This
section of the website contains a comprehensive list
of
those with the Collett name who lost their life
during
the First World War
The
information has been extracted from the
Commonwealth
War
According to these
records a total of 157 Collett men died during the war, comprising 112 from the
British Army, 16 from the Royal Navy, 3 from the Royal Flying Corp/Royal Air
Force (including New Zealander Captain Clive Franklyn Collett), 11 from
Australia, 11 from Canada, and 4 from New Zealand.
Each list is in
alphabetical order by Christian name and wherever possible additional
information has been added in italics after the military details.
So far it has been
discover that there were three sets of two brothers that lost their lives.
Up to December 2011 only fifty-eight
of the deceased have been identified as being members of the Collett Family
BRITISH
ARMY
|
Name |
Rank |
Regiment |
Date of Death |
|
Collett,
A |
Lance
Corporal 7616 |
The
King’s Royal Rifle Corps |
|
|
Collett,
A E |
Driver
845344 |
Royal
Field Artillery |
|
|
Collett,
A F |
Private
235569 |
Leicestershire
Regiment |
27
May 1918 |
|
Collett,
Albert 22
years |
Private
16326 |
1st
Battalion |
|
|
Albert
was born in 1894 at Bidford-on-Avon in Warwickshire and his name is listed on
the Bidford-on-Avon War Memorial. A
detailed account of the |
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|
Albert
was the husband of Marie Collett of 122 Golden Hillock Road, Small Heath in |
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|
Albert’s
father ‘Jack’ was |
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|
This
is indicated in the 1881 Census in which their father |
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|
La
Neuville Cemetery in Corbie is situated a few miles east of
Amiens in the Somme department of France.
The vast majority of the graves are of officers and men who died of
wounds received during the Battle of the Somme in 1916. |
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|
Collett,
Albert Edward 31 years |
Driver
T/327134 |
Army
Service Corps |
9
November 1918 |
|
Albert
Edward was born at |
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|
For further
details of Albert Edward Collett and his family see Part
36 - The |
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|
Collett,
Albert Henry 20 years |
Private
265814 |
Royal
Warwickshire Regt |
|
|
Albert Henry was
born in 1896 at Armscote in Warwickshire and in 1901 was living at Cleeve
Prior in Worcestershire. His name
appears on the Thievpal Memorial – see
later historical note. |
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|
Collett,
Albert Henry 37 years |
Private
203515 |
Worcestershire
Regiment |
|
|
Albert
Henry was the first child of the marriage of George Henry and Sarah Collett
of Bredon near Tewkesbury, where he was born in
June 1880 and where he was working as a navy in 1901. His father George Henry Collett was born in
1860 at Bredon while his mother Sarah was born at Westmancote near |
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|
Collett,
Albert Herbert 41 years |
Lance
Corporal 23199 |
Royal
Warwickshire Regt |
|
|
Albert
Herbert was born in 1877 at London New Cross and was the husband of Florence
Collett of 28 St Paul’s Road at Balsall Heath in Birmingham and the son of
Harry and Sarah Ann Collett. |
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|
Collett,
Aldin (Alden) |
Corporal
8103 |
7th
Battalion Gloucestershire Regiment |
|
|
Alden
was born in 1888 and was the son of Charles Collett of Chipping Sodbury. He was buried at the |
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|
For further
details of Alden Collett and his family see Part
44 - The Malmesbury District |
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|
Collett,
Alfred (T A) 19
years |
Private
G/71552 |
23rd
Battalion Royal
Fusiliers |
|
|
Alfred
of Hull was born there in 1898 and was the son of Isaac Collett and Mary Ann Gubby of 6 Waterloo Cottages at Harefield in
Uxbridge. His father Isaac Collett was
born at Harefield 1866 and his mother at Southall,
Middlesex in 1863. |
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|
Alfred
was killed on the front line at Mesnil and was buried in the Mesnil Communal
Cemetery Extension. He is also listed here under
the name of T A Collett. |
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|
For further
details of Alfred Collett and his family see Part
41 - The Middlesex Harefield |
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|
The Mesnil
Communal Cemetery Extension on the Somme was begun in July 1916, and used
again as a front-line cemetery in 1918. |
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|
Collett,
Alfred Ernest 33 years |
Private
26826 |
Royal
Fusiliers |
|
|
Alfred
Ernest was born in 1883 at |
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|
The Thievpal Memorial was designed by Sir
Edwin Lutyens and is the biggest British Battle Memorial in the world. It was built between 1928 and 1932 and is
sited just a few miles to the south-west of the village of Thievpal which was
totally destroyed during the Battle of the Somme between 1st July
and 4th November 1916. It contains the
names of 72,000 British and South African soldiers who have no known grave. Many of the Collett men listed here have
their names included on this memorial. |
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|
Collett,
Arthur 30
years |
Private
23212 |
10th
Battalion Worcestershire
Regiment |
|
|
Arthur
was born in 1886 at |
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|
For further
details of Arthur Collett see Part
44 - The Malmesbury District |
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|
Collett,
Arthur 24 years |
Lance
Corporal 7625 |
Cameron
Highlanders |
|
|
Arthur
was born in 1890 the son of Charles and Mary Collett. |
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|
Collett,
Arthur 19 years |
Private
22658 |
The
King’s Liverpool Regt |
|
|
Arthur
was born in 1897 at Liverpool the son of Charles and Alice Collett of 29
Earle Road, Edge Hill in |
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|
Collett,
Arthur Ernest 35 years |
Private
25936 |
The
Queen’s Royal West Kent Regt |
|
|
Arthur
Ernest was born in 1883 the husband of Catherine Lillian Collett of 97 Sydney
Road, Hornsey in London and the son of A & E
Collett of 41 High Road, Wood Green in London. |
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|
For
further details of Arthur Ernest Collett and his family see Part
46 - The Charlton-on-Otmoor (Oxon) Area |
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|
Collett,
Arthur J 31 years |
Private
G/4765 |
Middlesex
Regiment |
|
|
Arthur
J was born in 1885 at Fencott the son of William and Emma Collett of
Charlton-on-Otmoor. Tragically his
father died during the two-week period between being notified of Arthur’s
death and that of his older brother William who died on 5th
September 1916 as, on that second occasion, he was referred to as “the late
William Collett”. Arthur’s name
appears on the Thievpal Memorial - see brother William Collett (Ref.
