George was then working as a cattleman on a farm at the age of 60, while
his wife Emily was 61. George’s and
Emily’s eldest son James was also living in Cowley in 1901, as were two other
people with the Collett name. They were
baker Henry Collett (Ref. 3O32), aged 53 and from Stonehouse (Painswick), and
his wife Mary, aged 52 and from Elkstone
According
to the next census in 1911, George Collett was 70, and his wife Emily was
72. Still living with them at Cowley was
their unmarried son Jim Collett who was 42.
And it was at Cowley that George Collett died just over seven months
later on 25th November 1911.
At the time of his death, as in the census that year, his occupation was
that of a cowman working at Cowley Manor, where his eldest son James was also
employed as a gardener
Emily
Collett survived as his widow for a further seven years after George’s passing
and was eventually reunited with her husband on 27th January
1919. The headstone at Cowley that marks
their grave has the following inscription “In Memory of George Collett died
25th November 1911 aged 71 years, Also Emily Collett beloved wife of
the above, died 27th January 1919 aged 81 years – Rest in Peace”
The
aforementioned Family Bible produced by
47O37
– James Collett was
born in 1868 at Winstone
47O38
– Jane Collett was born
in 1869 at Winstone
47O39
– Richard Collett was
born in 1871 at Winstone
47O40
– Janet Collett was
born in 1872 at Winstone
47O41
– Charles Collett was
born in 1873 at Winstone
47O42
– Richard Collett was
born in 1875 at Cowley
47O43
– Emily Collett was
born in 1877 at Cowley
47O44
– Ann Collett was born
in 1881 at Cowley
James Collett [47N22] was born at Cowley on 10th
July 1843 and was seven years old, and 17, respectively in the censuses of 1851
and 1861. On both occasions he was
living with his father Richard and his brother George (above). The boys’ stepmother Esther was only present
in 1851. At the age of 27 James was
living in the Kingsholm area of Gloucester, but within the next few years he
married Martha Stallard who was born at Coberley in 1846. Cowley and Coberley lie adjacent to each
other being only about half a mile apart
Once
married the couple initially set up home in the village of Elkstone just south
of Cowley and it was there that their first two children were born. Around 1877 the family of four moved the two
and a half miles to Colesbourne where their next two children were born and
where the family was still living in April 1881. The census that year confirmed that James of
Cowley was aged 36 and was employed as a slatter and plasterer while living
with his family in a cottage in Colesbourne.
His wife Martha was 34 and their four children at that time were Percy,
who was seven, Joseph, who was five, John, who was three, and Tom who was
one-year old
The
cottage accommodation occupied by the family of six must have been of a
reasonable size since they also had three lodgers living there with them. These were farm labourers and bachelors
According
to the Colesbourne census conducted in 1891 the family was recorded in error
under the surname Collet. James Collet
was a plasterer of 47 from Cowley, his wife Martha Collet from Coberley was 43,
and their six children were Joseph J Collet a farm labourer from Elkstone who
was 15, John Collet who was another farm labourer at 13, Thomas Collet a
servant boy at 11, Edith M Collet who was nine and at school, as was Annie L
Collet who was six, and William A Collet who was only one year old, the youngest
five children all born at Colesbourne
Just
after the turn of the century the family was still residing in Colesbourne
where James aged 56 and from Cowley was continuing his occupation as a slatter
and plasterer. In addition to his wife
Martha aged 53 and of Coberley, the only members of their family still living
with them were sons
47O45
– Percy E Collett was
born in 1873 at Elkstone
47O46
– Joseph James Collett
was born in 1875 at Elkstone
47O47
– John Collett was born
in 1877 at Colesbourne
47O48
– Thomas Henry Collett
was born in 1879 at Colesbourne
47O49
– Edith Mary Collett
was born in 1881 at Colesbourne
47O50
– Anne Louise Collett
was born in 1884 at Colesbourne
47O51
– William Archibald Collett
was born in 1889 at Colesbourne
Victor George Collett [47O1]
was born at Cirencester
during 1865 and was the eldest known child of Joseph and Susan Ann Collett of
Bampton in Oxfordshire. He was five
years old in the Cirencester census of 1871 and on leaving school in Cirencester
as a scholar, he took a position possibly at the same school as a pupil
teacher, which was how he was described in the census of 1881 when he was
living at 15 Church Street with his family.
With the experience he gained at Cirencester he was later offered a post
at a school in Manthorpe-cum-Little Gonerby just north of Grantham in
Lincolnshire, where he was recorded in the census of 1891. The census return that year included
unmarried Victor G Collett from Cirencester, who was 25, as a lodger living at
a property in Albion Street. By that
time in his life he was described as a certified schoolmaster
Sometime
during the next decade Victor George Collett married Mary Elizabeth Palmer who
was born at Grantham, the daughter of Robert and Betsy Palmer. That was confirmed by the census in 1901 when
once again he was a schoolmaster, but then at a private school in the town of
Bottesford, five miles west of Grantham.
The census that year recorded Victor G Collett, aged 35 and from
Cirencester, as living at Grantham Road in Bottesford with his wife Mary E
Collett from Grantham, who was 33. The
only other person living with them was Mary’s nephew Wilfred Joseph Barrand,
the eldest son of her married sister Maria, who was very likely attending the
school where Victor was teaching. Ten
years later the childless couple were still residing in Bottesford, where
Victor George Collett from Cirencester was 45 and the Head Teacher at
Bottesford Elementary School near Grantham, and his wife Mary Elizabeth Collett
was 43
Living
with the couple in April 1911 was Mary’s elderly father Robert Percival Palmer,
together with her widowed sister Maria Percival Barrand and her two children
Wilfred Joseph and Victor Percival Barrand.
Fourteen years later Victor and Mary were still living in Lincolnshire,
and it was at Grantham register office (Ref. 7a 509) that the death of Victor
George Collett was recorded during the second quarter of 1925 when he was
59. His Will was proved in London on 21st
August 1925 following his passing on 25th April that year, with his
widow Mary Elizabeth Collett named as the executor of his estate valued at
£1,499 7 Shillings and 5 Pence. Mary
continued to live in Grantham after her loss and survived her husband by
twenty-seven years, with her death at the age of 84 also recorded at Grantham
register office (Ref. 3b 71) during the second quarter of 1952
Eliza Ann Collett [47O2] was born at Cirencester in 1867, the
second child and only daughter of Joseph and Susan Collett. In the following census returns for
Cirencester she was three years old, 13, 23 and 33 when she was living with her
parents for each year from 1871 through to 1901, the family home being at 15
Church Street in Cirencester in 1891.
Following the death of her father in 1903, Eliza remained living with
her mother until she passed away. It was
on 27th October 1910 when Eliza Ann Collett married the much younger
Frederick Charch at Rodborough in Gloucestershire. Eliza was a dressmaker, who said she was 39
instead of 42, the daughter of Joseph Collett – army officer, deceased, while
Frederick was 30 years old and working as a bailiff. A few months later the couple was residing in
Cirencester when the census of 1911 listed them as Frederick Church aged 28 and
from Berkshire, and Eliza Ann Church from Cirencester who was 42. This confirms that both the bride and the
groom gave incorrect ages on their wedding day, presumably out of embarrassment
for the great difference in their years
Sydney Joseph Collett
[47O3] was born at
Cirencester in 1869, the third of the five known children of Joseph and Susan
Collett, whose birth was recorded at Cirencester (Ref. 399) during the third
quarter of 1869. However, he was
baptised at Cirencester on 11th July 1869 as Sidney Joseph
Collett. It was also as Sidney Joseph
that he was one-year old in the census of 1871, while ten years later in 1881
it was as Sydney J Collett that he was living with his family at 15 Church
Street in Cirencester. On that occasion
he was a pupil at the local school, where his older brother Victor (above)
was employed as a pupil teacher. After
another ten years Sidney was absent from the family home on the day of the
census in 1891 when he would have been twenty-one
Unlike
his two brothers Victor and Wilfred (below), who both settled in the
East Midlands, Sydney remained in Gloucestershire and was residing at Butter
Row in Rodborough near Stroud in 1901.
Seven months prior to the day of the census Sydney Joseph Collett had
married Elizabeth Chapman by banns at St Lawrence’s Church in Stroud on 15th
August 1900. The census return in March
1901 listed Sidney J Collett from Cirencester as being 31 and a draper’s
assistant, while his wife Elizabeth Collett from London was 30. Rather strangely their ages ten years later
were slightly at variants when Sydney Joseph Collett of Cirencester was 40 and
was still living in Rodborough, where his wife Elizabeth Collett from London
said she was 38. Up until that time in
his life Sidney’s name had been variously recorded as Sidney and Sydney, while
it was certainly as Sydney that his birth was recorded although shortly after
it was as Sidney that he was baptised, the baptism record confirming his
parents as Joseph and Susan Ann Collett
Wilfred Harry Collett
[47O4] was born at
Cirencester in 1871 and was the fourth of the five children of Joseph Collett
and his wife Susan Ann. He had only just
been born prior to the census that year and was 10 years of age in 1881 when he
and his family were living at 15 Church Street in Cirencester. On leaving school, just a few years after, he
took up work in the city of Gloucester where, in 1891, he was recorded in that
year’s census as Wilfred Harry Collett from Cirencester who was 20 and living
and working within the parish of St Nicholas
Wilfred
may have been influenced by his eldest brother Victor (above) because,
during the 1890s, he too left Gloucestershire when he travelled north and
settle in Warsop near Mansfield, which today is known as Market Warsop. It was at Warsop that he was living in 1901,
when Wilfred Collett, aged 30 and from Cirencester, was a wheelwright and the
only Collett living in Warsop on that occasion.
It was very likely in Warsop that he married Kate Osborne during the
first three months of 1905, the event being recorded at Mansfield register
office (Ref. 7b 115). The witnesses were
George Herbert Hough and Esther Bourn.
It was also at the end of that same year that the couple’s first child
was born at Warsop
By
the time of the census in 1911 Kate had presented Wilfred with their second
child, when the family of four was still living at Warsop. Wilfred Harry Collett from Cirencester was
40, his wife Kate Collett was 33, and their two children were Wilfred Leslie
Chandler Collett who was five, and Florence Elizabeth Collett who was two years
of age. The death of Wilfred Harry
Collett was recorded at Mansfield in Nottinghamshire (Ref. 7b 102) during the
second quarter of 1942 when he was 71.
