PART
SEVEN
The
Short Australia
Updated June 2025
This is the family line of June Tobin of
7M1 |
HENRY COLLETT and Ann were the parents of George
Edwin Collett who was born at Leonard Stanley in Gloucestershire, England,
during the first four months of 1822. |
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7N1
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GEORGE EDWIN COLLETT |
Born in 1822 |
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7N1 |
GEORGE EDWIN COLLETT was born in 1822 and was baptised at
Leonard Stanley on 20th April 1822. The entry was a new addition, discovered and
inserted in December 2001 – see footnote at the end of this family line. George Edwin Collett later married (1)
Agnes Keane around 1848/49 at St Giles Camberwell in London, and the marriage
certificate confirmed that George’s occupation was that of an ‘upholder’. That was perhaps an indication he was a
member of The Worshipful Company of Upholders, an upholder being the archaic
name for an upholsterer. |
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The
two children from that marriage were both born in London; the first child was
born at York Place in Battersea, and the second at The Terrace in Kennington,
although both were baptised at the Church of St Mark in Kennington. It was in the spring of 1854 that the
family set sail for Australia on board the sailing ship Stebonheath and
arrived at Melbourne in August that same year. Rather curiously the ship’s indent only
listed George Collett, who was thirty-three years old, and his two children
George Collett and Alice Collett. It
therefore seems very likely that his wife Agnes had died prior to his
departure from England, possible during or as a result of the failed birth of
a third child. |
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What
is known for sure, is that George was married for a second time during 1861
in Australia, his new bride being (2) Alice William–Jones, and their only
child William Henry Collett was born at Inglewood in Victoria. On the child’s birth certificate, George
referred to himself as ‘of Cheltenham’ – see footnote. |
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Soon
after the birth of William Henry, the family went to live in New Zealand
where they managed a hotel at Naseby in central New Zealand. George must have eventually returned to
Australia, because it was there that his death was recorded in 1903 at the
age of eighty-one when, according to the information detailed on his death
certificate, his occupation at the end of his life had been that of a grocer. |
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7O1
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George William Collett |
Born in 1849
at Battersea, London |
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7O2 |
EVELYN ALICE COLLETT |
Born in 1850
at Kennington, London |
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The following
is the only child of George Collett by his second wife Alice: |
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7O3 |
William Henry Collett |
Born in 1861 |
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7O1
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George William Collett was born at York Place in Battersea,
London on 30th March 1849. That might indicate his parents were married
during 1848, rather than as previously documented in 1849, although that
cannot be ruled out and would mean that Agnes was with-child on her wedding
day. Just like his sister Evelyn (below),
George William Collett was baptised at St Mark’s Church in Kennington,
London. That took place on 1st
July 1849 and confirmed that his parents were George Edwin Collett and his
wife Agnes. Following his voyage to
Australia with his father and sister in 1854, nothing further has so far been
discovered about what happened to George William Collett. |
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However,
within the Electoral Roll for 1896 a certain George Collett was a resident of
Caversham in South Dunedin where he was working as a printer. The reason for assuming that he may well be
George William Collett is related to his occupation, when his half-brother
William Henry was a compositor for a printer.
Only one other Collett was recorded in the listing that year and she
was Ann Collett of Leonard Street
in Kensington, South Dunedin, who was undertaking domestic duties. |
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By
1899 The South Dunedin Electoral Roll contained the following names. The same George Collett, the printer of
Caversham, the same Ann Collett of Leonard Street, and the same William Henry
Collett (below) and his wife Alice of McGlashan Street in St
Kilda. However, by then they had been
added to by the inclusion of bootmaker Benjamin Collett and his wife Annie
Elizabeth Collett of Grosvenor Street in Kensington. It is now established that he was Benjamin Lewis Uparis Collett (Ref. 66O4)
and that Annie Elizabeth was his second wife.