46A/5/5). |
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|
For
further details of Arthur John Collett and his family see Part
46 - The Charlton-on-Otmoor (Oxon) Area |
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|
Collett,
Arthur Leigh 31 years |
2nd
Lieutenant |
8th
Battalion Gloucestershire Regiment |
|
|
Arthur
Leigh was born at Heckmondwyke in 1885 and was
buried at Grandcourt Road Cemetery in Grandcourt, |
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|
Arthur
was the son of millworker John Fawcett Collett of Heckmondwike and his wife
Annie of Mirfield near Heckmondwike.
Arthur was referred to as Arthur Ledgard
Collett in the Heckmondwike census of 1911 and ten years earlier his
occupation was that of a wood carver for a cabinet maker. He was the eldest of three children, his
two sisters being Clara and Ethel. |
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|
Grandcourt
Road Cemetery is situated on the site of the Ancre Battlefield just
north of Thievpal. The struggle to
take Grandcourt began on 1st July 1916 (the first day of the
Battle of the Somme) and was secured during the night of 5th
February 1917. It was briefly taken
back by the Germans between April and August 1918. The cemetery contains the graves of 389
British soldiers and one from Canada.
A further 108 graves are unnamed. |
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|
Collett,
Arthur Thomas 34 years |
Private
T/205129 |
The
Queen’s Royal West Surrey Regt |
|
|
Arthur
Thomas was born in 1883 the husband of Beatrice E Collett of 26 Belgrave Crescent
in Bath and the son of Mrs M A Collett of 6 Highbury Terrace in Bath. |
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|
His
name appears on the |
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|
For further
details of Arthur Thomas Collett and his family see Part
31 - The Second Wiltshire |
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|
Tyne
Cot Memorial is situated north-east of Ieper. It is one of four memorials to those
missing in the Belgian Flanders area of the Ypres Salient. The memorial bears the names of 35,000
officers and men whose graves are not known. |
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|
Collett,
C E |
Private
203086 |
Royal
Warwickshire Regt |
|
|
Collett,
Charles Edwin 41 years |
Private
11143 |
2nd
Battalion Duke of |
|
|
Charles
Edwin was born in 1875 and was the brother of Miss M Collett of 138 Fort Road
in Bermondsey, |
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|
Charles
Edwin’s sister was likely to be (Ethel) Maud Collett born in 1884 and they
were two of the four children of Joseph and Jane Elizabeth Collett of St Mary
Lode in |
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|
For further
details of Charles Edwin Collett and his family see Part
2 - The Secondary |
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|
The St Sever Cemetery at Rouen was
primarily the burial ground for those servicemen that died in the many
hospitals in the Rouen area. It was
extended in 1916 and contains over 3,000 commonwealth graves. |
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|
Collett,
Charles Henry |
Rifleman
A/203226 |
The
King’s Royal Rifle Corps |
|
|
His
name appears on the |
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|
Collett,
C J |
Sapper
452448 |
Royal
Engineers |
|
|
For further
details of Cecil John Collett and his family see Part
3 – The Chedworth |
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|
Collett,
Charles |
Sapper
6798 |
11th
Field Company Royal Engineers |
|
|
Charles
|
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|
For further
details of Charles see Part
37 - The |
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|
Richebourg
L’ Avoue is a village in the department of the
Pas-de-Calais situated between Bethune and Lille. The Touret Memorial commemorates 13,000
servicemen who were killed before 25th September 1915 who had no
known grave. |
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|
Collett,
Charles Robert |
Private
55856 |
14th
Battalion Royal Welsh Fusiliers |
|
|
Collett,
Charles William |
Rifleman
R/27208 |
The
King’s Royal Rifle Corps |
20
May 1917 |
|
Charles William’s
name appears on the |
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|
Collett,
Charles William |
Sergeant
34173 |
Machine
Gun Corps Infantry |
7
May 1917 |
|
Charles
William was the son of the late Charles Collett and Sophia Faber (formerly
Collett) of 40 South Row, |
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|
Neuville-Vitasse is a village in the department of the
Pas-de-Calais, five kilometres south-east of Arras. The London Cemetery stands on the west side
of the road to Arras in a shallow valley. Neuville-Vitasse
was attacked by the 56th London Division on 7 April 1917 and captured by the
same Division on 9 April. The village
was almost entirely lost to the German Army at the end of March 1918 but was
regained at the end of the following August.
The London
Cemetery was made by the 56th Division in April 1917 and was greatly extended
after the Armistice when graves were brought in from other burial grounds and
from the battlefields between Arras, Vis-en-Artois and Croisilles. The casualty details are as follows: British 713,
Canadian 23, Australian 11, making a total of 747 burials. |
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|
Collett,
Christopher William 21 years |
Private
9673 |
Royal
Warwickshire Regt |
15
May 1918 |
|
Christopher
William was born in 1897 the son of Christopher and Rachel Collett of 36 Fair
Green, Diss in Norfolk, where he was born.
