William Thomas Collings

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Preceded byMarie Collings
Born(1823-09-04)4 September 1823
Died7 March 1882(1882-03-07) (aged 58)
William Thomas Collings
Seigneur of Sark
In office
1853–1882
Preceded byMarie Collings
Succeeded byWilliam Frederick Collings
Personal details
Born(1823-09-04)4 September 1823
Died7 March 1882(1882-03-07) (aged 58)
SpouseLouisa Collings (née Lukis)
ChildrenWilliam Frederick Collings
and five others
Parent(s)Marie Collings (née Allaire)
Thomas Guerin Collings

William Thomas Collings (4 September 1823 – 7 March 1882) was a clergyman of the Church of England who served as Seigneur of Sark from 1853 to 1882.

Collings was the son of Marie and Thomas Guerin Collings (1786–1832). His maternal grandfather, the Guernsey privateer John Allaire, was mortgaged the fief of Sark by the island's seigneur, Ernest le Pelley, in 1844. By 1852, both the Seigneur and Collings' grandfather were dead. The Seigneur's successor, Pierre Carey le Pelley, was unable to pay the mortgage and thus had to sell Sark to Marie Collings, Allaire's heiress.[1] Collings was ordained a deacon of the Church of England the same year at the Wells Cathedral, where he served as curate prior to being ordained as a priest the following year. The Guernsey historian James Marr denies that he ever became canon of the Wells Cathedral, calling it a "frequently repeated but entirely false assertion".[2]

Seigneurship

Family

References

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