See Part 66 – The France to New Zealand Line. By 1902 George Collett the printer was
residing at Hillside Road in Kensington, while all the others from 1899 were
once again recorded at the same addresses as in the previous electoral roll. |
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It
was the next Electoral Roll in 1905 which was more interesting, insofar as
the previously mentioned Ann Collett of Leonard Street was no longer living
there, perhaps she was married by then. Instead, it was music teacher William Henry
and his wife Alice Harriet who were recorded at a house in Leonard Street in
Kensington. Only four Colletts were named
in the 1905 listing and the other two were the aforementioned Benjamin, and
his wife Annie Elizabeth, who were still residents in Grosvenor Street. According to the Electoral Roll for 1911
only three adults named Collett were still living in the South Dunedin
registration district. They were William
Henry and Alice Harriet Collett who, by then were living at 54 Helena Street,
and Annie Elizabeth Collett the widow of Benjamin Collett, who was then
living at 36 Rankeilor Street. |
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William
and Alice, and the widow Annie were still living at the same addresses in
1914, and had been joined on the listing by civil servant Stratford John Waverley Collett (Ref. 4M16)
and his wife Marion of 54 Glen Avenue in Mornington. In 1919 the widow Annie Elizabeth Collett
of 36 Rankeilor Street had living there with her unmarried daughter Vera Emma Collett (Ref. 66P8), while
living at 54 Helena Street was still William and Alice with their sons George
Edmund and Clarence Thomas (all below). |
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Some
new Colletts were listed on the Electoral Roll of 1922 and they were Edward Carnarvon Collett (Ref. 4M14),
a customs office, his wife Marion Collett and their unmarried daughter Hannah Maria Ellen (Ella) Collett (Ref.
4N11), all residing at 45 Maryhill Terrace in Mornington. Edward
was the older brother of Stratford John Collett (above). Mother and daughter, Annie, and Vera
Collett, were still living at 36 Rankeilor Street. George Edmund Collett, the married son of
William and Alice, and his wife Evelyn, were living at 262 South Road in
Caversham, while for some unknown reason there was no record of William Henry
Collett or his wife Alice Harriet. |
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However,
they were both once again included in the listing for 1925, when a total of
fourteen Colletts were named. William
and Alice were at 6 Alma Street in St Kilda, where their married son Clarence
and his wife Eva were staying at that time.
Their other married son George Edmund and his wife Evelyn were
recorded as 462 South Street in Caversham.
Living at 10 Nelson Street was father and son William Collett (Ref. 58O6), a tinsmith, and William Edwin Collett (Ref. 58P30), a labourer, William’s wife being
Mary Collett. Customs officer Edward
Carnarvon Collett, his wife Mary (rather than Marion as in 1922), and their
daughter Ella Hannah and their son Edward
Carnarvon Collett (Ref. 4N12), a storeman, were still living on Maryhill
Terrace but at number 28 and not 45.
And still living at 36 Rankeilor Street was the widow Annie Elizabeth
Collett, but without her daughter Vera who was married the previous year. |
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Three
years later the Electoral Roll for 1928 included fifteen eligible adults of
the Collett name, with two additional names being spinsters Amelia Louisa Collett (Ref. 58P32) of
15 Nelson Street and Iris Doreen
Collett (Ref. 66P9) of 61 Rankeilor Street, the second daughter of Annie
Elizabeth Collett who was still residing at Rankeilor Street but at number 26
and not 36 as previously. The same
four adult members of the family of William Henry Collett were still at 6
Alma Street in St Kilda, and they had been joined by his recently divorced
eldest son George. The four adults of
the family of Edward Carnarvon were still living at 28 Maryhill Terrace where
his wife was again named as Mary, plus the three members of the family of the
aforementioned Amelia Louisa Collett who were still living at nearby 10
Nelson Street. |
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The
previously listed Amelia Louisa Collett was staying with her family at 15
Nelson Street in 1931 and was still a spinster living with William and Mary
and William Edwin. By that time only
seven others of the name were still residing within the South Dunedin polling
area, and five of them were still living at 6 Alma Street in St Kilda. William Henry only had his two sons and
their wives living with him on that occasion.
The other two, as before were living in Rankeilor Street, widow Annie
Elizabeth Collett at number 26 and her daughter Iris Doreen Collett at number
61. |
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By
the time the new list was produced in 1935 the members of the Collett clan in
South Dunedin had increased again to fifteen.
