|
A
big thank you must go to Rob Campbell of Lake Mills, Wisconsin in the USA,
who has been researching the early settler families of Pierce County in
Wisconsin. During the project Rob discovered two, seemingly separate,
Collett families from the same Wiltshire village of Broughton Gifford. Prior
to November 2014 those two branches of the family had been identified as two
unrelated families, as set out in Part 35 and Part 62, the family of James
Collett in the former and the family of Samuel Collett in the latter.
|
|
|
|
|
Samuel
had sailed across the Atlantic in 1856 and was following by James in 1858.
However, a significant discovery in the autumn of 2014 revealed that they
were related and that Samuel Collett (Ref. 35O38) and James Collett (Ref. 35O45)
were first cousins, the grandsons of James Collett (Ref. 35M4) of Broughton
Gifford. Therefore, the previous line of Samuel Collett in Part 62 has been
removed from that file and is now correctly installed here in Part 35.
|
|
|
|
|
In
addition to this major change, another significant transfer of data has also
taken place for the update in November 2014. That involved the discovery
that John Collett of Broughton Gifford, whose family details had previously
been entered in Part 31 – The New Wiltshire-Somerset Line, indicated he was the
son of Stephen Collett (Ref. 35M8) and his wife Hannah Mortimer. Therefore,
the branch line from John Collett has been removed from Part 31 and inserted
here, which extends to Ontario, hence the title-change and the need to divide
this, now much larger, file into two sections.
|
|
|
|
|
The
aforementioned Part 62 – The Trowbridge to New Zealand Line was first
launched on the Collett Family History website in October 2012 using
information previously included in Part 35 – The Melksham line and Part 44 –
The Second Broughton Gifford Line. Earlier information generously provided
by Maureen Iliffe nee Collett (Ref. 64R23) in 2009 confirmed that Part 44 –
The Second Broughton Gifford Line also commenced in Broughton Gifford and
confirmed the vital link that connects Part 35 to Part 44. In 2021 Part 62
was renamed The Wiltshire Line to New Zealand & Australia.
|
|
|
|
|
A
previous update of this file was thanks to information received from Gloria
Davies which helped to determine some of the earlier generations of this
family, which previously had just been estimations.
|
|
|
|
|
The
information used in the December 2008 update of this file was kindly provided
by Barry Collett of the USA who was then carrying out a Collett DNA Study.
The line confirmed by DNA testing is denoted by the names that are
underlined.
|
|
|
|
|
The
village of Broughton Gifford lies approximately one mile west of Melksham and
it was there that this family line commenced in the late 1500s, as set out in
Part 44 – The New Malmesbury Line. Broughton Gifford also features in Part
62 – The Wiltshire Line to New Zealand & Australia.
|
|
|
|
|
Luke
Collett, who starts this line, was the younger brother of William Collett
(Ref. 44H2) of Broughton Gifford 1638-1719, and the second known son of
Daniel Collett (Ref. 44G2) of Broughton Gifford who, in turn, was the son of
Anthony Collett (Ref. 44F1) of Great Chalfield, a very small hamlet just one
mile from Broughton Gifford. All these details can be found in Part 44 – The
New Malmesbury Line.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35H1
|
Luke Collett (Ref. 44H3) may have been born around 1640, one
of only two sons of Daniel Collett. He was married to Grace around 1666 and
all their children were baptised at Broughton Gifford, including twin sons
Joseph and John Collett. When the couple’s youngest child was barely three
years old, Grace Collett, wife of Luke Collett, died at Broughton Gifford,
where she was buried on 11th December 1684. After losing his
wife, Luke entered a relationship with Edith who, upon her death in 1688,
three months after the death of Luke’s youngest child Grace, she was referred
to as the ‘pretend wife of Luke Collett, following which she was buried at
Broughton Gifford on 30th April 1688.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35I1
|
Thomas
Collett
|
Baptised on
24.05.1668 at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35I2
|
Luke
Collett
|
Baptised on
31.01.1670 at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35I3
|
William
Collett
|
Baptised on
18.02.1672 at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35I4
|
Joseph
Collett twin
|
Baptised on
20.09.1674 at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35I5
|
John
Collett twin
|
Baptised on
20.09.1674 at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35I6
|
Jane
Collett
|
Baptised on
04.12.1681 at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35I7
|
Grace Collett
|
Baptised on
11.11.1683 at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35I2
|
Luke
Collett was baptised
at Broughton Gifford on 31st January 1670, the second child of
Luke and Grace Collett. No record of a marriage has been discovered so far,
while it was at Broughton Gifford that Sybilla Collett, wife of Luke Collett,
was buried there on 24th May 1710. Two and a half years later,
Luke Collett was also buried at Broughton Gifford on 7th November
1712.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35I3
|
William Collett was
baptised at Broughton Gifford on 18th February 1671, the third of
seven known children of Luke and Grace Collett. It would appear that he was
married around 1693, with his wife presenting him with a son during the
following year. If his wife was Jane, then she outlived her husband, since
Jane Collett, a widow, was buried at Broughton Gifford on 18th
December 1727.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35J1
|
John
Collett
|
Born in 1694
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35I4
|
Joseph Collett
was baptised at Broughton Gifford on 20th September 1674, in a
joint ceremony with his twin brother John (below). Joseph later
married Mary Wakeley early in 1699, although the parish register at Broughton
Gifford stated that ‘the marriage did not take place here’. Once they were
married, Mary presented Joseph with eight children, all of them were baptised
at Broughton Gifford. The Wakeley surname appears many times in the records
for Broughton Gifford and, on two occasions, it was again linked to the
Collett family. The first of them was the marriage of Martha Collett
(Joseph’s granddaughter through his son Joseph) to John Wakeley in 1762 and
later, when the daughter of Joshua Mortimer and Ruth Wakeley married Benjamin
Collett. In addition to this, the Mortimer family also had many ties with
the Collett family. By the time Mary Collett nee Wakeley died at Broughton
Gifford in 1738 she was already a widow, when she was buried there on 4th
April 1738.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35J2
|
Martha
Collett
|
Born before
1699 at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35J3
|
Jane
Collett
|
Born in 1701
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35J4
|
John Collett
|
Born in 1705
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35J5
|
Mary
Collett
|
Born in 1710
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35J6
|
Joseph
Collett
|
Born in 1714
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35J7
|
Leah
Collett
|
Born in 1717
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35J8
|
Daniel
Collett
|
Born in 1720
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35J9
|
James
Collett
|
Born in 1722
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35I5
|
John Collett
was the twin brother of Joseph (above), with whom he was baptised at
Broughton Gifford on 20th September 1674, another child of Luke
and Grace Collett. Under two months later he died and was buried at
Broughton Gifford on 15th November 1674.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35I6
|
Jane Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford where she was baptised on 4th
December 1681, the penultimate child of Luke and Grace Collett. When she was
just over six years of age, Jane died and was buried at Broughton Gifford on
9th February 1688.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35J1
|
John Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford in 1694, the only known child of William Collett. It
was also at Broughton Gifford that John later married Ann Archer of Melksham
on 18th April 1720, although no record of any issue for John and
Ann has so far been found. John Collett died at Broughton Gifford, where he
was buried on 28th September 1729. Ann Collett, nee Archer, died
in Broughton Gifford, where she was buried over thirty years after her
husband on 7th December 1766.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35J2
|
Martha Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford, most likely prior to 1699, the eldest daughter of
Joseph Collett and Mary Wakeley, who was baptised there on 15th
October 1699. It was also at Broughton Gifford that a Martha Collett married
Stephen Dark, of Calne, on 25th December 1714, while another
record states that Martha Collett married John Young at Broughton Gifford on
4th March 1716. Having regard to the date of her baptism, it
would seem more than likely that her husband was John Young.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35J3
|
Jane Collett was
baptised at Broughton Gifford on 11th June 1701, another daughter
of Joseph and Mary Collett. Two years and two days later, she died and was
buried at Broughton Gifford on 13th June 1703. Therefore, she was
not the Jane Collett who married William Brossire, of Bradford-on-Avon, at
Broughton Gifford on 8th June 1721.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35J4
|
John Collett was
baptised at Broughton Gifford on 5th August 1705, the eldest son
of Joseph Collett and Mary Wakeley. He was twenty-three years old when he
married Millicent (Millie) Gearish at Broughton Gifford on 7th
August 1728, when he was confirmed as the son of Joseph Collett. Millie had
been born around 1707 and she presented John with four children, and all of
whom were born and baptised at Broughton Gifford. John Collett died at
Broughton Gifford during February 1766, and was buried there on 20th
February 1766. His widow, described as Milly Collett died nine years later,
during 1775, and was buried with her husband at Broughton Gifford on 7th
July 1775.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35K1
|
Patience
Collett
|
Born in 1730
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35K2
|
Mary
Collett
|
Born in 1733
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35K3
|
Millicent
Collett
|
Born in 1736
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35K4
|
John
Collett
|
Born in 1739
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35J5
|
Mary Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford in 1710 and was baptised there on 31st
January 1711, another daughter of Joseph and Mary Collett. She later married
John Bull at Broughton Gifford on 16th November 1728, when they
were both described as junior. Once married, the couple settled in Broughton
Gifford where their son William was born and was baptised on 15th
October 1732. Almost twenty years later William Bull married Martha Mortimer
at Broughton Gifford on 17th September 1752. They were married
for twenty-six years, when Martha died and was buried in the churchyard of
the parish church at Broughton Gifford on 16th July 1778. It is
very likely that the couple’s grandchild was Martha Bull who was born in
1779, who married George Mortimer in 1801. However, following her death in
1804, George married Amelia (Millicent) Collett (Ref. 35M6).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35J6
|
Joseph Collett
was probably born at Broughton Gifford, where he was baptised on 24th
October 1714, another child of Joseph and Mary Collett. He married (1) Anne
Redman at Broughton Gifford on 23rd December 1736 and, together,
they had five daughters who were all baptised at Broughton Gifford. Anne’s
name was spelt without an e until the baptism of the fifth child, when both
the child’s name and the mother’s name were recorded as ‘Anne’. Shortly
after the birth of their fifth child, or even during the birth itself, Anne
Collett nee Redman, died and was buried at Broughton Gifford on 7th
January 1750, the child baptised there one week later. Within the next
twelve months Joseph married (2) Mary with whom he had a further two children,
both of them being baptised at Broughton Gifford. Joseph and Mary Collett
both died very close together, since they were buried together at Broughton
Gifford on 24th October 1766, when their youngest child was only
twelve years old.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35K5
|
Mary
Collett
|
Born in 1738
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35K6
|
Martha
Collett
|
Born in 1740
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35K7
|
Betty
Collett
|
Born in 1743
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35K8
|
Sarah
Collett
|
Born in 1745
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35K9
|
Anne
Collett
|
Born in 1750
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
The
baptism records for the next two children gave the parents as Joseph and
Mary:
|
|
|
35K10
|
Rebecca
Collett
|
Born in 1751
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35K11
|
Joseph
Collett
|
Born in 1754
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35J7
|
Leah Collett was
baptised at Broughton Gifford on 8th September 1717, another
daughter of Joseph and Mary Collett.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35J8
|
Daniel Collett was
possibly born around 1720, the son of Joseph and Mary Collett. He later
married Ruth Burbridge from Seend on 19th February 1752 at
Broughton Gifford, where their first three children were born and baptised
there. The couple’s last two children were born and baptised at Great
Cheverell and, the day after the second of them was baptised there, Ruth
Collett nee Burbridge, was buried at Broughton Gifford on 21st
April 1767, having not survived the ordeal of the birth of her last child.
The parish burial record described her husband as Daniel Collett of Great
Cheverell, which lies five miles south of Devizes. After just over six years
as a widower, Daniel Collett was buried at Broughton Gifford on 10th
May 1773. The parish burial record described him as Daniel Collett of
Melksham, Broughton Gifford being less than two miles from Melksham.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35K12
|
Thomas
Collett
|
Born in 1753
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35K13
|
Ruth
Collett
|
Born in 1756
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35K14
|
Ann
Collett
|
Born in 1758
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35K15
|
Daniel
Collett
|
Born in 1762
at Great Cheverell
|
|
|
35K16
|
William
Collett
|
Born in 1767
at Great Cheverell
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35J9
|
James Collett was
baptised at Broughton Gifford on 17th March 1722, the youngest
child of Joseph Collett and Mary Wakeley.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35K1
|
Patience Collett was born at Broughton Gifford and was baptised there on
11th June 1730, the eldest of the four children of John Collett
and Millicent Gearish. It was much later in her life, when Patience married
widower Samuel Mayell at Broughton Gifford on 27th December 1778.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35K2
|
Mary Collett was
baptised at Broughton Gifford on 30th August 1733, the second
daughter of John and Millie Collett. It was also at Broughton Gifford where
she married James Keen on 17th November 1753.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35K3
|
Millicent Collett was born at Broughton Gifford and it was there that she
was baptised on 9th August 1736, another daughter of John and
Millie Collett. And it was at Broughton Gifford that she married James Hill
on 3rd February 1761.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35K4
|
John Collett
born at Broughton Gifford, where he was baptised on 16th May 1739,
the fourth and last child of John Collett and Millicent Gearish. When he was
around 24 years of age, he was married by banns to Ann Matthews at Broughton
Gifford on 31st March 1763. John signed the register in his own
hand, when the witnesses were William and Elizabeth Gearish. Four months
earlier, and on the same page of the parish register, was the marriage of
John’s cousin Martha Collett (below) and John Wakeley. The first-born
child of John and Ann Collett, James, was born shortly after their wedding
day and was baptised two months into their married life together. At the
baptism of all of their children in Broughton Gifford, the parents were
confirmed as John and Ann Collett.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35L1
|
James
Collett
|
Born in 1763
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35L2
|
Martha
Collett
|
Born in 1766
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35L3
|
Henry
Collett
|
Born in 1769
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35K5
|
Mary Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford and baptised there on 14th July
1738, the first-born child of Joseph Collett by his first wife Anne Redman. It
was also at Broughton Gifford that Mary Collett married Moses Hooper on 13th
December 1763.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35K6
|
Martha Collett was
baptised at Broughton Gifford on 24th February 1740, the daughter
of Joseph and Anne Collett. It was also there where she was married by banns
to John Wakeley on 5th December 1762, her grandmother having been
Mary Wakeley, so it seems likely that John was a member of the same family.
Martha and John signed the register with the mark of a cross, while the
witnesses were Isaac Rudman and John Bull, two more surnames with links to
the Collett family.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35K7
|
Betty Collett
was baptised at Broughton Gifford on 17th April 1743, the third
child of Joseph Collett and Anne Redman.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35K8
|
Sarah Collett
was baptised at Broughton Gifford on 23rd June 1745, another
daughter of Joseph and Anne Collett. It was also at Broughton Gifford, on 24th
April 1768, that she married Stephen Bevan of North Bradley.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35K9
|
Anne Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford very early in 1750 and, tragically during the
birth or just after Anne’s mother died and was buried at Broughton Gifford on
7th January 1750. One week later, Anne Collett, the daughter of
Joseph and Anne Collett, was baptised there on 14th January 1750. She
was therefore the last child of Joseph Collett by his first wife Anne Redman.
Anne Collett was nine months old when she died and was buried at Broughton
Gifford on 11th October 1750.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35K10
|
Rebecca Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford, where she was baptised on 16th November
1751, the first child of Joseph Collett by his second wife Mary.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35K11
|
Joseph Collet
was born at Broughton Gifford and was baptised there on 20th
October 1754, the last child of Joseph Collett and his second child by his
second wife Mary. Joseph was not yet three years old when he died at
Broughton Gifford, where he was buried on 24th April 1757.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35K12
|
Thomas Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford, where he was baptised on 25th
December 1753, the eldest of the four known children of Daniel Collett of
Broughton Gifford and Ruth Burbridge from Seend.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35K13
|
Ruth Collett
was named after her mother when she was baptised at Broughton Gifford on 2nd
February 1756, the second child of Daniel and Ruth Collett.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35K14
|
Ann Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford and was baptised there on 24th
February 1758, the third child of Daniel and Ruth Collett. No further
information is known about her, except that at Broughton Gifford on 21st
April 1794, an Ann Collett was buried there.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35K15
|
Daniel Collett
was born at Great Cheverell in 1762, the fourth of the five known children of
Daniel and Ruth Collett, who was baptised there on 14th June 1762.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35K16
|
William Collett
was born at Great Cheverell, where he was baptised on 20th April
1767, the last known child of Daniel Collett and Ruth Burbridge. Tragically,
his mother never recovered from the ordeal of his birth and was buried at
Broughton Gifford the following day. His father died six years later and was
also buried at Broughton Gifford, where William Collett was buried on 6th
December 1778, when he was 11 years old and confirmed as the son of Daniel
and Ruth Collett.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35L0
|
HENRY COLLETT was originally thought to have been born at Broughton
Gifford around 1746, a son of John and Ann Collett. That has now been proved
to be incorrect, since the parish register does list all of the children of
John and Ann Collett, but not one named Henry. Who his parents were, has still
to be determined. However, he did marry Mary Hayward at Broughton Gifford on
20th June 1768, where all of their children were born and
baptised, as confirmed by the parish records, kindly supplied by Stephen
Carpenter in 2019. In the earlier edition of this family, line the Wiltshire
IGI Records stated, in error, that Henry and Anne Collett were the parents of
James who was baptised at Broughton Gifford on 5th April 1776, now
re-affirmed as the child of Henry and Mary. On the occasion of the birth of
the couple’s last child, both Henry’s wife died, as did the child, one week
later.
