Leyland Hugh Sackett

FatherAlfred Barrett Sackett MC (1895-1977)
MotherDorothy Eleanor Salter (1898-2000)
Birth13 August 1928, Headington, OxfordshireG,1,2
Death12 April 20203
Marriage1995, St John'sGEleanor Davies4
L Hugh Sackett
(1928–2020)
(Src: Archaeological Institute of America)
Leyland Hugh Sackett, known as Hugh, schoolmaster and archaeologist, son of Alfred Barrett Sackett MC and Dorothy Eleanor Salter, was born in Headington, OxfordshireG, on 13 August 1928.1,2 He died on 12 April 2020.3 He married at Town Hall, St John's, AntiguaG, in 1995, Eleanor Davies.4
     Hugh travelled numerous times between England and Massachusetts from 1955 onwards.2,5,6,7

In Memoriam: Leyland Hugh Sackett
The AIA [Archaeological Institute of America] is deeply saddened by the passing of L. Hugh Sackett and we extend our condolences to his family, friends, students, and colleagues.
Leyland Hugh Sackett (1928 – 2020)
Shortly after the publication in 1979 and 1980 of the first volumes on the excavations at Lefkandi in Euboea, the archaeologist and Harvard professor Emily Vermeule explained to me, then an undergraduate, that "archaeological ability, like music or painting, was a talent as much as any other". She spoke with particular reference to Hugh Sackett, who was to deliver at Harvard later that day a James Loeb lecture on his discovery of "The Hero at Lefkandi", a talk she was to introduce. She noted that Hugh "has archaeological talent in spades and simply knows where to dig" – a joke she later used for her introduction – and then she conjured for me a picture of the excavator of Lefkandi at work: a tall, indefatigable figure, loping through the landscape, eminently visible because of an ancient red sweater he liked to wear.
     With the passing of Hugh Sackett, in the early hours of 12 April 2020, Easter Sunday by the Western calendar, at age 91, after an archaeological career taking in six and a half decades, it is now possible to appreciate more fully the truth of Professor Vermeule’s assessment forty years ago. If anything, it did not go far enough. At the start of his Loeb lecture, Hugh replied, with characteristic modesty, that archaeology was "good fortune, not talent". Yet, in his absence, we can see that his archaeological ability was not solely a manifestation of talent, nor merely a matter of fortune, but also a mark of genius.
     Born on 13 August 1928 and educated at Merton College, Oxford, Hugh had been a fixture at the British School of Archaeology at Athens from 1954. As an archaeologist, he is known principally for his partnership in the field with Mervyn Popham, with whom he excavated Lefkandi in Euboia and Palaikastro in East Crete. Both digs may claim to have been, for different reasons, the most significant of the archaeological projects conducted by the British after the Second World War. When the Archaeological Institute of America, of which he had been a member for many years, awarded Hugh its Gold Medal Award for Distinguished Archaeological Achievement in 2014, its trustees noted in the citation, "People may not agree which aspect of Sackett’s work represents his most significant legacy. Some would point to the major Cretan site of Palaikastro and the impact of discoveries there on our conception of Minoan Crete, others to the revolutionary discovery and exploration of Iron Age Lefkandi …. It is a wonderful thing to be able to have such a debate about a single archaeologist."
     Survey and excavation at Lefkandi (1962–1963; 1964–1990; new excavations under the direction of I. S. Lemos) revealed it to have been, in Hugh's words, "as important a center and as sophisticated as Athens itself" from 1100–800 BC. The Lefkandi centaur has become emblematic of that time, and the peristyle structure known as the Heroön extended the early history of the Greek temple-type by two, if not three, centuries. It can be said of only a few that their work has shed "too much light" on their subject – and yet, the phrase is, in Hugh’s case, apt, since no one now would use the term "Dark Age" when speaking of Early Iron Age Greece.
     At Palaikastro (excavations in 1962–1963; 1983 to the present with J. A. MacGillivray, J. Driessen, and others), the discovery alone of its chryselephantine kouros – to quote Hugh again, "among the masterpieces of Minoan glyptic" – would have secured the fame of the site and the reputation of its archaeologists. But Palaikastro itself is more than the kouros. It is also, like Knossos, a major urban center.
     Patient, persevering, practical, precise, and energetic, Hugh at both these sites may fairly be said to have trained, with Mervyn Popham, a significant number of the current generation of field archaeologists now at work in Greece. But equally important were excavations, aside from Lefkandi and Palaikastro, with different colleagues. In 1954, Hugh assisted at Emporio in Chios under Sinclair Hood, then Director of the British School, with whom he also worked at Knossos in 1957. With A. J. Graham and J. Ellis Jones, he excavated in Attica the "Dema House" (c. 450–425 BC) from 1958 to 1960, and in 1966 the "Vari House" (c. 350–275 BC), still important examples of ancient domestic architecture. From 1967 to 1973, again with Mervyn Popham, Hugh dug what Sir Arthur Evans had called the "Unexplored Mansion" at Knossos, and publication of this site is invaluable for the stratified evidence it provides for occupation in Crete from 1500 BC to AD 200. A principled man, Hugh understood the importance of publishing the results of his excavations, and his volumes appeared at regular intervals.
     Archaeological ability, however, was not Hugh's only claim to prodigious talent. As a schoolmaster too, he possessed a touch of genius. He began to teach Classics at Groton School in Groton, Massachusetts, in the autumn of 1955, a position he assumed he would hold for only a year. Instead, for the next 63 years, between excavations (or perhaps his excavations were conducted between lessons), he taught a typical array of school classes on Latin and Greek: introductory grammar and composition, Catullus, Cicero, Homer, Ovid, Plato, Virgil, and others, introducing into the syllabus as well elective courses on modern Greek, in which he was fluent, and archaeology, in which he was expert. He also coached intramural soccer and crew and served on assorted committees.
