McCollin
Family Tree
Family tree: Male Line 2

Male Line 2.1
Male Line 2.2
Male Line 2.3
Biography
William McCollin 1816-1885
William McCollin was a
boilermaker by trade and stands out as the ancestor we probably know most about
- exclusively from written records. William married Ann Winter, from Goxhill in Lincolnshire, 10
October 1839 in Holy Trinity Church,
Hull and his address was recorded at Hales
Entry, Mytongate, in Hull the same year. According to the Sheahan History of Hull, William McCollin, and his partner, William Fowler, had established the Vulcan Iron Works in Scott Street, Hull, in 1843. In the 1851 Census William McCollin and his wife, Ann, were living
at 21 Caroline Street,
Worship Street, Hull although after this William and Ann lived for many years
in Leonard Street
(No. 115 in 1861 and No. 48 in 1867 onwards). They had five children: Henry,
Donald, Mary, William Henry and Ann and William was
undoubtedly a self-made man; he bequeathed an estate worth nearly £10,000,
split four ways between his three surviving children, Donald, William Henry and
Ann Smith, and the sons of his already deceased daughter, Mary.
Mary had married Frederick Larard (1846-1918), a jeweller, on 28 December 1871, by licence,
in York. They
produced their first child, William McCollin Larard,
during the first 3 months of 1872 in Hull,
and a second son, Frederick Arthur, in late 1879. Mary's husband was elected to
Hull Council in 1875. Mary died on 13 April 1881, at 10 Brunswick
Terrace Hull,
of complications during a further pregnancy. Their son Frederick Arthur Larard (1879-1936), went on to set up Larard
and Taylor, Estate Agents in 1896, which in 1907, became FA Larard
and Sons, now the largest of its type in Hull.
Frederick
remarried on 15 Sept 1881, fathered a further eight children, became an
Alderman and was twice Mayor of Hull in 1904 and 1905. He founded the Hull
Tramways, led the vote to keep the telephone system independent, and was
posthumously made a Freeman of the City.
Insights can be gained into
William's character and the couple's Victorian lifestyle from various sources.
William's brother, Henry, left a portrait of William (probably commissioned by
William) in his will. Census returns show house servants living with the family
from 1851 onwards. In the 1881 Census, when William and Ann were both aged 64,
they had their grandchildren (i.e. Donald's children), Henrietta A. (then aged 14),
and William H. (aged 12), staying with them. Tragically, Henrietta was to die
two years later of consumption (according to 'A Glossary of Old
Medical Terms' - a medical term formerly applied to pulmonary
tuberculosis). In 1883 one servant, Betsy Rice, was convicted of stealing a
sealskin coat worth £20. In the proceedings Ann McCollin was described as being
frail and by the 1891 Census Ann was described as having been blind for eight
years. Ann had her grand-daughter, Anne M. (aged 17; born Grimsby - presumably Annie Maud, one of
Donald's daughters), living with her in 1891 along with two servants
girls, Anne Tipham (aged 21) and Dolly Ligge (aged 18).
The Burgess Roll of 1854-5
describes William as having an iron foundry in Scott Street. White’s Directory of 1859
records Fowler & McCollin as ‘engineers, millwrights, boilermakers, iron
founders, agricultural implement makers and general smiths’ with the Vulcan
Iron works in Scott Street and the Navigation Iron
Works on Railway Dock Side. The Sheahan History of 1863 in addition recorded The Vulcan Foundry in Church Street and stated that the proprietors, Messrs Fowler and Mc. Collin 'manufacture all kinds of land and marine engines and boilers, mill and agricultural implements, hydraulic presses, thrashing machines, &c, as well as their Patent Pan Tile Machine'. The business was evidently successful and continued to expand with a tender for the demolition of some old buildings
and the construction of a new foundry, pattern store, business office and
stables, etc, for Fowler & McCollin Vulcan Iron Works and Wilcolmlee being advertised in The Hull Times in 1865. By 1867-8 they had (work)shops
in Scott Street
as well as in Railway Dock Side. The Hull City Council Records Office (KHRO) has
a letter from Fowler & McCollin dated April 2nd, 1867 in response
to a complaint from the Board of Health about the smoke coming from the works
in Scott Street.
By 1871 F&M also had a warehouse in Wincolmlee, a
Shed and Yard in Swann Street,
and they owned the Hull registered ship
'Whimper' (43.38 ton, built in Sandwich,
Kent in 1848).