|
|
|
|
|
|
It
was on 26th July 1789 that Mary Collett, the wife of Henry
Collett, was buried at Broughton Gifford, the same day that her baby daughter
Mary was baptised there. Following his loss, it is assumed, but not proved,
that Henry would have had eight children, the eldest child, Ann, perhaps
acting as the family’s housekeeper. Henry Collett survived his wife by
nearly thirty-five years when he died at Broughton Gifford, where he was
buried on 22nd February 1824.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35M1
|
Ann
Collett
|
Born in 1768
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35M2
|
John
Collett
|
Born in 1771
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35M3
|
HENRY
(Harry) COLLETT
|
Born in 1774
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35M4
|
James
Collett
|
Born in 1776
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35M5
|
William
Collett
|
Born in 1778
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35M6
|
Amelia
(Millicent) Collett
|
Born in 1781
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35M7
|
Thomas
Collett
|
Born in 1784
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35M8
|
Stephen
Collett
|
Born in 1787
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35M9
|
Mary
Collett
|
Born in 1789
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35L1
|
James Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford in 1763 and was baptised there on 22nd
May 1763. His parents, John Collett and Ann Matthews, had only been married
for less than two months prior to his baptism. James Collett was married by
banns to Margaret Addams of Chalfield, at Broughton Gifford on 31st
October 1787. Both signed the register with the mark of a cross, when the
witnesses were John Baggs and Thomas Oating. Two years later, James and
Margaret were still living there when their three known sons and one daughter
were born.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35M10
|
John
Collett
|
Born in 1789
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35M11
|
Daniel
Collett
|
Born in 1794
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35M12
|
James
Collett
|
Born in 1799
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35M13
|
Mary
Collett
|
Born in 1808
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35L2
|
Martha Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford, where she was baptised 11th May
1766, the daughter of John and Ann Collett. Nearly eighteen months later
Martha Collett died and was buried at Broughton Gifford on 28th
October 1767.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35L3
|
Henry Collett was
baptised at Broughton Gifford on 19th February 1769, the third
child of John Collett and Ann Matthews, who must have been married twice in
his life. It was also at Broughton Gifford that Henry Collett, a widower,
was married by banns to Susannah Mortimer, a widow, on 4th January
1801, both of them signing the register with the mark of a cross. Nine
months later the first of their five children was born and baptised at
Broughton Gifford, before the family settled in or near Melksham, where their
remaining children were baptised. The parish baptism record for that first
child named the parents as Harry and Ann, most likely a shortening of
Susannah. It is possible their second child may have been born at Broughton
Gifford, with the baptism delayed until after the move to Melksham, where
their second and third child were baptised together on the same day. In each
case, as with the last child, their parents were named as Henry Collett and
his wife Ann. Before the couple’s youngest child was four years old,
Susannah Collett nee Mortimer, and the wife of Henry Collett, died and was
buried at Broughton Gifford on 5th February 1812.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Another member of the Mortimer family linked to the
Collett family, was Hannah Mortimer, the daughter of William Mortimer and
Mary Rudman, and she married Stephen Collett (below) at Broughton Gifford in
1808, while Susannah’s brother, George Mortimer, married Amelia Collett
(below) at Broughton Gifford in 1804. Amelia and Stephen were siblings and
cousins of Henry Collett
|
|
|
|
|
|
35M14
|
Thomas
Collett
|
Born in 1801
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35M15
|
William
Collett
|
Born in 1804
at Broughton/Melksham
|
|
|
35M16
|
Ann
Collett
|
Born in 1806
at Melksham
|
|
|
35M17
|
Hannah
Collett
|
Born in 1808
at Melksham
|
|
|
35M18
|
Maria
Collett
|
Born in 1811
at Melksham
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35M1
|
Ann Collett was
baptised at Broughton Gifford on 25th December 1768, the first
child of Henry Collett and Mary Hayward. It was on 25th October
1790 that Anne Collett of the parish of Broughton Gifford was married by
banns to Aaron Gay, also of the same parish. Each of them signed the church
register with the mark of a cross.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35M2
|
John Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford where he was baptised on 20th October
1771, the eldest son and second child of Henry and Mary Collett. It was also
at Broughton Gifford when he was twenty-one that he married Mary White on 20th
November 1792, who gave birth to their first child within the next four
months. The baptism records for all of their children have been found at
Broughton Gifford, when the parents were named as John and Mary Collett.
Mary White was baptised at Yatton Keynell in Wiltshire on 14th
February 1771 and, as Mary Collett the wife of John Collett, she died at
Broughton Gifford, where she was buried on 25th December 1813, at
the age of 41.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N1
|
William
Collett
|
Born in 1793
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N2
|
Mary
Collett
|
Born in 1795
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N3
|
Robert
Collett
|
Born in 1796
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N4
|
Henry
Collett
|
Born in 1798
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N5
|
Elizabeth
Collett
|
Born in 1800
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N6
|
Millicent
Collett
|
Born in 1803
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35M3
|
HENRY (Harry) COLLETT was born at Broughton Gifford, either
at the end of 1773 or very early in 1774, and was baptised there on 31st
January 1774, the third child of Henry Collett and Mary Hayward. It was
around the turn of the century that he married Maria. All of their children
were born at Broughton Gifford, although only the baptism records for three
of them have been found so far.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N7
|
William
Collett
|
Born in 1801
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N8
|
Daniel
Collett
|
Born in 1805
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N9
|
Thomas
Collett
|
Born in 1807
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N10
|
Maria
Collett
|
Born in 1812
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N11
|
STEPHEN
COLLETT
|
Born in 1819
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35M4
|
James Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford and baptised there on 5th April
1776, a son of Henry and Anne Collett. James was thirty years of age when he
married Sarah Clack at Broughton on 24th May 1806, where all of
their children were born and baptised. Sarah was slightly younger than
James, having been baptised at Broughton Gifford on 14th July
1782, the daughter of Thomas and Betty Clack. James and Sarah, of Broughton
Gifford, both featured in the first national census. On that day in June
1841, James Collett had a rounded age of 65, while his wife Sarah had a
rounded age of 55. Living with the couple, at their home on Broughton Street
that day, were five of their children, Elizabeth who was 25, Sarah, Mary and
Henry - all with a rounded age of 20, and Jane with a rounded age of 15.
Their son James, who would have been 22, had already died by then. Also, by
that time their eldest surviving son, Samuel was married with children of his
own, and that may also have been the reason for the absence of their eldest
daughter Ann. Eight years later, the death of James Collett was recorded at
Bradford-on-Avon (Ref. viii 221) during the third quarter of 1849, following
which he was buried at Broughton Gifford on 19th September 1849,
at the age of 73.
|
|
|
|
|
|
During
his life, James Collett was a publican/inn keeper from around 1813 until
after the baptism of his son James in 1818, as confirmed by the baptism
records of his four children during that time. On the occasion of the
baptism of his last child, his occupation was that of a labourer. Less than
two years later, James’ widow was living with their married son Thomas and
his family at Slipper Lane, off Church Street, in Broughton Gifford. The
census in 1851 described her as a pauper.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N12
|
Thomas
Collett
|
Born in 1807
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N13
|
Samuel
Collett
|
Born in 1808
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N14
|
Ann
Collett
|
Born in 1810
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N15
|
Samuel
Collett
|
Born in 1811
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N16
|
Elizabeth
Clack Collett
|
Born in 1813
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N17
|
Sarah
Collett
|
Born in 1815
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N18
|
Mary
Collett
|
Born in 1817
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N19
|
James
Collett
|
Born in 1818
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N20
|
Henry
Clack Collett
|
Born in 1820
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N21
|
Jane
Collett
|
Born in 1825
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35M5
|
William Collett,
who was baptised at Broughton Gifford on 28th September 1778,
another son of Henry and Mary Collett, married Mary Line from Winkfield
(today Wingfield), where they were married on 17th April 1804.
Once married, the couple settled in Broughton Gifford, where their three
known children were baptised. Tragically their son James did not survive to
adulthood and was buried at Broughton Gifford on 12th January
1826. The couple’s second son was baptised on the same day as another
William Collett, the son of Thomas and Maria Collett (below).
Eighteen years after the birth of the couple’s first grandchild, William
Granger Hulbert, the eldest son of their married daughter Mary Ann, William
Hulbert was living at Grittleton with his unmarried uncle Thomas Collett,
aged 30 and from Broughton Gifford. If the census in 1851 was absolutely
correct in stating their relationship to each other, then that would indicate
Thomas Collett was the brother of Mary Ann Hulbert nee Collett, and therefore
a later son of William Collett and Mary Line, hence his inclusion below.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N22
|
James
Collett
|
Born in 1807
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N23
|
William
Collett
|
Born in 1809
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N24
|
Mary Ann
Collett
|
Born in 1811
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N25
|
Thomas
Collett
|
Born in 1820
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35M6
|
Amelia (Millicent) Collett was born at Broughton Gifford, where
she was baptised in the parish church on 4th March 1781. She was
the sixth child and second daughter of Henry and Mary Collett of Broughton
Gifford and was married twice before she reached twenty-five years of age.
At the time of her marriage to (1) Thomas Gore at Broughton Gifford on 24th
August 1801, she was referred to as Millicent Collett, when both of them made
the mark of a cross. However, within a very short time, she was made a
widow. As a result of her loss, it was just three years after she was first
married that Amelia, a widow, married (2) George Mortimer, widower, at the
parish church in Broughton Gifford on 24th September 1804. George
was the youngest son of William Mortimer and Mary Rudman and was baptised at
Broughton Gifford on 9th October 1785. George’s sister Hannah
Mortimer married Amelia’s brother Stephen Collett (below).
|
|
|
|
|
|
Prior
to his marriage to Amelia, George had been married to Martha Bull at
Broughton Gifford on 18th January 1801. Tragically, Martha died
just three years later and was buried at Broughton Gifford on 10th
January 1804. It was over eight months later, that same year, when he
married Amelia Collett. George died sometime between 1841 and 1850, and was
followed by Amelia, who was buried at the Baptist Chapel in Broughton Gifford
on 23rd November 1850.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Amelia’s
and George’s eldest son Henry (Harry) Mortimer, who was baptised at Broughton
Gifford on 30th June 1805, later married (1) Eliza Gay at
Broughton Gifford on 7th April 1828. Just as had happened to his
father George Mortimer, Harry’s first wife also died shortly after they were
married, and less than a year later, on 15th January 1829, he
married (2) Anne Mortimer who was born at Kington Langley in 1809. It seems
highly likely that Anne was his cousin. Harry Mortimer was 47 when he died
in 1852, following which he was buried in the graveyard at the Baptist Chapel
in Broughton Gifford on 27th March 1852, just sixteen months after
his mother Amelia had been buried there.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The
only member of the family to have their life story extended, is that of
George and Amelia’s fourth child, their daughter Hannah. The couple’s other
Broughton Gifford-born children, apart from eldest son Henry, were Joseph
(1807-1808), Sarah (born 1809), George (born 1815), Joseph (born 1817) and
Elizabeth (born 1818).
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N26
|
Hannah Elizabeth
Mortimer
|
Born in 1813
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35M7
|
Thomas Collett
was baptised at Broughton Gifford on 30th May 1784, another son of
Henry Collett and his wife Mary Hayward. He married (1) Maria Spencer at
Melksham on 26th August 1805 and once married they lived in
Broughton Gifford, where their children were born, and then baptised at
Melksham, when the occupation of Thomas Collett was revealed as that of a
weaver. Maria was born at Biddestone, near Chippenham, on 3th August 1784,
where she was also baptised on 19th December 1784, the daughter of
Anthony and Elizabeth Spencer. Maria Collett, wife of Thomas, died at the
age of 38 and was buried at Melksham on 2nd June 1822. Widower Thomas
Collett, a butcher by that time, then married (2) Jane Marks of Melksham, at
Winsley, on 16th September 1823, with their three sons born at
Melksham. For the birth of the third of those children, Thomas Collett was
working as an inn keeper. The couple emigrated to America in 1829 with their
sons Thomas, Henry, John, Job and Jacob. Their son Harry had died aged one
year in 1817, hence why the couple’s next child was given the name Henry. Thomas’
second wife Jane was born on 30th November 1801, and was the
daughter of Moses Marks and his wife Martha, who was baptised at St Edmund’s
Church in Salisbury on 30th December 1801.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Looking
for a new life in the New World, the family entered America through New York,
following which they resided at Hamden in Connecticut, and Lowell in
Massachusetts, before finally settling in Bangor, Maine, in 1845 where they
founded a file cutting business to serve the lumber trade. Nine years prior
to that Thomas Collett, his wife, and three children were recorded as
attending public worship at the Grace Episcopal Church in Hamden during March
in 1836. By 1846, Thomas Collett senior and Thomas Collett junior were both
living on Pine Street in Bangor, where they were working as file cutters.
Following the death of his second wife Jane at home in Bangor on 23rd
April 1862 at the age of 68, Thomas was visiting relatives at St. Louis in
Missouri when he died, after which he was buried there. However, his wife
Jane and other members of his family were buried at Mount Hope Cemetery in
Bangor, where six Collett memorial headstones are set aside in a family
group.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N27
|
Stephen Collett
|
Born in 1807
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N28
|
William
Collett
|
Born in 1809
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N29
|
Thomas
Collett
|
Born in 1811
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N30
|
Harriet Collett
|
Born in 1813
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N31
|
John Collett
|
Born in 1815
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N32
|
Harry Collett
|
Born in 1816
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N33
|
Henry Collett
|
Born in 1818
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N34
|
James Collett
|
Born in 1820
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
The following
are the sons of Thomas Collett by his second wife Jane Marks:
|
|
|
35N35
|
John Collett
|
Born in 1824
at Melksham
|
|
|
35N36
|
Job Collett
|
Born in 1825
at Melksham
|
|
|
35N37
|
Jacob F
Collett
|
Born in 1826
at Melksham
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35M8
|
Stephen Collett
was possibly born in 1786 and was baptised on 4th March 1787 at
Broughton Gifford, a son of Henry Collett and Mary Hayward. Stephen married
Hannah Mortimer, after the reading of banns, on 31st May 1808 at
Broughton Gifford, where their children were born and baptised. The church
register was signed by the bride and the groom with the mark of a cross,
while the two witnesses were Stephen’s older brother James and Collett and
Eliza Mortimer in her own hand. Hannah Mortimer was the sister of George
Mortimer who had married Stephen’s sister Amelia (above) in 1804.
Also, at Broughton Gifford on 6th April 1837, another Hannah E
Mortimer (Ref. 35N26) married Samuel Collett (Ref. 35N15), his first wife.
Hannah was Samuel’s cousin ‘one-step removed’ and was baptised at Broughton
Gifford on 24th July 1813, being the daughter of George Mortimer
and Amelia (Millicent) Collett (Ref. 35M6), who was a cousin of Samuel’s
father.
|
|
|
|
|
|
All
of the children of Stephen and Hannah Collett were born and baptised at
Broughton Gifford and, in each case, the parish records confirmed that
Stephen was a shoemaker, as they did at the time of the marriage of their
daughter Mary in 1839. Furthermore, that was the occupation taken up by all
his sons John, Harry and Simeon, the older two boys being baptised on the
same day in 1817 who, may or may not, have been twin brothers. In the
Broughton Gifford census of 1841, Stephen and Hannah were the only ones still
living at the family home on ‘the street’ in the village, when Stephen had a
rounded age of 50 and Hannah a rounded age of 60. Both of them were recorded
as having been born in Wiltshire. It was the same situation in 1851, by
which time the pair of them were living on The Common in Broughton Gifford.
Stephen Collett from Broughton Gifford was 64 and a former shoemaker, who was
described as a pauper. Hannah Collett, also of Broughton Gifford was 70
years of age and ‘a pauper’s wife’. Almost exactly one year later, the death
of Stephen Collett was recorded at Bradford-on-Avon (Ref. 5a 33) during the
second quarter of 1852. Although much older than her departed husband, his
wife survived for another eighteen months, when the death of Hannah Collett,
nee Mortimer, was recorded at Bradford-on-Avon (Ref. 5a 39) during the last
three months of 1853.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Where
there is a complication with their children, is with regard to their eldest
son John Collett. Whilst he is correctly placed within the family, he is NOT
the John Collett who later married Sarah Halstead Wiggell in London in 1842,
who emigrated to Ontario. And there are two valid reasons for this, the
first being the census of 1841 when, unmarried John Collett, with a rounded
age of 20, was the only child still living with his widowed father at
Atworth. However, that person was William Collett who had a rounded age of
55. Within the next two years, shoemaker John Collett from Wiltshire was
married in London, when his father was recorded as shoemaker William Collett.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The
first two children of William Collett (Ref. 35N1) of Broughton Gifford and
Jane Webb were born in 1816 and 1820. William’s father was John Collett, but
has not a child of that name within his own family, which is unusual.
Therefore, it is possible that, missing from his family is John Collett born
around 1818. Whilst all of the baptisms of the children of William and Jane
have been identified in the parish records, none has been found with the name
of John. So, until this conundrum can be solved, John Collett, the shoemaker
and son of William Collett, has been added to his family (Ref. 35O1) but, to
avoid a very major change to the layout of this family line, the Ref. 35O1
must lead to a second Ref. 35N40.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N38
|
Sarah
Collett
|
Born in 1809
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N39
|
Anne
Collett
|
Born in 1812
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N40
|
John
Collett
|
Born in 1814
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N41
|
Henry
Collett
|
Born in 1816
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N42
|
Mary
Collett
|
Born in 1819
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N43
|
Simeon
Collett
|
Born in 1823
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35M9
|
Mary Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford and was the last child of Henry Collett and his
wife Mary Hayward. Just like all of her older siblings, Mary Collett was
also baptised at Broughton Gifford on 25th July 1789, the same day
that her mother was buried there, having died during the birth. One week
later, baby Mary Collett was buried at Broughton Gifford on 2nd
August 1789.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35M10
|
John Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford in 1789 and was baptised there on 1st
November 1789, the eldest child of James Collett and Margaret Addams. Around
the time he was 22, John married Sarah Elmes at Broughton Gifford on 29th
July 1811. Sarah was the daughter of William and Jane Elmes and was baptised
at North Wraxall on 8th February 1789, whereas previously it had
been stated here that she had been baptised at Broughton Gifford on 9th
May 1790. It was also at Broughton Gifford where they settled after they were
married, and where all of their known children were born and baptised, their
baptism records confirming their father John was a labourer. In the first
national census held in the UK in June 1841, John was recorded with a rounded
age of 50, as was his wife Sarah. Living with them at that time Church Brook
in the village were four of their children, and they were Samuel who was 25,
William who was 20, Sarah who was 11 and Eliza who was nine years old.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ten
years later the Broughton Gifford census of 1851 revealed that agricultural
labourer John Collett was 62 and his wife Sarah from Broughton Gifford was
60. Living at the same dwelling was the widowed daughter of John and Sarah,
Elizabeth Ashman from Broughton Gifford who was 32, who had with her, her son
James Ashman aged seven years and from Marylebone in London, described as the
couple’s grandson. Next door was an unoccupied property, while adjacent to
that was the home of John’s brother’s family, wool weaver Sarah Collett aged
58, the widow of Daniel Collett (below), with her son James Collett
who was 17 and another agricultural labourer.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N44
|
Anne
Collett
|
Born in 1811
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N45
|
Thomas
Collett
|
Born in 1814
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N46
|
Samuel
Collett
|
Born in 1816
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N47
|
Elizabeth
Collett
|
Born in 1818
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N48
|
William
Collett
|
Born in 1821
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N49
|
Anne
Collett
|
Born in 1823
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N50
|
Anne
Collett
|
Born in 1825
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N51
|
Mary
Collett
|
Born in 1826
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N52
|
Sarah
Collett
|
Born in 1830
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N53
|
Eliza
Collett
|
Born in 1832
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35M11
|
Daniel Collett was
baptised at Broughton Gifford on 23rd November 1794, the second
son of James and Margaret Collett. He was just over 21 years of age when he
married Sarah Gowin at Broughton Gifford on 24th December 1815.