     In all that he did at School, he was challenging and supportive in equal measure. The calm and kindness, the incisiveness and insistence on accuracy that he showed in his digs served him equally well in the classroom, where his liveliness became at times theatrical, and in his many dormitories, where common-room life swung between the high-minded (readings of Shakespeare plays broke out on stray Saturday nights) and the amusingly chaotic (as Hugh wrote in a preface to the School yearbook of 1972: "… dorm games of all kinds were invented with an astonishing fecundity but always recognized the meaning or spirit of the dorm master's objections…."). Even after his putative retirement in June 2018, he remained at Groton, not at all a diminished figure, but to the contrary, amidst the changes of the twenty-first century, a still vital and reassuring presence, who continued to take his usual seat for daily chapel and Sunday services, attend School occasions, and participate informally in the classes on archaeology.
     This balancing act between the British School and Groton School, between a life of schoolmastership and one of scholarship, was unusual. The two demand distinct ways of thinking. As Hugh put it, when asked by the School newspaper in 1987 to comment on the differences between curating pots and counselling pupils: "Young Americans are, of course, quite different from pottery." How had he been able to maintain the equilibrium over the years?
     As ever, Hugh asserted that it was a matter of luck. He was fortunate to have served at Groton under two particularly enlightened Headmasters. These were the Reverend John Crocker (who hired Hugh at the recommendation of R. G. C. Levens, Hugh's old Classics tutor at Merton) and the Reverend Bertrand Honea, who succeeded Crocker from 1965 until 1969. Both realized that since Hugh was an exceptional teacher and colleague, his curious passion for archaeology was to be indulged and encouraged. "The allurement of digging is apparently a strong one," noted Crocker in 1961, as if unable to understand how this could possibly be.
     A year at Groton had turned into six, archaeology confined largely to summer holidays. At Hugh's request, Crocker permitted leave in 1961, so that he could take up, for two years, the Assistant Directorship at the British School ­– a sign of the Headmaster's regard. Not since the Second World War had Groton granted a teacher so long an absence from his duties.
     Honea, no less supportive, set in place more formal mechanisms to allow Hugh to pursue his double life. In 1967, Honea agreed that, in lieu of the sabbatical year Hugh was owed for longtime service, he could have instead three successive Spring Terms off. To substitute for him at Groton from April 1968, Hugh turned to Rogers Scudder, who had retired from teaching Classics at Brooks School in North Andover, Massachusetts, in 1966. Sometime before that, they had met (one or the other told me) on the sidelines of a soccer match between their two schools.
     This duopoly proved so congenial and convenient to all concerned that the "Castor and Pollux" arrangement, as some called it, was granted in perpetuo. The Sackett-Scudder partnership became one of those quaint and curious elements of boarding school life that generates story after story which gain in the telling and invite cozy reminiscence years later. From 1968 until his death in 2006 at age 93, Rogers, a kind of "alter ego" to Hugh, took over Hugh's duties in the spring, taught his classes, dispensed idiosyncratic wisdom to advisees, and ran the dormitories. Hugh used spring and summer to excavate and write and see to the logistics of his many projects (the acquisition of permits, the search for funding, the careful preparation of all the administrative minutiae that go toward the success of a dig). Even when Rogers, an expert on the archaeology of Rome and Italy, was appointed Director of the Library at the American Academy in Rome from 1975 until 1979, the arrangement continued, and he added to the School syllabus a class on "Roman Archaeology" for the Spring Term to complement Hugh's own courses on "Aegean Archaeology" and "Archaic and Classical Archaeology" taught in the fall and winter. In 2006, at a memorial service for Rogers in the School chapel, Hugh said, "Without Rogers, my career would not have been possible".
     And so, in 1968, the passage of Hugh's career was set fair, set even fairer with his marriage to Eleanor in 1995. With Hugh, she travelled to Greece, and at the excavations she took part in drawing, conserving, and recording the finds. She also saw to the well-being of many pupils and teachers from Groton whom Hugh, in a 1950s Mercedes or, subsequently, in a minivan, drove around Greece. Several of these boys and girls – and at least one faculty member (Thomas Carpenter, Professor of Classics at Ohio University, who taught at Groton from 1971 to 1976) – became archaeologists themselves under Hugh's encouragement.
     But now Hugh's work for the British School and his time at Groton have come to a close – or as C. S. Lewis put it at the end of his sequence of novels on Narnia, "The term is over: the holidays have begun". In other words (to continue the metaphor), that moment has come which would signal for Hugh the chance to begin another season of survey, excavation, and study, even if "upon another shore and in a greater light". And so, as valediction, we may repeat the words of the Reverend Crocker, delivered at Groton School's Prize Day in June 1961, just before Hugh left to become Assistant Director at the British School:
     During his years at Groton he has quietly carried out all that we hope for in a teacher. With modesty and humor, with kindliness and integrity, with ability and scholarship, he has served this School unselfishly and with a sensitive understanding of what it is all about. He has been not merely a colleague, but a dear and true friend to us all. We wish him God's blessing in his new venture.