At the proving of his Will it was revealed that he died on 19th
June 1942 while residing at 65 King Road in Warsop, Nottinghamshire, when
administration of his personal effects of £807 15 Shillings was granted to his
widow Kate Collett
47P1
- Wilfred Leslie Chandler Collett was born in 1905 at Warsop, Mansfield
47P2
-Florence Elizabeth Collett was born in 1908 at Warsop, Mansfield
Harold William Collett
[47O5] was born at
Cirencester in 1876 the youngest child of Joseph and Susan Collett. He was recorded in the census of 1881 as
Harold W Collett aged four years when he was living with his family at 15
Church Street in Cirencester. Ten years
later is was just Harold, then 14, and his older sister Eliza, who were he only
children still living with their parents at the family home in
Cirencester. Whether it was as the
result of an accident at work, or possibly during military service, the death
of Harold William Collett was recorded at Cirencester (Ref. 6a 264) during the
first three months of 1898 when he was only 21 years of age
Elizabeth Steptoe Collett
[47O6] was born at
Bampton during September 1850, where she was baptised on 5th January
1851, the base-born daughter of Esther Elizabeth Collett. Her second forename was very likely the
surname of her unnamed father. It was
simply as Elizabeth Collett aged six months that she was recorded with her
mother in the Bampton census of 1851. By
1861 her mother had taken up the role of housekeeper for unmarried Alfred Corke
at his Bampton home where Elizabeth Collett was 10 years old. Around six or seven years later Elizabeth
gave birth to her own base-born child which was taken into the care of her
mother who had since married Alfred Corke.
The boy was named after Elizabeth’s youngest brother Walter who had died
shortly after the census in 1861, and it was Elizabeth’s mother Esther, under
her maiden-name of Collett, who was entered in the parish baptism register as
the child’s only parent
By
the time of the census in 1871 Elizabeth was married to James Smith and was
living in the Bampton area where Elizabeth was expecting the birth of the
couple’s first child. Although no actual
census return for the expectant couple has been found, it was the next census
in 1881 that confirmed their first child was born at Bampton. Also, by 1881 Elizabeth had presented James
with a further four children. According
to the census that year the family was living in a cottage in South Hinksey
near Oxford where James Smith was 30 and an agricultural labourer from Appleton
in Berkshire
His
wife Elizabeth Smith from Bampton was 31, and their five children were Herbert
W Smith, aged nine and also from Bampton, Ellen Smith from Wootton in Berkshire
who was six, Alfred G Smith who was five, Thomas H Smith who was three, and Ada
Mary Smith who was one-year old, all three of whom had been born after the
family arrived in South Hinksey. Living
with the family on that day in 1881 was Florence E Corke who was 12 and from
Bampton, who was described as wife’s sister, she being Elizabeth’s half-sister
and the daughter of Esther Elizabeth Collett and her husband Alfred Corke
47P3
– Walter John Collett
was born in 1867 at Bampton
Alfred Thomas Collett
[47O7] was born at
Bampton towards the end of 1854, the base-born son of Esther Elizabeth Collett,
whose birth (without Thomas) was recorded at Witney (Ref. 3a 548) during the
first three months of 1855. It was as
Alfred Thomas Collett that he was baptised at Bampton in a joint service with
his younger sister Ann Maria Collett (below) on 18th March
1857. Only his mother’s name, as Esther
Collett of Bampton, was written in the parish register. It was as Alfred Collett, aged six years and
from Bampton, that he was a scholar living with his mother and his three
siblings at the Bampton home of Alfred Corke in 1861. His mother later married Alfred Corke, so by
1871 the former Alfred Collett was named as Alfred Corke, aged 16, whose
occupation was that of an agricultural labourer in the Bampton census that year
when he and his family were living in the nearby hamlet of Weald
Ann Maria Collett [47O8] was born at Bampton in early 1857, her
birth recorded at Witney (Ref. 3a 581) during the first three months of that
year. It was also at Bampton that she
was baptised on 18th March 1857 with her brother Alfred (above),
the third base-born child of Esther Elizabeth Collett. In 1861, at the age of four years, Ann
Collett was living at the Bampton home of Alfred Corke, where her unmarried
mother was his housekeeper. Following
the marriage of her mother to Alfred Corke in 1868 the four base-born children
of Esther Elizabeth Collett took the name Corke, and it was as Ann Corke, aged
14, that she was living in the hamlet of Weald near Bampton with her family in
1871, by which time she was employed as an agricultural labourer
By
a strange twist of fate, having had to give up her surname of Collett, it was
ironic that when Ann Marie Corke, the daughter of Alfred Corke, was married on
19th October 1878, she once again became Ann Marie Collett. Her marriage to William James Collett (Ref.
38P1) of Wolvercote took place at Wolvercote near Oxford and, by the time of
the census in 1881, she was expecting the birth of their first child. William who was 24, was a stonemason, living
at village street in Wolvercote with his wife Annie M Collett, aged 24 and from
Bampton, who was described as a former domestic servant. Visiting the couple on the day of the census
was Ann’s youngest half-sister Edith M Corke (below), who was nine years
old and also from Bampton
For
the continuation of this family go to Part 38 – The Oxford Stonemasons Line
(Wolvercote)
Walter Collett [47O9] was the fourth base-born child of Esther
Elizabeth Collett, and was born at Bampton during 1859. He was one-year old in the Bampton census of
1861 when he was with his fatherless family at the home of agricultural labourer
Alfred Corke, by whom his mother was employed as his housekeeper. Tragically if the seven years later when
Walter was only eight years old that he died, his death being recorded at
Witney (Ref. 3a 410) during the first three months of 1868. It seems highly likely that the base-born son
of his older sister Elizabeth Steptoe Collett (above) was named Walter
in his memory
Ann
Collett [47O10]
was born in 1850 at Fyfield and was the base-born child of unmarried Mary Ann Collett by an unknown father. Perhaps to cover the embarrassment, Ann was
baptised at Eastleach Martin, in a joint ceremony with Nehemiah Collett [47N18]
during 1852, her mother’s youngest brother.
Sophia Collett [47O11] was born in the hamlet of Whelford in
1856, but was baptised at the parish church in Kempsford on 29th
June 1856. She was aged four years in
1861 but was recorded as being aged 12 in 1871 when her place of birth was
confirmed as Whelford. It is now
understood that Sophia Collett later married Thomas Hayward and not Thomas
Fincher, as he married Sophia Bullock, so further work needs to be done to
confirm this
Sarah Ann Collett [47O12] was born at Whelford in 1858 and was
baptised at Kempsford on 23rd May 1858. Sarah was three years old in the Kempsford
census of 1861 which confirmed that she was born at Whelford. She was not living with her family ten years
later. However, by 1881 Sarah was 23 and
was married to 31 years old James Gosling, an agricultural labourer of
Kempsford. It would appear that they had
not long been married as living with them was their first-born child Harry
Gosling who was just one-month old. From
1891 onwards the census returns reveal that Sarah was a widow. That year’s census recorded just Sarah aged
32 and her son Harry aged 11, as living within the Cirencester registration
district. Ten years later Sarah A
Gosling of Kempsford was 42 and was working as a sick ward attendant at the
Cirencester Union Workhouse. Her son
Harry Gosling from Whelford was 21 and his occupation was that of an assistant
civil engineer in Cirencester
William Collett [47O13] was born at Whelford around 1860 and was
baptised at nearby Kempsford on 5th August 1860. The earliest census records for Kempsford of
1861, 1871 and 1881 confirmed that it was there that he had been born and that
his age of those occasions was respectively nine months, ten years and twenty
years. At the time of the latter, he was
an agricultural labourer working with his father Charles Collett. He was still living with his parents Charles
and Elizabeth Collett at Kempsford just after the end of the century, by which
time he had been married and was already a widower with two daughters
According
to the census return for 1901, William Collett was 39 and an agricultural
labourer, living in the hamlet of Horcott within the parish of Kempsford, where
his two daughters had been born. They
were Annie who was six, and Kate Elizabeth who was four years old. During the next few years William’s father
died and by April 1911 William’s widowed mother Elizabeth was living with him
at Horcott. By that time William, who
was 52, was employed as a shepherd on a farm, and the only daughter still
living with him was Kate Collett who was 15
47P4
– Annie Collett was
born in 1894 at Horcott
47P5
– Kate Elizabeth Collett
was born in 1896 at Horcott
Kate Collett [47O14] was very likely born at Whelford near
Kempsford in 1865 and was living in that area with her parents in 1871 when she
was five years old. However, no record
of Kate or Katherine has been found in any subsequent census which might
indicate that she had died sometime during the 1870s with her absence from the
1881 Census
Elizabeth/Harriet J Collett [47O15]
was born in 1854 possibly at Charlton Kings where she was recorded in the 1861
census as Elizabeth Collett aged seven years.
No record of her birth or baptism has been located and, since she was
born three years prior to her mother Mary Ann Wood marrying Robert Collett, it
is likely she was base-born. Curiously
in 1871, the Charlton Keynes census listed her with her family as Harriet Jane
Collett aged 17. No further record of
her has been found
Ann Sophia Collett [47O16]
was born at Charlton Kings in 1858, with her birth registered at Cheltenham
(Ref. 6a 339) during the fourth quarter of that year. Shortly after she was baptised at Charlton
Kings on 30th January 1859, a daughter of Robert Collett. It is possible that Ann was born at Ryeworth
Field in Charlton Kings where her family was living in 1861, when she was two
years old. By 1871 Ann was 12 and still
living with her family at Charlton Kings.
Just over seven years later the marriage of Ann Sophia Collett and Henry
Averiss was recorded at Cheltenham (Ref. 6a 837) during the last three month of
1878. It was as Henry Norman Averiss,
the son of George Averiss, that his birth was registered at Cheltenham (Ref. 6a
335) during the summer of 1858, being just a few months older than his wife. Two years after their wedding day, Ann gave
birth to a son, the couple’s first child Charles Averiss who was one
year old in the Cheltenham census of 1881, when Henry was 23 and Annie was 22
Ten years after that day the family had
grown to three children when Henry was 30, Annie was 29 (both older than
shown), Charles who was 11, Arthur who was nine, and Rosa just born. After a further decade Henry Averiss was 44
(sic), Annie was 40 (sic), who had five of the six children living at
Cheltenham with them. They were Arther
Averiss who was 19, Rose Averiss who was ten, Alice Averiss
who was eight, Harry Averiss who was four, and Edith Averiss who
was two years of age. Every member of
the family, except Annie, had been born in Cheltenham. And it may have been there also that the
family was still living eleven years later when Henry Norman Averiss died in
1922 at the age of 64, with his death recorded at Gloucestershire register
office (Ref. 6a 387). After eight years
as a widow Ann Sophia Averiss was living in Warwickshire when she died during
1930 (Ref. 6d 99)
Charles Collett [47O17]
was born at Ryeworth Field, Charlton Kings in 1859 and his birth was registered
at Cheltenham (Ref. 6a 358) during the final quarter of that year, after which
he was baptised at Charlton Kings on 23rd November 1859, the eldest
son of Robert Collett and Mary Ann Woodward.
It was there that Charles was one-year-old in 1861, and 11 in 1871,
before the family moved to Cheltenham, where unmarried Charles was 21 in 1881. Following the death of his father in 1882,
Charles continued to stay with his widowed mother in Cheltenham, where he was
30 years old in 1891.