Clarence and his wife Eva were still living with his father who had
moved to 52 Dalgety Street, leaving the elder son George Edward (sic) and his
second wife Muriel still at their previous home at 6 Alma Street. William and Mary, and their daughter Amelia,
were by then living at 10 Nelson Street, while Annie and her unmarried
daughter Iris were living together at 61 Rankeilor Street. The remaining five were Edward Carnarvon,
wife Mary, daughter Ella, and sons William
Cahill Collett (Ref. 4N14), a postal official, and James Collett (Ref. 4N13), a storeman, whose address was 156 Glen
Avenue. |
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The
final year for which records are currently available is 1938. That year the widow Annie Elizabeth Collett
was still living at 61 Rankeilor Street but alone as her daughter Iris was
married by then, William Henry Collett was still at 52 Dalgety Street with
his son Clarence Thomas and his daughter-in-law Eva Helen Collett, while his
other son George Edmund Collett and his second wife Muriel Irene Collett were
still at 6 Alma Street. Still living
at 10 Nelson Street was tinsmith William Collett, his wife Mary, and their
daughter Amelia Louisa Collett. And
finally, still residing at 156 Glen Avenue was Mary Collett (without her
husband) but with her daughter Ella Hannah Collett, and her son William
Cahill Collett. |
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7O2 |
EVELYN ALICE COLLETT was born at Kennington in London on
12th August 1850, and it was there at St Mark’s Church that she
was baptised on 1st September 1850, the daughter of George Edwin
Collett and his wife Agnes. In 1854
Evelyn accompanied her widowed father and brother George (above) to
Australia, and it was there that she married Henry Pullen at Fitzroy in
Melbourne during 1870. All their ten
children were born in Australia. The
only other known fact about the family is that Henry Pullen died in 1934. |
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7P1
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Agnes Alice
Pullen |
Born in 1871;
died in 1871 |
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7P2 |
Alice Pullen |
Born in 1872;
died in 1872 |
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7P3 |
George Henry
Pullen |
Born in 1873;
died in 1956 |
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7P4
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Henry Pullen |
Born in 1875;
died in 1945 |
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7P5 |
Gertrude Jane
Pullen |
Born in 1879;
died in 1949 |
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7P6 |
Emma Eliza Pullen |
Born in 1882 |
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7P7
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Gilbert
Sayers Pullen |
Born in 1885;
died in 1974 |
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7P8 |
James Samuel
Pullen |
Born in 1888;
died in 1889 |
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7P9 |
Annie Pullen |
Born in 1889;
died in 1889 |
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7P10 |
Rueben
William Pullen |
Born in 1892;
died in 1933 |
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7O3 |
William Henry Collett was born at Inglewood in Victoria
during 1861, the youngest son of George Edwin Collett and his only child by
his second wife Alice William-Jones. A
compositor by trade in the printing industry, William emigrated to New
Zealand when he was around 25 years of age in 1886 and, in the same year he
married Alice Harriet Welsh, the daughter of Charles Maddox and Louisa
Welsh. Alice was few years younger than William, who was born at
Somerset, England and was around two years old when the family emigrated to New Zealand on
the ship the Warrior Queen in 1867.
Tragically, her mother died during the sea voyage when giving birth to
a stillborn daughter. This family has not been
updated for many years, and was released in the first tranche of family lines
back in 2006, using details received from June Tobin over the previous twenty
years. More recently Bruce Simons,
a direct descendant of Somerset
farmer Charles Maddox Welsh and his second wife Louisa Andrews, made contact
concern the fact that he was unaware his ancestors had a daughter Alice
Harriet Welsh. In defence of the information kindly
provided by June, it is possible that Alice’s parents were not Charles and
Louisa, but it is confirmed she was born in Somerset and her surname was
Welsh, as proved by the details for George Edmund Collett, William and
Alice’s eldest son. |
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William and
Alice were blessed with three children, Annie Louisa, George Edmund, and
Clarence Thomas Collett. Annie and
Clarence were both born in New Zealand, while George was born in Australia,
perhaps when the family was visiting relatives there.