The parish register confirmed the event as follows. “Daniel Collett, aged
21 years of this parish, and Sarah Gowin, aged 23 years of this parish, were
married in this church by banns this twenty-fourth day of December in the
year One Thousand eight hundred and fifteen by me James Gisborne, curate.
This marriage was solemnised between us Daniel Collett (who signed his name)
and Sarah Gowin (who made her mark) in the presence of Thomas Gowin and James
Bugg.”
|
|
|
|
|
|
In
1841 Daniel and Sarah were both 45 when they and their family were recorded
in the census for Broughton Gifford. Their children on that day were listed
as George who was 20, Mary who was 15, Daniel who was 10, and James who was
seven years old. The absence of earlier son James and his sister Sarah have
both been confirmed by the record of their deaths, fifteen years and five
years earlier respectively. As regards the couple’s two eldest daughters,
Ann had married her cousin Thomas Collett (Ref. 35N45) during the previous
year when she was 21, so it is possible that the slightly older Maria was
also married by that time or perhaps she too had suffered the same fate as
her two younger siblings. Just over five years later Daniel Collett died at
Broughton Gifford on 23rd August 1846, his death recorded at
Bradford-on-Avon (Ref. viii 164) during the third quarter of the year.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The
Broughton Gifford census in 1851 listed just Sarah Collett, a widow of 58 who
was a wool weaver, who had living with her James Collett aged 17, her
youngest child. Both of them were born at Broughton Gifford and, while the
adjacent dwelling was unoccupied, the next property contained the family of
John Collett (above) her late husband’s brother and his wife Sarah.
Living with the couple was their widowed daughter, Elizabeth Wheeler aged 32
and from Broughton Gifford who had with her, her son John Wheeler who was
seven years of age and from St Marylebone in London.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N54
|
Maria
Collett
|
Born in 1816
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N55
|
Ann
Collett
|
Born in 1818
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N56
|
George
Collett
|
Born in 1821
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N57
|
Mary
Collett
|
Born in 1824
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N58
|
James
Collett
|
Born in 1826
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N59
|
Sarah
Collett
|
Born in 1827
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N60
|
Daniel
Collett
|
Born in 1831
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N61
|
James
Collett
|
Born in 1834
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35M12
|
James Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford around 1797, where he was baptised on 20th
June 1799, the third son of James and Margaret Collett. James was still
living at Broughton Gifford when he married Martha Tarrant on 2nd
April 1821, both with the consent of their parents. According to the census
of 1841 James had a rounded age of 40, while his wife Martha was 44. On the
occasion of the baptism of each of his children, James’ occupation was that
of a labourer. The children living with the couple at Broughton Street in
1841 were Mary and Ann, both 15, George who was 12, Elizabeth who was 10,
Margaret who was nine, Jane who was six, and Martha who was two years old,
having suffered the loss of their sixth child seven years earlier. On the
day of the Broughton Gifford census in 1851, James Collett was 53 and an
agricultural labourer, his wife Martha was 55, and the only children still
living with them were Elizabeth who was 20 and Martha who was 11.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Seven
years later, James Collett died at Broughton Gifford, his death recorded at
Bradford-on-Avon (Ref. 5a 66) during the third quarter of 1858, when he was
61, following which he was buried at Broughton Gifford on 26th
September 1858. It was two years later, and also at Broughton Gifford, that
his widow Martha Collett was buried there on 11th November 1860,
just three months after her youngest daughter Martha was married there. The
death of Martha Collett, aged 64, was also recorded at Bradford-on-Avon (Ref.
5a 68).
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N62
|
Mary
Collett
|
Born in 1823
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N63
|
Anne
Collett
|
Born in 1825
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N64
|
George
Tarrant Collett
|
Born in 1827
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N65
|
Elizabeth
Collett
|
Born in 1829
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N66
|
Margaret
Collett
|
Born in 1831
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N67
|
Jane
Collett
|
Born in 1833
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N68
|
Jane
Collett
|
Born in 1835
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35N69
|
Martha
Collett
|
Born in 1839
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35M13
|
Mary Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford in 1808 and was baptised there on 25th
December 1808, the last child of James Collett and Margaret Addams, according
to the parish records. Curiously, the IGI records the date as 25th
January 1808.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35M14
|
Thomas Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford, where he was baptised at Broughton Gifford on 27th
September 1801, the son of Henry Collett and Susannah Mortimer. The parish
register recorded them as Harry Collett, a widower, and Ann Mortimer, a
widow. On the first occasion, a Thomas Collett married Ann Taylor at
Melksham on 26th May 1823. Ann was the daughter of William and
Ann Taylor who had been born at Melksham in 1801, but was not baptised at
Melksham until 1822. Once they were married, Thomas and Ann settled in the
hamlet of Whitley, two miles north-west of Melksham, with all of them
baptised at St Michael & All Angels Church in Melksham. The parish
records for each child described Thomas Collett as being weaver of Whitley.
|
|
|
|
|
|
According
to the first national census in June 1841, Thomas and his family were still
residing in Whitley. Thomas had a rounded age of 40 and Ann had a rounded
age of 35. Their children were listed as Stephen Collett was 15, as was Jane
Collett, Maria Collett was 12, James Collett was 10, William Collett was
seven, Henry Collett was five, Sarah Collett was two years of age, and
Frederick Collett was just two months old.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ten
years later, in 1851, when Thomas Collett was 50, his occupation was no
longer that of a weaver, instead he was a butcher who was living at the
family home in Whitley. With him was his wife Ann, who was 48 and from
Melksham, James
Collett, aged 20, William Collett, aged 17, Sarah Collett, who was 12, and
Frederick Collett who was 10 years old and still attending the local school.
By that time, the couple’s eldest son Stephen was married with children of
his own, daughter Jane was a domestic servant at Shaw Hill House in Melksham, while son Henry had already died by
then.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Although
no census record for the family has been located in 1861 and 1871 it is
established that Thomas Collett died during the month of June in 1872, while
his wife Ann died less than two years later on 10th January 1874.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N70
|
Stephen
Collett
|
Born in 1824
at Whitley, nr Melksham
|
|
|
35N71
|
Jane
Collett
|
Born in 1826
at Whitley, nr Melksham
|
|
|
35N72
|
Maria
Collett
|
Born in 1829
at Whitley, nr Melksham
|
|
|
35N73
|
James
Collett
|
Born in 1831
at Whitley, nr Melksham
|
|
|
35N74
|
William
Collett
|
Born in 1834
at Whitley, nr Melksham
|
|
|
35N75
|
Henry
Collett
|
Born in 1835
at Whitley, nr Melksham
|
|
|
35N76
|
Sarah
Collett
|
Born in 1838
at Whitley, nr Melksham
|
|
|
35N77
|
Frederick
Collett
|
Born in 1841
at Whitley, nr Melksham
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35M15
|
William Collett
was possibly born at Broughton Gifford around 1804 before his parents moved
to Melksham, where William was baptised in a combined service with his sister
Ann (below) on 7th September 1806, the children of Henry
and Ann (Susannah).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35M16
|
Ann Collett
was baptised at Melksham on 7th September 1806, the same day as
her brother William (above), the daughter of Henry and Ann Collett.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35M17
|
Hannah Collett
was baptised at Melksham on 5th June 1808, another daughter of
Henry and Ann Collett. She was said to be 17 years old, when Hannah died and
was buried at Melksham on 10th May 1826.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35M18
|
Maria Collett
was baptised at Melksham on 19th May 1811, the last child of Henry
Collett and Susannah Mortimer.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N1
|
William Collett
was baptised at Broughton Gifford on 17th February 1793, the
eldest child of John Collett and his wife Mary White, who were only married
there on 20th November the previous year. It was also at
Broughton Gifford that William Collett married (1) Jane Webb around the same
time that his sister Mary Collett (below) married Jane’s brother James
Webb there on 18th December 1813. Jane Allen Webb was born at
Broughton Gifford, where she was also baptised on 5th April 1795,
the daughter of Robert and Eleanor Webb. William Collett was a shoemaker and
all of his children were born and baptised at Broughton Gifford, but from two
marriages. There is a chance that Jane gave birth to William’s first child
before they were married, since the parish register included the entry of the
child’s baptism on 7th July 1816, as Tabitha Webb, the daughter of
Jane, a weaver, and William Collett, a cordwainer.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Previously,
William and Jane were credited with just two children. However, the
four-year gap between their daughters could be filled by the birth of a son,
named John after William’s father. The reason for suggesting this, are the
facts that in 1841 William Collett had his son John living with him at
Atworth, just a short distance north of Broughton Gifford. William had a
rounded age of 55, with John having a rounded age of 20 years. Not long
after that, John was married, when his father was recorded as William
Collett, a shoemaker. For these two separate validated details, William has
been credited with son John born in 1818, even though no birth or baptism
record has been found. However, in order to avoid an extensive
re-writing/re-formatting of this family line, the continuation of the life
John Collett can be found from Ref. 35N40, where he was original placed, in
error, as the son of Stephen Collett and Hannah Mortimer.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Between
the years 1820 and 1822, William’s wife’s name changed from Jane to (2)
Elizabeth for the baptism for his last three children at Broughton Gifford.
To date, no record has been found for the premature death of Jane Collett nee
Webb, either around the time of the birth of her daughter Elizabeth, or
shortly thereafter. In addition to this, it is perhaps interesting to note
that no record of the first or second marriage of shoemaker William Collett
has been found anywhere within the Wiltshire parish records. William Collett
of Broughton Gifford, a former shoemaker, presumably retired by then, was
visiting the home of the Pullen family from Atworth at Bradford-on-Avon in
1851. It is possible he came friendly with Francis and Rebecca Pullen when
William was living in Atworth, where they and their three young children had
been born between 1841 and 1851.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O0
|
Tabitha
Collett
|
Born in 1816
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O1 go to 35N40
|
John
Collett
|
Born in 1818
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O2
|
Elizabeth
Collett
|
Born in 1820
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
The following
are the three children of William Collett and Elizabeth:
|
|
|
35O3
|
Hannah
Collett
|
Born in 1822
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O4
|
Eliza
Collett
|
Born in 1826
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O5
|
William
Collett
|
Born in 1828
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N2
|
Mary Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford, where she was baptised on 5th April
1795, the second child of John Collett and Mary White. It seems that she may
have been the twin sister of Robert Collett (below), as they were both
baptised there on the same day. The marriage of Mary Collett and James Webb
was conducted at Broughton Gifford on 18th December 1813. James
was born at Broughton Gifford in 1790 and was the son of Robert and Eleanor
Webb, her brother William (above) being married there to James’
younger sister Jane Webb two years later. As far as could be originally determined,
the marriage of Mary and James produced two sons.
|
|
|
|
|
|
However,
prior to their birth/baptism, Mary gave birth to son George, the only problem
being that at his baptism seven months after the couple’s wedding day, his
parents were named in error as George and Maria Collett, rather than James
and Mary. The confirming aspect of the baptismal record for George, the
erroneous father of George, was that his occupation was stated to be that of
a weaver, the same as James the father of the two younger sons. This new
information was kindly provided in August 2023 by Jon Moya, who is a direct
descendent of George Webb, the eldest of the three sons of Mary Webb, nee
Collett, the details also recorded in the Bishop’s Transcripts.
|
|
|
|
|
|
So,
to update the previous version of this family line, we can now say with some
confidence, that the three sons of James Webb and Mary Collett were as
followings:
George Webb
who was baptised at Broughton Gifford on 17th July 1814; James
Webb who was born on 26th December 1816; and Thomas Webb
who was born on 28th December 1818, both later baptised in a joint
ceremony at Broughton Gifford on 26th November 1820, when they
were confirmed as the children of weaver James Webb and his wife Mary. Two
days earlier, the father of the three children died at Broughton Gifford,
with James Webb buried there on 24th November 1820, at the age of
30, his year of birth born confirmed as 1790. Thirty months after being
widowed, the marriage of Mary Webb and George Gore was recorded at Broughton
Gifford on 11th May 1823, with whom she went on to have many more
children, but at Hinton Blewett in Somerset, south of Bristol. The later
death of Mary Gore was recorded at Frome in Somerset at the start of 1879.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N3
|
Robert Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford and was baptised there on the same day as his
sister Mary (above), that being 5th April 1795, another son
of John Collett and Mary White.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N4
|
Henry Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford, where he was baptised on 29th April
1798, the son of John and Mary Collett. Henry married Mary Morris on 3rd
May 1825 at Melksham, where they settled and where all their children were
born. Very shortly after their wedding day, Mary gave birth to their first
child, who did not survive. At the baptism of all his children, Henry
Collett was described as a shoemaker / a cordwainer. By the time of the
census in June 1841, the family living at Town Tything in Melksham comprised
Henry aged 40, who was listed as Harry, his wife Mary who was also 40, and
their seven children. They were Henry and Sarah who were both 14, Eliza aged
12, Elizabeth (Betsy) who was nine, Ann who was six, Everest who was four and
John who was two years old. The family had been reduced in number by then,
following the premature deaths of the couple’s first-born child Ann, a later
child being given the same name.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Eighteen
months later, Mary gave birth to her second set of twins but, tragically
first Mary and then the twins all suffered premature deaths. The death of
Mary Collett, the mother, was recorded at Melksham (Ref. viii 247) during the
third quarter of 1842. Her two babies, George and Mary, were baptised
together at Melksham on 11th August 1842, when their parents were
confirmed as Henry and Mary Collett. After losing his wife, Henry then
suffered the death of his to recent arrivals. The births of George and Mary
Collett were recorded at Melksham (Ref. viii 344) during the third quarter of
1842, the same period that their deaths were recorded there (Ref. viii 248).
|
|
|
|
|
|
Henry
Collett from Broughton Gifford was 51, a widower and a shoemaker in the
Melksham census of 1851. Living with him on that day was his daughter Sarah
who was 24 and acting as his housekeeper, his son Henry who was also recorded
as being 24, together with four more of his children. They were Eliza who
was 22, Ann who was 16, Everest who was 14 and John Collett who was 11 years
old. It was seven years later that the death of Harry Collett was recorded
at Melksham (Ref. 5a 56) during the third quarter of 1858. Ten years after
that, at the time of the marriage in London of his youngest surviving
daughter Everest in 1868, her father was referred to as Henry Collett
deceased.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O6
|
Ann
Collett
|
Born in 1825
at Melksham
|
|
|
35O7
|
Henry
Collett twin
|
Born in 1827
at Melksham
|
|
|
35O8
|
Sarah
Collett twin
|
Born in 1827
at Melksham
|
|
|
35O9
|
Eliza
Collett
|
Born in 1829
at Melksham
|
|
|
35O10
|
Betsy
(Elizabeth) Collett
|
Born in 1831
at Melksham
|
|
|
35O11
|
Ann
Collett
|
Born in 1835
at Melksham
|
|
|
35O12
|
Everest
Collett
|
Born in 1837
at Melksham
|
|
|
35O13
|
John
Collett
|
Born in 1839
at Melksham
|
|
|
35O14
|
George
Collett twin
|
Born in 1842
at Melksham
|
|
|
35O15
|
Mary Collett twin
|
Born in 1842
at Melksham
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N5
|
Elizabeth Collett was born at Broughton Gifford in 1800 and was baptised
there on 23rd November 1800, the last child of John Collett and
Mary White. When Elizabeth was 24 years old, she married Francis Miles of
Weston near Bath, the marriage taking place in the village of Weston on 12th
October 1824. Francis had been born at Priston in Somerset during 1799. The
marriage produced four children for Elizabeth and Francis, and they were Mary
Miles who was born in 1825, John Miles born in 1827, Francis Miles born in
1830, and Thomas Miles who was born in 1836. By the time of the first
national census in June 1841, the family was still living within the Bath
registration district and comprised Francis who was 40 (rounded age),
Elizabeth who was 35 (rounded age), and their four children, Mary 15, John
13, Francis 10, and Thomas who was four years old.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ten
years later the family was recorded living in the Bath & Lansdown area,
which included the village of Weston. The census of 1851 listed the family
as Francis 52, Elizabeth 49, and their two sons Francis who was 22 and Thomas
who was 14. By 1861 Elizabeth was a widow aged 59 who was living within the
Bath & Walcot area with her unmarried son Francis Miles, who was 30 years
old. It was eight years later that Elizabeth Miles nee Collett died at Bath
in 1869.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Her
son Thomas Miles, born at Bath during November 1836, later married Emma Viner
Russell who was born during 1839 at Walcot in Bath, and they had a daughter
Emily Clara Miles who was also born there on 29th October 1866.
Emily later married William Albert Smith who was born on 6th
September 1865 at Limpley Stoke, Bradford-on-Avon, whose parents were Henry
Charles Smith and Sylvia Wicks. Sylvia was the sister of Sarah Deborah Wicks
who married Charles Collett (Ref. 64O17), Sarah being the great grandmother
of Maureen Iliffe Collett (Ref. 64R15), who kindly provided this information.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N6
|
Millicent Collett was born at Broughton Gifford and baptised there on 11th
September 1803, the last child of John Collett and Mary White. Although not
proved to be this Millicent, a Millicent Collett was buried at Broughton
Gifford on 25th December 1803, with parents named or age stated.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N7
|
William Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford and was baptised there on 27th October
1801, the son of Henry and Maria Collett. He later married Jane Gardner and
once they were married the couple settled in Melksham area of Wiltshire, not
far from Broughton Gifford. It was while they were living there, that their
children were born and baptised, when the parents were described as William
Collett, a weaver of Melksham Forest, and his wife Jane.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Around the same time that William’s daughter was born,
another Elizabeth Collett was baptised at Christian Malford to the north-east
of Chippenham. That Elizabeth Collett (Ref. 35O16a) was born at
Christian Malford on 3rd February 1827, and was baptised there one
year later on 11th March 1828, the daughter of William Collett
(Ref. 35N7a) and his wife Mary. That Elizabeth Collett never married and
she was still living in Christian Malford when she died on 13th
June 1866. William and Mary also had a second daughter Anne Collett (Ref.