Ellen Collett [47O18]
was born at Charlton Kings on 2nd October 1861 and it was as Ellen,
the daughter of Robert and Mary Ann Collett that she was baptised there on 28th
November 1862. And it was as Ellen that
she was nine years of age in 1871, but as Helen aged 20 in 1881. It was during the summer months that same
year that the marriage of Ellen Collett and Walter Ireland was recorded at
Cheltenham (Ref. 6a 646). Their son
Walter Frederick Ireland was born and died in 1883 at Cheltenham (Ref. 6a
260). By that time, Ellen’s father had
passed away, never to see his grandson, and a later family tragedy for Ellen
was the premature death of her husband just prior to the next census in 1891
However, before that sad event, Ellen
had given birth to Walter Sidney Ireland in 1886 and daughter Elizabeth
Ireland at the end of 1890. The
death of Walter Frederick Ireland aged 39 at Cheltenham was recorded there
(Ref. 6a 331) during the early months of 1891.
Very shortly after he died, Ellen returned to the family home to be with
her widowed mother Mary Ann in Cheltenham, with widow Ellen Ireland aged 28
listed there with her unmarried brothers Charles 30, and Jessie 24, and soon to
be married Frank who was 19. Where
Ellen’s two surviving children were that day has still not bee
determined
In 1898 Ellen’s mother died in
Cheltenham, while it may be that the family continued to live in the family
home there with her two surviving Cheltenham born children, as confirmed in the
next census in 1901. Ellen Ireland, a
widow from Charlton Kings, was 39 whose two children were Sidney Ireland aged 14,
and Lizzie Ireland who was 10. Staying
with the young family that day was Ellen’s younger unmarried brother Jessie
Collett, a lodger, who was 35 and born at Charlton Kings. Later that same year, widow Ellen Ireland
married Charles Mason, with their wedding was record at Cheltenham register
office (Ref. 6a 978) during the third quarter of 1901
According to the Cheltenham census in
1911, Ellen Mason was 49, Charles Mason was 45 and employed on a light
railway. Son Sidney was no longer living
with his mother and was married with a wife and daughter of his own living
nearby in Cheltenham that day. Her
daughter Elizabeth was still living with her and was described as Charles
Mason’s stepdaughter at the age of 20. Completing the family group was again
Ellen’s brother Jessie Collett still single at the age of 44, described as a
boarder. Ellen was 83 years old when she
died in Cheltenham in July 1945
Rosa Elizabeth Collett [47O19]
was born at Charlton Kings in 1863, another daughter of Robert and Mary Ann
Collett, whose birth was registered at Cheltenham (Ref. 6a 384) during the
second quarter of that year. It was as
Rosa Collett that she was seven years old in the Charlton Kings census of 1871
after which her family moved in Cheltenham where Rosa (as Rose) was 18 in
1881. Less than one year after that day,
the marriage of Rose Elizabeth Collett was recorded at Cheltenham (Ref. 6a 571)
during the firth three months of 1882. Her
husband was Gloucestershire born Joseph Perkins who, once married moved to
South Wales, where the childless couple was residing in 1891. The Newport Monmouthshire census listed the
couple as Joseph Perkins aged 30 and Rose Perkins aged 28. The later death of Rose Elizabeth Perkins
aged 62 was recorded at Glamorgan register office (Ref. 11a 552) in 1925
Miriam Collett [47O20]
was a twin sister of Sarah (below) and was born at Charlton Kings in 1865,
with whom she was baptised there on 25th March 1866, but tragically
died two weeks later on 9th April 1866
Sarah Collett [47O21]
was the twin of Miriam (above) born at Charlton Kings in 1865 and
baptised with her in a joint ceremony at Charlton Kings on 25th
March 1866. Sarah survived for just over
eighteen months after losing her twin sister, when she died on 16th
1867
Jessie [47O22
] was born in 1866 at Charlton Kings, nor his baptism at Charlton Kings but
unfortunately no record of his birth has been found at Cheltenham. It is also very likely that he never married
and lived at the family home in Cheltenham up to the death of his mother, after
which he was a lodger/boarder with his married older sister Ellen (above)
Frederick Collett [47O23]
was born at Charlton Kings near the start of 1868, the ninth child of Robert
and Mary Ann Collett, whose birth was registered at Cheltenham (Ref. 6a 385)
during the first three months of the year. Much later in his life, he was reported in the
local Cheltenham Chronicle as Frederick Robert Collett. He was three years of age in the Charlton
Kings census of 1871, and was 13 years old in 1881, by which time he and his
family were living in Cheltenham. Living
in Leckhampton, another district of Cheltenham and less than two miles west of
Charlton Kings, on that same day, was Frederick’s future wife, 12-year-old Harriet
Cross the youngest daughter of Henry Cross who was 65 and Emily Cross 42, both
born in Cheltenham. Harriet and her four
siblings were all born in Cheltenham and they were Mary Cross 18, Charles Cross
15, James six, and Frederick Cross three
It was just over six years later,
during the last three months of 1887, when Frederick Collett married Harriet
Cross, with their wedding recorded at Cheltenham register office (Ref. 6a 863). Shortly after they were married Harriet gave
birth to the first of their five children. A couple of years later Harriet
presented Frederick with a second son, with all five children born in
Cheltenham. At the announcement of the
birth of their first-born child, Frederick Robert Collett, he was described as the
son of Frederick Robert Collett. For the
census in 1891, Frederick Collett of Cheltenham was 22, his wife Harriet
Collett was 21, Frederick Collett was three, and William Frank Collett was one
year old. Staying with the family was
17-year-old James Cross, Frederick’s brother-in-law who was six in 1881. The enlarged family was still living in
Cheltenham in 1901 by which time the couple had given birth to a total of four
sons and one daughter. Frederick Collett
of Charlton Kings was 32, as was Harriet E Collett, Frederick R Collett was 13,
Frank Collett was 11, Ellen Collett was eight, Arthur Collett was six, and
Charles Collett was three years old
There were another three additions to
the family over the next five years, who were recorded with the family at the
High Street in Cheltenham in April 1911, when the census return stated that
Frederick and Harriet had been married for 24 years. Head of the household was house painter Fred
Collett aged 44, his wife Harriet was 43 although her name was poorly written,
Arthur was 18 and working as an assistant drayman employed by a brewery
company, Charlie was 13 and still attending school, Gertrude was nine, Jack was
seven, and Maud was five
47P6
- Frederick Robert Collett was born in 1888 at Cheltenham
47P7
- William Frank Collett was born in 1890 at Cheltenham
47P8
- Ellen Collett was born in 1893 at Cheltenham
47P9
- Wilfred Arthur Collett was born in 1895 at Cheltenham
47P10
– Victor Charles Collett was born in 1897 at Cheltenham
47P11
- Gertrude Louisa Collett was born in 1902 at Cheltenham
47P12
- Jack Collett was born in 1904 at Cheltenham
47P13
– Beatrice Maud Collett was born in 1906 at Cheltenham
Frank Collett [47O24]
was born at Charlton Kings on 24th March 1870 when his birth was
registered at Cheltenham (Ref. 6a 395) during the second quarter of the
year. Therefore, when he was recorded
with his family at Charlton Kings in the census of 1871, he had just celebrated
his first birthday. He was the last
child of Robert Collett and Mary Ann Woodward who, by 1881 had moved into
Cheltenham with their family, where Frank Collett was eleven years of age. He father died in 1882 and by 1891, unmarried
Frank was living at the home of his widowed mother together with other members
of the family. Around eighteen months
prior to the next census in 1901, Frank Collett married Mary Ann Rivers with
their wedding day recorded at Cheltenham register office (Ref. 6a 962) during
the last three months of 1899
Although no record of the couple has
been identified within the census of 1901, their first child was born the
following year, followed by three more as recorded within the next census in
1911. Head of the household in
Cheltenham that year was Frank Collett who was 41 and working on the railway, his
wife Mary Ann Collett who was 41, to whom he had been married for eleven years. Completing their family were their four
children; Frank Collett junior who was eight, Evelyn Collett who was six, Emily
Louisa Collett who was two years old, and Edward Collett who was not yet
one-year-old. Forty-six years later,
Frank Collett was 87 when his death was recorded at Gloucestershire register
office (Ref. 7b 395) in 1957
47P14
– Frank Collett was born in 1902 at Cheltenham
47P15
– Evelyn Ellen Collett was born in 1904 at Cheltenham
47P16
– Emily Louisa Collett was born in 1908 at Cheltenham
47P17
– Edward Collett was born in 1910 at Cheltenham
William Edward Collett
[47O25] was born at
Northleach in 1856, the base-born child of Luanna Collett of Fyfield. His birth was registered at Northleach (Ref.
6a 287) during the last three months of that year. He was simply listed as William Collett aged
four years in the census of 1861, when he was living with his grandparents
Charles and Sophia Collett in the hamlet of Fyfield, within the parish of
Eastleach Martin. Over the next decade
he continued to be brought up by his grandparents at Fyfield, so by the time of
the next census in 1871, William Collett from Northleach was 14 and working as
an agricultural labourer
Ten
years after that he was unmarried at the age of 24, when he was recorded as
being the head of the household, a servant and an agricultural labourer to his
landlord, while living in part of the house at Downs Farmhouse in Little
Barrington. Once again, his place of
birth was given as Northleach. There
were two other people listed with William in April 1881 and they were Amos
Radburn, aged 18, a servant and agricultural labourer, and Caroline Tovey who
was seven years old and of Little Barrington who was recorded as the daughter
of the head of house and described as a farmer’s daughter. New information discovered in 2013 has
however revealed that Caroline Tovey was the daughter of unmarried Joseph Brown
who was 29 and an agricultural labourer from Little Barrington who was also
living in another part of Downs Farmhouse in 1881
It
seems rather curious that no record of William Edward Collett has been found in
any census return after that time, so what actually happened to him from 1881
onwards is currently not known. However,
the later death of William Edward Collett was recorded at Dursley register
office (Ref. 6a 354), midway between Bristol and Gloucester, during the fourth
quarter of 1915, when he was 58 years of age
John Collett [47O26] was born at Lechlade in 1878. He was originally the base-born child of
It
was three years later that John gave up his status as a single man when he
married Ada. By April in 1911 the census
return that month confirmed that the couple had been married for six years,
during which time their union had not been blessed with any children. John Collett from Lechlade was 32 and a
dairyman living at Gravel Walk in Faringdon with his wife Ada Collett who was
28 and from Poole Keynes to the south of Cirencester. Living with them on that occasion was Thomas
Joseph Godwin who was 25. Sadly, their
marriage only endured for a relatively short time, since it was just ten years
later that Ada Collett died at Faringdon in 1921 when she was 38. Her death was recorded at Faringdon register
office (Ref. 2c 298) during the second quarter of that year
Charles Edward Collett
[47O27] was born at
Fyfield in 1878, the eldest son of Nehemiah Collett and Elizabeth Ann Hackling,
his birth recorded at Northleach (Ref. 6a 387) during the third quarter of
1878. It is quite likely he was a
‘honeymoon baby’ following his parents’ marriage nine months earlier. In the census of 1881, he was described as
Charles E Collett aged two years from Fyfield, where he was living with his
parents. Completing the family was his
half-sister, his mother’s daughter, Edith Hackling also of Fyfield, who was
five years old. By 1891 he and his
family had left Fyfield and had moved to Town End in Meysey Hampton, near
Cirencester, where his age was incorrectly given as being sixteen, instead of his
actual age of 13. Sometime during the
next ten years Charles left Cirencester and moved ten miles north and was
living at Elkstone by 1901, where he was working as a labourer on a farm. On that occasion, he was a boarder at the
home of carter on a farm William Trinder and his large family, when his age was
stated as being 24 and he was still a bachelor
After
a further ten years, the census conducted in 1911 described Charles Collett as
an unmarried farm labourer from Fyfield aged 34, who was still a boarder with
farm labourer William Trinder who, with his even larger family, was then
residing in Somerford Keynes near Cirencester.