The South Dunedin New Zealand Electoral Rolls for the years from 1893
to 1938 William and his wife Alice were listed in the 1899 and 1902 listings
as residing at McGlashan Street in St Kilda, by which time William, referred
to as Henry in the latter listing, had the occupation of a music teacher. At the time of the 1905 elections William
Henry and Alice Harriet Collett were living at Leonard Street in Kensington,
and six years later in 1911 their address was 54 Helena Street in South
Dunedin, where they still in residence from that time through to the
elections in 1919. |
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By
1925 the Electoral Roll that year placed William Henry with wife Alice, their
daughter-in-law Eva Helen Collett and their son Clarence Thomas, all living
at 6 Alma Street in St Kilda. The four
of them were still living together at the time of the election in 1928
election, but in addition to which their older son George had returned home
after being granted a divorce from his wife Evelyn. It was also 6 Alma Street that was the
family’s home still in 1931 when the occupants were just William, as head of
the household, his son George with new wife Muriel, and his son Clarence. Where Eva Helen was that day has not been
determined. However, it is surmised
that William’s wife Alice may have been in hospital or a nursing home in
1931, since she was also missing from the family home in both the 1935 and
1938 Electoral Rolls. For the first of
them, William Henry Collett, a music teacher, was recorded as residing at 52
Dalgety Street, when also with him at that address was his son Clarence with
his wife Eva Helen Collett. It is
interesting to note, that still living at 6 Alma Street was his married son
and his wife Muriel, although George was listed in error as George Edward
Collett. |
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It
was at 52 Dalgety Street that William lived out the rest of his life. His wife Alice was still absent from the
family home in 1938, and it was that same year that Alice Harriet Collett nee
Welsh aged 70 died on 28th August 1938. It was the following day that she was
buried in a family plot [Block 134 Plot 77] at Andersons Bay Cemetery in
Dunedin where she was later joined by her husband. William Henry Collett was still living at
52 Dalgety Street in Dunedin at the time of his death on 5th October
1947 when he was 86, following which he was buried with his wife on 7th
October in the Andersons Bay Cemetery in Dunedin. The same family plot was later used for the
burial of their two sons and one of their wives. |
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The
record of the death of William Henry Collett at Dunedin confirmed that he was
a compositor and a native of Australia who have been living in New Zealand
for the past sixty-one years. It is
curious that no listing for the family every included any mention of the
couple’s first child, their only daughter Annie Louisa, so it is conceivable
that she may have suffered an infant death or left home very young to be
married or moved away from the family. |
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7P11
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Annie Louisa Collett |
Born in 1887
in New Zealand |
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7P12 |
George Edmund Collett |
Born in 1892 at
Melbourne in Australia |
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7P13 |
Clarence Thomas Collett |
Born in 1898
in New Zealand |
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7P6 |
Emma Eliza Pullen was born in 1882 and married Fred
Murray after the turn of the century. |
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7Q1
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June Murray |
Born circa
1910 |
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7P11
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Annie Louisa Collett was born at Caversham in the
Kensington area of Dunedin in New Zealand on 14th June 1887 (Ref.
1887019818) when her parents were confirmed as William Henry Collett aged 26
of Inglewood in Victoria, and his wife Alice Harriet Collett nee Welsh from
Bristol in Somerset, England. |
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7P12 |
George Edmund Collett was born in Australia around 1890 to
parents William Henry Collett and Alice Harriet Welsh who home was in New
Zealand before and after that event.
In his early life he lived with his family at McGlashan Street in St
Kilda, at Leonard Street in Kensington and at 54 Helena Street in South
Dunedin. George Edmund Collett
enlisted in the New Zealand Army at Dunedin on 27th September
1916. His entry papers described him
as being aged 24 years and 7 months, 5 feet 5½ inches tall, of a medium
complexion with hazel eyes and brown hair, and having the occupation of a
labourer. He stated in ignorance that
his father, William Henry Collett, had been born in Naseby in Otago - where
the family had been living - not knowing that he had been born at Inglewood
in Australia. However, he correctly provided his mother's place of birth as
Somersetshire in England and her home address as 54 Helena Street in South
Dunedin. |
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Five
months later, after receiving his basic training, George sailed from
Wellington to Devonport in England on board the ship Navua on 16th
February 1917 with H Company of 22nd Reinforcements of the New
Zealand Rifle Brigade. He was Rifleman
39169 and served just one year and thirty-three days in France before being
discharged on 17th April 1918.