35O16b) who was baptised at Christian Malford on 8th February
1829. Their details have been included here for completeness.
|
|
|
|
|
|
It
was at Cannonfield Tything in Melksham that the family was recorded on the
day of the census in 1841. William Collett was 35, his wife Jane Collett was
also 35, while their three surviving children were Elizabeth Collett who was
13, Thomas Collett who was 10 and William Collett who was seven years of age.
|
|
|
|
|
|
New
information has revealed that there is a headstone at the Church of St
Nicholas in Biddestone which bears the name of William Collett and his wife
Jane Gardner, on which the date of his death is 15th September
1844, when he was 44. The same headstone also carries the name of his wife,
Jane Gardner, who died on 26th November 1858, aged 50 years.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O16
|
Charles
Collett
|
Born in 1826
at Melksham
|
|
|
35O17
|
Elizabeth
Collett
|
Born in 1828
at Melksham
|
|
|
35O18
|
Thomas
Walters Collett
|
Born in 1830
at Melksham
|
|
|
35O19
|
Thomas
Walters Collett
|
Born in 1832
at Melksham
|
|
|
35O20
|
William
Collett
|
Born in 1834
at Melksham
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N8
|
Daniel Collett
was probably born during the middle of first decade of the 1800s, the son of
Henry and Maria Collett of Broughton Gifford, where he was very likely also
born, as were his other siblings. In the Broughton Gifford census of 1841,
Daniel had a rounded age of 30 and by that time he was married to Sarah who
also had a rounded age of 30. It was ten years or so earlier that he had
married Sarah, since the three children with them in 1841 were Ann Collett
who was eight, Stephen Collett who was three and Mary Collett who was still
under one-year old. The five years between their eldest child and the second
one was possibly filled by a further child who may have been the victim of an
infant death. No record of any member of the family has been found after
1841.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O21
|
Ann Collett
|
Born in 1832
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O22
|
Stephen
Collett
|
Born in 1837
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O23
|
Mary Collett
|
Born in 1840
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N9
|
Thomas Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford and baptised there on 18th October
1807, another son of Henry and Maria Collett.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N10
|
Maria Collett
who was born at Melksham around 1812 later married to become Maria Daniels.
In 1881 she was a widow aged 69 when she was living with her brother Stephen
Collett (below) at Broughton Road in Melksham, when her place of birth
was given as Melksham.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N11
|
STEPHEN COLLETT was
born at Melksham in 1819 and by June 1841 he was married with a child when
living at Woodrow Tything in Melksham with his widowed father Henry Collett.
It was in 1840 when the marriage of Stephen Collett and (1) Grace Brinsdon
was recorded at Melksham. Stephen was 21 and confirmed as the son of Henry
Collett, while Grace was 23 and named as the daughter of John Brinsdon. In
the census of 1841 Stephen was described as a woollen weaver with a rounded
age of 20, the same rounded age given to his wife Grace who is known to have
been slightly older than her husband. The very recent marriage of Stephen
and Grace had already produced their first of the couple’s ten children born
and baptised at Melksham, their son George was still under one-year old.
|
|
|
|
|
|
In
1851 the family comprised Stephen 31 who was an agricultural labourer, Grace
34 who was a yarn wool quiller, George who was ten, Hannah who was nine,
Jemima who was seven, Emma who was six, John who was three, and baby William
who was not one-year old on the thirtieth of March that year. By the time of
the next census in 1861 only eight of the ten children were still living with
their parents at Broughton Road in Melksham. On that day Stephen Collett was
41, and employed as an agricultural labourer, and Grace Collett was 46.
Their children were George aged 20, Emma aged 15, John aged 13, William aged
11, Ellen who was nine, Thomas who was six, Maria who was five, and Frederick
who was three years old.
|
|
|
|
|
|
It
was just shortly before the next census that Grace Collett nee Brinsdon
passed away, her death recorded at Melksham (Ref. 5a 81) during the first
three months of 1871 when she was 54. As a consequence, by the time of the
Melksham census of 1871, Stephen Collett was a widower and a gardener at the
age of 51 years. Still living there with him were his three youngest
children, Thomas Collett who was 17, Maria Collett who was 16, and Frederick
Collett who was 13. Living nearby in Melksham on that same day was Stephen’s
son William, aged 22, and his new wife Sarah A Collett who was 21. It would
appear that Stephen may have already remarried by that time since, his second
wife (2) Susan H Hayward, who was born at Plymouth in 1832, was recorded in
the Charles district of Plymouth in the census in 1871 as Susan Collett aged
38. On that day she seems to have been visiting or staying with her parents
in Plymouth, perhaps because she was pregnant with Emily, the first of the
three children she had with Stephen.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ten
years later, according to the 1881 Census, Stephen Collett was a gardener at
61, and was born at Melksham. Living with him at that time were his two of
his three youngest children. They were Emily who was nine, and Sidney who
was six, both of them having been born at Melksham. Stephen’s wife Susan H
Collett, who was 48 and from Plymouth, was described in the 1881 Census as a
gardener’s wife and a visitor at the Plymouth home of James Taylor and his
family. Accompanying Susan on her trip to Devon was her youngest son Frank S
Collett who was three and born at Melksham.
|
|
|
|
|
|
During
his wife’s absence in April 1881, Stephen’s married sister Maria Daniels nee
Collett (above) was living with him and his two children, Emily and
Sidney, at Broughton Road in Melksham, presumably taking over the role of
housekeeper. It was also in Broughton Road that Stephen’s two cousins, the
brothers Henry and Simeon Collett, were living at that time. Also, by 1881,
five of Stephen’s older children had left England and had sailed to North
America, where they had settled in Michigan and Connecticut.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Stephen
and Susan were reunited for the census of 1891. Gardener Stephen was 71 and
Susan was 58 when, living with the couple at Union Street in Melksham was
their youngest child Frank Collett who was 13. No record of their daughter
Emily or their son Sidney has been found in 1891. By March 1901 Stephen and
Susan were recorded as living at New Broughton Road in Melksham Within, where
gardener Stephen from Melksham was 81 and his wife from Plymouth was 69.
Eight years later the death of Stephen Collett was recorded at Melksham
register office (Ref. 5a 83) during the first quarter of 1909 when his age
was thought to be 89.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O24
|
George
Collett
|
Born circa
1840 at Melksham
|
|
|
35O25
|
Hannah
Collett
|
Baptised on
27.03.1842 at Melksham
|
|
|
35O26
|
Jemima
Collett
|
Born in 1843
at Melksham
|
|
|
35O27
|
Emma Collett
|
Baptised on
26.10.1845 at Melksham
|
|
|
35O28
|
John
Collett
|
Born circa
1848 at Melksham
|
|
|
35O29
|
WILLIAM
COLLETT
|
Born circa
1849 at Melksham
|
|
|
35O30
|
Ellen
Collett
|
Born in 1851
at Melksham
|
|
|
35O31
|
Thomas
Collett
|
Born circa
1854 at Melksham
|
|
|
35O32
|
Maria
Collett
|
Born in 1855
at Melksham
|
|
|
35O33
|
Frederick
Collett
|
Born circa
1858 at Melksham
|
|
|
The children
from Stephen’s second marriage and living with him in 1881 were:
|
|
|
35O34
|
Emily
Collett
|
Born circa
1871 at Melksham
|
|
|
35O35
|
Sidney
Collett
|
Born circa
1875 at Melksham
|
|
|
35O36
|
Frank S
Collett
|
Born circa
1877 at Melksham
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N12
|
Thomas Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford in 1807 and was baptised there on 1st
November 1807, when he was confirmed as the first-born child of James Collett
and Sarah Clack. By the time of the census in 1841, Thomas Collett had been
married for nearly eleven years, since it was on 14th October 1830
at Broughton Gifford that he had married Joan Elizabeth Button, when he was
nearly twenty-three years of age. The individual baptism records for all of
their children, listed below, described them as the children of labourer
Thomas and Elizabeth Collett, while in that first census in 1841 his wife was
curiously recorded as Ann Collett. However, she was correctly named as Betty
(Elizabeth) in 1851.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The
Broughton Gifford census of 1841 listed the family at Chally Mead, as Thomas
and Ann Collett, both with a rounded age of 30, while their children were
confirmed as Samuel who was eight, Ann who was six, Elizabeth who was four
and James who was one-year old. Sadly, by then, the family had suffered the
loss of their eldest daughter and their fifth child, the first of the
couple’s two son named James. Two more children were added to the family
over the next two years, with Thomas’ wife expecting the birth of the first
of them on the day of the census, son Henry being born just a few weeks
later.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The
family was still living in Broughton Gifford in 1851 when they were living at
Slipper Lane off Church Street. Thomas Collett, aged 43, was an agricultural
labourer, and his wife Betty Collett, aged 42, was a washing woman. The
children living with them on that occasion were Betsy Collett aged 14, James
Collett aged 11, Henry Collett who was nine, and Simeon Collett who was seven
years old. Every member of the family was confirmed as having been born at
Broughton Gifford, while staying with Thomas and his family was his widowed
mother Sarah Collett who was 68 and a pauper, together with his unmarried
sister Mary Collett, who was described as a general servant at the age of
32. Thomas’ other two children were also living nearby in the village, and
they were Samuel Collett who was 18 and Ann Collett who was 16.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Next
door to the Collett dwelling were two unoccupied properties, but adjacent to
them was the home of James Gerrish, aged 33, and his wife Mary, who was 28
and the youngest sister of Thomas Collett (below). Living there with
them, their three children were Sarah who was eight, Elizabeth who was five,
and Mary Anne who was four months old. It was another Sarah Gerrish, the
daughter of Samuel Gerrish and his wife Hannah Bull, who married Thomas’
eldest son Samuel Collett at Broughton Gifford in 1855, before they sailed to
America during 1857.
|
|
|
|
|
|
After
that time every member of the family was missing from the next census in
1861. However, by 1871 three of them were once again listed as residing in
Broughton Gifford, and they were Thomas Collett who was 60, as was his wife
Elizabeth, while the only child living there with them was their son James
who was still a bachelor at the age of 32. Thomas Collett died in 1880 and
was buried at Broughton Gifford on 9th October 1880 at the age of
73. While no record of any other member of his family has been found in
Great Britain after 1871, it is possible that, during the 1870s, some of them
travelled to America where the couple’s eldest son Samuel has positively been
identified within the US Census of 1880.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O37
|
Caroline
Collett
|
Born in 1830
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O38
|
Samuel
Collett
|
Born in 1832
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O39
|
Anna Maria
Collett
|
Born in 1834
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O40
|
Elizabeth
Collett
|
Born in 1836
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O41
|
James
Collett
|
Born in 1838
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O42
|
James
Collett
|
Born in 1840
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O43
|
Henry
Collett
|
Born in 1841
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O44
|
Simeon
Collett
|
Born in 1843
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N13
|
Samuel Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford, where he baptised on 25th December
1808, another son of James and Sarah Collett. Six weeks after being
baptised, Samuel died and was buried at Broughton Gifford on 7th
February 1809. Two and a half years later, Sarah gave birth to her third
child, who was also given the name Samuel, in honour of the couple’s first
child.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N14
|
Ann Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford and it was there also that she was baptised on
5th August 1810, the first daughter of James and Sarah Collett.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N15
|
Samuel Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford in 1811 and was the fourth child of James and
Sarah Collett and was baptised at Broughton Gifford on 15th
November 1811. He later married (1) Hannah Elizabeth Mortimer (Ref. 35N26)
on 6th April 1837. Hannah was Samuel’s cousin ‘one-step removed’
and was baptised at Broughton Gifford on 24th July 1813. She was
the daughter of George Mortimer and Amelia (Millicent) Collett (Ref. 35M6),
who was a cousin of Samuel’s father.
|
|
|
|
|
|
This
was yet another of the many links between the Collett and Mortimer families.
Others were (a) Ann Mortimer who married James Gay, who were the parents of
Jacob Gay who later married Mary Collett (Ref. 35N41), the daughter of
Stephen Collett (Ref. 35M8) and Hannah Mortimer, and (b) Ruth Mortimer the
daughter of Joshua Mortimer and Ruth Wakeley, who married Benjamin Collett
(Ref. 35O110) the son of Stephen and Catherine Collett. By June 1841 the
family living at Broughton Gifford comprised Samuel, with a rounded age of
30, his wife Hannah who was 25, and their two children, James aged three
years, and baby Sarah who was one-year old.
|
|
|
|
|
|
All
of Samuel’s and Hannah’s children were born and baptised at Broughton Gifford
and, according to the next census in 1851, Samuel was an agricultural
labourer at 39 and was living in the main street in Broughton Gifford with
his wife Hannah, aged 37, and the rest of his family. The children listed
with them on that occasion were children James who was 13, Sarah who was 11,
and George who was two years old. Missing from the family home in Broughton
Gifford, which was only two doors from the home of Samuel’s ‘one-step
removed’ cousin Simeon Collett (Ref. 35N43), was their son Edwin who had died
six years earlier.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Further
tragedy struck the family in late 1853, when Hannah Collett died and was
buried at the Baptist Chapel in Broughton Gifford on 1st December
1853. Possibly following his loss, Samuel took his family at live in
Bradford and, towards the end of the decade, he married (2) Fanny, who was 14
years younger than Samuel. That was confirmed in the Bradford census of
1861, when Samuel Collett was 49 and a gardener, living in the Budbury area
of the town. Living there with him was his new wife, Fanny Collett who was
36 and their daughter Anne Collett who was under six months old. Completing
the household were three of Samuel’s children from his previous marriage, and
they were Sarah Collett who was 21, George Collett who was 14 and Mary Ann
Collett who was 12. No record of birth or baptism has been found for Mary
Ann Collett, nor was she listed with the Collett family ten years earlier.
She was therefore most likely to be the daughter of Fanny, possibly from an
earlier marriage, who had taken on her mother’s new married name.
|
|
|
|
|
|
By
1871, the family had left Bradford and, on that occasion, they were living at
Bedminster near Bristol, where Samuel was 59, Fanny was 45, and the only
children still living with them were Ann who was 10, Eliza who was eight, and
Samuel who was three. Ten years later in 1881, Samuel was a gardener aged 69
and was recorded as living at 154 East Street in Bedminster with his wife
Fanny, aged 55, who was the proprietor of a grocer’s shop employing one
assistant. The census details confirmed that Samuel was born at Broughton
Gifford and that that his wife Fanny had been born at Corston, near
Malmesbury. Living with them was their 18-year-old daughter Eliza Collett
who was born at Bradford-on-Avon, and it was she that was the aforementioned
grocer’s shop assistant to her mother. No further record of the family has
been found after 1881, so it is likely that both Samuel and Fanny died during
the 1880s.
|
|
|
|
|
|
A
little over four years later, the death of Samuel Collett was recorded at
Bedminster (Ref. 5c 456) during the last three months of 1855, when he was
74. It was also at Bedminster, in Bristol, where he was buried on 22nd
December 1855 in the churchyard of St John’s Church.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O45
|
James
Collett
|
Born in 1837
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O46
|
Sarah Ann
Collett
|
Born in 1840
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O47
|
Edwin
Collett
|
Born in 1844
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O48
|
George
Collett
|
Born in 1848
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
(dau of
Fanny)
|
Mary Ann
Collett – adopted?
|
Born in 1848
at Bradford-on-Avon
|
|
|
The
following are the three children of Samuel Collett by his second wife Fanny:
|
|
|
35O49
|
Annie
Collett
|
Born in 1860
at Bradford-on-Avon
|
|
|
35O50
|
Eliza
Collett
|
Born in 1862
at Bradford-on-Avon
|
|
|
35O51
|
Samuel
Collett
|
Born in 1867
at Bradford-on-Avon
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N16
|
Elizabeth Clack Collett was baptised at Broughton Gifford on 1st
November 1813, another daughter of publican James Collett and Sarah Clack.
By June 1841 she was a spinster with a rounded age of 25, when she was still
living with her parents at Broughton Gifford.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N17
|
Sarah Collett was
probably born at Broughton Gifford sometime between her siblings Elizabeth (above)
and Mary (below), although the exact date is not known. It is also
possible that she may have been a twin with her sister Mary, since they were
both baptised at Broughton Gifford in a joint ceremony on 23rd
February 1817. On that occasion her father, James Collett, was described as
an inn keeper. Both of his daughters were also listed with a rounded age of
20 in the Broughton Gifford census of 1841, when they were still living with
her parents James and Sarah Collett.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N18
|
Mary Collett was
baptised at Broughton Gifford on 23rd February 1817 in a joint
ceremony with her sister Sarah (above). At the time of the 1841
Census she was given a rounded age of 20, the same as her sister Sarah, which
may indicate that they were twins. Ten years later, her age was more
accurately recorded as 32 in the Broughton Gifford census of 1851. Unmarried
Mary Collett, aged 32 and a general domestic servant, was with her recently
widowed mother Sarah, staying at the home of her older married brother Thomas
Collett and his family, at Slipper Lane off Church Street. Also living there,
was Mary’s recently married youngest sister Jane Tippett (nee Collett) and
her husband Alfred.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N19
|
James Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford and baptised there on 18th October
1818, another son of inn keeper James Collett and his wife Sarah Collett.
The death of James Collett, aged 20 years, was recorded in Wiltshire,
following which he was buried on 28th February 1839, most likely
at Broughton Gifford.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N20
|
Henry Clack Collett was born at Broughton Gifford, where he was baptised on 2nd
July 1820, the last son born to James Collett, a labourer, and Sarah Clack.