During the last there months of 1967, the death of a Charles Collett
aged 90 was recorded at Stroud register office (Ref. 7a 623). It has not yet been determined whether, or
not, this was Charles Edward Collett from Fyfield
William Collett [47O28] was born at Fyfield during the first few
days of 1880, the second child of Nehemiah and Elizabeth Collett. His birth was recorded at Northleach (Ref. 6a
36) during the first month of that year, but tragically he suffered an infant
death and was buried at Eastleach Martin on 17th January 1880. The parish burial record confirmed that he
was ‘of Fyfield’
Mary Ann S Collett [47O29]
was born at Fyfield in
1881, but after the census day that year.
That is confirmed by the fact that her birth was recorded at Northleach
(Ref. 6a 390) during the second quarter of that year. By 1891 the census that year recorded Mary’s
age in error as 12 years when she was living with her parents at Town End in
Meysey Hampton near Cirencester. Three
years later Mary’s father suffered a premature death, following which her
mother was remarried and continued to live in Cirencester. However, by the time of the next census in
1901 Mary and her younger sister Sarah (below) had left Gloucestershire
and were working together in a lodging house on Worcester Road in Great
Malvern, Worcestershire, managed by spinster Sophia Bradley. Mary A Collett from Fyfield was 21 and
employed as a domestic housemaid. No
record of Mary or her sister have been identified within the census of 1911, by
which time both of them may have been married
Sarah Ann Collett [47O30] was born at Fyfield in 1883, another
daughter of Nehemiah and Elizabeth Collett.
As with her older siblings, her birth was recorded at Northleach (Ref.
6a 372) during the third quarter of the year.
Shortly after she was born her parents moved from Fyfield to live near
to Cirencester, and it was at Town End in Meysey Hampton where they were living
in 1891 when Sarah Collett from Fyfield was eight years old. Three years later her father died when he was
around 40 years of age and, after completing her schooling, Sarah joined her
older sister Mary (above) who was working in domestic service at a
lodging house on Worcester Road in Great Malvern. According to the census in 1901 she was
described as Sarah A Collett, aged 17 and of Fyfield, who was employed as a
domestic servant and kitchen maid at the lodging house of Sophia Bradley. With no further record of her as a single
lady, it may be assumed she was married before 1911
Henry Collett [47O31] was born at Langford Down near
Cirencester in 1884 and was living at Town End in Meysey Hampton with his
family in 1891 at the age of five years.
The census return that year stated that his place of birth was Slade Down,
immediately before moving to Langford Down.
Because his father Nehemiah was a farm labourer, there is every chance
that Slade Down and Langford Down were farms where he worked and lived. Just over three years later his father died,
following which his mother remarried. In
the Cirencester census of 1901 Henry was recorded as Harry Collett aged 16
whose place of birth was confirmed as Cirencester. On that occasion, he was living at 73 Watermoor
Road in Cirencester, the home of his stepfather John Hulbert and his mother
Elizabeth Hulbert, when his occupation was that of a domestic groom. He was the eldest of the six children still
living with their mother who had also given birth to a daughter by John Hulbert
by then. No confirmed record of Henry or
Harry Collett after 1901 has so far been discovered
William Collett [47O32] was born at Langford Down near
Cirencester in 1886 and was four years old in the 1891 Census for Town End in
Meysey Hampton and was only seven years old when his father suffered a
premature death in 1894. So far though,
no further record of him has been found after that time, which might indicate
that he too had not survived. Where
William was in 1901 has not been revealed from the details in that year’s
census return, but ten years later he and his younger brother John (below)
were staying at a boarding house in Cirencester run by Alice Mabel Russell at
16 Prospect Place in the Watermoor area of the town. William Collett from Langford Down was
unmarried at the age of 24 and was working as a general labourer. Just over eight years later, when William
Collett was 32, that he married Annie Maria Davis at South Cerney on 13th
December 1919, the marriage register confirmed his late father was Nehemiah
Collett. It was also at South Cerney
that William Collett died and was buried on 9th December 1977 when
he was 90 years old. The last twenty
years of his life was spent as a widower, following the death of Annie Maria
Collett nee Davis and her burial at South Cerney on 14th April
1956. Her burial record made provision
for her husband to be buried with her at a later date
JOHN ROBERT COLLETT [47O33]
was born at Langford
Down, near Cirencester, in 1888. He was
two years old on the day of the April census in 1891, when he and his family
were recorded at Town End in Meysey Hampton, when his place of birth was recorded
at Langford Down. He was then 12 years
of age by the end of March 1901, by which time his father had died and his
mother had married John Hulbert. On that
occasion, John and four siblings were living at 73 Watermoor Road, the home of
John Hulbert, their stepfather, and the second of the three husbands of his
mother Elizabeth Hulbert. Ten years
later, in April 1911, John was 22 and was still a bachelor living in
Cirencester, when he and his brother William (above) were staying at a
boarding house at 16 Prospect Place in the Watermoor area of the town, from
where John was working as a general carter
47P18
– ROBERT JOHN COLLETT
was born in 1912 at Cirencester
George Collett [47O34] was born at Meysey Hampton near
Cirencester in 1890, his birth recorded at Cirencester (Ref. 6a 363) during the
third quarter of that year. He was
therefore under one-year old at the time of the census of 1891 when he and his
family were recorded residing at Town End in Meysey Hampton. He was around four years old when his father
died and within a further couple of years his mother Elizabeth married John
Hulbert. According to the census in 1901
George Collett, aged 11 and from Cirencester, was living at 73 Watermoor Road
in Cirencester the home of his mother and his stepfather. Having first suffered the death of his
father, George then had to deal with the death of his stepfather John Hulbert
and his mother’s subsequent marriage to David Dance, his mother’s third husband
The
census conducted in April 1911 placed George still living at 73 Watermoor Road
in Cirencester with his mother, his new stepfather, and his two younger Collett
siblings Annie and Frank. He was
described as being 20 years of age, as having the occupation of a domestic
gardener, with his place of birth confirmed as being ‘Maisey Hampton’
Annie Collett [47O35] was born at Duntisbourne Abbotts, near
Cirencester, in 1894, the youngest daughter of Nehemiah and Elizabeth Ann
Collett, whose birth was recorded at nearby Cirencester (Ref. 6a 342) during
the second quarter of that year. Annie
was just a few months old when her father died and her mother remarried, so on
the day of the census in 1901 stepdaughter Annie Collett from Cirencester was
living at 73 Watermoor Road in Cirencester, the home of her mother’s second
husband John Hulbert. After John Hulbert
died, Annie’s mother married David Dance and it was with him and her mother
that Annie Collett from Duntisbourne Abbotts was 15 and still residing at 73
Watermoor Road, having no stated occupation
Frank Ernest Collett [47O36] was born at Duntisbourne Abbotts in
1896, the son of Elizabeth Ann Collett nee Hackling, the widow of Nehemiah
Collett who tragically died two years before Frank was born, father
unknown. The birth of Frank Ernest Collett
was recorded at Cirencester register office (Ref. 6a 346) during the third
quarter of 1896. Shortly afterwards, his
mother was re-married to John Hulbert, and it was with his mother and
stepfather that five-year old Frank Collett was living at 73 Watermoor Road in
Cirencester, and where he was still living ten years later at the age of 14,
when his place of birth was recorded as Duntisbourne Abbotts. It was after a further thirteen years when
Frank Collett married Ethel Cissie Bird at the parish church of Down Ampney
near Cirencester on 27th September 1924, which was recorded at
Cirencester register office (Ref. 6a 957) during the third quarter of that year
Although
the church register indicated that each of them was of full age, those words
had been crossed out, with their respective ages of 25 and 23 added
alongside. The entry also confirmed that
Frank was a bachelor and a labourer from Cirencester, whose father was
confirmed as Nehemiah Collett, a deceased labourer. Spinster Ethel from Down Ampney was named as
the daughter of labourer Edward Frederick Bird.
Both the bride and groom signed the register in their own hand, with the
witness named as William Smith and Dorothy Ellen Bird. The death of Ethel Cissie Collett, aged 75,
was recorded at Cirencester register office during June 1976 when her date of
birth was stated as 20th June 1901
James Collett [47O37], who was referred to as Jim, was born at
Winstone on 22nd June 1868 and was three years old in the 1871
Census of Winstone. In 1874 his parents
left Winstone and moved the three miles north to Cowley. By 1881 he and his family were living at
Cowley where Jim was working as an agricultural labourer with his father at the
age of 13. This was probably at Cowley
Manor where it is known he was working later in his life. Ten years later James was aged 22 still
living there with his family. He was not
married by the time of the census of 1901 but was still a bachelor then aged 32
and living at Cowley from where he was employed as a domestic gardener at
Cowley Manor. Cowley Manor was built by the architect George Somers Clarke in 1860
and today is a grand 30 bedroom luxury hotel with restaurant, bar and spa. James was 54 years old when he married
Mary Jane Winter on 23rd February 1922. Sixteen years later Mary died on 23rd
July 1938 and was followed by James ten years later on 21st August
1948, just two months after his eightieth birthday
Jane Collett [47O38] was born at Winstone on 11th
June 1869 and was one-year old in 1871 while still living at Winstone. In 1874 her parents moved to Cowley where in
1881 she was aged 11. Towards the end of
the 1880s Jane had left the family home and moved to Dorking in Surrey where
she was working as a domestic servant in early April 1891. Just six weeks after the census day Jane
married William Sims on 18th May 1891 at Effingham parish church in
Surrey. William was born at Effingham
around 1868 and once they were married the couple settled in Cobham in Surrey
where they lived for the first twenty-five years of their life together. Before the end of the century, they adopted
their daughter, who had been born at Cobham in 1893
According
to the 1901 Census for Cobham, Jane was 31 and from Winstone in
Gloucestershire, her daughter Dorothy W Sims was seven, and her husband
William, aged 32, was a general labourer.
Lodging with the family were Jane’s’ two brothers Charles Collett and
Richard Collett and their cousin Joseph Collett (all below). It must have been Jane’s move to Surrey that
encouraged other members of her family to join her there, which also included
her sister Janet, who lived nearby in Cobham.
Around the time of the outbreak of war Jane, William and Dorothy left
Surrey and moved to Barnet in Hertfordshire.