He was killed in |
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|
For further
details of Christopher William Collett and his family see Part
30 - The Third |
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|
Collett,
Clarence Henry 27 years |
Private
14/165 |
8th
Battalion |
|
|
Clarence
Henry was born in 1889 the son of Thomas and Rosa Collett of “Melksham” |
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|
Collett,
Cyril Frederick |
Private
13375 |
Worcestershire
Regiment |
|
|
Cyril Frederick died
during the First |
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|
The Ypres Menin Gate Memorial is situated
on the east side of the town of Ieper (formerly Ypres) in West Vlaanderen, Belguim. It is one
of four memorials to the missing soldiers in Belgian Flanders covering the
area of Ypres Salient. More
information on this subject can be found on this website in “Clive Franklyn
Collett”. |
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|
Collett,
Cyril Joseph 20 years |
Gunner
162399 |
Royal
Field Artillery |
|
|
Cyril
Joseph was born in 1898 at Bicester and was the son Thomas and Mary Collett who
were living at |
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|
Collett,
David |
Private
6531 |
1st
Battalion |
|
|
David
was the son of George and Amy Collett of 40 Harford Street, Lakenham in
Norwich. The name of David Collett
appears on Panel 8 of the Le Touret Memorial – see historical note below. |
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|
For
further details of the family of George and Amy Collett see Part
18 - The Suffolk Line (Ref. 18P138) |
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|
The Le Touret Memorial was primarily established to commemorate the
lives of 13,000 servicemen who died during the Battle of Loos from 1914
through to 25th September 1915 who had no known grave. |
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|
Collett,
Denis |
Private
45492 |
8th
King’s Royal Irish Hussars |
|
|
Collett,
E 27
years |
Private
G/2945 |
16th
Battalion Middlesex Regt |
|
|
|
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|
Collett,
Edmund 24
yrs |
Private
35594 |
King’s
Own Royal Lancaster Regt |
|
|
Edmund
was born in 1894 and was the son of the late Robert Collett and Agnes
Catherine Collett of 21 Bradhurst (or Bradburn) Street, Cheetham in |
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|
Collett,
Edward |
Sergeant
12748 |
5th
Battalion Oxfordshire & Buckinghamshire Light Infantry |
1
May 1917 |
|
Edward
|
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|
For further
details of Edward see Part
34 - The Appleford Berkshire |
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|
Collett,
Ernest 28
years |
Lance
Corporal 7948 |
Duke
of Wellington’s West Riding Regiment |
|
|
Ernest
was born in 1886, the husband of Ethel Emily Collett of 75 Pownall Road, Dalston in |
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|
Collett,
Ernest George |
Private
7646 |
First
Battalion Wiltshire Regiment |
|
|
Ernest
|
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|
Ernest
was killed during the Second |
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|
For further
details of Ernest see Part
28 - The Faringdon |
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|
Collett,
F |
Gunner
86413 |
Royal
Garrison Artillery |
|
|
Collett,
Frederick |
Lance
Corporal 8668 |
King’s
Own Royal Lancaster Regt |
|
|
|
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|
Collett,
F G |
Lance
Corporal 23105 |
Machine
Gun Corps Infantry |
|
|
Collett,
Frederick 22
years |
Corporal
242131 |
2nd
/ 8th Battalion Worcestershire Regiment |
|
|
Frederick
|
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|
For further
details of Frederick John James Collett see Part
38 - The Oxford Stonemasons Line (Ref. 38P50) |
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|
The Wieltje Farm Cemetery was made and
used by fighting units (in particular by the 2nd/4th Gloucestershire
Regiments) during the period from July to October 1917. There are only 115 Commonwealth servicemen from
the First World War buried or commemorated at this small cemetery. Ten of the
burials are unidentified and there are special memorials to twenty casualties
whose graves were destroyed by shell fire. The site also contains the grave of one
German soldier. |
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|
Collett,
F V |
Private
20160 |
Duke
of Cornwall’s Light Infantry |
|
|
Collett,
Francis William |
Private
6300 |
1st
Battalion |
|
|
Collett,
Frederick William 24 years |
Private
2670 |
16th
Battalion Middlesex Regt |
|
|
Frederick
William was born in 1892 and was the son of Frederick William and Emma
Collett of |
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|
The
day Frederick William Collett junior died, |
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|
Collett,
Frederick Yeeles |
Private
45529 |
8th
Battalion Royal |
|
|
Frederick
Yeeles was the son of Daniel and Eliza Collett of 1 Poplar Cottages at
Batheaston in Bath. Panel 7 of the
Vis-an-Artois Memorial bears his name along with 9,000 men who lost their
lives in the final push for Victory in Picardy and Artois which ended with
the Armistice on 11th November 1918. |
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|
For
further details of Frederick Yeeles Collett see Part
21 - The Cornwall Line (Ref. 21B/1B4/10) |
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|
Collett,
George A 25
years |
Private
134918 |
Royal
Fusiliers |
|
|
George
A Collett (who is listed incorrectly on the CWGC website as C A Collett), was
born at Battersea in 1895, the son of Henry James and Harriet Elizabeth
Collett of 31 Landseer Street in Battersea. |
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|
For
further details of George A Collett see Part
41 - The Middlesex Harefield Line (Ref. 41Q6) |
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|
Collett,
George F |
Corporal
11942 |
7th
Battalion Gloucestershire Regiment |
|
|
George
F was buried at the |
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|
Collett,
George 21
years |
Private |
Royal
Fusiliers |
|
|
George
was born in 1895 and was the son of Charles John and Eliza Collett of |
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|
Collett,
George Cyril 19 years |
Rifleman
52510 |
Royal
Irish Rifles |
|
|
George
Cyril was born in 1899 and was the son of W H Collett of Luddington just
south-west of |
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|
For
further details of George Cyril Collett see Part
11 - The Welford-on-Avon Line (Ref. 11Q15) |
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|
The Ploegsteert Memorial is situated a
few miles south of Ieper (Ypres). It commemorates more than 11,000 British
and South African serviceman who were killed during the war but have no known
graves. It forms part of the Berks
Cemetery Extension named after the 1st/4th Royal
Berkshire Regiment who set it up in June 1916. |
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|
Collett,