His age was confirmed as being 20 in the census of 1841, when he was still
living at the family home in Broughton Gifford. Just over four years later,
bachelor Henry Collett and the son of James Collett, married spinster Maria
Gore, the daughter of Thomas Gore, at Broughton Gifford on 30th
October 1845, where Maria had also been born during 1822. It was at
Broughton Gifford that the couple initially settled, where their first two
children were born, before moving to Combe Down, just south-east of Bath,
where the third of their five known children was born. Sadly, their second
child died shortly after he was born. James Collett, whose birth was
recorded at Bradford-on-Avon (Ref. viii 271) during the third quarter of
1848, mother’s maiden name Gore, died at Broughton Gifford on 19th
September 1849. By 1851 the family of four was still residing at Combe Down
where Henry Collett was 31, Maria Collett was 30 and their two children were
Elizabeth Collett who was five and Thomas Collett who was one-year old.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sometime
thereafter Henry took his family to Monkton Combe, close by Combe Down, where
the couple’s last two children were born. In was also at Monkton Combe that
Henry and Maria appear to have lived out their lives. The census in 1861
confirmed the birth there of their third child when Henry was 41, Maria was
39, Elizabeth was 15, Thomas was 10 and Jane was four years of age. Two
years later the final child was added to the family while, perhaps towards
the end of the next decade, the two older children left the family home. So,
according to the Monkton Combe census of 1871, Henry was 50, Maria was 47,
their daughter Jane was 14, and their son James was seven.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ten
years after that Henry Collett was 61 and a shepherd living there with just
his wife Maria and his son James. Living with the family in 1881, as a
boarder and described as a domestic servant, was James Allan who was 18 and
from Glasgow. Son James was still a bachelor living with his parents in 1891
when Henry Collett 70 and his wife Maria was 67.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O52
|
Elizabeth
Collett
|
Born in 1846
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O53
|
James Collett
|
Born in 1848
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O54
|
Thomas
Collett
|
Born in 1850
at Combe Down near Bath
|
|
|
35O55
|
Jane
Collett
|
Born in 1856
at Monkton Combe nr Bath
|
|
|
35O56
|
James
Collett
|
Born in 1863
at Monkton Combe nr Bath
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N21
|
Jane Collett was
the last child of James Collett and Sarah Clack, who was possibly born around
1827, considering her stated age in the census of 1851. She was therefore
around six years of age when she was baptised at Broughton Gifford on 20th
January 1833, while in the Broughton Gifford census of 1841, Jane Collett had
a rounded age of 15 years. By 1851 she was married to Alfred Tippett from
Lower Easton in Gloucestershire. The census that year recorded the couple as
Alfred Tippett who was 23 and a plasterer and Jane Tippett from Broughton
Gifford who was 27, when they and Jane’s mother Sarah Collett, and older
sister Mary Collett, were staying with Jane’s older married brother Thomas
Collett and his family at Slipper Lane off Church Street in Broughton
Gifford.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N22
|
James Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford where he was baptised on 12th April
1807, the eldest of the four known children of William Collett and Mary
Line. Whether it was an injured sustained at work, or natural causes, James
Collett was only 18 years of age when he was buried at Broughton Gifford on
12th January 1826.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N23
|
William Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford and it was there he was baptised on 12th
February 1809, another son of William and Mary Collett.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N24
|
Mary Ann Collett was baptised at Broughton Gifford on 14th
January 1811, the daughter of William Collett and Mary Line. She later
married William Granger Hulbert at some time prior to 1833, with whom she had
nine children. That was confirmed in part by the census in 1841 when William
and his wife Mary Ann Hulbert were living within the Melksham area of
Wiltshire. Listed with the couple were their six older children, all of whom
were baptised at Rowde, midway between Melksham and Devizes. The couple’s five
youngest children were born after 1837 and are shown in the GRO index with
mother's maiden name Collett.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ten years later, in the census of 1851,
William and Mary Ann were both listed as having been born at Broughton, when
they were living at North Petherton, in Somerset, with eight of their nine
children, just the eldest son missing. He was William Granger Hulbert,
baptised on 4th March 1833 at Rowde, and in 1851 he was one of
three men working as a journeyman blacksmith who were living and working at
Grittleton, north of Chippenham. William Hulbert was 18 and born at Rowde,
the nephew of head of the household Thomas Collett, who was 30 and born at
Broughton Gifford. The third blacksmith was Thomas Rudman, aged 28 and born
at South Wraxall, who was one of the sons of Mary Collett (Ref. 31N8) and
Thomas Rudman, a journeyman blacksmith himself. Another member of the later
Collett family, Martha (Ref. 35N69), married Michael Rudman at Broughton
Gifford on 9th August 1860.
|
|
|
|
|
|
William
Granger Hulbert was born in 1805, whose death was recorded at
Bradford-on-Avon (Ref. 5a 74) during the last three months of 1872, when he
was 67 years old. Just under two months later, probate was granted at
Salisbury on 18th January 1873 to his widow Mary Ann Hulbert, the
document also confirmed that William passed away on 25th November
1872. Nearly seven years after losing her husband, Mary Ann Hulbert died at
Atworth, where she was buried on 17th October 1878, her death also
recorded at Bradford-on-Avon (Ref. 5a 83) at the age of 66. Likewise, it was
at Salisbury, on 28th December 1878, that the executors of her
estate were named as her sons Frederick and William Hulbert.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The
inscription on the Hulbert family tomb at Atworth, although badly frost
damaged, is known to read as follows: “Sacred to the memory of Betty
Hulbert who departed this life January 26th 1827 aged 72 years. Also to the
memory of William Hulbert who departed this life April 16th 1829 aged 74
years. Also to the memory of William Granger Hulbert grandson of William and
Betty Hulbert who died November 25th 1872 aged 68 years. Also to the memory
of Mary Ann the beloved wife of William Granger Hulbert who died October 17th
1878 aged 67 years. Frederick Hulbert son of the above died May 1st 1926 aged
77. Sarah Anna wife of Frederick Hulbert died April 20th 1932 aged 82.”
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N25
|
Thomas Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford around 1820, although it is yet to be proved that
he was the son of William Collett and Mary Line. The only reason for his
inclusion here is that in 1851 he was the uncle of William Hulbert, the
eldest son of Mary Ann Hulbert nee Collett (above). That year he was
a journeyman blacksmith and head of the household at Grittleton, when the
census return confirmed he was 30 years old and born at Broughton Gifford.
William Hulbert was also a journeyman blacksmith at the age of 18 and had
been born at Rowde. The final person at the same dwelling was Thomas Rudman,
another journeyman blacksmith, who was 28 and from South Wraxall, the son of
Mary Collett (Ref. 31N8) and Thomas Rudman.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ten
years later unmarried Thomas Collett from Broughton in Wiltshire was 38 and a
blacksmith, a boarder at the home of the Burdon family in Devers Lane at
Bathford in Somerset. No further record of Thomas Collett from Broughton
Gifford has been found, although the death of a Thomas Collett was recorded
at Chippenham (Ref. 5a 32) during the third quarter of 1871. However,
whoever reported his passing on 13th September 1871, gave his age
as 53.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N26
|
Hannah Elizabeth Mortimer was born at Broughton Gifford and was
baptised there on 24th July 1813. She was the daughter of George
Mortimer and Amelia (Millicent) Collett and eventually married one of her
Collett cousins – go to Ref. 35N15 for the continuation of her life as
Hannah Elizabeth Collett.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N27
|
Stephen Collett was
born around 1805 at Broughton Gifford, where he was baptised on 30th
August 1807, the first-born child of Thomas and Maria Collett. It seems
possible that, before he was twenty years of age, he married Mary who was
around five or six years older than Stephen. It would also appear that the
marriage produced just three children for the couple, before Stephen died
just after 1841.
|
|
|
|
|
|
By
the time of the first national census the family had left the Melksham area,
where their son was born, and had moved to the Chepstow & Monmouth
registration district. Stephen’s rounded age was 35, while Mary’s was 40,
and living with them were their two daughters Sarah 14 and Caroline who was
nine years old. Ten years later in 1851 Mary was a widow aged 52, when she
was living within the area of Usk & Pontypool with her daughters, Sarah
who was 23 and Caroline who was 20.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O57
|
Sarah Collett
|
Born in 1827
at Melksham
|
|
|
35O58
|
Caroline
Collett
|
Born in 1830
at Melksham
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N28
|
William Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford when he was baptised on 12th February
1809, the second son of Thomas and Maria Collett. It was on 8th
October 1840 that William married Elizabeth Gunstone at Melksham and during
the next eleven months their first child was born. Elizabeth was baptised at
Melksham on 23rd July 1812, the daughter of John Gunstone and
Sarah Gale. William would have been approaching thirty-two when he married
Elizabeth, so it is possible that William may have first married Catherine
when he was around twenty-one since, a certain Mary Collett, the daughter of
William and Catherine Collett, was baptised at Broughton Gifford on 29th
April 1832, who could have been named after his mother.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O59
|
Sarah
Collett
|
Born in 1841
at Melksham
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N29
|
Thomas Collett was
baptised at Broughton Gifford on 2nd June 1811, another son of
Thomas and Maria Collett. He may have been around ten years old when his
mother died, following which his father was remarried and in 1829 Thomas
sailed to America with his father, step-mother and three half-brothers John,
Job and Jacob (below). Initially, Thomas worked with his father at
Bangor in Maine where, in 1845, they founded a file cutting business to serve
the local lumber trade and during the following year father and son were both
living on Pine Street in Bangor, where they were recorded as file cutters.
During the next few years Thomas’ half-brother John was married, most likely
in Maine, before moving to Hamden in New Haven, Connecticut. According to
the Hamden census in 1850 the half-brothers were living next door to each
other, when they were both described as butchers, perhaps even working
together.
|
|
|
|
|
|
By
that time, Thomas from England, aged 37, was married to Ann, who was 34 and
from England, and they had with them daughter Harriet A Collett who was two
years of age and born at Connecticut. Ten years later Thomas and Ann were
still residing in Hamden, when the 1860 recorded their slightly larger family
as Thomas Collett who was 47, Ann Collett who was 45, Harriet Collett who was
12, Daniel Collett who was nine and Stephen Collett who was seven. Thomas
was no longer living next door to his half-brother John, who had moved away
by then.
|
|
|
|
|
|
It
was after a further ten years when Thomas H Collett aged 59 and from England
was granted American citizenship at New Haven on 16th March 1870.
That same year, the census included just Thomas aged 59, Ann who was 55 and
their son Daniel who was 19. By then Thomas was a farmer, Ann was keeping
house and Daniel was working at an auger shop.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O60
|
Harriet Ann
Collett
|
Born in 1848
at Hamden, Connecticut
|
|
|
35O61
|
Daniel Thomas
Collett
|
Born in 1850
at Hamden, Connecticut
|
|
|
35O62
|
Stephen
Collett
|
Born in 1852
at Hamden, Connecticut
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N30
|
Harriet Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford, but was baptised at nearby Melksham on 19th
December 1813, the only daughter of Thomas Collett, a weaver, and Maria
Spencer, who had five sons.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N31
|
John Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford around 1815, another son of Thomas and Maria
Collett. His mother died when he was only a few years old, following which
his father remarried and, eventually in 1829, the family sailed off to a new
life in America. However, John Collett from Broughton Gifford may have
stayed in the village of his birth, where he was a married man in the census
returns for 1851 and 1861. In the first of them, the childless couple was
recorded as John Collett who was 36, an inn keeper and a shoemaker, and Jane
Collett who was 43 from Wales, when they were living in Bradford-on-Avon,
with a servant girl and an elderly gentleman lodger. Ten years later they
were residing at The Common in Holt, two miles from Bradford-on-Avon, when
John from Broughton Gifford was 46 and a shoemaker, and Jane from South Wales
was 53. To supplement the income earned by her husband, Jane took in lodgers
and, on that census day in 1861, there were three middle-aged boarders
staying with the couple. Nine years later, the death of John Collett, aged
55, was recorded at Bradford-on-Avon (Ref. 5a 96) during the first three
months of 1870.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N32
|
Harry Collett
was baptised at Melksham on 29th September 1816, the fifth of the
six children born to weaver Thomas and Maria Collett. It is more than likely
that he was born at Broughton Gifford earlier in 1816, where his siblings
were born, with baptisms also conducted at Melksham. Sadly, Harry Collett
was one-year-old when he died and was buried at Broughton Gifford on 27th
April 1817.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N33
|
Henry Collett
was very likely born at Broughton Gifford in 1818, like most of his older
siblings, being the sixth child of Thomas Collett by his first wife Maria
Spencer. Also, as with most of his older siblings, Henry Collett, aged two
years, was baptised at Melksham on 21st May 1820, when his parents
were incorrectly recorded as James and Maria Collett. Also baptised with him
that same day was his younger brother James (below). The deciding
factor in this, is that the occupation of the father of Henry Collett was
confirmed as that of a weaver, which had previously been established as his
job of work on the occasion of earlier sibling baptisms. Henry’s mother died
in 1822, after which his father married Jane Marks. Thanks to Laura Swenson
Akerman in America, who generously provided lots of details of the life of
Henry Collett, we now know that he accompanied his father and his stepmother
Jane, when they sailed to America with two of Henry’s older brothers, plus three
half-brothers.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Once
in America, and at the age of 21, Henry Collett from England married Maria
Maslen (1820-1900) in New York on 2nd June 1839. Maria was the
daughter of Stephen and Jane Maslen of Maiden Bradley in Wiltshire, where
Maria was baptised on 24th December 1820. The two witnesses were
Maria’s sister Jane C Maslen and her future husband Lorenzo Demmond. Two
days later, Henry purchased a property in Jackson County, Illinois, where the
couple was living in 1841 after the birth of their first child in New York. A
second property was acquired there on 1st January 1841. Nine
years later the census in 1850 identified the family living at Hamden in New
Haven, Connecticut, where Henry purchased two more properties, which he
eventually sold to two residents of Hamden. In the census that year Henry
Collett from England was 32 and a mechanic, Maria was 29 and also born in
England, and their three sons were Walsingham H Collett aged ten, William M
Collett aged eight, both born in Illinois, and Charles C Collett who was two
years old and born after the family settled in Hamden.
|
|
|
|
|
|
It
was later than same year that the couple’s last child was born in Hamden, and
when Henry purchased a property at Orono, Penobscot, in Maine on 20th
October 1850. No record of the family has been found in 1860. By 1868 it
was back at Hamden, Centreville, Mount Carmel in New Haven where they were
living while, after a further two years, it was at Buffalo, Prince Edward,
Virginia, that they were recorded in the census of 1870, conducted during the
month of September that year. On that occasion Henry was 53 years old and
working as a farmer, although the surname was incorrectly recorded as Corlette,
when Maria was 48 and keeping house. Staying with the couple were two of
their sons, who were married and already each had a child of their own. They
were William M Collett, with his wife and their one-year-old son, and Charles
C Collett and his wife with their two-month-old son.
|
|
|
|
|
|
And
it was there at Buffalo, nine months later, that Henry purchase a property on
2nd March 1871. Seven months later, in October 1871 another
property was purchased at Orono, Penobscot. It was only four months after
that, when Henry Collett died on 12th February 1872 at Ware in
Hampshire County, Massachusetts. According to one report, he dropped dead in
the street near Mister Addison Sanford, who lived several doors down from the
house of his sister-in-law, Jane C Demond nee Maslen, in Ware. He was buried
at Central Burying Grounds in Hamden, New Haven, with his Will proved there
later that same year. Although not mentioned in the Will, there was known to
be an outstanding debt owed to Henry by his half-brother Job Collett (below)
of Bangor, Maine, which may account for a death notice being printed in the
Bangor Daily Whig & Courier – “In Hamden, Conn., suddenly of a heart
decease, Henry Collett aged about 58 years.”
|
|
|
|
|
|
His
obituary was published in the Massachusetts Spy; Worcester, on Friday
February 18th 1872, under the heading “Our New England
Dispatches: Massachusetts – Ware, Feb. 12 – This forenoon Mr Henry Collett
dropped dead in the street near the residence of Mr Addison Sanford; cause,
heart decease. Mr Collett formerly resided Iver Station, Conn., and was
about fifty years old.”
|
|
|
|
|
|
The
Will of Henry Collett was made on 18th November 1871, less than
three months before he died, and was proved at New Haven Probate Court on 28th
March 1872.
“Know all men by these present, that I Henry Collett of
New Haven County, Connecticut, and now residing in Ware, Mass., being in good
health and sound mind and memory, do make this my Last Will and Testament.
First,
I hereby constitute and appoint my wife Maria Collett to be my sole executrix
to this my Will, to pay off all just debts and the legacies hereinafter mentioned
out of my estate.
To my son, Henry W Collett I give the house and lot in
Iverville whereon he now resides, also a note I hold against him for Fourteen
Hundred and Fifty Dollars, also Five Hundred Dollars in money.
To my son William M Collett I give Twenty-Five Hundred
Dollars to be paid him with interest within five years of my decease the
interest to be paid annually until the principal is paid.
To my son Charles C Collett I give Twenty-Five Hundred
Dollars to be paid him with interest within five years of my decease the
interest to be paid annually until the principal is paid.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Second,
after the above legacies are paid, I give all the remainder to my estate in
houses, lands, monies, notes, bonds, stocks and all my valuables, whatsoever
to my wife Maria Collett as long as she shall remain unmarried and my widow,
with the remainder thereof on her decease or marriage, to my children or
their heirs respectively share and share alike.
Executed and signed by me at Ware, Massachusetts in the
presence of the undersigned witnesses this eighteenth day of November
eighteen hundred and seventy one. Signed by Henry Collett
The three witnesses were Lorenzo Demond, Laura E Maslen,
and Mary Craft
|
|
|
|
|
|
Eleven
months prior to his death, Henry Collett had placed an advertisement in The
Cultivator & Country Gentleman magazine on 2nd March 1871,
relating to the property in which he had been living in 1870, as follows
“Central Virginia – We have here as fine a climate as
in the world, midway between mountain and sea; land beautifully undulating;
water pure, with clear streams; the finest fruit region on the continent.
Lands are cheap and been badly tilled, but can easily be brought back to
great fertility. Deep plowing and clover will do it. I have lived in many
States east and west, but find none so healthy as here. Winters are mild,
and farming operations on the land go on the whole winter when not too wet.
We are on one of the great thoroughfares from New York to Memphis, Tenn., and this country must soon fill
up. H Collett – Prince Edward County, Va.”
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O63
|
Henry
Walsingham Collett
|
Born in 1840
at New York
|
|
|
35O64
|
William
Mortimer Collett
|
Born in 1841
at Jackson County, Illinois
|
|
|
35O65
|
Charles C
Collett
|
Born in 1848
at Hamden, New Haven
|
|
|
35O66
|
Alfred
Collett
|
Born on 09.03.1850
at Hamden Twnshp
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N34
|
James Collett was born in 1820 at Broughton Gifford
and was baptised at Melksham on 21st May 1820 in a joint ceremony
with his two-year-old brother Henry (above), the last child of Thomas
and Collett and Maria Spencer.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N35
|
John Collett was
baptised at Melksham on 21st November 1824, having been born
earlier in that year, the eldest of the three sons of butcher Thomas Collett
by his second wife Jane Marks. John was around five or six years of age when
his father took the young family to live in America. On the occasion of the
US Census in 1850, John Collett from England was 25 years of age and had been
married to Ann for around two years, with whom he already had two young
children. On that day the family of four was living in Hamden, New Haven in
Connecticut, where John was a butcher. His wife Ann A Collett was also 25
and had been born in Maine. The couple’s first child Charles H Collett, who
was one year old and had also been born in Maine, before settling in
Connecticut where their second child, baby Jason S Collett, had only just
been born. Staying with the family was mechanic James Simpson 23 and Mercy H
Simpson 29, both from Maine, possibly related to John’s wife. Living in the
adjacent dwelling was the family of butcher Thomas Collett from England, who
was 37, and his wife Ann who was 34 and from England, and their daughter
Harriet A Collett aged two years and born in Connecticut. Thomas was John’s
half-brother from his father’s first marriage.
|
|
|
|
|
|
In
April 1854 their daughter Emma Jane Collett was born at Hamden, when her
parents were confirmed as John Collett and Ann A Collett. That event was
confirmed in the next census of 1860, by which time the family was living at Princeton in Bureau County, Illinois. The family that year
was listed as: John Collett, a drover of 35; Ann A Collett 36; Charles H
Collett 12; Jason S Collett 10; Mary E Collett who was eight; Emma J Collett
who was six; John H Collett who was four; and George E Collett who was one year
old. At least two more children were added to the family, while the death of
George E Collett was recorded at St Louis City in Missouri where he was
buried in
Bellefontaine Cemetery. That
move to Missouri was confirmed again in the census of 1870 when John was a
farmer aged 48. His wife Ann was 46, daughter Mary was 18, Emma was 16, John
H Collett was 14, and George was curiously stated as being only four years of
age, when he was nearer seven years old.
|
|
|
|
|
|
According
to the next census in 1880 John Collett and his family were living at Blue Mound in Vernon County,
Missouri, where John from England was a farmer at the age of 56 and Ann was
58 and from Maine. The only children living with them that day were their
daughter Emma A Collett (sic) who was 26 and born in Connecticut, John Collett
junior who was 20 and born in Illinois, and George D Collett who was 17 and
born in Missouri. Twenty
years later John Collett was still living at Blue Mound where he was described
in the 1900 Census as being widower who was 76, who had been born in England
during October 1824, and who entered America in 1829. Looking after John in
his old age was married couple and servants John and Laura Rupard, who also
had living there with them, their one-year old son George Rupard, all of them
born in Missouri.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O67
|
Charles H
Collett
|
Born in 1849
at Maine
|
|
|
35O68
|
Jason S
Collett
|
Born in 1850
at Hamden, Connecticut
|
|
|
35O69
|
Mary E
Collett
|
Born in 1852
at Hamden, Connecticut
|
|
|
35O70
|
Emma Jane
Collett
|
Born in 1854
at Hamden, Connecticut
|
|
|
35O71
|
John H
Collett
|
Born in 1856
in Illinois
|
|
|
35O72
|
George E
Collett
|
Born in 1859
in Illinois; died 1864
|
|
|
35O73
|
John Collett
|
Born in 1860
in Illinois
|
|
|
35O74
|
George
Dexter Collett
|
Born in 1863
in Missouri
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N36
|
Job Collett was
born at Melksham on 26th May 1825, the second son of Thomas and
Jane Collett. Job was four years old when his father took the family to live
in America during 1829. In America the family lived initially at Hamden in
Connecticut, then at Lowell in Massachusetts, and finally at Bangor in Maine,
where Job eventually lived and worked as a file cutter. For many years the first column on the front page
of the Bangor Daily Whig and Courier promoted the successful file cutting
business of Job Collett of Exchange Street in Bangor with the following
words. “Now is the time to sharpen up and get ready for business. I have on
hand 1000 files and am finishing off 150 dozen per week which I am selling at
the lowest prices and will warrant them equal to any imported. Call and see
them. Old files re-cut as usual”.