The reason for his exit from the Great War was because he was no
longer physically fit for war service on account of the numerous bullet
wounds he had received in frontline action. |
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Not
long after his return to New Zealand he married (1) Evelyn Bell at Dunedin on
26th March 1919 and, according to the South Dunedin Electoral Roll
in 1922, the couple was living at 262 South Road, Caversham in Dunedin, when
George was working as a soap maker as he had been as a bachelor in early
1919. Between the years of 1919 and
1927 Evelyn presented George with four children, of which no details are
currently known, while the Electoral Rolls in 1925 again placed the family
still living in South Road but at number 462 instead of 262, by which time
George was a soap stamper. Shortly
after 1925 George took up work with the railway which resulted in the family
leaving Dunedin and moving to Addington in Christchurch. Tragically for George the marriage was not
successful and he and Evelyn were eventually divorced in 1927 after Evelyn
had been involved in an affair with George's cousin Alfred Frederick
Welsh. In the absence of any further
information, it has been assumed that George’s four children remained with
him rather than with their mother. |
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The
following is the first paragraph of the story published in the New Zealand
Truth magazine on 8th December 1927 under the heading “First
Cousin who thought He Came First”: The pealing of marriage bells in 1919 is now but a dim
memory for the Colletts of Dunedin.
The crash has come, due to Evelyn [Evelyn Collett nee Bell] having loved not wisely but
too well outside the marital fold.
George Edmund Collett has secured his decree nisi and his first
cousin, Alfred Frederick Welsh, an engineer of Christchurch, has been told by
a Jury to deliver £300 as a balm to the injured husband's feelings in having
had his wife stolen from him by the amorous Alfred. George Edmund, who is a railway employee,
journeyed with his counsel, Lawyer J. S. Sinclair, all the way from Dunedin
last week to tell Judge Adams and a jury all about it in the Christchurch
Divorce Court. Collett not only asked
that the nuptial knot be severed, but that he should be awarded the sum of
£500 damages at the expense of the correspondent Welsh. The
continuation of the report on the courtroom proceedings can be found in the
appendix at the end of this file. |
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Following
the failure of his marriage George returned to live at the home of his
parents at 6 Alma Street in St Kilda, where he was living in 1928. It was during the following year that
George married (2) Muriel Irene Holland and by 1931 he and his new wife were
still living at 6 Alma Street. During
the next four years George’s father moved out of the dwelling that was 6 Alma
Street, while George and his wife continued to live there. That was confirmed in the listing for 1935
when, in error, the couple was recorded as George Edward (sic) and Muriel
Irene Collett. It was also at that
same address that the couple was living in 1938, by which time George’s
occupation was that of a carpenter. |
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George
Edmund Collett died at the age of 65 on 20th July 1957 at 7 Cooper Street in Mornington which is within the general area of
South Dunedin where the family had been living previously. He was subsequently buried in the family
plot at the Andersons Bay Cemetery on 23rd July 1957. His second wife Muriel Irene Collett was
also buried in the Andersons Bay Cemetery when she passed away twenty-seven
years later, on 30th November 1984. |
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George
and Muriel had one known child, Edmund Ross Collett, who born while the
family was living at 6 Alma Street in St Kilda. Sometime after the death of her husband in
1957, Muriel emigrated to Australia with her son and his young family
possibly in 1959 or 1960, but subsequently returned to New Zealand onboard
the Wanganella during the month of June in 1963. On the ship’s passenger list, Muriel was
recorded as being 64 years of age and retired, which would suggest she had
previously been in work to support the family. |
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7Q2
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Mona Daphne Collett |
Born in 1920
at Dunedin |
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7Q3
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a Collett
child |
Born in 1922
at Dunedin |
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7Q4
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a Collett
child |
Born in 1924
at Dunedin |
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7Q5
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a Collett
child |
Born in 1926
at Dunedin or Addington |
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The