George Edwin Archie |
Private
203402 |
1st
Battalion Royal Warwickshire Regt |
|
|
Collett,
George Russell 21 years |
Rifleman |
1st
Battalion The Rangers |
|
|
George
Russell was born in 1897 and was the son of William Russell and Elizabeth
Collett of 82 Glyn Road in Clapton, |
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|
William
senior was born in 1835 at Limehouse in |
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|
Collett,
George William 16 years |
Private
3279 |
Royal
Warwickshire Regt |
|
|
George
William was born in December 1899 at |
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|
For further
details of George William Collett see Part
2 - The Secondary |
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|
Collett,
H |
Pioneer
288317 |
Royal
Engineers |
|
|
H
was buried at the |
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|
Collett,
H A |
Private
2780 |
1st
Battalion Welsh Guards |
|
|
Collett,
H E |
Private
G/51710 |
Royal
Fusiliers |
|
|
Collett,
Harold |
Private
P/6849 |
Royal
Fusiliers |
|
|
Harold
from |
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|
For further
details of Harold Collett see Part
14 - The John Kyte Collett |
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|
The Arras Memorial designed by Sir Edwin
Lutyens is situated in the town of Arras and commemorates 35,000 British,
South African and New Zealand servicemen who were killed between the spring
of 1916 and August 1918. |
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|
Collett,
Harold John 19 years |
Rifleman
S/9529 |
Rifle
Brigade |
|
|
Harold
John was born in 1897 and was the son of Thomas and Sarah Collett of 127 St
Paul’s Road, Moseley in |
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|
Collett,
Harry 28
years |
Private
39538 |
South
Staffordshire Regt |
|
|
Harry
was born in 1890 the husband of Nellie Collett of New Buildings in Wednesfield Road, Willenhall in Staffordshire and the son
of Harry and Maria of Willenhall. He
is buried at Stagleno in |
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|
Collett,
Henry George 33 years |
Private
267061 |
1st
Bucks Battalion of the Oxford & Bucks Light Infantry |
|
|
Henry
George was the husband of Hannah Collett of 86 Watlands
View at Porthill in |
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|
Henry
George junior was born on 23.07.1884 and his wife Hannah Slater was born on
08.08.1889 both at |
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|
For further
details of Henry see Part
11 - The Welford on |
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|
The Dozinghem Military Cemetery lies
near Krombeke. It contains over 3,000
graves and was one of three cemeteries set up by the troops when establishing
casualty clearing stations in readiness for the July 1917 offensive. The name given to each was very cryptic in
that they where Mendinghem, Dozinghem, and Bandaghem. |
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|
Collett,
Henry William Howell |
Private
16019 |
The
King’s Liverpool Regt |
|
|
Henry
William Howell was the son of the Reverend William and Emily Collett of Ferney Queen’s Park in |
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|
Collett,
Herbert 31
years |
Private
235127 |
York
& |
|
|
Herbert
was born in 1886 the husband of Clara Collett of Ecclesall
in Sheffield. His name appears on Bay
8 of the |
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|
Collett,
Herbert Paris |
Corporal
242048 |
7th
Battalion of The Queen’s Royal West Surrey Regt |
23
May 1918 |
|
Herbert was buried
in the Chauny Communal Cemetery at Aisne in France – 1.A.11 |
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|
For
further details of Herbert Paris Collett see Part
33 - The Bourton-on-the-Water |
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|
The Chauny Communal Cemetery at Aisne in
France was extended (The British Extension) after the
Armistice and was made for the burial of remains brought in from the
battlefields of the Aisne and from the smaller cemeteries in the surrounding
countryside. |
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|
Collett,
Joseph |
Private
26885 |
10th
Battalion Duke of |
|
|
Joseph’s name
appears on Bay 6 of the |
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|
Collett,
John |
Sergeant
8108 |
D
Company 2nd Battalion Wiltshire Regiment |
|
|
John
enlisted on |
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|
He was buried at Neuville-Vitasse ( |
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|
For further
details of see Part
28 - The Faringdon |
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|
Collett,
John |
Private
6017 |
2nd
Battalion Royal |
9
May 1915 |
|
John’s
name appears on Panel 7/8 of the Ploegsteert Memorial. The memorial forms part of the Berks
Cemetery Extension named after the Royal |
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|
Collett,
John 20
years |
Private |
22nd
Battalion |
|
|
John
was born in 1896 and was the son of William John and Margaret Collett of 56
Carruthers Street, at Ancoats in |
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|
Collett,
John Elvin |
Private
40682 |
Northumberland
Fusiliers |
|
|
John Elvin’s name
appears on Panel 2 of the Ploegsteert Memorial. |
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|
Collett,
John Ernest |
Lance
Corporal 13313 |
3rd
Battalion Worcestershire Regiment |
|
|
John
Ernest was the son of John and Mary Ann Collett of the Market Place at
Kineton in Warwickshire. |
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|
Collett,
John G |
Rifleman
323979 |
City
of |
21
May 1917 |
|
John G’s name
appears on Bays 9/10 of the |
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|
Collett,
John Harry 38 years |
Acting
Bombardier 96570 |
Royal
Garrison Artillery |
|
|
John
Harry was born in 1879 the husband of Anne May Collett of 71 Battle Road, St
Leonards-on-Sea at |
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|
Collett,
John Henry 24 years |
Private
681125 |
22nd
Battalion |
|
|
John
Henry was born in 1894 and was the son of John Henry and Mary Collett of 8
Salisbury Street, |
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|
Collett,
John William 20 years |
Private
10253 |
|
|
|
John
William was born in 1896 and was the son of John and Eliza Collett 10 of |
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|
Collett,
Joseph George 38 years |
Private
13538 |
Royal
Warwickshire Regt |
|
|
Joseph
George was born in 1878 the son of William Collett. He was buried at the Khartoum War Cemetery |
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|
Collett,
Joseph Henry |
Private
SR/584 |
Middlesex
Regiment |
|
|
Joseph
Henry’s name appears on the Thievpal Memorial. Joseph was another fatality of the first
day of the Battle of the Somme. His
younger brother Sidney Frederick Collett (Ref. 15P17) died in 1917. |
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|
For
further details of Joseph Henry Collett see Part
15 - The Kenilworth & Coventry |
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|