Later in their life they moved again, this time to Wivenhoe in
Essex. Their daughter Dorothy married
Wilfred Stevens, but the marriage produced no children for the couple
Richard Collett [47O39] was born at Winstone in 1870, but must
have died shortly after since he did not appear in the census of 1871 with his
family
Janet Collett [47O40] was born at Winstone on 3rd
July 1872 and by the time of the 1881 Census she was aged 9 and was living with
her family at Cowley. Like her sister
Jane (above), Janet also left Gloucestershire during the late 1880s and
had moved to Surrey where she was living in Dorking and working as a domestic
servant in 1891. Just over five years
later Janet married Walter John Stanbridge at Dorking on 2nd August 1896. Walter was born in 1866 at East Grinstead in
Sussex and was the eldest son of Walter and Emma Stanbridge. At the time of the birth of Janet’s and
Walter’s first child the couple were living at Emsworth near Portsmouth which
might indicate that Walter was a sailor in the navy
Certainly,
Walter was absent from the family home in Cobham in Surrey two years later and
Janet aged 29 and from Winstone in Gloucestershire was listed as ‘receiving war
pay’ in the 1901 Census. Living with her
at that time was her son Ernest who was two years old and of Emsworth in
Hampshire. Walter returned to the family
home shortly after 1901 resulting in a further six children being born into the
family over the next ten years.
Tragically though, three of the children, including a set of twins, died
as babies in 1905, which followed the earlier death of another baby in 1902
It
may have been just after that sad event when Janet and Walter left Cobham and
moved the four miles to Claygate where the family was living at Vale Road in
1911. The marriage between Janet and
Walter suffered a breakdown after this time when Walter left Janet who
continued to live in Vale Road until her death in 1945 when the house was taken
over by her son Norman. Janet’s
estranged husband Walter died twenty-three years earlier in 1922. Around the time that Janet’s husband left the
family home in Claygate, her brother Richard (below) moved into the
house in Vale Road, as that was the address given in his wartime service record
The known
details of the seven children of Walter John Stanbridge and Janet Collett are
as follows:
Ernest Charles Stanbridge was born at Emsworth near Portsmouth on
9th January 1899. By the end
of March 1901, he was two years old and was living at Cobham in Surrey with his
mother Janet. His father Walter was
absent from the family home at that time for which his mother was in receipt of
war pay. Ernest was married later in his
life and the marriage produced five children for the couple. Walter
Stanbridge was born at Cobham in 1902 and died within three months of being
born. The twins John Stanbridge and Janet Stanbridge were born at Cobham in early
1905, but tragically died during the same first three months of 1905. Walter
Charles Stanbridge was born at Cobham in late 1905 and tragically did not
survive beyond the end of that year.
Walter’s death was the fourth infant death that the family had suffered
in just three years. Ruby Florence Stanbridge was born in
1907 and this may have been at Cobham, or after her parents moved to nearby
Claygate. Sadly, she died from rheumatic
fever when she was just 15 years of age, when she passed away on 21st
August 1922. Norman Walter Stanbridge was born at Vale Road in Claygate on 6th
October 1910. He later married Alice
Preece in 1936 and the marriage produced two daughters for Norman and
Alice. Following the death of his mother
Janet Stanbridge nee Collett in 1945, Norman and his family took over the house
in Vale Road
Charles Collett [47O41] was born at Winstone on 22nd
August 1873 and was seven years old in the 1881 Census while living with his
family at Cowley. He was still there ten
years later but shortly after he and his brother Richard (below) and
their cousin Joseph (below) followed his two sisters to Surrey. Both brothers were employed as non-domestic
gardeners by the time of the 1901 Census for Cobham where they were living with
their sister Jane Sims nee Collett (above). Charles was confirmed as being aged 27 and
born at Winstone in Gloucestershire.
Charles never married and joined the army during the last year of the
First World War when he would have been forty-five years old. From his wartime service record, he is known
to have worn spectacles
Thanks
to new information received from Frances Francis at the end of 2016 we know
that Charles Collett died on 29th September 1940 at Cobham in Surrey
following an accident. At that time in
his life, he was employed as a gardener at the grand house known as Pyports on
Downside Bridge Road in Cobham – designated a Grade II listed building in
1969. Having been home for breakfast on
27th September, he was cycling back to work at Pyports when he was
in collision with a car. He suffered
serious head injuries from which he died two days later. According to statements in the Coroner's
Report, Charles had been a keen cyclist since his youth and also took part in
races. In addition to this, he was also
a keen cricketer and became an umpire for local matches later in life
Richard Collett [47O42] was born at Cowley on 23rd
December 1875 following his family’s recent move from Winstone. The census of 1881 placed the family as
living at Cowley where Richard was aged five.
Ten years later he was still living there with his family at the age of
15, but sometime after he and his brother Charles (above) and their
cousin Joseph Collett (below) left Gloucestershire to start a new life
in Surrey. By 1901 Richard aged 25 and
from Cowley in Gloucestershire was living at the Cobham home of his married
sister Jane Sims nee Collett. Also
living with them was his brother Charles and cousin Joseph Collett. Both of the brothers were employed as
non-domestic gardeners. And also, just
like his brother Charles, Richard never married. Sometime later, probably after 1914, Richard
went to live at Vale Road in Claygate with his married sister Janet Stanbridge
nee Collett (above) who was separated from her husband. Richard played an active part with the army
in the Great War and was still living at Claygate with his sister Janet when he
died from heart failure on 29th December 1925
Emily Collett [47O43] was born at Cowley on 1st
February 1877 and she was three years of age and 13 years old respectively in
the Cowley censuses of 1881 and 1891. By
the end of March 1901 Emily had left Gloucestershire and was working in service
as a domestic servant at a house in Kidlington near Oxford. She was 23 and her place of birth was
confirmed as Cowley, Cheltenham. Emily
was still living in Kidlington ten years later when she married Joseph Thomas
Tuffrey there on 17th October 1911.
Not long after they were married the couple moved to Rushden in
Northamptonshire where their two daughters were born. Northamptonshire was the main centre for the
manufacture of footwear at that time and it was at Rushden that Joseph Tuffrey
was a bespoke boot and shoemaker. The
six-year gap between his two children possibly indicates that Joseph took an
active role in the First World War and was absent from the family home for some
years. Twenty years after the birth of
her first child Emily died at nearby Wellingborough on 19th August
1933 at the age of 56
The known
details of the two children of Joseph Thomas Tuffrey and Emily Collett are as
follows:
Lily Tuffrey was born at Rushden in Northamptonshire
on 20th December 1913. She
never married and died in Oxfordshire on 12th January 1982. The youngest Tuffrey daughter of Emily
Collett and Joseph Tuffrey was born in Rushden during 1920. She was still alive and living in Oxfordshire
in 2008, by which time she was married with three daughters
Ann Collett [47O44], who was known as Annie, was born at
Cowley on 13th September 1881 and by 1891 she was listed as Annie
Collett aged nine years, while living with her family at Cowley. It is understood that she was educated at
nearby Cobberley School. She was still
living at Cowley with her parents in 1901 aged 19. The census did not give her as having an
occupation but as the only child still living with her parents she was very
likely looking after them in their advancing years
Just
as two of her sisters and two of her brothers had done so ten years earlier,
Annie also moved to Surrey in the early years of the new century. And it was there at Cobham that she married
Thomas Clements on 5th June 1911, just five months before her father
died. Thomas Clements was a gardener as
were Annie’s two brother Charles and Richard (above). So, it seems likely that she was introduced
to her husband through her brothers knowing him by working with him in Cobham,
where they also living and worked
Annie
lived the rest of her life at Cobham where her two children were born and where
in 1936 her gardener husband Thomas died.
After his death Annie worked in the kitchens of the White Lion Hotel in
Cobham and survived for thirty years after her husband, before she died on 5th
June 1966. Upon the death of her oldest
brother James Collett (above), Annie inherited the Family Bible produced
by her father George Richard Collett, which in turn was passed to one of her
granddaughters. Also, with the Bible was
a Cobberley School book belonging to James Collett
The known
details of the two children of Thomas Clements and Annie Collett are as
follows:
Marjorie Nellie Clements was born at Cobham on 13th
September 1911. She later married Robert
Craven Wakeman who was born in 1913 with whom she had two daughters. The eldest daughter emigrated to Australia
and has four children and seven grandchildren.
Marjorie and Robert were divorced in 1947, with Robert remarrying in
1948. Marjorie had a long-term partner
with whom she had another daughter.
Marjorie and her new daughter eventually emigrated to Australia in 1960
to be reunited with their eldest daughter and it was at Adelaide in 1978 that
Marjorie died. Robert died in England
two years later in 1980. Their youngest
daughter Frances was a scientific and technical information officer before
retraining as a secondary school teacher.
Frances is now retired and still lives in the United Kingdom and has two
children and six grandchildren. And it
is Frances Francis who kindly provided the basic details that has enabled this
family line to be developed
James Hector Clements was born at Cobham on 30th
July 1913. He later married Joan
Margaret Francis Taylor who was born in 1922 and with whom he had a
daughter. Joan died in 1977 and was
followed by James who died at Effingham in Surrey in 1989. During his life James was a commercial artist
with the Milk Marketing Board
Percy E Collett [47O45] was born at Elkstone in 1873. Apart from being recorded as being aged seven
years and living with his family at Colesbourne in 1881, no further details
have so far been discovered as to what happened to Percy later in his life
Joseph James Collett [47O46]
was born at Elkstone in
1875, his birth recorded at Cirencester (Ref.6a 399) during the first three
months of the year. Shortly after he was
born his parents James and Martha moved to Colesbourne, seven miles south of
Cirencester. In the 1881 Census for
Colesbourne he was aged five years when he was living there with his parents,
as he was again in 1891 when Joseph J Collett was 15 and a farm labourer. It would appear that during the 1890s he
joined his four cousins (above) in a move that took them from Gloucestershire
to Surrey. By 1901, Joseph from Elkstone
was 25 and a bricklayer, when he was staying with his married cousin Jane Sims
nee Collett and her family at their Cobham home in Surrey, who also had her two
younger brothers, Charles and Richard, living there that census day
However,
it was at Cirencester (Ref. 6a 831) that the marriage of Joseph James Collett
and Kate Selina Winstone was recorded during the fourth quarter of 1904, when
the witnesses were named as Emily Louisa Gilder and Albert Edward Hale. Kate had been born at Cirencester in 1878 and
by 1911 she had presented Joseph with their first three children. According to the census year that year Joseph
James Collett of Elkstone was 35 and was living at Addlestone in Surrey with
his wife Kate Selina Collett who was 32.
