Jump to: Birth Death Burial Cemetery Accounts Biographies
Born: | |
Died: | |
Buried: | 06/08/1855 |
Listed below are all the details we have been able to find so far on John Collier.
As far as we are aware, all the information is correct. However, sometimes transcriptions can lead to errors being made. If you find any errors or omissions, please let us know and we will endeavour to get them corrected as soon as possible.
If you have any further information on John Collier, we would be delighted to hear from you.
There is no information in our database regarding the birth of John Collier.
Can you help us? If so, please contact our History Research Group.
There is no information in our database regarding the death of John Collier.
Can you help us? If so, please contact our History Research Group.
There is no burial register information available for John Collier.
Only three of the five burial register books still exist as far as we know and these are held at the Berkshire Record Office.
Stillborn children were not recorded in the burial register, only in the cemetery accounts.
This information is taken from the accounts ledgers of the Newbury Cemetery Company that originally ran and maintained the cemetery.
The Ledgers are held at the Berkshire Records Office.
Name at death | John Collier |
Date of burial | 06/08/1855 |
Whence brought | Newbury |
Where & how buried | Unconsecrated Ground - Common Interment |
By whom buried | Rev'd. W. Ashley |
Account Entry | Book 1 - Page 23 |
Accounts Entry for John Collier
© Newbury Town Council
Reproduced with kind permission
The articles below contain information about John Collier.
Obituary of
John Collier of Witney and Newbury.
1779 – 1855
Blanket Maker of Greenham and
East Woodhay Blanket Mills.
John Collier was the son of John and Anne Collier whose family had been making blankets in Witney for hundreds of years. After his sister Elizabeth married John Coxeter their father John Collier senior had to come to John Coxeter’s rescue in 1805 when he went bankrupt while in partnership with a Richard Mason at Greenham Mill. For the help he gave John Coxeter, John Collier junior was made a co-partner in the business at Greenham Mill. This partnership carried on until February 1809 when presumably John Coxeter as the then junior partner had paid off most of his debts to the Collier family. What I now realise is that he didn’t pay it all off as John Collier junior continued to hold onto at least one third of the Mill, which he kept until the mid to late 1820’s. From here John moved to East Woodhay where it seems he stared working at the now gone Blanket Mill between East Woodhay and Wash Water.
John Collier junior was married in 1807 to Jane Baylis a widow of Little Rissington in Gloucestershire, with whom he had four children; John, Job, Jane and George Bennet Collier. They lived in Cheap Street Newbury, but in around 1825 Jane left him taking their youngest son George Bennet Collier back to Rissington. This was after John had taken a fancy to another lady by the name of Harriet Hamblin, with whom he six illegitimate children.
Although John Coxeter is well known for making the Newbury Coat, today nobody is told that it was probably only due to the Collier money from Witney that the Mills at Greenham were updated with the latest machinery, including the famous rag machine that John Coxeter boasted could pull apart Sir John Throckmorton’s coat and remake it in a day. As for John Collier’s part in the amazing day, nothing is recorded about him or his part in its making, although no doubt he would have been involved in its construction even if it was just to help his nephew John Coxeter junior with weaving the cloth.
To be honest it seems that after John started his love affair with Harriett, its probably why he has been ignored by the local historians. Although he has been cut out of the history of Newbury, he must have been quite a good businessman, for not only did he own a house in Cheap Street but also various commercial buildings behind it in Back Lane Newbury. Add this to his blanket business which supplied the London Markets from his warehouse at 26 Broad-Street-Place London, together with blankets to Canada as well as parts of Europe, it shows he was doing very well financially.
Derek J Collier, Thatcham March 2023.
Author: Derek J Collier
©
*The FNRC believe that the certificates published on this page have been added in compliance with the rules laid down by the General Register Office (GRO). Click here for more information.
If you believe that we may have inadvertently breached the privacy of a living person by publishing any document, please contact us so we can immediately remove the certificate and investigate further.
Thank you.
FNRC.
© 2010-2023. Friends of Newtown Road Cemetery, unless otherwise stated.
Web site designed by Paul Thompson
The Friends of Newtown Road Cemetery is a not-for-profit organisation that works in association with Newbury Town Council to look after and maintain Newtown Road Cemetery for the benefit of the people of Newbury.