following is the only known child of George Edmund Collett by his second wife
Muriel I Holland: |
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7Q6
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Edmund Ross Collett |
Born in 1930
at St Kilda, Dunedin |
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7P13 |
Clarence Thomas Collett was born in New Zealand on 23rd
October 1898, the youngest of the three known children of William Henry
Collett and Alice Harriet Welsh. As a
young child he grew up while living at McGlashan Street in St Kilda and by
the time he was around five years old he and his family were living at
Leonard Street in Kensington. Clarence
Collett was placed second amongst the Infants Room Boys Class Prizes at the
Kensington School, on the corner of Grosvenor Street and Andersons Bay Road
at the end of term in December 1905. In
his early to mid-teens his parents took the family to live at 54 Helena
Street in South Dunedin, where they were recorded in 1911 and again in
1919. On leaving school Clarence
became a tally clerk and it was during 1921 that he married Eva Helen
Dickson, the daughter of Alexander and Janet Dickson, Eva having been born in
New Zealand on 4th May 1899.
Even after they were married Clarence and Eva continued to live with
his parents through to 1925 and that year the family’s home was at 6 Alma
Street in St Kilda, when Clarence was a candle maker. |
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From
1925 through to 1931 Clarence and Eva and Clarence’s parent continued to
reside at 6 Alma Street, but sometime after that the couple and Clarence’s
father moved house to 52 Dalgety Street leaving his brother George (above)
still living in the property at 6 Alma Street. And it was at 52 Dalgety Street in Dunedin
that candle maker Clarence and his wife were living with Clarence’s father in
1935 and 1938. |
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By
the time of the death of Clarence Thomas Collett at Dunedin at the age of 82
on 22nd September 1983 he was described as a soap maker, following
which he was buried in the family plot at Andersons Bay Cemetery on 24th
September. Clarence’s wife Eva Helen
Collett nee Holland survived him by a further seven years, when she passed
away at the Chalet Hospital on the High Street in Dunedin on 27th
May 1990 at the age of 91 and was buried in the same plot as her husband and
his parents and his brother George. It
still has not been ascertain whether Clarence and Eva ever had any children. |
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7Q1 |
June Murray was born around 1910 to parents Fred
Murray and his wife Emma Eliza Pullen.
She later married to become
June Tobin. |
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7Q2
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Mona Daphne Collett was born at Caversham in Dunedin on 22nd
October 1920, the daughter of George Edmund Collett and his first wife Evelyn
Bell. It is likely that it was at the
family home in South Street that she was born where her father was living
before becoming a married man and after when he and Mona’s mother were living
with her grandparents in 1922 and 1925.
In 1927 when Mona and her family were living at Addington in
Christchurch her parents were divorced, although it is not clear whether she
and her three siblings remaining living with her mother or her father, both
of whom remarried after the decree nisi.
It was in 1946
when Mona married Alan John Campbell with whom she had a son Al
Campbell. It was during 2013 that
Mona Daphne Campbell nee Collett passed away. |
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7Q6
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Edmund Ross Collett was born at 6 Alma Street within the
St Kilda district of South Dunedin on 7th November 1930, the
second of George Edmund Collett and his second wife Muriel Irene
Holland. The family was still living
at that same address eight years later according to the electoral rolls. Whilst his father was a carpenter in 1938,
Edmund followed in the footsteps of his grandfather William Henry Collett and
his great uncle George William Collett when he became a printer. Edmund Ross Collett later married June
Irene who was born in New Zealand on 1st January 1931. Over the following years June presented
Edmund with two children Ross and Lynette, and just after the death of his
father in 1957 Edmund and his family, together with his widowed mother, emigrated
to Australia. It is possible the five of
them were living close to other relatives when in Australia. However, life there was not for them, and
they returned to Auckland in New Zealand on the Wanganella on 9th June
1963, and thereafter made their way back to Dunedin. Edmund and June was both described as being
32 years of age, with Edmund’s occupation confirmed as a printer. |
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Also
of interest on their return journey and among the passengers on board the
Wanganella, was Ray Codrye and Thelma Codyre.