Collett,
Joseph McKennes 21 years |
Private
200287 |
Royal
Scots |
|
|
Collett,
Louis Arthur |
Private
16810 |
1st
Battalion |
|
|
Louis
Arthur’s name appears on Bay 3 of the Arras Memorial. |
|||
|
For
further details of Louis Arthur Collett see Part
18 - The Suffolk |
|||
|
Collett,
Oliver Harold |
Private
2179 |
9th
Battalion Royal Warwickshire Regt |
|
|
Oliver
Harold was the son of Henry and |
|||
|
Collett,
P A |
Private
M/338338 |
Army
Service Corps |
|
|
Collett,
Percy 28
years |
Sergeant |
Royal
Warwickshire Regt |
|
|
Percy
was born in 1890 the husband of Jessie Collett of 41 Enderby
Road at Perry Common in Erdington, |
|||
|
Collett,
Percy Frank |
Private
G/16220 |
12th
Battalion East Surrey Regiment |
|
|
Percy
Frank was buried at the London Rifle Brigade Cemetery at Comines-Warneton in
Hainaut, Belguim. |
|||
|
For
further details of Percy Frank Collett and his family see Part
27 - The Harewood Yorkshire Line (Ref. 27Q5) |
|||
|
The London Rifle Brigade Cemetery is
situated 800 metres from Ploegsteert and 15 km to the south of Ieper. It was begun by units of the 4th Division
in December 1914, and used by fighting units and field ambulances until March
1918. The cemetery owes its name to the 22 burials of the London Rifle
Brigade of the 4th Division in Plot 3, made in January, February and March
1915. The cemetery now contains 335
Commonwealth and 18 German burials of the First World War |
|||
|
Collett,
Percy James 27 yrs |
Private |
South
Wales Borderers |
6
May 1918 Berlin
South West Cemetery |
|
Percy
James was born in 1891 and was the foster son of Mrs
E Harris 26 Sparkbrook Street in |
|||
|
Collett,
Peter 28
years |
Private
20137 |
The
King’s Liverpool Regt |
|
|
Peter
was born in 1887 the son of Mrs Jane Cadman
(formerly Collett) of |
|||
|
For further
details of see Part
43 - The Staffordshire |
|||
|
Collett,
R |
Corporal
1518 |
Machine
Gun Corps (Motors) |
16
April 1918 |
|
Collett,
R |
Rifleman
266415 |
Prince
of Wales’ Own West Yorkshire Regt |
4
May 1918 |
|
R was buried in |
|||
|
Collett,
Robert H |
Private
049696 |
Royal
Ordnance Corps |
|
|
Robert H was buried
at |
|||
|
Collett,
Reginald Jack 31 years |
Private
52926 |
8th
Battalion Royal
Fusiliers |
|
|
Reginald
Jack was born in 1892 the son of the late Henry and Harriet Collett of 65
Henry Street in Kenilworth. He was
killed during the early days of the |
|||
|
For further
details of Reginald Jack Collett and his family see Part
15 - The |
|||
|
The Cambrai Memorial is situated near the
village of Louverval. It commemorates
the lives of 7,000 British and South African servicemen who died in the
Battle of Cambrai lead by Sir Douglas Haig from 20th November through to
December 1917. |
|||
|
Collett,
Reuben Kemp 20 years |
Rifleman
2806 |
1/6th
Battalion City
of London Rifles, London Regt |
|
|
Reuben Kemp Collett was born at Camberwell on 10th August 1895, the fourth son
of Reuben Collett of 114 Loughborough Park in
Brixton, by his wife Anna Eliza Higgins the daughter of Alfred Higgins. He was educated at Bellenden Road High
School in Camberwell, and was a clerk before he volunteered
and enlisted in September 1914. He
trained at Burgess Hill and served with the Expeditionary Force in France
from March 1915. He was seriously
wounded in action at the Battle of Loos on 25th September
1915. He died in New End Hospital in
Hampstead, following which he was buried at the Hampstead Cemetery. He also lost two brothers during the war –
see Sydney John Collett and W R Collett. |
|||
|
His
father was Reuben |
|||
|
Collett,
Robert H 31 years |
Private
7644 |
First
Battalion Gloucestershire Regiment |
9
May 1915 |
|
Robert
H was born in 1884 and was the son of Mrs Elizabeth
Ann Dance of 12 Midland Road, Watermoor, in
Cirencester. His name appears on Panel
17 of the Le Touret Memorial, Pas de Calais – see earlier historical note. |
|||
|
Collett,
Ronald Frederick 21 years |
Private
24228 |
2nd
/ 6th Battalion South Staffordshire Regiment |
29
September 1917 |
|
Ronald
Frederick was born in 1896 and was a native of |
|||
|
For
further details of Ronald Frederick Collett see Part 57 - The Bakers of Abbots
Morton Line (Ref. 57P14) |
|||
|
The Bridge House Cemetery is located 5km
north-east of Ieper and was named after a farmhouse. It was made by the 59th (North Midland)
Division at the end of September 1917 and around the time that Ronald was killed. All the graves but five are those of
soldiers of that division, and all except one date from 26-28 September and
the Battle of Polygon Wood. The
cemetery contains forty-five First World War burials, four of them
unidentified. |
|||
|
Collett,
Samuel |
Private
7868 |
2nd
Battalion Worcestershire
Regiment |
|
|
Samuel’s
name appears on Panel 34 of the |
|||
|
Collett,
Sidney Thomas 23 years |
Private
2868 |
Oxfordshire
& Buckinghamshire Light Infantry |
|
|
Sidney
Thomas was born in 1893 and was the son of Edwin and Sarah Ann Collett of |
|||
|
For further
details of Sidney Thomas Collett see Part
38 - The Oxford [Wolvercote] Stonemasons |
|||
|
Collett,
Sydney 20
years |
Private
18137 |
Royal
Warwickshire Regt |
|
|
Sydney
was born in 1897 and was the son of Mr Sidney and Mrs Charlotte Collett of Block 2 in Cook Street in
Coventry. He was buried at the London
Road Cemetery at Coventry. His older
brother Joseph Henry Collett died at the Battle of the Somme in 1916. |
|||
|
For
further details of Sidney Frederick Collett see Part
15 - The Kenilworth & Coventry |
|||
|
Collett,
Sydney John 27 years |
Private
42629 |
|
|
|
Sydney
John Collett was born at Camberwell in 1891 but
later he came from Badsey near Evesham. He was the third son of Reuben Collett of
114 Loughborough Park in Brixton by his wife Anna
Eliza Higgins the daughter of Alfred Higgins. Two of his brothers had already died earlier
in the war – see Reuben Kemp Collett and W R Collett. |
|||
|
The Pozieres Memorial at Somme relates
mainly to the crisis in March and April 1918 when the Allied 5th
Army was driven back by overwhelming numbers across the former Somme
battlefield. The memorial commemorates
the lives of 14,000 British casualties who had no known grave and who died
between 31st March and 7th August 1918. |
|||
|
Collett,
T |
Private
9821 |
1st
Battalion Royal
Warwickshire Regt |
|
|
T
was the brother of Mr C Collett of |
|||
|
Collett,
T A |
Sergeant
G/61683 |
17th
Battalion Royal
Fusiliers |
4
May 1918 |
|
Collett,
T A 19
years [see Alfred] |
Private
G/71552 |
23rd
Battalion Royal
Fusiliers |
1
April 1918 |
|
Collett,
Thomas 21
years |
Rifleman
Y/1277 |
The
King’s Royal Rifle Corps |
|
|
Thomas
was born in 1895 and was the son of George and Alice Collett. |
|||
|
Collett,
Thomas Edwin 33 years |
Lance
Corporal F/670 |
Middlesex
Regiment |
|
|
Thomas
Edwin was born in 1883 the husband of Eliza Collett of |
|||
|
Collett,
Thomas Theodore 20 years |
Second
Lieutenant |
3rd
Company 7th Battalion Yorkshire Regiment |
|
|
Thomas
Theodore was born in 1897 and was the son of the late Reverend Thomas Collett
Vicar of Scotby, Carlisle and Maude Collett of 12 Garden Road in Tunbridge Wells.