A. T. Reyes
Groton School

AIA News, Archaeological Institute of America website

 Notes & Citations

  1. "England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index" (Ancestry image), "Sep qtr 1928. Sackett, Leyland H. Mother: Salter. Headington. 3a:1710."
  2. "Massachusetts Passenger Lists 1820–1963" (Ancestry image), "Sackett, Leyland H, British, b. Oxford, England, 13 Aug 1928, US address Groton School, Groton, MA, BOAC Comet flight from London to Boston, 15 Sep 1960."
  3. Obituary.
  4. Information from Michael Oliver Sackett.
  5. "UK Outward Passenger Lists 1890–1960" (Ancestry image), Empress of Scotland, Canadian Pacific Steamships Ltd, from Liverpool 9 Sep 1955, to Quebec and Montreal, "Sackett, Leyland, tourist class, to Montreal, b. 13 Aug 1928, res. Kingswood School, Bath, England, Rotary International Foundation Fellow, UK passport, issued Aleppo, last res. England, intended res. USA."
  6. "UK Incoming Passenger Lists 1878–1960" (Ancestry image), "Leyland H Sackett, 28, b. 13 Aug 1928, single, teaching, British, Empress of Britain tourist class, arr. 24 Jun 1957 Liverpool, from Montreal, Quebec, Canada, UK address Kingswood School, Bath, Somerset, last permanent residence USA, intended permanent residence USA, visiting Britain 1 month."
  7. "UK Incoming Passenger Lists 1878–1960", (Ancestry image), "Leyland H Sackett, 29, b. 13 Aug 1928, single, teacher, UK citizen (passport issued Syria), Empress of France, arr. 24 Jun 1958 Liverpool, from Montreal, Quebec, Canada, UK address Kingswood School, Bath, last permanent residence USA, intended permanent residence USA, visiting Britain 1 month."
Sackett line10th great-grandson of Thomas Sackett the elder of St Peter in Thanet
1st cousin 10 times removed of Simon Sackett the colonist
Generation.TreeS.3
Last Edited14 May 2020