Ray, aged 36, was a linotype operator in the printing trade who may
have been a work colleague, friend, or relative, of Edmund Collett. The same passenger list described Thelma
Codyre as having been born in New Zealand and that she was 58 years of age,
making her year of birth around 1905. In fact, it now transpires that, Thelma
Codrye was the former Thelma Gladys Collett who died in New Zealand during
1972, as confirmed on BDM New Zealand database. Who she was, and where she fits into this
family line, has still to be determined. |
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The
retired printer Edmund Ross Collett died on 26th February 2013
when he had been living at 39 Law Street in the Caversham district of South
Dunedin, following which he was buried five days later at the Dunedin
Cemetery on 1st March. His
wife June Irene Collett had passed away eleven years earlier when she died in
2002 in New Zealand although, curiously, no record has been found of her in
any of the Dunedin Cemeteries. |
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7R1
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Ross Collett |
Born circa
1956 in New Zealand |
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7R2
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Lynette Collett |
Born circa
1959 in New Zealand |
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7R1
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Ross Collett was born in New Zealand around 1956,
the son of Edmund Ross Collett and his wife June Irene. He was around three years old when his
family emigrated to Australia after the death of his grandfather, but
returned within a few years. For that
return journey on board the ship Wanganella on 9th June 1963 Ross
Collett was recorded as being seven years of age. |
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7R2
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Lynette Collett was born in New Zealand around 1959,
two years after her grandfather George Edmund Collett passed away. Shortly after her birth her parents Edmund
Ross Collett and June Irene Collett took the family to living in Australia,
together with Lynette’s recently widowed grandmother. However, the new life did not live up to
their expectations and the family later returned to Dunedin during the 1960s. For that return journey on 9th
June 1963 Lynette Collett was four years old. |
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Footnotes: |
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The
original information for George Edwin Collett (above) was assembled in
1995 by June Tobin with the help of |
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Furthermore,
it is very likely that the reference to Cheltenham by George Edwin Collet at
that time, was made with regard to the district of Melbourne where he was
living, rather than the town in Gloucestershire. |
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Information
discovered in December 2001 conclusively proved that George Edwin Collett was not George Collett (Ref.
1N63) of Leonard Stanley. That
gentleman married Harriet Frape of Eastington near Stroud and ended up later
in his life living at Altrincham in Cheshire, where he was a carpenter and
joiner. |
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That
then only leaves George Edwin Collett to be the one baptised at Leonard
Stanley on 20th June 1822, the son of Henry and Ann Collett. Since 2001, no further details had been
added to this family line that is until Kelvin Parker, of Christchurch in New
Zealand, managed to unearth the details of the family line of William Henry
Collett, the youngest child of the aforesaid George Edwin Collett, for
inclusion in the revised edition of the file in March 2014. |
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Appendix |
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The continuation of the article
published in the New Zealand Truth magazine on 8th December 1927 under the heading “First Cousin who thought He Came First” |
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The story told by Lawyer Sinclair, and which was backed
up by George [George
Edmund Collett Ref 7P12] when he entered the box, was a sorry tale of a
gay Lothario whose long suit seemed to be poaching on another man's
preserves. Of course, Welsh was most
charming of manner, and being a first cousin of George, he was a persona
grata, so to speak, in his home after the formalities of introducing him to
his wife were completed. However, it
was not very long before the fickle Evelyn, in spite of home cares and four
young children, had lost her heart to Welsh, the welsher of another man's
wife. And thereby hangs the tale. Neither Welsh nor the erring Evelyn thought
it necessary to defend the suit and George romped home with his decree and
damages. When, on March 26, 1919,
George and Evelyn left on the honeymoon trip, both were deeply in love, and
when they settled down to home-making in Dunedin, life seemed one long round
of happiness. Time went by and they
set up the nucleus of a family. The
Colletts were truly happy until towards the end of last year, when Alfred
Frederick Welsh appeared on the scene.