In 1851 Job was first listed in the Bangor City Directory as being employed
at Woodbury & Collett File Factory and Hardware Store at 35 Exchange
Street in Bangor, but it was during the following year that his established
his very own lucrative file cutting company.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Job
was twice married, the first time to (1) Julia born in England on 1st
April 1828 who sadly died when she was only 25 years of age on 16th
September 1853, following which she was buried at Mount Hope Cemetery in
Bangor where a tombstone marks her grave. That first marriage produced one
child for Job and Julia who was Jennie M Collett (1850-1872). Job then
married (2) Elizabeth A Sawyer from Old Town, Maine, and their marriage
produced a son who was born during January 1856 but who died in March that same
year. Three more children were added to their family and tragically the
second of those also died when she was only two months old in 1866. A joint
memorial for Willie and Lille at Mount Hope Cemetery in Bangor has a sheep
resting on the top and is situated in an area of the cemetery set aside for
the Collett family. Job Collett died on 26th July 1894 and was
also buried in Mount Hope Cemetery, where his wife was later laid to rest
following the death of Elizabeth A Collett nee Sawyer on 4th
November 1906, her birth recorded as 17th May 1834.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other
elaborate memorial stones within the Collett area of Mount Hope Cemetery at
Bangor include those of Jane Collett nee Marks, the wife of Thomas Collett
and mother of Job, Julia M Collett the first wife of Job Collett, Jennie M.
Collett the only child Job and Julia M Collett. Beside the grand memorial
for Job Collett is one for Charles T Collett who was born on 26th
December 1857 who died on 16th November 1913, his third child.
The
photograph on the right shows in the background, the large memorial to Job
Collett which is built fine-grained grey granite and stands at the head of a
family plot containing six graves, while in the foreground is the smaller
memorial stone for his first wife Julia M Collett. To the left of the latter
are the other four gravestones.
|

|
|
|
|
|
|
Following
the death of Job Collett the Bangor Daily Whig published an article which
read: “The late Mr Job Collett was a pioneer in this city in advertising by a
cut of himself. Many of The Whig readers will remember the ad and the
position it occupied for years at the head of the first column on the first
page with the injunction - “Files! Files! Now is the time to sharpen up,”
while below was a cut of M Collett sitting at a file block in the act of
cutting a file. He used this ad for years and became well known all over the
State thereby”. Sadly, seventeen years after the death of Job Collett,
nearly everything he had created over fifty years of hard work and dedication
was destroyed during the Great Fire of Bangor in 1911. In addition to all of
this, the name of Job Collett of Bangor was listed in the Will of his older
half-brother Henry Collett (above), proved in 1872, which described
Job as having an outstanding unpaid debt, and also mentioned in Henry’s
obituary published in a Bangor newspaper.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O75
|
Jennie M
Collett
|
Born on
26.07.1850 at Bangor; died 22.02.1872
|
|
|
The
following are the five children of Job Collett by his second wife Elizabeth A
Sawyer:
|
|
|
35O76
|
Willie Thomas
Collett
|
Born in 1856
at Bangor, Maine; died 30.03.1856
|
|
|
35O77
|
Charles T
Collett
|
Born in 1857
at Bangor, Maine
|
|
|
35O78
|
Carrie
Collett
|
Born in 1864
at Bangor, Maine
|
|
|
35O79
|
Lillie
Collett
|
Born in 1866
at Bangor, Maine; died 19.07.1866
|
|
|
35O80
|
Henry
Eugene Collett
|
Born in 1872
at Bangor, Maine
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N37
|
Jacob F Collett was
baptised at Melksham on 23rd July 1826, the youngest of the three
sons of Thomas Collett, an inn keeper, and his second wife Jane Marks. Jacob
was three years old when Thomas and Jane sailed to America with their young
family in 1929. His first appearance in America was on the occasion of the
census in 1870, by which time he was married and residing in the state of
Maine. Jacob from England was 44 and a merchant tailor, his wife Augusta
Collett from New Hampshire was 36, and their children were Frances M Collett
who was 17 and born in Massachusetts, as was son Harry A Collett who was 14,
with Frank Collett aged 11 from New Hampshire, while Albert L Collet aged
four years had been born after the family had settled in Maine.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ten
years later it was at Corinna
in Penobscot County, Maine, that Jacob F Collett was 54 and still working as
a merchant tailor. Augusta was 47, and the children still living with the
couple was their married daughter Fannie M Green, aged 26, with her younger
husband Edgar M Green who was 23 and from Maine, plus their Jacob’s youngest
son Albert L Collett who was 15 and youngest daughter Valentine E Collett who
was six years old. Curiously the census return recorded that both Albert and
Valentine had been born in Nebraska, which is contrary to the previous
census, and the fact that in 1870 and 1880 the family had been recorded in
Maine, a long way from Nebraska.
|
|
|
|
|
|
During
his twilight years Jacob returned to Massachusetts and, in the census
conducted in 1900, he was 75 and described as a cutter of men’s clothing,
living at Somerville City
Ward 4 in Middlesex County. The census form that year described his wife as
Hannah A Collett who was 67 who had been born at New Hampshire during October
1833. Four years earlier, on the tragic occasion of the premature death of
their youngest child, shortly after she was married, her death certificate
revealed that the wife of Jacob F Collett from England was Hannah Augusta
Brown who had been born at Concord in New Hampshire.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O81
|
Frances M
Collett
|
Born in 1853
in Massachusetts
|
|
|
35O82
|
Harry A
Collett
|
Born in 1856
in Massachusetts
|
|
|
35O83
|
Frank Collett
|
Born in 1859
in New Hampshire
|
|
|
35O84
|
Albert L
Collett
|
Born in 1866
in Maine
|
|
|
35O85
|
Valentine
E Collett
|
Born in 1874
at Newport, Maine
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N38
|
Sarah Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford and was baptised there on 25th
December 1809, the first child of Stephen Collett and Hannah Mortimer.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N39
|
Anne Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford, the second child of Stephen and Hannah
Collett, her baptism conducted at Broughton Gifford on 24th May
1812.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N40
|
John Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford, perhaps when his sister Mary (above) was
two years old and two years before the birth of his brother Harry (below),
placing his year of birth around 1814. It would also appear that his baptism
was delayed and, in the end, he was baptised at Broughton Gifford in a joint
ceremony with his brother Harry on 23rd February 1817. The parish
register recorded the pair of them as the sons of shoemaker Stephen Collett
and Hannah Mortimer, leading to the original speculation that they may have
been twin brothers. However, new information discovered in 2020 reveals that
the continuation of the life of John Collett, depicted from here onwards,
MUST relate to a different John Collett, another shoemaker of Broughton
Gifford, that of the son of William Collett and Jane Webb of Broughton
Gifford.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The outcome of this discovery, resulted in a search for
the real John Collett, the son of Stephen Collett and Hannah Mortimer, whose
details now follow, with the details of John Collett, the son of William
Collett and Jane Webb following after that with the out-of-place Ref. 35O1.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Although
no record for John Collett of Broughton Gifford, son of Stephen and Hannah,
has been found anywhere within the census of 1841, the subsequent census
returns, up until his passing, confirm that he was born at Broughton Gifford
in 1814. The marriage of John Collett and Jane Bailey, from South Wales, was
recorded at Bradford-on-Avon (Ref. viii 128) during the second quarter of
1843, but may have taken place at Broughton Gifford. Janes was seven years
older than John, consequently they had no children and, in 1851 when John
from Broughton Gifford was 36 and a shoemaker and an inn keeper, when his
wife Jane was 43. With the couple that day was servant Elvira Williams from
Wales who was 20 and a general servant working at the inn, and lodger John
Wilshire from nearby Holt, who was 73 and an agricultural pauper.
|
|
|
|
|
|
By
1861, John had given up being an inn keeper and was simply a shoemaker,
residing at Holt Common with the parish of Bradford-on-Avon at the age of
46. Jane Collett from Glamorganshire was 53 and had three gentleman
boarders. They were Edwin Chandler 36, Samuel Mann 38, and Richard
Gillingham who was 54. During the following decade, John and Jane travelled
two miles to the village of Holt, where they were recorded in the census of
1871, when John from Broughton Gifford was 56 and again working as a shoemaker,
while Jane was 63 and said to be from Laudmead in Wales (?). John Collett
was 66 when his death was recorded at Devizes (Ref. 5a 77) during the first
three months of 1881. The census just after the day of his passing
identified his widow Jane Collett as having returned to Bradford-on-Avon,
when she was living at Station Road in the town, where she was a
lodging-house keeper at the age of 73. Staying at the lodging-house that day
were two people, Alice Bristow who was 12 and male Jesse Reeves who was 28.
It was fifteen years after that, when the death of Jane Collett, aged 89, was
recorded at Bradford-on-Avon register office (Ref. 5a 365) during the last
three months of 1896, following which she was buried on 27th
November 1896.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O1
(35N40)
|
John Collett
was the son of shoemaker William Collett of Broughton Gifford and his wife
Jane Webb, previously confused with John Collett (above), the son of
shoemaker Stephen Collett and Hannah Mortimer. Although no birth of baptism
has been found within the parish records at Broughton, John could have been
born there in 1818, where the is a four gap between the two known daughters
of William and Jane. His mother died around 1820, perhaps during the birth
of his younger sister Elizabeth, after which William had three more
children with his second wife Elizabeth. It may be worth mentioning that no
record of William’s marriages to Jane or Elizabeth have been located, nor has
any record of the death of Jane around 1820. By the time of the census in
1841, John Collett had a rounded age of 20, when he was living at the Atworth
home of his father William Collett
|
|
|
|
|
|
Towards
the end of the following year, the marriage of John Collett and Sarah
Halstead Wiggell was recorded in the Marylebone district of London (Ref. i
108), during the fourth quarter of the year. The marriage certificate,
signed by both of them and kindly provided by Roger Collett in 2020,
confirmed that they were married after the reading of banns at St Mary’s
Church in the parish of St Marylebone on 2nd November 1842, both
of them of full age. John was a shoemaker of 21 Inebee Street (?), while
Sarah was residing at Tame House, her father being John Wiggell.
Furthermore, just as with the census in the previous year, the father of John
Collett was recorded as William Collett, a shoemaker. Although not written
on the certificate, it is established that Sarah was a school mistress. By
the time of the census in 1851, the pair of them had settled in Wiltshire and
were living at Rose Cottage in Atworth Chapelry, near Melksham, where their
two known children were born during the next decade.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The
Atworth census return for 1851 included John Collett aged 31 who was born at
Broughton Gifford, who was described as a master shoemaker employing two men
and two boys. His wife Sarah Collett was 27 and visiting the couple was
Sarah Whitby, a married lady aged 60. Both of them were recorded as having
been born at Harwich in Essex, raising the question, were they mother and
daughter. If so, then maybe Sarah’s mother had remarried. In addition to
those three adults there were also two young females staying at the Collett
household, and they were sisters Emily Lewis who was 14 and Laura Lewis who
was 12 who were both born at Atworth and who were very likely the pupils of
school mistress Sarah Collett.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sarah
presented John with two children over the following six years, as confirmed
by the census in 1861 when the family of four was still living at Rose
Cottage in Atworth. John Collett from Broughton Gifford was 42 and a
cordwainer, his wife Sarah from Harwich in Essex was 37, their daughter Sarah
M Collett was eight years old and their son John S Collett was three years
old, both of them born at Atworth. Still living with the family was widow
Sarah Whitby from Harwich who was 71 by then. It was just less than nine
years later that the death of John Collett of Atworth and Broughton Gifford
was recorded at Bradford-on-Avon (Ref. 5a 273) during the first three months
of 1870 when his age was said to be 55.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The
following year, the census return for 1871, included widow and head of the
household at Rose Cottage on ‘The Street’ in Atworth, Sarah Halstead Collett,
was 48 years of age and from Harwich, whose occupation was that of a school
mistress. Her two children were confirmed as daughter Sarah Mary Collett who
was 18 and a dressmaker and her son John Stanier Collett who was 13 and an
errand boy. Living in the dwelling next to Rose Cottage was Henry Collett (below),
a widower from Broughton Gifford, with his two children Sarah Ann and Thomas
who were both born in Birmingham. And, in the next but one dwelling, was
71-year-old widower and cottager John Collett (Ref. 44L11) from South Wraxall
with his son Thomas (Ref. 44M13) from Atworth, who was 46 and a servant out
of employment.
|
|
|
|
|
|
By
the time of the census in 1881 Sarah H Collett, aged 59 and from Harwich in
Essex, was a widow living at Main Street in Bradford-on-Avon with her
unmarried son John S Collett, aged 23, who was a carpenter who had been born
at Atworth. Her absent, unmarried daughter, Sarah Mary Collett was 27 and
had already left the family home and was living and working at Shaw Hill
House on the Bath Road in Melksham. Curiously, the move to Bradford also
happened for the aforementioned near neighbour John Collett who was also
living on Main Street that same year when he was 81 years old and still had
his eldest son Thomas Collett from Atworth still living with him. The death
of Sarah Halstead Collett was recorded at Bradford-on-Avon (Ref. 5a 289)
during the last three months of 1884, when she was 64 years old.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O86
|
Sarah Mary
Collett
|
Born in 1853
at Atworth
|
|
|
35O87
|
John
Stanier Collett
|
Born in 1857
at Atworth
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N41
|
Henry Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford around 1816 and may have been the twin brother
of John Collett (above) with whom he was baptised on 23rd
February 1817 as Harry Collett, their father confirmed as shoemaker Stephen
Collett. It was at Limpley Stoke, three miles west of Bradford-on-Avon,
where Henry Collett married (1) Jane Lovelock on 10th October
1841. Both of them were of full-age, a bachelor and a spinster, Henry a
shoemaker and Jane a dressmaker, both residing in Bradford. Henry’s father
was confirmed as Stephen Collett, a shoemaker, while Jane’s father was Jacob
Lovelock who was a labourer. Both Henry and Jane signed the register in
their own hand, with the two witnesses not any member of either family.
After giving birth to three children in Wiltshire, Henry’s work took the
family to the Aston district of Birmingham, where they were living at
Cheapside in 1851. Henry Collett from Broughton Gifford was 35 and a master
boot and shoemaker, his wife Jane Collett was also 35, but born in
Bradford-on-Avon, and their children were, Edwin Collett who was eight and
Albert Collett who was seven – both born at Holt in Wiltshire, and Francis
Collett who was three and born at Biddestone.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Two
further children were added to the family while they were still living in
Aston although, by 1861, the family was residing at Birchall Street in
Aston. On that census day the family comprised Henry Collett who was 44 and
a boot and shoe maker, Jane Collett who was 44 and working with her husband
as a boot binder, Edwin Collett who was 18, Albert Collett who was 17,
Francis Collett who was 15, Amy H Collett who was eight and Sarah A Collett
who was two years old. Another son, Thomas, was added to the family later
that same year.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jane
Collett, nee Lovelock, died on 21st April 1864 at 50 Lombard
Street in Aston, Birmingham. Her death certificate confirmed that she was
40, the wife of Henry Collett, a cordwainer. The cause of death was cerebral
disease over the previous six days, while informant on 2nd May was
her son Edwin Collett, who make the mark of a cross. Following his loss,
Henry returned to Wiltshire, when he initially settled in the village of
Atworth, where he occupied the dwelling next door to his brother John and his
wife Sarah from Harwich in Essex. Tragically, John died in the first quarter
of 1870, so by 1871 the census that year confirmed that his widow Sarah
Halstead Collett, aged 48 and a school mistress was the next-door neighbour
of widowed Henry Collett from Broughton Gifford who was 50 and a boot and
shoe maker. On that occasion Henry had living there with him his daughter
Sarah Ann Collett who was 12 and his son Thomas Collett who was nine, both
born in Birmingham and both of them attending the village school, where Sarah
Halstead Collett was very likely their teacher.
|
|
|
|
|
|
It
was at Melksham on 23rd October 1876 that widower Henry Collett
married (2) widow Elizabeth Eliza Scott who was born at Holt in Wiltshire in
1829 as Elizabeth Eliza Hutton. The marriage certificate confirmed that
Henry, the son of shoemaker Stephen Collett, was 59 and a shoemaker who
signed the certificate in his own hand, and that his bride was 49, the
daughter of carpenter John Hutton, who made the mark of a cross. One of the
witnesses was Simeon Collett, Henry’s youngest sibling. By the time of the
census in 1881 Henry, aged 64, was a bootmaker from Broughton Gifford, who
was living with his wife Elizabeth, aged 52, at Broughton Road in Melksham.