Edward Hallam Baylis

FatherEdward Baylis (c 1865-1937)
MotherAnnie Catherine Dowker Sackett (1868-1956)
Birth1895, Romford, EssexG,1
Death15 September 19532
Marriage1923, Romford, EssexGDorothy Lee2,3
Edward Hallam Baylis, son of Edward Baylis and Annie Catherine Dowker Sackett, was born in Romford, EssexG, in 1895.1 He died aged 58 on 15 September 1953.2 He married in Romford, EssexG, in 1923, Dorothy Lee.2,3

 Notes & Citations

  1. General Register Office, Online Index to Births, "Sep qtr 1895, Baylis, Edward Hallam. Mother: Sackett. Romford. 4a:443."
  2. Email from Sheila Phythian to Chris Sackett, 23 July 2007.
  3. General Register Office, Online Index to Marriages, "Jun qtr 1923. Baylis, Edward H. Spouse, Lee. Romford. 4a:943."
    "Jun qtr 1923. Lee, Dorothy. Spouse, Baylis. Romford. 4a:943."
Sackett line9th great-grandson of Thomas Sackett the elder of St Peter in Thanet
1st cousin 9 times removed of Simon Sackett the colonist
ChartsDescendants of Benjamin Sackett
Generation.TreeR.3
Last Edited9 Nov 2016

Robert William Baylis

FatherEdward Baylis (c 1865-1937)
MotherAnnie Catherine Dowker Sackett (1868-1956)
Birth6 January 1897, Romford, EssexG,1,2
Death3 December 1944, Ilford, EssexG,3
Marriage5 August 1922, Ilford, EssexGHilda Mary Pickett3,4
Robert William Baylis
(1897–1944)
(Src: Sheila Phythian)
Robert William Baylis, son of Edward Baylis and Annie Catherine Dowker Sackett, was born in Romford, EssexG, on 6 January 1897.1,2 He died aged 47 in Ilford, EssexG, on 3 December 1944.3 He married in Ilford, EssexG, on 5 August 1922, Hilda Mary Pickett, daughter of William Frederick Pickett and Emma Zilla Woods.3,4 Hilda was born in RomfordG on 2 May 18963 and died aged 91 in Basingstoke, HampshireG, on 4 July 1987.3
     Robert Baylis served in the British army during the First World War, being amongst the first wave of volunteers, and enlisting in the 5th Company of City of London Rifles on 31 August 1914 when he gave his age as 18 years and 7 months. He was actually 17 years and 7 months. He was posted to France with the British Expeditionary Force on 16 February 1915, serving there until 1 August 1915.3,5

Children of Robert William Baylis and Hilda Mary Pickett

Children who are or may be living are not shown.