Thomas was buried in Grove Town Cemetery at Meaulte in Somme, France. |
|||
|
For
further details of Thomas Theodore Collett see Part
18 - The Suffolk Line (Ref. 18R1) |
|||
|
The Grove Town Cemetery contains 1,395
First World War burials and was designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens. In September 1916, the 34th and 2/2nd
London Casualty Clearing Stations were established at this location, known to
the troops as Grove Town, to deal with casualties from the Somme
battlefields. They were moved in April 1917 and, except for a few burials in
August and September 1918, the cemetery was closed. |
|||
|
Collett,
Thomas William |
Private
2030 |
7th
Battalion The
King’s Liverpool Regiment |
16
May 1915 |
|
Thomas William MAY have been the only
son of William Collett (Ref. 11O9) and his second wife Ann who was a farmer
at Admington. He was buried at
Rue-des-Berceaux Military Cemetery in Richebourg-L'Avoue. |
|||
|
For further details of Thomas William
Collett see Part 11 - The Welford-on-Avon
Line (Ref. 11P15) |
|||
|
Richebourg is a village and commune to the north of
Bethune in the Pas de Calais district of northern France. The
Rue-des-Berceaux Military Cemetery was begun in
January 1915, and used until February 1917. |
|||
|
Collett,
William 28
years |
Rifleman
306477 |
Prince
of Wales’ Own |
|
|
William
was born at |
|||
|
For further
details of William Lawton Collett see Part 36 - The Barwick-in-Elmet [Leeds] |
|||
|
The Coxyde Military Cemetery is today
known as Koksijde. In June 1917,
Commonwealth forces relieved French forces on six kilometres of front line
from the sea to a point south of Nieuport, and held this sector for six
months. Coxyde was about ten
kilometres behind the front line. The
village was used for rest billets and was occasionally shelled, but the
cemetery, which had been started by French troops, was found to be reasonably
safe. It became the most important of
the Commonwealth cemeteries on the Belgian coast and was used at night for
the burial of the dead brought back from the front line. The cemetery was
used again during the Second World War, chiefly for the burial of casualties
sustained during the defence of the Dunkirk-Nieuport perimeter in May
1940. The cemetery now contains 1,507
Commonwealth burials of the First World War, the French graves from this
period having since been removed. The
cemetery was designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens. |
|||
|
Collett,
William 28
yrs |
Corporal
13189 |
11th
Battalion |
|
|
William
was born in 1888 the husband of May Eleanor Collett of 20 Cemetery Road in
Ipswich and the son of Mr & Mrs
J Collett of 62A Churchgate in Stockport. His name appears on the Thievpal Memorial. |
|||
|
Collett,
William |
Lance
Corporal 73852 |
Gloucestershire
Regiment |
30
May 1918 |
|
William was the son
of Sarah Collett of |
|||
|
Collett,
William 36
years |
Private
12223 |
6th
Battalion Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry |
|
|
William
was born at Fencott near Charlton-on-Otmoor in October 1880 and was the son
of the late William and Emma Collett of Charlton-on-Otmoor in Oxfordshire. Less than two-weeks earlier William’s
brother had been killed – see Arthur J Collett (Ref. 46A/5/6). |
|||
|
For
further details of William Collett and his family see Part
46 - The Charlton-on-Otmoor (Oxon) Area |
|||
|
Collett,
William |
Private
65691 |
61st
Company Infantry Machine Gun Corps |
|
|
William
was born in Fulham and later lived at Leagrave in |
|||
|
For
further details of William Collett see Part
49 - The Kirtlington to California Area |
|||
|
Collett,
William 35
years |
Private
29412 |
12th
Labour Battalion |
|
|
William
was born at Sheffield in 1882, the son of widow Mary Collett of |
|||
|
Collett,
William Robert 32
years |
Private
7790 |
First
Battalion of the Gloucestershire Regiment |
|
|
William
Robert was born in 1882 the husband of Mrs Collett
of |
|||
|
For further
details of William Robert Collett see Part
One - The |
|||
|
Collett,
William Alfred 21 years |
Private
10237 |
2nd
Battalion |
|
|
William
Alfred was born in 1893 and was the son of the late Joseph W Collett and Rose
Blanche Collett. His name appears on Panel
33 of the |
|||
|
Collett,
William Edwin 21 years |
Corporal
48324 |
C
|
|
|
William
Edwin was born in 1896 and was the son of Maria Collett of Nethcote Hill in Lacock near Chippenham in
Wiltshire. He was awarded the Military
Medal and his name is amongst those on the Tyne Cot Memorial listed as ‘missing
in Belgian Flanders’ during the Ypres Salient conflict. |
|||
|
For further
details of William Edwin Collett see Part
35 - The Melksham |
|||
|
Collett,
William H 23 years |
Corporal
11239 |
3rd
Battalion Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry |
|
|
William
H was born in 1895 the son of Lewis and Selina Collett of Lillingstone Lovell
in Buckinghamshire. He was buried in
the Lillingstone Lovell Cemetery. |
|||
|
For further
details of William H Collett see Part
46 - The Charlton-on-Otmoor (Oxon) Area |
|||
|
Collett,
W R 19
years |
Rifleman
S/20722 |
1st
Battalion Rifle Brigade |
18
May 1916 |
|
It is believed that his age of 19
should in fact have been 29, when he would have been born at Stockwell/Lambeth in 1887, the eldest son of Reuben John and Helen E
Collett of 75 Tasman Road, Stockwell in
London. In 1881 Reuben |
|||
|
Collett,
Walter Victor 19 years |