Their three children at that time were Myrtle Collett who was five,
Edith Emmeline Collett who was three and William Joseph Collett who was
one-year old, and all of them born at Addlestone, although their births were
recorded at Chartsey register office
Whether
the couple had further children during the next few years who did not survive
is not known, while their last child was born much later in 1921. Joseph James Collett died on 4th
November 1956 when he was residing at 1 Osbourne Road in Severn Beach, near
Bristol. His Will was proved at Bristol
on 27th March 1957 when his son William Joseph Collett was named as
the sole executor of his personal effects amounting to £1,010
47P19
– Myrtle Collett was
born in 1905 at Addlestone, Chertsey
47P20
– Edith Emmeline Collett
was born in 1907 at Addlestone, Chertsey
47P21
– William Joseph Collett
was born in 1909 at Addlestone, Chertsey
47P22
– Betty Winstone Collett
was born in 1921 at Addlestone, Chertsey
John Collett [47O47] was born in 1877 at Colesbourne just
after his parents had moved there from Elkstone. John was aged three years at the time of the
census in 1881 and was living at Colesbourne with his family. By 1891 he had left school and at the age of
13 he was working with his brother Joseph (above) as a farm
labourer. John was still living with his
parents at Colesbourne twenty years later when he was 23 and was still employed
as a farm labourer. Two major events in
John’s short life happened in the next few years, although it is not yet known
which occurred first
One
was the death of his mother Martha, and the other was his marriage to Sarah
Frances Ranford who was also born at Colesbourne. Their marriage took place at Elkstone, midway
between Cirencester and Cheltenham on 23rd April 1905 when,
according to the banns notices, bachelor John was a resident of Colesbourne and
Sarah was residing in Elkstone. By April
1911 the marriage had not produced any children for the couple who, by that time,
had left Colesbourne and were living in the Cirencester area, where John
Collett was 33 and a builders’ labourer and his wife Sarah Frances Collett was
30, both of them born at Colesbourne.
John Collett of 16 Elkstone Road in Cheltenham was a patient in the
Watermoor Hospital in Cirencester when he died there on 17th March
1956, his widow Sarah Frances Collett being the beneficiary of his personal
estate of £640 4 Shillings and 7 Pence, as proved at Gloucester on 12th
June 1956
Thomas Collett [47O48] was born at Colesbourne in 1879, the son
of James and Martha Collett, and was listed as Tom Collett aged one year in the
Colesbourne census of 1881. It was also
at Colesbourne that he was still living with his large family in 1911, although
the surname was recorded as Collet, when Thomas Collet was 11. Tragically he only survived for a further
five years, with his death at 16 being recorded at Cirencester (Ref. 6a 241)
during the first three months of 1896
Edith Mary Collett [47O49]
was born at Colesbourne
in 1881, but after 3rd April that year. Edith Collett, aged nine years, was recorded
in the Colesbourne census of 1891 and was still living there with her parents
at the time of the 1901 Census. She was
listed as being 19 years of age when she was working as a domestic
servant. Edith’s mother died at
Colesbourne during the first decade of the new century, so by the time of the
census of 1911 she had taken over housekeeping duties for her elderly father James. Unmarried Edith Mary Collett was 29 and was
also working as a supplementary teacher, while living with her and her father
was her youngest brother William (below)
Anne Louise Collett [47O50],
who was referred to as
Annie, was born at Colesbourne in 1884, and it was as Annie L Collet that she
was still living with her family at Colesbourne in 1891 when she was six years
old and attending the local school with her sister Edith (above). Upon leaving school she took up employment
with the family of Church of England clergyman Francis Edward Brown Witts and
in 1901 she was recorded as Anne Louisa Collett from Colesbourne who was 16 and
a kitchen-maid at The Rectory in Upper Slaughter
William Archibald Collett
[47O51] was born at
Colesbourne in 1889, the youngest child of James and Martha Collett. He was one-year old in the census of 1891
when he was recorded in error as William A Collet. Just after the turn of the century, when he
was 11, he was still living with his family at Colesbourne according to the
census in March 1901. Ten years later
William Archibald Collett was 21 and was still living in the family home in
Colesbourne, although the family had been reduced to just his father and sister
Edith Mary Collett (above) by then, following the earlier death of his
mother
Wilfred Leslie Chandler
Collett [47P1] was born
at Warsop near Mansfield on 14th December 1905 around nine months
after his parents Wilfred and Kate were married there. However, his birth was not recorded at
Mansfield register office (Ref. 7b 69) under the first few weeks of 1906. Apart from the Warsop census of 1911, when he
was five years old and recorded under his full name, very little else is known
about him, the exceptions being the details of his marriage and his death. Wilfred L C Collett was twenty-nine years old
when he married Lucy Smith at Southwell in Nottinghamshire (Ref. 7b 1233)
during the second quarter of 1935. The
death of Wilfred Leslie C Collett at the age of 73 was recorded at Mansfield
register office (Ref. 8 0308) during the second quarter of 1979, while it was
three years after his passing that the death of widow Lucy Collett was recorded
at Mansfield (Ref. 8 0189) during the last quarter of 1982. The record of her death also gave her date of
birth as 4th May 1912
Florence Elizabeth Collett
[47P2] was born at
Warsop in 1909, her birth recorded at Mansfield register office (Ref. 7b 67)
during the first three months of that year.
Within the Warsop census of 1911 Florence Elizabeth Collett was two
years old, but tragically it was eight year later that the death of ten-year
old Florence E Collett was recorded at Mansfield register office (Ref. 7b 57)
during the second quarter of 1919
Walter John Collett [47P3]
may have been born in
the hamlet of Weald near Bampton at the end of 1867 and was very likely the
base-born son of Elizabeth Steptoe Collett.
Presumably to overcome any embarrassment to the family, Walter was
raised by his grandmother Esther Elizabeth Corke nee Collett, who also arranged
his baptism at Bampton on 27th February 1868. It is also of interest that the baptism
record did not include the name of his father and, more curiously, his mother
was named as Esther Collett. It was as
Walter Collett, aged one year (sic) and from Brampton, that he was living at
Mill Lane in Weald with his grandmother’s Corke family. However, after a further ten years he was
using his second name when he was still living with the Corke family at
Bampton, where he was described as John Collett from Bampton who was 11
(sic). By that time in his life, when he
would have been 12 or even 13, his birth mother Elizabeth had been married for
almost ten years and as Elizabeth Smith she was living at South Hinksey near
Oxford with her husband and their five children. No trace of Walter Collett or John Collett of
Bampton has been found after 1881
Annie
Collett [47P4] was born
in 1894 at Horcott near Kempsford, with her birth recorded at Cirencester
register office (Ref. 6a 342) during the second quarter of the year. She was the older of the two daughters of
William Collett and his wife, who tragically died between 1896 and 1901, by
which time Annie aged six and from Horcott was living with her widowed father
and sister Kate (below) at the Kempsford home of Annie’s grandparents
Charles and Elizabeth Collett. Ten years
later, 16-year-old Annie Collett from Kempsford was the only domestic servant
employed at Colston House in Fairford, the home of Alfred William Iles (Eles)
who was 60 and living on private means, with his wife Annie, and their daughter
Marie. It seem likely that Annie never
married, with the death of Annie Collett aged 74 recorded at Gloucestershire
register office (Ref.7b 290) during 1968
Kate
Elizabeth Collett [47P5]
was born on 26th February 1896 at the hamlet of Horcott, the younger
of the two daughters of William Collett by his unknown wife. They were married between 1891 and 1893, with
William’s wife not surviving the ordeal that was the birth of daughter
Kate. Curiously, it was as Elizabeth
Kate that her birth was recorded at Cirencester (Ref. 6a 359) during the second
quarter of that year. Following the
premature death of her mother, Kate Elizabeth Collett from Horcott was four
years of age when she and her older sister Annie, together with their widowed
father, were living at the Kempsford home of the sister paternal grandparents,
Charles and Elizabeth Collett.
Her
grandfather died during the following years and sister Annie left home during
that same period, leaving Kate Collett from Horcott aged 15 and with no stated
occupation, still living at the Kempsford home of her elderly widowed
grandmother Elizabeth Collett, where her father was employed as a shepherd on a
farm. Three years after that census day,
the marriage of Kate E Collett and Charles Goodman was recorded at Cirencester
register office (Ref. 6a 869) during the last three months of 1914. No record of any children has been found and
it was in 1985 that the death of Kate Elizabeth Goodman, aged 89, was recorded
at Gloucestershire register office (Vol. 22 606)
Frederick Robert Collett [47P6]
was born at the end of January 1888 at Cheltenham, his birth notice was printed
in the Cheltenham Chronicle on 11th February 1888, when his father
was confirmed as Frederick Robert Collett (senior). The birth was recorded at Cheltenham register
office (Ref. 6a 423) during the first quarter of 1888. He was three years of age in 1891 and was 13
in 1901, the eldest of the five children of Frederick Collett and Harriet E
Cross, who added another three children to their family after 1901. By 1911 Fred Collett of Cheltenham was 23 and
working as a live-in servant at the Lamb Hotel in Cheltenham the home of the
Craddock family, with Charles Craddock being the proprietor. Nine months later the marriage of Frederick
Collett and Florence E Merrett was recorded at Cheltenham register office (Ref.
6a 1001) during the last three months of 1911.
The birth of their only known daughter Violet H Collett was recorded at
Cheltenham register office (Ref. 6a 765) during the first three months of
1912. Frederick Robert Collett was 76
when he died in 1964, with his death recorded at Gloucestershire register
office (Ref. 7b 440). It was also there
that the earlier passing of his wife Florence E Collett was recorded, either at
the age of 58 in 1946 (Ref. 6a 563), or at the age of 74 in 1950 (Ref. 7b 382)
47Q1
– Violet H Collett was born in 1912 at Cheltenham
William Frank Collett [47P7]
was born at Cheltenham on 28th March 1890, where his birth was
recorded (Ref. 6a 405) during the second quarter of the year, another son of
Frederick and Harriet Collett. It was
under his full name that he was recorded in the Cheltenham census of 1891 as
one year old, one of only two children with their parents. As simply Frank Collett he was 11 years old
and one of five children living at the family home in Cheltenham. By the time he was 21, he had left
Gloucestershire and was lodging with the Perry family at Gelligaer in
Glamorganshire, where his younger brother Arthur (below) was living in
1914. No record has been found to
indicate that he ever married. In the
end, it was in Leicestershire where he died with his death recorded there (Ref.
3a 1272) during 1969, with his death certificate confirming his date of birth
Ellen Collett [47P8]
was born at Cheltenham in 1893, the eldest daughter of Frederick and Harriet Collett. Ellen’s birth was registered at Cheltenham
register office (Ref. 6a 425) during the early months of 1893. She was incorrectly recorded in the 1901
census as being eight years of age, while in 1911 she was more accurately list
as 17, by which time Ellen had left the family home. On that census day she was employed as a servant
at a property in Bayshill, Cheltenham, the home of spinster Mary Harriet Woodroff
from Trull in Gloucestershire (?) who was 48.