 Notes & Citations

  1. General Register Office, Online Index to Births, "Mar qtr 1897, Baylis, Robert William. Mother: Sackett. Romford. 4a:471."
  2. Email from Sheila Phythian to Chris Sackett, 23 July 2007, date of birth.
  3. Email from Sheila Phythian to Chris Sackett, 23 July 2007.
  4. Website The Sackett Family Association (http://www.sackettfamily.info), Newsletter, January 2009, "Benjamin and Elizabeth (Lee) Sackett" by Sheila Phythian.
  5. Website British Army WWI Pension Records 1914-1920 (Ancestry.co.uk) (http://www.ancestry.co.uk).
Appears inSacketts in the Military
Sackett line9th great-grandson of Thomas Sackett the elder of St Peter in Thanet
1st cousin 9 times removed of Simon Sackett the colonist
ChartsDescendants of Benjamin Sackett
Sackett Family Association descendants
Sheila Phythian.
Generation.TreeR.3
Last Edited18 Jan 2020

Annie Kathleen Baylis

FatherEdward Baylis (c 1865-1937)
MotherAnnie Catherine Dowker Sackett (1868-1956)
Birth12 April 1900, Romford, EssexG,1,2
Death4 January 19603
Annie Kathleen Baylis, daughter of Edward Baylis and Annie Catherine Dowker Sackett, was born in Romford, EssexG, on 12 April 1900.1,2 She died aged 59 on 4 January 1960.3 She was unmarried.

 Notes & Citations

  1. General Register Office, Online Index to Births, "Jun qtr 1900, Baylis, Annie Kathleen. Mother: Sackett. Romford. 4a:515."
  2. Email from Sheila Phythian to Chris Sackett, 23 July 2007, date of birth.
  3. Email from Sheila Phythian to Chris Sackett, 23 July 2007.
Sackett line9th great-granddaughter of Thomas Sackett the elder of St Peter in Thanet
1st cousin 9 times removed of Simon Sackett the colonist
ChartsDescendants of Benjamin Sackett
Generation.TreeR.3
Last Edited7 Nov 2016

Emily Frances Sackett

FatherBenjamin Richard Sackett (1860-1949)
MotherFrances Sarah Horton (c 1858-1935)
Birth5 May 1887, Stepney, MiddlesexG,1,2,3,4
Death1970, Ashford, KentG,5
Marriage1912, Elham, KentGJohn L Ashdown6,7
Emily Frances Sackett, daughter of Benjamin Richard Sackett and Frances Sarah Horton, was born in Ratcliff, Stepney, MiddlesexG, on 5 May 1887.1,2,3,4 She died aged about 83 in Ashford, KentG, in 1970.5 She married in Elham, KentG, in 1912, John L Ashdown, son of James Ashdown and Anne H ___.6,7 John was born in Hythe, KentG, about 18863,2 and died aged 48 in Elham, KentG, in 1934.8
     In 1891 Emily was living at 3 Ethel Villas, Violet Road, Woodford, EssexG, in the household of her parents Benjamin and Frances, and was recorded in the census as Emily F Sackett, aged three, and born in Ratcliffe, London.9
     In 1901 she was living at Essex Villa, Derby Road, WoodfordG, in the household of her parents Benjamin and Frances, and was recorded as Emily Frances Sackett, aged 13 and born at Albert Square.10
     At the outbreak of the Second World War in September 1939, Emily was living at 20 St Leonard's Road, HytheG, with her father Benjamin.11
     Emily proved her father Benjamin's will on 16 December 1949. His estate was valued at £6,314.12