According to the 1851 Census the partners Fowler & McCollin employed 20 men
altogether although this had increased to nearly 200 by the 1871 Census. Later,
they also acquired works in Beverley and Cottingham,
a steamer ‘Fawn’ being launched at the Vulcan Iron Works in Beverley in 1883. However,
business was badly affected by the closure of the fish dock, where the company
had trade from smackowners. According to the Hull Times,
meetings of creditors were called in 1884. By that time the works at Beverley
had been sold off and the creditors decided that the business still had
potential and that they should not force a sale.

KHRO holds records of a court case in 1863 in which the defendant,
Thomas Bainbridge, was charged with the theft of an iron spittoon, worth 1
shilling, from Fowler & McCollin's works in Scott Street.
William, acting on information received, caught Thomas leaving the yard with
the spittoon under his coat and PC Leonard Dodsworth
happened to be on hand to make the arrest. The records don't show what Thomas's
sentence was. Also in 1863, The Hull Times reported a small fire that occurred
at about 10 o’clock in the evening in the turning room at the works, probably
due to a spark falling from a thrashing engine. The Jarratt Street
and Parliament Street
fire hose were called but the fire was put out before they arrived.
William was again called to give
evidence seven years later - this time at the inquest of Edward Watson
Atkinson, who died when he fell off a horse outside the works in Scott Street.
William describes how he was in the gateway to the works in Scott Street at lunchtime that day in
1870, when George Boynton brought a mare along to see if he wanted to buy it.
Edward Atkinson offered to ride it and trotted it a couple of hundred yards up Scott Street. On
returning, Edward fell off it for no discernable reason as far as either George
or William could see. According to William, blood which "oozed" out
of Edward's ears - he died shortly afterwards.
Boilers were prone to explode if
not operated properly and several accounts of inquests held by KHRO record the
deaths of operators. In those days inquests seem to have been held the day
after the event usually in a place near to where the death occurred (often the
local public house). These records contains
hand-written affadavits made by William McCollin in
which he provides evidence for the worthiness of his boilers. One particularly
tragic case involved an explosion at William McCann's works in 1866 that lead
to the deaths of three boys, George Kelby, William
Carr and Frederick Harpham aged 14 - 17. William had
inspected the boiler seven or eight years previously and had said it was too
thin. In a judgement that would not be accepted by todays
Health and Safety Inspectorate, the jury decided that the boys came to their
deaths "accidentally casually and by misfortune".
Three years later in 1869 George
Dove, engine driver and fireman, aged 31, died in another boiler explosion,
this time at Hodge's Yard, a seed-crushing mill on Holderness Road, Hull.
James Sykes, foreman at the yard, stated "shortly before 8 o'clock last
night an explosion took place of the boiler connected with the engine which
deceased was driving... I do not know whether the engine (?) boiler was high or
low pressure, although I have driven the engine for about 3 years."
William stated "I made the boiler 13 years ago (20 hp engine). I think it
has exploded because it has been short of water". He went on "I
prefer a good labourer to many mechanics [who get very conceited] to drive an
engine." He thought it had been measured by William Henry and it was said
that the boiler had been repaired three times by William Tarbotton
of 100 Witham. (i.e., McCollin and Tarbotton)
The Public Records Office holds
part records of proceedings taken by William McCollin against his partner,
William Fowler, in the High Court, Chancery Division in 1877. These records
show the handwritten ledgers of Frederick Larard,
receiver (who also happened to be William McCollin's
son-in-law, having married Mary in 1871), showing a total of 745 incomings and
outgoings separately for each partner for a one year period from February 1877.
These are amazingly detailed accounts which will be of use to genealogists with
Hull
connections. These have been transcribed onto a MS Excel
spreadsheet, click here to download.
William died of heart disease at
the age of 69 in 1885 and was buried in the old part of Spring
Bank Cemetery,
Hull. His grave
inscription read:
"Weep not if thou loved me
well
I am happier than the weeper"
His wife, Ann, died aged 75 in
1892 was interned in the same plot
Addresses:
21 Caroline Street 1851
115 Leonard Street 1861
48 Leonard Street 1867, 1881
Home
Page last updated 22/3/06
Thanks go to Paul McCollin for providing copies
of the adverts (from Kelly's) and Mark Larard for
info about the Larard family. Thanks also to John Freeman for further information about the history of the Vulcan Iron Works.
Duncan McCollin