The only other person at the premises was Mary’s niece, Mabel Woodroff
from London who was 22. The only
Cheltenham marriage of Ellen Collett was recorded there during the spring of
1917 (Ref. 6a 878), when the groom was named as William Smith
Wilfred Arthur Collett [47P9]
was born at Cheltenham in 1895, whose birth was recorded there (Ref. 6a 408)
during the third quarter of 1895. Apart
from his birth record, he was generally known simply as Arthur, who was six
(sic) in 1901 and again in 1911. By then
Arthur was 18 (sic) and working as an assistant drayman employed by a brewery
company. Three years later, at the
outbreak of war, Arthur Collett from Cheltenham was 21 and was residing in
Glamorganshire when he entered military service with the 3rd
Battalion of the South Wales Borders, service number 13067. His military record confirmed his place of
birth was Cheltenham, with his year of birth being 1893. The only other record so far found for Arthur
Charles Collett is believed to be for his death at Gloucestershire register
office in 1965 (Ref. 7b 515) when the informant gave his approximate age as
being 73
Victor Charles Collett [47P10]
was born at Cheltenham in 1897, where his birth was recorded (Ref. 6a 425)
during the third quarter of 1897, another son of Frederick and Harriet
Collett. Despite his name registered at
birth, the only other records for him simply refer to him as Charles Collett,
who was three in 1901 and 13 in 1911, when he was living with his family in
Cheltenham. Again, as Charles Collett,
his marriage to Florence McDermott was recorded at Cheltenham register office
(Ref. 6a 715) during the first quarter of 1917 when he was 19 years of
age. No record of any children has been
found, nor the death of either Charles or Florence
Gertrude Louisa Collett [47P11]
was born at Cheltenham on 14th February 1902, with her birth
recorded there (Ref. 6a 450) during the first three months of 1902. Gertrude was nine years old in 1911 when she
was living with her family on the High Street in Cheltenham. Just under ten years later Gertrude L Collett
married William H Jenkins during the early weeks of 1921, with their wedding
recorded at Chepstow Monmouthshire register office (Ref. 11a 42). The couple’s two known children were Fredrena
H M Jenkins, whose birth was recorded at Chepstow (Ref. 11a 2) during the
third quarter of that same year – a honeymoon baby, and Gertrude L Jenkins
whose birth was also recorded at Chepstow (Ref. 11a 15) four years later during
the last three months of 1925. In both
cases, the mother’s maiden-name was confirmed as Collett. The death of Gertrude Louise Jenkins was
recorded at Monmouthshire register office (Vol. 8361 50b) in 1994 when her date
of birth was reported as 14th February 1902
Jack Collett [47P12]
was born at Cheltenham on 29th February 1904, the last son of
Frederick and Harriet Collett. His birth
was recorded at Cheltenham register office (Ref. 6a 446) during the second
quarter of 1904 and was seven years of age in the Cheltenham census of 1911
when he and his family were residing on the High Street in the town. He was another member of the family who later
settled in South Wales, and it was there that the death of Jack Collett born on
29th February 1904 was recorded at Newport Monmouthshire register
office (Vol. 28 0490) in 1974
Beatrice Maud Collett [47P13]
was born at Cheltenham on 28th March 1906 and was the last child
born to Frederick Collett and Harriet Cross.
As with all her older siblings, her birth was recorded at Cheltenham
register office (Ref. 6a 452) during the
second quarter of 1906. It was as Maud
Collett aged six years that she was living with her family on the High Street
in Cheltenham in 1911. Fifteen years
after that census day, the marriage of Beatrice M Collett and Arthur L Bailey
was recorded at Chepstow register office (Ref. 11a 20) during the last three
months of 1926, where some of her older siblings settled after leaving
Cheltenham. Their marriage produced six
children, who births were are recorded at Chepstow register office when their
mother’s maiden-name was confirmed as Collett
Those six children were: Lionel V J
Bailey in 1927; Millicent D Bailey in 1930; Lilian R Bailey
in 1932; Rona M Bailey in 1934; Beryl E Bailey in 1936; and Gwynneth
Bailey in 1938. Also, as with other
members of her family, Maud was residing in South Wales when she died, with her
passing recorded at Monmouthshire register office (Vol. 8361 52b) in 1995 at
the age of 89. Her husband, Arthur
Lionel Bailey was born on 10th March 1907 and his earlier death was
recorded at Monmouthshire (Vol. 28 0445) in 1976
Frank Collett [47P14]
was born at Cheltenham on 15th June 1902 with his birth recorded
during the third quarter of the year at Cheltenham register office (Ref. 6a
446), the eldest of the four known children of Frank Collett married Mary Ann
Rivers. Frank was eight years old in the
Cheltenham census of 1911 and was 19 when the marriage of Frank Collett and Constance
E Skey was recorded at Cheltenham (Ref. 6a 1005) during the fourth quarter of
1921. Just over eighteen months after
their wedding day, Constance presented Frank with a son, when the birth of
Cyril F Collett was recorded at Cheltenham (Ref. 6a 768) during the second quarter
of 1923
Although no record of the premature
passing of Constance E Collett has been found, it may have happened that Frank
and Constance were separated and divorced, since the later wedding Frank
Collett and (2) Lucy F G Bowell was recorded at Cheltenham register office
(Ref. 6a 1047) in 1927. The death of
Lucy Frances G Collett aged 72 was recorded at Essex register office (Ref. 4a
1075) in 1972, when her date of birth was reported to be 4th April
1900, who was born at Uttar Predesh in India, the daughter of a member of the
25th Foot Regiment based there.
The last three years of her life was spent as a widow in Essex after the
death of Frank Collett from Cheltenham was recorded at the Essex register
office (Ref. 5d 2010) in 1969 at the age of 67
47Q2
– Cyril Frank Collett was born in 1923 at Cheltenham
Evelyn Ellen Collett [47P15]
was born at Cheltenham towards the end of 1904 where her birth was recorded (Ref.
6a 437) during the last three months of that year. It was simply as Evelyn Collett that she was
six years of age in 1911 and fourteen years later she married Ernest G Davies,
their wedding recorded at Cheltenham register office (Ref. 6a 859) during the
last three months of 1925. The birth of
their first child Leslie J Davies was recorded at Cheltenham (Ref. 6a
661) during the third quarter of 1926 then, like other members of this Collett,
they left Cheltenham and moved south to Newport in Monmouthshire where the
birth of the couple’s other children were recorded. They were Patricia Davies during the
spring of 1927 (Ref. 11a 354), and Arthur D Davies (11a 293) during the
first quarter of 1930. The mother’s
maiden-name was confirmed as Collett for all three children
Emily Louisa Collett [47P16]
was born at Cheltenham on 17th December 1908 and was two years old
in the census of 1911. Her birth, using
her full name, was recorded at Cheltenham (Ref. 6a 395) during the first months
in 1909. She was 21 years of age when
she married Mervyn G Minchin with their wedding recorded at Cheltenham (Ref. 6a
605) during the first quarter of 1930. Mervyn
George Minchin was born at Wheatenhurst, near Stroud, in 1090 the son of Thomas
Minchin of Bourton-on-the Water and his wife Mabel of Stroud. The birth of couple’s first child Pauline
M Minchin was recorded at Cheltenham register office (Ref. 6a 637) during
the second quarter of 1932. Other children followed, including twins, whose
births were recorded at Gloucestershire register office, and in all cases their
mother’s maiden-name was confirmed as Collett.
They were: Marion W Minchin (Ref. 6a 397) during the last three
months of 1934; Mervyn W Minchin (Ref. 6a 398) also during the first
three months of 1934; Roderick S Minchin (Ref. 6a 656) in 1945. Upon her death in 1991, at the age of 82, her
passing was recorded at Gloucestershire register office (Vol. 22 2020). Mervyn had died many years earlier aged 59,
when his death was recorded at Gloucestershire (Ref. 7b 280)
Edward Collett [47P17]
was born at Cheltenham on 23rd November 1910, the fourth and last
child of Frank Collett and Mary Ann Rivers.
His birth was recorded at Cheltenham register office (Ref. 6a 385) during
the first quarter of the following year.
He was just over four months old in the Cheltenham census return in
1911. It was towards the end of 1931
that the marriage of Edward Collett and Winnie L Lippett was recorded at
Cheltenham register office (Ref. 6a 999) during the last three months of that
year. They had five children, with the
first four born at Cheltenham, including twins, with the birth of the couple’s
last child registered at the Gloucestershire register office. On all five occasions, the mother’s
maiden-name was confirmed as Lippett. After
that, the only other information know about their father Edward is that he died
in 1978 with his passing at the age of 67 recorded at Gloucestershire register
office (Vol. 22 1800)
47Q3 – Raymond E Collett was born in 1932 at Cheltenham (Ref. 6a 553) Qrt 1
47Q4 – Anthony Collett was born in 1936 at Cheltenham (Ref.
6a 582) Qrt 1
47Q5 – John Collett was born in 1939 at Cheltenham (Ref. 6a 597) Qrt 2
47Q6 – Mary Collett was born in 1939 at Cheltenham (Ref. 6a 598) Qrt 2
47Q7 – Leslie Collett
was born in 1944 at Gloucestershire
He
joined 2nd Battalion South Wales Borders, in which he was Private
Collett 14590673. Tragically, on 8th
July 1944 at the age of 31, he was killed during the heavy fighting in the
Bayeux and Caen area of France and was buried at the Hottot-les-Bagues War
Cemetery fourteen kilometres from Bayeux.
His next-of-kin were named as his parents John and Millicent Collett,
and his wife Betty May Collett of Watermoor
The
War Memorial in Cirencester bears the name of Robert John Collett. Sadly, he never saw his youngest child who
was born after he had died. Four years
after the war, on 21st September 1949, probate of the personal
effects of Robert John Collett of 78 Melmore Gardens in Cirencester, amounting
to £625 2 Shillings and 8 Pence, was granted to Alice May Butler and William
John Butler, Jack’s mother and father-in-law.
Following the death of her husband, and with her two surviving children
to support, Betty May Collett married Arthur Frank H Goscombe who was born on
22nd November 1913. That
marriage produced another child for Betty, when Jenny Goscombe was born
sometime around 1948 or 1949. Arthur
Goscombe died at the age of 82 during the third quarter of 1996, his death
recorded at Cirencester register office (Ref. 33d 191). Betty May Goscombe was 84 when she died in
2002, her death also being recorded at Cirencester (Ref. 42d 54) during the
second quarter of that year. Their
daughter Jenny was still alive in 2014
The
photograph of Robert John Collett (above) was generously provided by his
granddaughter Michelle Downes-Hall nee Collett, the youngest child of his son
Rodney James Collett, who also kindly provided the photograph of her great
grandfather John Collett [47O33]
47Q8
– David John Collett
was born in 1940 at Cirencester
47Q9
– RODNEY JAMES COLLETT
was born in 1942 at Cirencester
47Q10
– Anthony W Collett was
born in 1946 at Cirencester
Myrtle
Collett [47P19] was
born at Addlestone on 25th July 1905, the first child of Joseph
James Collett and Kate Selina Winstone who were married nine months earlier,
her birth recorded at Chertsey register office (Ref. 2a 65) during the third
quarter of that year. It was at
Addlestone that she was living with her family in 1911, when she was five years
old. She was 23 when the marriage of
Myrtle Collett and David Sleet was recorded at Chertsey register office (Ref.
2a 118) during the second quarter of 1929.
A year later, the birth of the couple’s first child Eileen M Sleet was
recorded at Chertsey in 1930, when the mother’s maiden-name was confirmed as
Collett. A second daughter, Audrey R
Sleet was born there towards the end of 1931 and, four years after that, Myrtle
presented David with a son David C Sleet in the spring of 1936, his birth
recorded at the Surrey North-Western register office. Myrtle Sleet, nee Collett was 71 years old,
when her death was recorded at the Surrey North-Western register office (Vol.