Private
15221 |
10th
Battalion Royal Warwickshire Regt |
|
|
Walter
Victor was born in 1897 and was the son of George and Emma Collett of
Blackwell north of Shipston-on-Stour in
Warwickshire. His name appears on the
Thievpal Memorial. |
|||
|
For further
details of Walter Victor Collett see Part
11 - The Welford |
|||
ROYAL
NAVY
|
Name |
Rank |
Regiment |
Date of Death |
|
Collett,
Arthur Benjamin 26 years |
Lieutenant |
Royal
Navy Volunteer Reserve |
|
|
Arthur
Benjamin was born in 1892 at Great Yarmouth and was the son of James Collett
of 2 Highfield Road in Cape Town, |
|||
|
Collet,
Charles Herbert 27 years |
Flight
Commander |
Royal
Naval Air Service |
19
August 1915 |
|
Charles Herbert Collet(t) was born in
Calcutta on 4th February 1888, the second son of James Francis
Herbert Collett of ‘Woodleigh’ Westend, Millbrook, Southampton, late of the
Public Works Department of the Government of India, an engineer, and his wife
Teresa the daughter of Francis and Teresa Pilley. He was educated at Elizabeth College in
Guernsey and Dulwich College in London, and joined the Royal Marine Artillery
on 1st September 1905. He
was promoted to Lieutenant on 1st July 1906 and transferred to the
Naval Wing of the Royal Flying Corp in 1913 where he was gazetted
Flight Commander on 23rd February 1915. |
|||
|
At the outbreak of the war he served
on the Western Front, taking part in the defence of Antwerp until the
evacuation, and after at the Dardanelles. He
successfully carried out the first long distance air raid into enemy
territory of the war, when he bombed the Zeppelin Sheds at Dusseldorf on 23rd
September 1914. Conditions were rendered very
difficult by the misty weather, but Flight Lieutenant Collett flying a Sopwith tractor biplane made a long flight and dropped
three bombs on the Zeppelin Sheds within 400 feet. His plane was hit by one projectile but
returned safely back to base. During
two sorties he was shot down, but on both occasions he managed to avoid
capture and escaped to safety. |
|||
|
While in the Dardanelles he
participated in the landing on the Gallipoli Peninsular on25th April 1915 and
engaged with many hostile enemy aeroplanes It was four months later that he lost his
life when he was taking off from Imbros Aerodrome,
when at 150 feet, his engine cut out and the plane plummeted to ground and
burst into flames. He was buried at the Lancashire Landing
Cemetery in Turkey. |
|||
|
While
he was serving with the Royal Marine Artillery he received the DSO and was
twice mentioned in Despatches. While stationed at Royal Naval Flying School at Eastchurch
he was the first officer of the Naval Air Service to loop the loop. |
|||
|
Collett,
Ernest Harry 25 years |
Leading
Cooks Mate M/2997 |
Royal
Navy |
|
|
Ernest
Harry was born in 1892 the husband of Mrs F B Weeks
(formerly Collett) of 6 Elm Terrace, |
|||
|
For
further details of Ernest Harry Collett see Part
39 - The Clanfield Oxfordshire |
|||
|
HMS
Vanguard
was a battleship and suffered an internal explosion while in Scapa Flow on 9th
July 1917 killing all but 19 of her crew of 823. |
|||
|
Collett,
Frank |
Private
PLY/10685 |
Royal
Marine Light Infantry |
13
May 1915 |
|
Frank
served and died HMS Goliath and
his name appears on the |
|||
|
HMS
Goliath
was a battleship torpedoed by a Turkish destroyer Muavenet-I-Millet
off De Tott’s Battery in the Dardanelles on 13th
May 1915 with the loss of 570 men. |
|||
|
For
further details of Francis Ernest (Frank) Collett see Part
2 - The Secondary |
|||
|
Collett,
Frederick James 21 years |
Able
Seaman J/46313 |
Royal
Navy |
|
|
Frederick
James was born in 1896 and was the son of Frederick Arthur and Amy Matilda
Collett of |
|||
|
HMS
Mary Rose was a destroyer that was sunk on 17th
October 1917 by the Greman cruisers Brummer and Bremes off the
coast of Norway. |
|||
|
Collett,
Frederick William 25 years |
Able
Seaman SS/1669 |
Royal
Navy |
|
|
Frederick
William Collett was born in 1889 the husband of May A Collett of 41 Alfred
Street at Kings Heath in Birmingham and the son of Frederick William Collett
of Worcester. He served and died on
board HMS Good Hope and his name
appears on the |
|||
|
HMS
Good Hope was a cruiser attacked and sunk by two German cruisers
the Scharnhorst and Gneisenau during the Battle of
Coronel off the coast of Chile |
|||
|
For
further details of Frederick William Collett and his family see Part
56 - The Line of Thomas Collett of Alcester (Ref. 56P4) |
|||
|
Collett,
Harry 23
years |
Ordinary
Seaman J/49879 |
Royal
Navy |
31
May 1916 |
|
Harry
was born in 1893 the son of Benjamin and Lucy Ann Collett of The Gasworks at
Gomersal in |
|||
|
For further
details of Harry Collett and his family see Part
36 - The |
|||
|
Collett,
Henry Willie 18 years |
Boy
1st Class J/18135 |
Royal
Navy |
|
|
Henry
Willie was born in 1896 and was the son of William Thomas and Sarah Ann
Collett of Corner House at Bletchingdon in Oxfordshire. He served and died on board HMS Bulwark and his name appears on
the |
|||
|
For further
details of Henry William Collett and his family see Part
38 - The Oxford [Combe] Stonemasons |
|||
|
HMS
Bulwark
was a battleship destroyed by an internal explosion on 26th
November 1914 while loading ammunition at Sheerness. Only 12 men survived the blast. |
|||
|
Collett,
Jack 18
years |
Air
Mechanic 2nd Class F/20396 |
Royal
Navy Air Service |
|
|
Jack