His arrival was the prelude to much trouble and heartburning, but it
was some time before Collett realised just what sort of a man his first
cousin was. At this time the Collets
had moved from Dunedin and were living in Addington, Christchurch, hence the
meeting with Welsh, who is an engineer employed by Anderson's, Ltd., in the Cathedral
City. Collett was delighted to take
him along and introduce him to Mrs Collett and, being a relative, he of
course had access to the home whenever he liked. Welsh traded fully on his friendship with
Collett to pull the wool over his eyes and deceive him as to his real
intentions. |
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They were anything but honourable, and he lost no
opportunity of impressing himself upon his cousin's wife in a manner that any
self-respecting husband would strongly object to. But, convinced of Welsh's friendship, and
as he was a relative, Collett suspected nothing. He was, as he told the court, living on the
happiest terms with his wife and he had no reason to think his affection for
her was not reciprocated. But sometime
later he had reason to revise his opinion.
One day as he was leaving work, Welsh met him outside, saying he had
been up at the house but did not like to stay there when Collett was not
present. George thought little of this
at the time, but when he and Welsh finally arrived home Evelyn "burst
into a cloud of tears" and then rushed into the kitchen. Wondering what all the fuss was about, and
very much perturbed, Collett followed her out and asked her what the matter
was. But never a word did she
vouchsafe in explanation. |
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Lawyer Sinclair:
‘Had you had any serious quarrels with your wife up to that stage?’ —
‘No.’ ‘From then onward did you notice
any change in your wife's affection for you?’ — ‘Yes, I did; she cooled
off. Her affection for me faded right
away.’ When once he realised that a
crisis was pending in his married life, Collett left for Dunedin, taking his
wife with him. But by this time
Evelyn's heart had been well and truly snared by the welshing first
cousin. Collett told the court that
about a week after he and his wife returned to Dunedin she cleared out and
left him. And very cunningly was the
departure staged by the wife. ‘One day
she had to go out into town on business,’ said Collett. ‘At that time we were staying with my own
people, and as she left the house she told my mother she would not be
long.’ His Honour: ‘Were you present
at the time?’ — ‘No, I was at work.’
His Honour: ‘Well, you cannot give us hearsay evidence.’ Lawyer Sinclair: ‘Just tell the court what you know of your own
knowledge.’ ‘Well, I had neuritis at
the time.......’ Collett began to explain, but the judge interrupted
him. ‘What has that got to do with
it?’ asked his honour. Counsel: ‘He is just leading up to the point,
sir.’ The Judge: ‘But what has
neuritis got to do with it?’ |
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Collett forgot his neuritis at his counsel's invitation
and went on to tell what had happened when Evelyn cleared out. ‘The same day I met her on the street and
she told me she was off, and wheeling round got away quick and lively’ said
he. Counsel: ‘Now, up to that time had
your wife been a good mother to the children?’ — ‘Yes, absolutely.’ Lawyer Sinclair then put in two written
confessions supplied by Welsh and Mrs Collett. Mrs Collett was interviewed at the house
where she was staying with Welsh at 288 Madras Street, Christchurch, by W. R.
Lascelles, a solicitor, to whom she admitted misconduct with Welsh. Welsh, when he was interviewed at the same
address later, also made a similar admission and added that he and Mrs
Collett had been living together as Mr and Mrs Welsh since March last. ‘The question for you, gentlemen, is to
decide what is the value of this woman who has proved false to her marriage
vows’ remarked the judge when addressing the jury on the question of
damages. ‘The woman was living happily
with her husband until the co-respondent came along, and the presumption will
be that he lured her away, knowing that she was the wife of another
man.’ His honour pointed out that the
correspondent, who was described as an engineer, was probably a wages man,
and the jury would have to consider that fact when assessing damages, if
any. The jury did not take long to
decide and brought back a verdict for £300 damages. The Judge then entered the decree nisi and
gave judgment for the amount awarded.
A costly wooing for Welsh. |
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