Living just three doors away in Broughton Road was his cousin Stephen
Collett, and also living further along in the same street was his bootmaker
brother Simeon Collett (below). According to the next census in 1891,
Henry Collett from Broughton Gifford was 74 and a boot and shoe maker, and
his wife Eliza E Collett from Holt was 62, when they were living on Bath Road
in Melksham. Nine years later, Henry Collett died at Melksham on 8th
January 1900, his death certificate confirmed he was 83 and a former master
shoemaker, who suffered with cerebral softening for nine years, the informant
being Martha Doddimead who was present when he passed and who lived at Bath
Road in Melksham, Henry’s next-door neighbour.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O88
|
Edwin
Collett
|
Born in 1842
at Holt, nr Broughton Giff.
|
|
|
35O89
|
Albert
Collett
|
Born in 1844
at Holt, nr Broughton Giff.
|
|
|
35O90
|
Francis
Collett
|
Born in 1845
at Biddestone
|
|
|
35O91
|
Aimee
Hannah Collett
|
Born in 1851
at Aston, Birmingham
|
|
|
35O92
|
Sarah Ann
Collett
|
Born in 1858
at Aston, Birmingham
|
|
|
35O93
|
Thomas
Collett
|
Born in 1861
at Aston, Birmingham
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N42
|
Mary Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford in 1819. At the age of twenty years, Mary married
Jacob Gay at Broughton Gifford on 25th December 1839. Jacob was
born at Brought Gifford in 1819 and was the son of weaver James Gay and
Hannah Borns. It may be of interest that there had been earlier marriages at
Broughton Gifford between the Collett and Gay families. They were Ann Collett
to Timothy Gay on 12th April 1701 and Edith Collett to William Gay
on 12th May 1714.
|
|
|
|
|
|
By
the time of the first national census in June 1841 Mary and Jacob, whose
rounded ages were both 20 years, were living at Broughton Gifford with their
first child James Gay, who had been born there, but who was not yet one-year
old. Ten years later Mary was confirmed as being 30, while her husband Jacob
was 31, when they and their five children were still living at Broughton
Gifford, where all of their children at that time had been born. The
children were James who was 10, Ann who was eight, John who was six, John who
was four, and Mary who was one-year old.
|
|
|
|
|
|
A
further three children were added to the family over the next decade, so by
1861, the family comprised Mary, aged 41, Jacob who was 42, and their
children James 21, Ann 18, John 16, John 14, Mary 11, Isaac who was eight,
Frank who was six and George who was three. At that time, the family was
listed as living in Trowbridge, where the most recent children had been born.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Three
years after that census day in 1861, Mary Gay nee Collett aged 44 died at
Silver Street in Studley, Trowbridge and was buried at Trowbridge on 22nd
October 1864. It is possible Mary died during the birth of the couple’s
tenth child. It was during the following year that Jacob married Emma
Randall, with whom he had a further five children. The marriage certificate
confirmed he was a widower and the son of weaver James Gay, and a witness to
the marriage was Jacob’s brother Isaac Gay, who was born in 1826.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sixteen
years later, according to the 1881 Census, Jacob, aged 61, was working as a
woollen weaver. He was living at 2 Silver Street Lane in Trowbridge with his
wife Emma who was 45 and was a woollen weaver from Bradley in Wiltshire.
Living with the couple were their five children Jane 14, William 12, Enos who
was eight, Obadiah who was five, and Dinah who was two, all of the children
having been born at Trowbridge. Also, still living with his father, was
Charles Gay, aged 19, the only remaining child from Jacob’s first marriage.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The
full name of Mary’s and Jacob’s son Frank, who was six years old in 1861, was
Frank Stephen Collett Gay. When in his mid-twenties he married Ada Searl
from Portsmouth and both of them were woollen weavers in 1881, when they were
living at 78 Dursley Road in Trowbridge, with no children.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Also
living at Trowbridge in 1881 was Ephraim Gay and his wife Ruth Ricketts, who
was possibly related to Jacob Gay. However, this was not Ephraim Gay of
Broughton Gifford who was living there in 1881 when he was incorrectly listed
as Ephraim Jay. It was the son of Ephraim Gay of Broughton Gifford, George
Edward Gay, who married Lilly May Bunker in 1909. Lilly May was the great
great grand-daughter of Elizabeth Collett (Ref. 1L2) of Kempsford.
|
|
|
|
|
|
See Part One – The Main Line 1700 to
1800 for further details of this family link
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N43
|
Simeon Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford around 1823, the youngest child of blacksmith
Stephen Collett. It was at the parish church in the village of Keevil that
Simeon Collett was married by banns to Sophia Stinchcombe on 13th
May 1846, when both of them were recorded as being of full age (sic), he a
bachelor and a cordwainer from Broughton, she a spinster of Keevil. The
couple signed the parish register in their own hand, when one of the
witnesses was Alijah Stinchcombe. Sophia was baptised at Broughton Gifford
on 25th November 1827, the daughter of blacksmith Nathaniel
Stinchcomb and his wife Ruth, her surname being given to Simeon’s second
son. Sophia would therefore appear to have been around nineteen years of age
when she married twenty-three-year-old Simeon. All of their children were
born at Broughton Gifford and baptised there, apart that is from their second
son, for whom no baptism record has been found. Tragically, the couple’s
first three did not survived beyond infancy.
|
|
|
|
|
|
According
to the census of 1851 the family was living in the main street in Broughton
Gifford, two dwellings away from Simeon’s ‘one-step removed’ cousin Samuel
Collett (Ref. 35N15) and his family. Simeon, aged 27, was a cordwainer, his
wife Sophia was 23, and the only child listed with them on that occasion was
their son Francis who was four years old. All three of them were confirmed
as having been born at Broughton Gifford. By that time, the couple’s second
and third-born sons, James and Albert, had already died, with further tragedy
to follow for Simeon and Sophia, later that same year, with the death of son
Frank. Simeon’s wife Sophia would have been with-child on the day of the
census since, shortly after, she gave birth to their fourth child who was
baptised four months later. Sadly, that child also died before reaching her
fourth birthday.
|
|
|
|
|
|
By
1861 Simeon was 37 and was still a cordwainer living with his family in the
main street in Broughton Gifford. Sophia was 33 and the only child listed as
living with the couple at that time was their daughter Matilda who was five
years old. It seems highly likely that all of their first six children had
died as a result of some common illness. Once again Sophia was with-child on
the day of the census and, three months, later she gave birth to another
daughter.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ten
years later, according to the 1871 Census for Broughton Gifford, Simeon was
46 and his wife Sophia was 45. Living with them were their two sole
surviving children, and they being their daughters Matilda who was 15 and
Abijah who was nine years old. Simeon was a shoemaker (a cordwainer) like
his brother Henry Collett (above) and, again like his brother and his
cousin Stephen (above), he was living at Broughton Road in Melksham by
the time of the census in 1881. Living with him was his wife Sophia who was
53, together with their youngest daughter Abijah Collett who was 19, and also
born at Broughton Gifford.
|
|
|
|
|
|
What
was interesting about Simeon was that, according to the IGI, he was the
subject of an adult baptism at Broughton Gifford on 21st August
1870. The record also confirmed that he was the son of Stephen Collett and
his wife Hannah Collett (nee Mortimer). It is possible that he had been
persuaded to take this action in order to safeguard the lives of his two
surviving daughters. By 1891 Simeon Collett was 69, when he was living
within the Trowbridge & Melksham registration district with his wife
Sophia Collett who was 63. Still living with the couple was their unmarried
daughter Abijah A Collett who was 29. Over three years later, when the death
of Simeon Collett was recorded at Melksham (Ref. 5a 64) during the last three
months of 1894, he was estimated to be 70 years of age.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O94
|
Frank
Stinchcomb Collett
|
Born in 1847
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O95
|
James
Collett
|
Born in 1848
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O96
|
Albert
Collett
|
Born in 1849
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O97
|
Ruth
Hannah Collett
|
Born in 1851
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O98
|
Alicia
Collett
|
Born in 1853
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O99
|
Maria
Collett
|
Born in 1853
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O100
|
Matilda
Collett
|
Born in 1856
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
35O101
|
Abijah
Alice Collett
|
Born in 1861
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N44
|
Anne Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford, within four months of the marriage of her parents,
and was baptised there on 13th October 1811, the first children of
John Collett and Sarah Elmes. Tragically, it was exactly one week later,
when her death was recorded at Broughton Gifford on 20th October
1811.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N45
|
Thomas Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford, where he was baptised on 25th
September 1814, the eldest son of labourer John and Sarah Collett. He was
twenty-five years of age when married his cousin Ann Collett (Ref. 35N55) at
Broughton Gifford on 4th April 1840. Ann was twenty-one and the
daughter of Daniel and Sarah Collett of Broughton Gifford, who was baptised
there on 18th October 1818. Next year, according to the census of
1841, the recently married couple was still living in Broughton Gifford,
where Thomas Collett was 26 and his wife was recorded as being only 20 years
of age instead of 22, perhaps an enumerator’s error. During the following
years Thomas and Ann moved to London when, in 1851, the childless couple was
living at 18 West Street in the St George Hanover Square area, where Thomas
was incorrectly recorded as 31 – a mistake perhaps for 37 – when he was a
police constable, Ann was 32, and visiting them was Thomas’ sister Mary
Collett (below) who was 25. All three of them had been born at
Broughton Gifford. So far, no record of Thomas and Ann has been unearthed after
1851.
|
|
|
|
|
|
It
is possible, although not confirmed, that Thomas may have later returned to
Broughton Gifford, where a Thomas Collett aged 53 was buried on 2nd
July 1868. The death of that Thomas Collett was recorded at Bradford-on-Avon
(Ref. 5a 198) during the third quarter of 1868, where his age was stated as
being 54.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N46
|
Samuel Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford on 5th September 1816 and was baptised
there on 22nd September 1816. The baptism record confirmed he was
the son of labourer John and Sarah Collett and was still a bachelor in June
1841, when he was still living with his family at Church Brook in Broughton
Gifford, with a rounded age of 25. He was still in Broughton Gifford when he
married Hannah Tailor on 4th July 1842, the marriage register
confirming that Samuel’s father was John Collett, while Hannah’s father was
named as John Tailor. Perhaps because of his work, John eventually left
Wiltshire when he took his family to live in Monmouthshire, South Wales. No
records have so far been found to suggest that they might have had any
children. According to the census in 1851, Samuel Collett from Wiltshire was
35 and a farm labourer who was living at Baneswell Road in Newport, with his
wife and his younger cousin. His wife was recorded as Anna Collett who was
36, while the cousins was farm labourer George Collett (Ref. 35N56) who was
24 (sic), and with him his wife Charlotte Collett who was 21, all four of them
having been born in Wiltshire.
|
|
|
|
|
|
In
the census of 1861 Hannah Collett was 46 and by 1871 the couple was living at
Christchurch within the Newport area of South Wales, where Samuel Collett
from Broughton Gifford was 55 and a labourer, and his wife Hannah Collett
from Melksham was 57. Ten years later in April 1881, Samuel and Hannah were
living at 17 Liswerry Common in Christchurch, near Newport. Samuel was still
working as a general labourer at the age of 65, when he gave his place of
birth as Norrington, which is the hamlet adjacent to Broughton Gifford, when
his wife Hannah was 67 and from Melksham. Completing the family group on the
day was three-year-old Alice Wilson from Newport, who was simply described as
boarding with the couple.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Two
years later, the death of Samuel Collett was recorded at Bedwelty in
Monmouthshire (Ref. 11a 73) during the first three months of 1883, at the age
of 67. The body of Samuel Collett was then laid to rest, when he was buried
at Aberystruth in Monmouth on 22nd March 1883. Four years after
his passing, the death of his widow Hannah Collett nee Tailor was recorded at
Newport (Ref. 11a 104) during the second quarter of 1887, when she was 74
years old. Although there is no direct link, this is yet another connection
between the Collett families of Wiltshire and the Collett families of
Christchurch near Newport, whose details are provided in Part 53 – The South
Wales Branch Line.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N47
|
Elizabeth Collett was born at Broughton Gifford in 1818 where she was
baptised on 18th October 1818, the eldest surviving daughter of
labourer John Collett and Sarah Elmes. By the time of the census in 1841
Elizabeth had left the family home at Church Brook in Broughton Gifford and
was possibly living in London where, eighteen months later she married James
Ashman on 19th September 1842 at St James’ Church in Paddington.
James Ashman was a bachelor and a gardener residing at Conduit Street in
Paddington, the son of George Ashman, a weaver. His bride was described as
Elizabeth Collett a spinster of Maida Vale whose father was John Collett, a
farmer, while the witnesses were William Hogg and Elizabeth Mills. The
marriage of Elizabeth and James produced just one child before James died
during the 1840s. Being a widow with a young son, Elizabeth returned to
Broughton Gifford, where she was living with her parents on the day of the
census in 1851. Elizabeth Ashman from Broughton Gifford was 32 and her son
James Ashman was seven years and had been born at Marylebone in London.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N48
|
William Collett was
another son of labourer John Collett and was baptised at Broughton Gifford on
1st April 1821. He was listed as being 20 years old in the census
of 1841, when he was still living there with his family at Church Brook.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N49
|
Anne Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford, where she was baptised on 1st June
1823 and confirmed as the daughter of labourer John Collett and his wife
Sarah. Sadly, just like the couple’s first child, also named Anne, she did
not survive, and was twenty-one months old, when she was buried at Broughton
Gifford on 26th February 1825.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N50
|
Anne Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford shortly after her sister and namesake passed
away in early 1825. Like her deceased sister, she was baptised at Broughton
Gifford on 21st August 1825, when she was confirmed as the
daughter of labourer John Collett by his wife Sarah. She too, may not have
survived, since she was not living with her family at Broughton Gifford in
1841.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N51
|
Mary Collett was
baptised at Broughton Gifford on 5th March 1826, the daughter of
labourer John and Sarah Collett. When her brother Thomas (above) was
married in 1840 he and his wife moved to London sometime after 1841. Upon
leaving school around that same time Mary travelled to London, where she
stayed at her brother’s home while she was working elsewhere as a servant.
It was in the census of 1851 that Mary Collett, aged 25 and from Broughton
Gifford, was described as a visitor at 18 West Street in the St Georges
Hanover Square who was employed as a servant. The other occupants of the
house were her brother Thomas Collett and his wife Ann, both from Broughton
Gifford.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N52
|
Sarah Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford during 1829, where she was baptised on 14th
November 1830, the daughter of labourer John and Sarah Collett. She was 11
years old in the 1841 Census when she was still living with her parents at
Church Brook in Broughton Gifford with just three of her siblings.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N53
|
Eliza Collett was
baptised at Broughton Gifford on 18th November 1832 and was nine
years old at the time of the 1841 Census when she was recorded as living
there with her family at Church Brook. She was the last child born to John
Collett and his wife Sarah Elmes.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N54
|
Maria Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford on 30th June 1816 and it was there that
she was baptised on 22nd September 1816, the first-born child of
Daniel Collett and Sarah Gowin. Tragically, she died when she was only
fourteen months old at Broughton Gifford, where she was buried on 17th
September 1817.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N55
|
Ann Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford where she was baptised on 18th
October 1818, the second child of Daniel Collett and Sarah Gowin and she
married Thomas Collett at Broughton Gifford on 4th April 1840.
The register stated that Ann was 21 and the daughter of Daniel Collett, while
Thomas was 25 and the son of John Collett. Ann and Thomas were first
cousins, their respective fathers being brothers. For more details of the
family of Ann and Thomas Collett go to Ref. 35N45 (above).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N56
|
George Collett was
baptised at Broughton Gifford on 18th February 1821 and was 20,
according to the census of June 1841, when he was still living with his
family. It was also at Broughton Gifford that George Collett, the son of
Daniel Collett and Sarah Gowin, married Ruth Mayell on 8th
September 1845. The wedding was recorded at Bradford-on-Avon during the
third quarter of the year (Ref. viii 108), where George was a labourer and
confirmed as the son of Daniel Collett, with both the bridge and groom being
single. It is not known whether they had any children during the next four
years but, just one year prior to the census in 1851, Ruth Collett died and
was buried at Broughton Gifford on 14th March 1850. Helping him
get through the loss of his wife was his younger sister-in-law Charlotte
Mayell, to whom he was married before the end of that year. Their marriage,
most likely at Broughton Gifford, was recorded at Bradford-on-Avon (Ref. viii
31) during the final three months of 1850.
|
|
|
|
|
|
By
the time of the census in the following year, George and Charlotte was
lodging with George’s older cousin Samuel Collett (Ref. 35N46) and his wife
Hannah at their home on Baneswell Road in Newport, Monmouthshire. George was
around ten years older than his new wife but, out of embarrassment, did not
admit that to the census enumerator. As a result, the 1851 recorded the
childless couple as George Collett, a farm labourer from Wiltshire who gave
his age as 24, while his wife Charlotte Collett, also from Wiltshire, was
21. No further record of George or Charlotte has been found after that day.
|
|
|
|
|
|
It
may be of interest, that the Mayell name had earlier links with the Collett
of Broughton Gifford. Upon the marriage Elizabeth Collett and William Tyler
at Broughton Gifford on 13th October 1763, the first bondsman was
John Mayell, a shoemaker of Broughton Gifford. Elizabeth Collett was a
spinster aged 22 years, while William Tyler from Melksham was 27 and another
shoemaker. A second relates to Patience Collett (Ref. 35K1) who married
widower Samuel Mayell at Broughton Gifford on 27th December 1778.
Another, more recent mention concerns the marriage at Bradford-on-Avon on 26th
December 1837 between Henry Collett, aged 21 and a sawyer, and Ann Mayell who
was also 21. Who they were, and where they belong, has still to be
determined.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N57
|
Mary Collett was
baptised at Broughton Gifford on 9th May 1824 and was 15 years of
age in 1841 when she living there with her family.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N58
|
James Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford during February 1826, where he was baptised on
30th April 1826, a son of Daniel and Sarah Collett. Tragically,
he was only eight months old when he died at Broughton Gifford, where he was
buried on 28th October 1826.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N59
|
Sarah Collett
was baptised at Broughton Gifford on 25th December 1827 and was
recorded as being aged eight years when she died and was buried at Broughton
Gifford on 18th September 1836, a daughter of Daniel Collett and
Sarah Gowin.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N60
|
Daniel Collett was
baptised at Broughton Gifford on 6th March 1831 and was listed as
living with his parents in 1841 at the age of 10 years.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N61
|
James Collett was
baptised at Broughton Gifford on 30th March 1834 and his age was
given as being seven years in the census of 1841. He was the last child of
Daniel Collett and his wife Sarah Gowin with whom he was recorded at
Broughton Gifford that year.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N62
|
Mary Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford in 1823 and was baptised there on 6th
July 1823, the first child of labourer James Collett and his wife Martha
Tarrant. She had a rounded age of 15 in the census of 1841, when she and her
family were residing on Broughton Street. Four years later, Mary was more
accurately recorded as being twenty-two years old when she married Gains
Smith at Broughton Gifford on 25th December 1845, the marriage
register confirming that her father was James Collett and that the father of
bachelor Gains Smith was John Smith.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N63
|
Anne Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford in 1825 and was baptised there on 21st
August 1825, another daughter of labourer James and Martha Collett, who was
said to be 15 years old in 1841.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N64
|
George Tarrant Collett was born at Broughton Gifford on 25th October
1827, where he was baptised on 11th November 1827, the only son
and the third of eight children of labourer James Collett and Martha
Tarrant. As simply George Collett, he was 12 years of age in 1841, when
living at Broughton Street with his family. At the age of twenty-two he
married Mary Ann Hill at Broughton Gifford on 28th February 1850,
and just a few months later the couple emigrated to America. Their crossing
of the Atlantic Ocean took place during May 1850 when they were passengers on
board the sailing ship Sibernia which sailed out of Liverpool bound for
Philadelphia.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Once
in America the couple settled in Chester Town, Delaware County in
Pennsylvania. It was at Chester that their three children were born, before
George’s untimely death on 27th October 1856 when he was only 29.