was born in 1899 and was the son of Edwin and Fanny Collett of |
|||
|
For
further details of Jack Collett and his family see Part
21 - The Cornwall Line (Ref. 21Q118) |
|||
|
HMS
Airship C27 was the second airship to be shot down in action. On that fateful day three German seaplanes
attacked the vessel bringing it down with the loss of all five crew members,
including Jack Collett. Airship C26
was subsequently dispatched to locate the downed sister ship but run out of
fuel and came down in occupied Holland where the crew were interned for the
remainder of the war. |
|||
|
Collett,
|
Able
Seaman J/19404 |
Royal
Navy |
|
|
John
Francis Collett was the son of Mr William Henry
& Mrs Ellen Collett of 50 Lawn Road at
Hampstead in London and served with HMS Astraea. |
|||
|
For further
details of John Francis Collett and his family see Part
2 - The Secondary |
|||
|
Collett,
John Henry 32 years |
Private
PLY/14601 |
Royal
Marine Light Infantry |
31
May 1916 |
|
John
Henry was born in 1884 the husband of Katherine T Collett of 6 Bishop’s
Buildings in |
|||
|
For
further details of John Henry Collett and his family see Part
49 - The Kirtlington [Oxon] to California Line (Ref. 49P6) |
|||
|
Collett,
John William 19 years |
Ordinary
Seaman SS/16825 |
Royal
Navy |
|
|
John
William was born in 1897 the son of Harry and Annie Collett of |
|||
|
HMS
Hampshire was a cruiser that, on 5th June 1916, hit a
mine off the Orkney Islands with only 12 survivors. A passenger on board the vessel was British Commander-in-Chief, Lord
Kitchener, age 66, who was travelling to St Petersburg for a meeting with the
Czar of Russia and his Generals to try to persuade them to remain in the war
against Germany. Only a small number
of men survived and they were instructed to say nothing of the night’s event,
for fear of creating panic at the loss of Lord Kitchener. |
|||
|
For further
details of John William Collett see Part 55 - The Wakefield & Leeds
|
|||
|
Collett,
Leonard 33
years |
Leading
Seaman 23971 |
Royal
Navy |
|
|
Leonard
was born in 1882 the husband of Elsie Louisa Collett of 42 Cornwall Road at
Handsworth in Birmingham and the son of the late Mr
& Mrs Collett of Wimbledon. He served and died on board HMS Formidable and his name appears
on the |
|||
|
HMS
Formidable was a battleship that was sunk off Portland Bill by a
torpedo from the German submarine U-24 on 1st January 1915
resulting in the death of 547 men from her crew of 780. |
|||
|
Collett,
N C |
Probationary
Flight Officer |
Royal
Navy Air Service |
|
|
N C was buried at
Bromley, Plaistow in |
|||
|
Collett,
Robert William 24 years |
Stoker
1st Class SS/111186 |
Royal
Navy |
|
|
Robert
William was born in 1893 and was the son of George and Sarah Collett of
Islington. He served with HMS Pembroke
and he was buried at |
|||
|
Collett,
William Alfred |
Private
CH/1902 S |
Royal
Marine Light Infantry |
|
|
William
Alfred’s name appears on Bay 1 of the |
|||
ROYAL
FLYING CORPS & ROYAL AIR FORCE
|
Name |
Rank |
Regiment |
Date of Death |
|
Collett,
Clive Franklyn |
Captain
MC and Bar |
Royal
Flying Corp |
|
|
Clive
Franklyn was the son of Horace and Alice Collett of New Zealand and was
buried at Comely Bank Cemetery in |
|||
|
See Part
31 – The Wiltshire to New Zealand Line (Ref. 31O16) and
separate web file entitled Clive Franklyn Collett |
|||
|
Collett,
Ernest Joseph |
Private
328156 |
Royal
Air Force |
|
|
Ernest
Joseph was buried at |
|||
|
Collett,
George |
Leading
Airman 76978 |
Royal
Air Force |
|
|
George
was the husband of Violet May Collett of |
|||
|
This is NOT George Henry Collett (Ref. 34Q10) of |
|||
|
Name |
Rank |
Regiment |
Date of Death |
|
Collett,
Arthur 32
years |
Private
3703 |
Australian
Infantry AIF |
|
|
Arthur
was born in 1884 and was the son of Robert D and Grace Collett of Eldorado in
|
|||
|
Collett,
Ernest Oswald 20 years |
Bombardier
19618 |
Australian
Field Artillery |
|
|
Ernest
Oswald was born in 1897 and was the son of Ernest Augustus and Lucy Alice
Collett of Hokitika, Ferncroft
Avenue, East Malvern in Victoria and was buried at the St Sever Cemetery in
Rouen – see historical note. |
|||
|
Collett,
Frank 24
years |
Private
1519 |
19th
Battalion Australian
Infantry AIF |
|
|
Frank
was born in 1891 at |
|||
|
Collett,
Gerald Arthur 28 years |
Corporal
2363 |
Imperial
Camel Corps |
|
|
Gerald
Arthur was born in 1889 the husband of Emily E Collett of Balcarres
in |
|||
|
For further
details of Gerald Arthur Collett see Part
22 – The |
|||
|
Collett,
Henry 21
years |
Private
1519 |
24th
Battalion Australian Infantry AIF |
|
|
Henry
was born in 1894 and was the son of William Henry & Emily Collett of The
Post Office at Maryborough in Victoria.
He was buried at the |
|||
|
For further
details of Henry Collett see Part
8 – The |
|||
|
The Lone Pine Cemetery at Anzac contains
the known graves of eleven New Zealanders including nine who served with the
Australian Imperial Force in Turkey. |
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Collet,
Herbert 26
years |
Private
605 |
Australian
Imperial Infantry Force 25th Battalion |
4
August 1916 |
|
Herbert
Collet(t) born in 1890, the son of Fernand Louis Collet and Marie Ines Collett of Pozieres, Mawbray Road, Chatswood, NSW. He was buried in Grave IU17 at Becourt Military Cemetery at Becordel-becourt. |
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Collett,
John Montague |
Private 59 | ||