17 0614) near the end of 1976
Edith
Emmeline Collett [47P20]
was born at Addlestone in 1907, her birth recorded at Chertsey register office
(Ref. 2a 61) during the third quarter of that year, the second child of Joseph
and Kate Collett. Under her full name
Edith was three years old in the Addlestone census of 1911. Although it has been reported that Edith was
also married and died at Bristol in 1988, no recorded of a marriage or a record
of her death has been found
William Joseph Collett
[47P21] was born at
Addlestone on 2nd September 1909, his birth recorded at Chertsey
register office (Ref. 2a 54) during the last three months of that year. He was the only son of amongst the four
children of Joseph and Kate Collett. He
was only one-year old in 1911, when he and his family were living at Addlestone
within the Chertsey area of Surrey. He
is known to have married, but unfortunately no record of the event has been
found. In 1956, following the death of
his father, William Joseph Collett was named as the executor of his father’s
Will, when his occupation was that of a local government officer. Thirty-four years later, the death of William
Joseph Collett, the son of Joseph James Collett, at Taunton Deane was recorded
in Somerset (Vol. 23 1633) during early 1990
Another
William Joseph Collett was twenty-nine at the outbreak of the Second World War,
and it was around then that he joined the Royal Army Medical Corp with which he
was Private Collett 7535348. He was
posted to the Far East where he was involved in the campaign against the
Japanese. Tragically, he was killed on
Saint Valentine’s Day in 1942, at the age of 31, and his name appears on the
Singapore War Memorial (Column 105) amongst the 24,000 casualties who have no
known grave
Betty
Winstone Collett [47P22] was born in 1921 and her birth was recorded at Chertsey
register office (Ref. 2a 106) during the second quarter of the year, when her
mother’s maiden-name was confirmed as Winston.
She was the fourth and last child of Joseph James Collett and Kate
Selina Winstone. Selina Winstone. It is
understood that she was married and that she died during 1982
Cyril Frank Collett [47Q2]
was born at Cheltenham on 31st May 1923, the only known child of Frank
Collett and Constance E Skey. His birth
was recorded at Cheltenham (Ref. 6a 768) during the second quarter of 1923,
when his mother’s maiden-name was confirmed as Skey. At the age of 23, the marriage of Cyril Frank
Collett and Dorothy Broadhead was recorded at Yorkshire register office (Ref.
2c 1607) during the third quarter of 1946.
The birth of their first child David was also recorded at Yorkshire
register office (Ref. 2c 944) in 1947.
After a further nine years, Dorothy gave birth to a daughter Brenda,
whose birth was recorded at Rotherham register office (Ref. 2c 839) in
1956. For both births, the mother’s
maiden-name was confirmed as Broadhead.
The later death of Cyril Frank Collett was recorded at Yorkshire
register office (Vol. 0451a c44b) during 2001 when he was 78 years old
47R1 – David Collett was born in 1947
at Yorkshire
47R2 – Brenda Collett was born in 1956
at Rotherham
Leslie Collett [47Q7] was born in 1944, possibly in Cheltenham where his older
sibling were born, the fifth and last child of Edward Collett and
Winnie L Lippett. His birth was recorded at Gloucestershire register office (Ref. 6a 745),
when his mother’s maiden-name was confirmed as Lippett. He was around 23 when the marriage of Leslie
Collett and Maureen P Smith was recorded at Cheltenham register office (Ref. 7b
455) during the spring of 1967. The
birth of their children were also recorded at Cheltenham, with their mother’s
maiden-name confirmed as Smith
47R3 – Donna Louise Collett
was born in 1967 at Cheltenham
47R4 – Michelle Lesley Collett
was born in 1971 at Cheltenham
David John Collett [47Q8] was the eldest son of Robert John
(Jack) Collett and his wife Betty May Butler and was born at Watermoor, in
Cirencester, on 5th January 1940.
His birth was recorded at Cirencester register office (Ref. 6a 1226)
during the first three months of 1940, when his mother’s maiden-name was
confirmed as Butler. He never married
and his death was recorded at Gloucester records office (Vol. 22 1951) during
the spring of 1989, who he was 49 was born in 1921 and her birth was recorded
at Chertsey register office (Ref. 2a 106) during the second quarter of the
year, when her mother’s maiden-name was confirmed as Winston. She was the fourth and last child of Joseph
James Collett and Kate Selina Winstone. Selina Winstone. It is understood that she was married and
that she died during 1982
RODNEY JAMES COLLETT [47Q9]
was born at Watermoor
in Cirencester on 15th June 1942, another son of Jack and Betty
Collett. It was also at Cirencester,
that his marriage to Doris Lillian George, from St Helena in the South
Atlantic, was recorded (Ref. 7b 669) during the last quarter of 1962. and they had three children who were all born
at Watermoor, where the family still live in 2012
47R5 – Deborah Jane Collett was born in 1963 at Watermoor,
Cirencester
47R6 – THOMAS MARK COLLETT was born in 1963 at Watermoor,
Cirencester
47R7 – Michelle Collett was born in 1972 at Watermoor,
Cirencester
Anthony
W Collett [47Q10], who
was known as Tony, was originally thought to have been born at Cirencester in
1946, when in fact his birth was recorded at Cheltenham register office (Ref.
6a 727) during the first quarter of 1946, his mother’s maiden-name was
confirmed as Butler. He was the last son
of Jack Collett and Betty Butler and was 23 years old when the marriage of
Anthony W Collett and Rosemary P Jeffery was recorded at Cirencester (Ref. 7b
1168) during the summer of 1969. No
record of any children has been found
Donna Louise Collett [47R3]
was born at Cheltenham in 1967 where her birth was recorded (Ref. 7b 459)
during the last three months of the year, when her mother’s maiden-name was
confirmed as Smith. She was the older of
the two daughters of Leslie Collett and Maureen P Smith and was 29 years old
when she married. It was a Donna L
Collett that she married Jeremy R Brookes in 1997, with their wedding day
recorded at Cheltenham register office (Vol. 479 0927) during the spring that
year
Michelle Lesley Collett [47R4]
was born at Cheltenham in 1971, the youngest daughter of Leslie and Maureen
Collett. Her birth was recorded at
Cheltenham register office (Ref. 7b 1296) during the first three months of that
year, as was her marriage when she was 24.
The marriage of Michelle L Collett and Michael N Guthrie was recorded there
(Vol. 479 0501) during the last three months of 1995
Deborah Jane Collett [47R5]
was born at Watermoor
in Cirencester, the eldest of the three children of Rodney James Collett and
his wife Doris Lillian George. Her birth
was recorded at Cirencester register office (Ref. 7b 601) during the last three
months of 1963, when her mother’s maiden-name was confirmed as George. It was during the spring of 1983 that her
marriage to Alexander A Bryson was recorded at register office (Vol. 22
1588). In 2012, Deborah and Alexander
were living in Cirencester, their three sons being James Bryson (born in
1987 at Swindon), Scott Bryson (born in 1989 at Cheltenham), and Danny
Bryson (born in 1991 at Cheltenham)
TIMOTHY MARK COLLETT [47R6],
who is known as Tim,
was born at Watermoor in Cirencester, the only son of Rodney and Doris
Collett. During the middle of 1990, the
marriage of Timothy M Collett and Tessa J Rowe was recorded at Cirencester
register office (Vol. 22 1918). Their
marriage produced three children and, in 2012, Timothy and Tessa were residing
in Cirencester with their family
47S1
- Karl John Collett was born in 1990 at Cheltenham
47S2
– Fabienne Collett was born in 1992
47S3
– Rosie Collett was born circa 1999 at Cirencester
Michelle Collett [47R7], who is known as Shelley, was born at
Watermoor in Cirencester, the youngest of the three children of Rodney and
Doris Collett. The birth was recorded at
Cirencester register office (Ref. 7b 1372) during the spring of 1972, when her
mother’s maiden-name was confirmed George.
It was there also, that her subsequent marriage to Timothy M F
Downes-Hall was recorded (Vol. 480 0165) during the latter part of 1995. Shelley and Timothy have two sons and there
is a tradition within the Downes-Hall family that any sons born into the family
carry an addition name. Hence Shelley’s
two sons are William Connor ffoxe Downes-Hall, and Brendan Jack ffoxe
Downes-Hall. It is thanks to the information
received from Shelley during 2012 that this family line has been extended by a
further three generations, and a fourth in 2020
Karl
John Collett [47S1] was
born at Cheltenham towards the end of 1990, where his birth was recorded (Ref.
22 2179), the first-born child of Timothy Mark Collett, whose mother’s maiden-name
was confirmed as Rowe
Fabienne
Collett [47S2] was born
in 1992, her birth recorded at Cheltenham register office (Vol. 22 2224) during
the summer of that year. She was the
second of the three children of Timothy Mark Collett, her mother’s maiden-name
confirmed as being Rowe. On 6th
March 2020, she gave birth to a son, Conor James Porter
Appendix
for Fifield in Oxfordshire
The following
information had previously been incorrectly placed in this family, but has now
been removed to this appendix because it relates to the alternative village of
Fifield near Burford in Oxfordshire
William Collett [47l1] was a sawyer and was married to
Elizabeth, whose son Richard was born at Fifield near Burford in 1803
47m1
– Richard Collett was
born in 1803 at Burford
Richard Collett [47m1] was born in 1803 and was baptised at
Fifield by Burford in Oxfordshire on 10th July 1803, when his
parents were confirmed as being William and Elizabeth Collett. He was a sawyer, like his father, and was
married and widowed shortly after, although no records of his first marriage
have yet been found. It was on 29th
August 1847 that sawyer Richard Collett, a widower, was married by banns to the
widow Mary Cawcott at Bledington. The church register confirmed the groom’s
father was William Collett, a sawyer, while the bride’s father was named as
labourer W Hathaway. The witnesses at
the ceremony were Amos and Lois Cook, while the register was signed by the
bride in the name of Callcutt, rather than Cawcott
Richard
and Mary were still living in Bledington at the time of the census in 1851,
when Richard Collett was 48 and a sawyer from Fifield in Oxfordshire, and his
wife Mary was 52 and from Salford near Chipping Norton in Oxfordshire. On that occasion the couple had taken in two
lodgers. It was a similar same situation
ten years later when once again Richard’s place of birth was recorded as
Fifield in Oxfordshire when he and Mary were still residing in the village of
Bledington which was midway between Fifield and Chipping Norton
However,
by the time of the next census in 1871 the couple was residing within the
Shipston-on-Stour area of Warwickshire, albeit under the incorrect name of
Collett. Richard was 68 and had been
born at Fifield in Oxfordshire, while his wife Mary was 73. It was just two years later that Richard
Collett passed away, with his death recorded at Shipston-on-Stour (Ref. 6d 386)
during the third quarter of 1873
Prior
to her marriage to Richard Collett, Mary had presented her first husband Thomas
Callcott with ten children who were all baptised at
Bledington. The eldest was baptised as
William Calcut on 20th April 1817, while
the youngest was baptised as Edward Caucutt on 8th
October 1835. Further work is therefore
needed to determine where William and Richard Collett fit into the wider
Collett family