His death was the result of an accident at the lumber yard where he worked.
By 1870 the census conducted that year in Chester included the widow Mary
Collett from England, who was 46. Still living with her were her three
children, Martha, who was 19, Mary, who was 17, and James who was 15.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O102
|
Martha
Tarrant Collett
|
Born in 1851
at Chester, Penn.
|
|
|
35O103
|
Mary
Collett
|
Born in 1853
at Chester, Penn.
|
|
|
35O104
|
James
Tarrant Collett
|
Born in 1855
at Chester, Penn.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N65
|
Elizabeth Collett was born at Broughton Gifford in 1829 and was baptised
there on 6th June 1830, another daughter of James and Martha
Collett. She was ten years of age in the Broughton Gifford census of 1841,
living at Broughton Street with her large family. Elizabeth was 20 in 1851,
when she was the older of two daughters still living with her parents at
Broughton Gifford, but with no stated occupation.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N66
|
Margaret Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford, either at the end of 1831 or early in 1832,
where she was baptised there on 30th September 1832, the fifth
child of labourer James Collett and his wife Martha. On the day of the
census in June 1841, Margaret was confirmed as being nine years old and
living at Broughton Street with her family.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N67
|
Jane Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford in 1833, where she was also baptised on 20th
January 1833, the only child of James and Martha Collett to suffer an infant
death. The next child born to the couple was also named Jane.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N68
|
Jane Collett
was born at Broughton Gifford and baptised there on 18th October
1835, the daughter of labourer James and Martha Collett. It was at Broughton
Street that six-year-old Jane Collett was living with her family in 1841, but
was absent from the family home in 1851. Instead, she was working as a
domestic servant at the home of the Davis family at Bath Buildings in
Melksham. However, she did return to Broughton Gifford, to be with her
family in 1857 when, at the age of 22, Jane Collett the daughter of James Collett,
married George Beverley Jones, who was also 22 and the son of David Jones.
Their wedding was conducted at Broughton Gifford on 12th November
1857. After they were married, George and Jane Jones moved to Brecon in
Powys, South Wales. Although that is all that is currently known, Jane is
confirmed as the great grandmother of the wife of Val Llewellyn of Brecon and
Australia.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N69
|
Martha Collett was
born at Broughton Gifford in early 1839, where she was baptised on 25th
July 1839, the youngest of the seven children of labourer James Collett and
his wife Martha Tarrant. She was two years old in 1841, when living at
Broughton Street with her family, and was 11 years of age and still attending
school in 1851, one of only two children still living in Broughton Gifford
with her parents in 1851. It was also at Broughton Gifford, just over nine
years later, that she married Michael Rudman on 9th August 1860,
the event recorded at Bradford-on-Avon (Ref. 5a 187). The bride and groom
were both 21 and single, Martha confirmed as the daughter of James Collett,
and Michael recorded as the son of Thomas Rudman.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Although
the couple has not been located within the census seven months later, their
first child was baptised at Broughton Gifford on 8th June 1861.
Their second child, George Rudman, was also baptised there on 8th
March 1863, with no record of the family found after that day.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N70
|
Stephen Collett was
very likely a honeymoon baby who was born in the hamlet of Whitley within the
parish of Melksham during the early weeks of 1824, and was baptised in
Melksham on 29th February 1824, the eldest child of Thomas Collett
and Ann Taylor. In the Whitley census of 1841, Stephen had a rounded age of
15, when he was living there with his family. Five years later, Stephen
married Catherine Collett (Ref. 31N37) from South Wraxall, at Holy Trinity
Church at the neighbouring village of Shaw, within the parish of Melksham,
the wedding taking place on 21st September 1846. The marriage
certificate confirmed that Stephen Collett from Whitley, near Melksham, was a
yeoman and the son of Thomas Collett. Stephen and Catherine were both listed
as being of full age, and both signed the certificate with the mark of a
cross. One of the witnesses to the ceremony was named as Sarah H Collett, of
whom nothing is known so far.
|
|
|
|
|
|
By
the time of the Melksham census of 1851, the marriage had produced three sons
for the couple, the first two born at Corsham and the third at Whitley near
Melksham where the family was living in 1851. Stephen Collett was 27 and a
farmer of 8 acres, his wife Catherine Collett was 26 and from Wraxall, and
their three sons were Henry John Collett who was three, Tom Collett who was
two, and William Collett who was under one-year old. Also living with the
family at that time was Catherine’s widowed mother Ann Collett of Wraxall who
was 60, the whole household being supported by Mary Ann Davis aged 15, who
was employed as a servant.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ten
years earlier, in June 1841, Catherine and her widowed mother were living
together at Lower Wraxall, where Ann Collett had a rounded age of 50 and was
an agricultural labourer, and her daughter Catherine Collett had a rounded
age of 20 and also working as an agricultural labourer. That situation
followed the death of Catherine’s father William Collett, a butcher of South
Wraxall, prior to 1841.
|
|
|
|
|
|
For details of butcher William Collett
(Ref. 31M19) and his wife Ann Boyer see Part 31
|
|
|
|
|
|
During
the following decade a further four children were born into the family, the
first three of them while the family was still living in Whitley, with the
couple’s last child being born after the family had moved to Norrington
Common, immediately to the north of Broughton Gifford. Curiously, the
recorded names of the children and their ages vary in the subsequent census
returns, as did the recorded ages of both Stephen and Catherine. Having said
that, no record of the birth or baptism of his wife has been found to confirm
in which year she was actually born.
|
|
|
|
|
|
According
to the Norrington Common census in 1861 the family comprised Stephen Collett
aged 36 and from Melksham, who was a butcher like his father before him,
Catherine Collett aged 35 and from South Wraxall, Henry Collett aged 13 and
from Corsham, who was an agricultural labourer, Tom Collett who was 12 and a
shoemaker also from Corsham, William Collett who was 10 and also an
agricultural labourer, James Collett who was nine and Sarah Ann Collett who
was five, both of them attending school, Benjamin Collett who was three, and
Mary J Collett who was seven months old. Supporting the family was the same
servant as ten years earlier, Mary A Davis from Box who was 24. The birth
place for William, James, Sarah, and Benjamin was simply stated as Melksham.
|
|
|
|
|
|
By
1871 the family at Norrington Common was made up of Stephen Collett who was
48, Catherine Collett who was 44, and their children John Collett aged 21,
Thomas Collett aged 18, James Collett aged 16, Sarah A Collett aged 14 and
Benjamin Collett who was 12. Tragically the couple’s last child, Mary Jane
Collett, did not survive and had died just three years after the day of the
census in 1861. Their missing son William had already left the family home
by then and, in fact, had emigrated to New Zealand in 1874.
|
|
|
|
|
|
It
was nine years after that when Stephen Collett died at Norrington Common on
10th February 1880 and his death was recorded at Bradford-on-Avon
(Ref. 5a 96) at the age of 56. Following the death of her husband, Catherine
Collett was listed as a widow in the census of 1881 when she was still living
at Norrington Common. Rather curiously, her age was recorded as 45, when she
was more likely nearer 50. She did however, confirm that her place of birth
was South Wraxall, at a time in her life when she was working as a
greengrocer. Living with her were her three sons Henry J Collett aged 28,
James Collett aged 24 and Benjamin Collett who was 21. The first of them was
confirmed again as having been born at Corsham in Wiltshire, with the other
two having been born a few miles away at Whitley, near Melksham. Visiting
the family on that occasion was 15 years old Annie Box from Broughton
Gifford.
|
|
|
|
|
|
By
1891, widow Catherine Collett was still working as a greengrocer at
Norrington Common, when she gave her age as being 57 years, as opposed to
probably being just over sixty. Only two people were living there with her
that day, and they were her unmarried eldest son John and domestic servant
Annie Page who, despite their twenty-years difference in age, were married
during the next few months. After a further ten years, the Norrington Common
census in 1901, included greengrocer and poultry dealer Catherine Collett
from South Wraxall who, at the age of 71, was living with her married eldest
son John Collett and his young wife Annie and their children. From that
information, it is believed that Catherine was some years younger than her
late husband Stephen and that, perhaps in their early days together, she
inflated her age out of embarrassment. It is therefore possible, that her
stated age of 71 tears in 1901 would indicate that she was born around 1830,
but why then, would she have had a rounded age of 20 years in the census of
1841. Furthermore, no record of her death or burial has so far been located.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O105
|
Henry John
Collett
|
Born in 1847
at Corsham
|
|
|
35O106
|
Tom
Collett
|
Born in 1849
at Corsham
|
|
|
35O107
|
William
Collett
|
Born in 1851
at Whitley, Melksham
|
|
|
35O108
|
James
Collett
|
Born in 1854
at Whitley, Melksham
|
|
|
35O109
|
Sarah Ann
Collett
|
Born in 1856
at Whitley, Melksham
|
|
|
35O110
|
Benjamin Collett
|
Born in 1857
at Whitley, Melksham
|
|
|
35O111
|
Mary Jane
Collett
|
Born in 1860
at Broughton Gifford
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N71
|
Jane Collett was
born at Whitley near Melksham in 1826 and was not baptised at Melksham until
1st March 1829, when there was a double christening with her
sister Maria (below). Jane was the second child of weaver Thomas and
Ann Collett, and was 15 years old in the Whitley census of 1841 when she was
still living there with her family. She appears to have been approaching
forty years of age when she was married to David Chapman, the event recorded
at Melksham (Ref. 5a 241) during the last three months of 1865.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N72
|
Maria Collett was
born at Whitley in 1829 and baptised at the parish church in Melksham on 1st
March 1829, the third child of Thomas Collett, a weaver of Whitley, and his
first wife Ann. Maria Collett was 12 years old in the first national census
in 1841 when she was still living at Whitley with her family. She was no
longer living with them ten years later since, by then at the age of 22, she
was working as a servant at Shaw Hill House in Melksham, the home of the
Heathcote family. Curiously it was Maria who was the first member of the
Collett family to travel to Brighton to be married, and she was followed by
her brother William and sister Sarah (below).
|
|
|
|
|
|
Four
years later, at Brighton, on 7th March 1855, Maria Collett married
George Funnell who was born on 4th December 1817 at Rodmell, east
of Brighton in Sussex, the son of Henry Funnell and Deborah Deddemeir
Burtenshaw. The marriage of Maria and George produced five children who were
all born at Brighton, and they were George Collett Funnell born in 1857, twins
Henry John Funnell and William Thomas Funnell born in 1859, Frederick William
Funnell born in 1861, Florence Funnell born in 1865. In 1861 the family was
residing at 11 Windsor Street in Brighton from where George was working as a
poulterer’s assistant.
|
|
|
|
|
|
By
1871 the completed family was living at Buckingham Street in Brighton,
although curiously no record of them has been found in 1881. Not long after
that George Funnell died at Hailsham in Sussex, while his widow Maria Funnell
nee Collett died during March 1895. Their daughter Florence married Alfred
Peckham during the summer of 1886 and in 1891 she and her two children and
her mother-in-law Mary A Peckham, were living at 28 Artillery Street in
Brighton. The enlarged family was living at that same address in 1911, by
which time Alfred and Florence still had five of their children still living
there with them.
|
|
|
|
|
|
It
was their daughter Lily Eliza Peckham (1889- ) who married Victor George
Boxall at Brighton on 20th May 1909. In turn, they had a daughter
Nancy Lillian Boxall (1912-1998) who was the grandmother of Moana Shortland
nee Boxall of Whangarei in New Zealand who kindly provided the details for
this February 2013 update of this family line.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N73
|
James Collett was
born at Whitley in 1831, another son of Thomas and Ann Collett who was
baptised at Melksham on 24th July 1831. At the time in his life,
her father was working as a weaver. James was 10 years old in the Whitley
census of 1841 and was 20 in 1851 when he was still living at Whitley with
his family when on the latter occasion he was employed as a gentleman’s
servant.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N74
|
William Collett was
born at Whitley in 1834, the son of weaver Thomas Collett of Whitley and his
wife Ann. It was at nearby Melksham where he was baptised on 18th
May 1834. He was seven years old in the census of 1841 and was 17 and a
cordwainer in 1851 when, on both occasions, he was living with his family in
Whitley. During the next five years he became a married man, as confirmed by
the next Melksham census in 1861. William Collett married Elizabeth Fox in
Brighton on 12th October 1856, where his older sister Maria (above)
had been married during the previous year. Elizabeth Fox was baptised at
Melksham on 28th August 1836, the daughter of Charles and Hannah
Fox. Their choice of Brighton for their wedding raises the question that
Elizabeth was already with-child when they fled from Melksham in shame. And
this was borne out by the fact that their son William was born at Brighton,
either before or just after their wedding day. This would then suggest that
they ‘ran away’ to be with William’s sister Maria, thus avoiding shaming
themselves and their families.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Therefore,
with William and his wife and their first-born child living in Brighton
during 1856 and 1857, it made sense for William’s younger sister Sarah (below)
to join him there during the summer of 1857 to be married when she was under
adult age and very likely married without her parent’s consent. When
William’s and Elizabeth’s son was around one-year old, the couple left
Brighton when they moved to Devizes where their second child was born, and
shortly after that, the family returned to live in Melksham. On the occasion
of the Melksham census in 1861, William Collett was 26, and his wife
Elizabeth was 24, and their address was simply ‘city’ of Melksham. At that
time in his life William was a shoemaker, his wife a (shoe) binder and, for
both of them, their place of birth was confirmed as Melksham. The census
return that year also confirmed the details for their three children and they
were William T Collett who was four and born at Brighton, Maria Collett who
was two and born at Devizes and Sarah J Collett who was four months old.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Two
more children were added to the family during the next three years, but then
tragically, around the time of the birth of the last child, William Collett
died at Melksham on 6th August 1864 when he was only 30 years
old. As a tribute to her late husband, Elizabeth added the name William to
that of her latest son. Sometime during the following years Elizabeth
married George Truman and moved in with him at his home in Semington Road in
Melksham. The house on Semington Road was adjacent to the New Inn. And it
was there that Elizabeth was living in 1871, but only with her three youngest
children. What had happened to her eldest daughter Maria Collett has not
been discovered at this time, whereas more is known about her missing eldest
son William.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The
Melksham census return for 1871 listed the household as George Truman who was
30 and a labour at the local ironworks, Elizabeth Truman who was 34 and a
boot builder, and George’s three stepchild, Sarah Jane Collett 10, James
Collett who was eight, and Fredk W Collett who was six years old, and all of
them were born at Melksham. Ten years later at the time of 1881 Census,
George and Elizabeth Truman had a child of their own, although Elizabeth two
sons from her previous marriage were still living with the family. Their
address on that occasion was given as Semington Lane in Melksham from where
George, who was 40, was a sawyer. His wife Elizabeth was 44, and their
daughter Eliza Truman was eight. The two Collett brothers were James who was
18 and a mat maker, while Frederick was 16 and a blacksmith’s labourer.
|
|
|
|
|
|
35O112
|
William
Thomas Collett
|
Born in 1856
at Melksham
|
|
|
35O113
|
Maria
Collett
|
Born in 1858
at Melksham
|
|
|
35O114
|
Sarah Jane
Collett
|
Born in 1860
at Melksham
|
|
|
35O115
|
James
Collett
|
Born in 1862
at Melksham
|
|
|
35O116
|
Frederick
William Collett
|
Born in 1864
at Melksham
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N75
|
Henry Collett was
born at Whitley in 1836. The parish record confirms that it was at Melksham
that he was baptised on 26th June 1836, the son of weaver Thomas
and Ann Collett, while an alternative source states the date was 18th
October 1835, which may have been the date he was born. He was five years
old in the Whitley census of 1841, but was absent from the family which was
still living there in 1851. Furthermore, no record of a Henry Collett born
anywhere in Wiltshire in 1835 has been located in the census of 1851, so it
is possible that he had suffered a childhood death before then.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35N76
|
Sarah Collett was
born at Whitley during 1838 and was baptised at Melksham on 26th
August 1838, the daughter of Thomas and Ann Collett. She was two years old
in June 1841 and had left school prior to March 1851 to start work as a shoe
binder while living with her family at Whitley. Six years later, when Sarah
was 19, she was the third member of her family to ‘run away to Brighton’.
That move might indicate that she did not have her parents’ consent when she
married Frederick White in Brighton on 6th July 1857. Frederick
was the son of John White and Deborah Dicks, and was born in 1831 and was
baptised at Melksham on 1st December 1832. With the bride and the
groom both being of the parish of Melksham perhaps underlines the fact that
the wedding took place in Brighton against the wishes of Sarah’s parents,
with her not having reach full adult age.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The
selection of Brighton was the obvious choice for the couple to run away to,
since it was there that her older sister Maria was married in 1855 and where
her older brother William was married in 1856, and both were still living
with his family in July 1857. It was however over a year after they were
married that Sarah presented her husband with their first child, and that
event also took place in Brighton, thus dispelling any idea that she may have
been with-child when they ran away from Melksham.
|
|
|
|
|
|
In
total, the marriage produced six known children for the couple and they were
(a) Frederick White who was born at Brighton on 24th October 1858,
who died there two weeks later on 9th November 1858, (b) Louise
Jane White who was born at Brighton on 19th July 1860, who died in
May 1883, (c) Sarah Amelia White who was born on 2nd February
1863, (d) Francis William White who was born at Brighton on 5th
September 1865, and (e) Clara Mabel White who was born at Brighton on 14th
June 1868. The couple’s sixth child was reputed to have been born at Powick
in Worcestershire on 31st May 1871. That was Herbert Henry White
who emigrated to America, where he died on 11th December 1940 at
Boston in Massachusetts, following which he was buried at Wayland in
Middlesex, Massachusetts. Sarah White nee Collett died on 24th
December 1892, and that may have taken place at Brighton.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|