Children of Emily Frances Sackett and John L Ashdown

 Notes & Citations

  1. General Register Office, Online Index to Births, "Jun qtr 1887. Sackett, Emily Frances. Mother: Horton. Stepney. 1c:417."
  2. Census.
  3. Death record.
  4. 1939 Register.
  5. "England & Wales, Civil Registration Death Index, 1916–2007" (Ancestry transcript), "Jun qtr 1970. Ashdown, Emily Frances, b. 5 May 1887. Ashford. 5f:45."
  6. General Register Office, Online Index to Marriages, "Jun qtr 1912. Sackett, Emily F. Spouse: Ashdown. Elham. 2a:2446."
  7. General Register Office, Online Index to Marriages, "Jun qtr 1912. Ashdown, John L. Spouse: Sackett. Elham. 2a:2446."
  8. "England & Wales, Civil Registration Death Index, 1916–2007", "Jun qtr 1934. Ashdown, John L, 48. Elham. 2a:1473."
  9. 1891 England census, RG12/1360/?
    3 Ethel Villas, Violet Rd, Woodford, Essex
    Benjamin R Sackett, head, married, 31, wholesale hosier's clerk (empd), b. Hythe, Kent
    Frances Sackett, wife, 33, b. Hythe
    Emily F Sackett, dau, 3, b. Ratcliffe, London
    Ida R Ashdown, niece, 4, b. Buckland, Dover, Kent
    Frances J May, visitor, married, 30, b. Chumleigh, Devon
    Jane Comer, serv, unm, 15, gen serv, b. Folkestone, Kent.
  10. 1901 England census, Essex Villa, Derby Road, Woodford (St Mary), Essex
    (5+ rooms)
    Benjamin Sackett, head, married, 41, wholesale hosier's clerk, b. Hythe, Kent
    Francis {ITAL:]sic] S Sackett, wife, 43, b. Hythe
    Emily Frances Sackett, dau, 13, b. Albert Sq, Commercial Rd
    Annie Horton, sister-in-law, single, 33, b. Hythe
    Ruth Horton, sister-in-law, single, 29, b. Hythe
    Florence Winter, servant, 15, general servant domestic, b. Goring, nr Reading, Berkshire.
  11. "1939 Register" (Findmypast image), Sackett household, 20 St Leonards Road, Hythe M B, Kent: RG101/1742H/002/5, Benjamin R Sackett, b. 15 Feb 1860, widowed, clerk hosiery manufacture (retired); Emily F Ashdown, b. 5 May 1887, widowed, unpaid domestic duties.
  12. "England & Wales, National Probate Calendar (Index of Wills & Administrations), 1858–1995" (Ancestry image), "Sackett Benjamin Richard of Rowanhurst 20 St Leonards-road Hythe Kent died 21 September 1949 Probate London 16 December to Emily Frances Ashdown widow and Mervyn Ivor Leopold Ashdown government official. Effects £6314 17s."
Sackett line9th great-granddaughter of Thomas Sackett the elder of St Peter in Thanet
1st cousin 9 times removed of Simon Sackett the colonist
ChartsDescendants of Benjamin Sackett
Generation.TreeR.3
Last Edited10 Nov 2016

Rev Benjamin Howard Sackett MA, BD

FatherRev George Whitefield Sackett (1873-1955)
MotherElizabeth Finlay Kingston (c 1873-1936)
Birth29 April 1903, Morley, YorkshireG,1,2,3
Death7 March 1999, Sefton, LancashireG,2,4,5
Marriage1933, Rotherham, YorkshireGWinifred Faith Milnes6,7,8
Rev Benjamin Howard Sackett
(1903–1999)
(Src: Sunderland Daily Echo, 10 Jul 1937)
Rev Benjamin Howard Sackett MA, BD, Congregationalist minister, son of Rev George Whitefield Sackett and Elizabeth Finlay Kingston, was born in Morley, YorkshireG, on 29 April 19031,2,3 and died aged 95 in Sefton, LancashireG, on 7 March 1999.2,4,5 He married in Rotherham, YorkshireG, in 1933, Winifred Faith Milnes, daughter of William Hall Milnes and Harriet Ellen Howe.6,7,8 Winifred was born in RotherhamG on 11 October 19139,3 and died aged 82 in SeftonG in January 1996.10
     Benjamin served in a number of parishes during his ministry: Roker [Sunderland], 1933–37; West End, Sowersby Bridge, 1937–41; Eccleshill, Bradford, 1946–50; and Wycliffe, Warrington, 1950–71. He was a Royal Air Force chaplain from 1941 to 1946. He retired to Southport.2,11
     In 1911 Benjamin was living at 14 Beaumont Street, Todmorden, YorkshireG, in the household of his parents George and Elizabeth, and was recorded in the census as Benjamin Howard Sackett, aged seven and born in Morley.12
     In 1921 he was living at The Manse, South Ockendon, EssexG, in the household of his parents George and Elizabeth, and was recorded as Benjamin Howard Sackett, a shipping clerk, aged 18.13
     At the outbreak of the Second World War in September 1939, Benjamin and Winifred were living at 14 Rochdale Road, Sowerby Bridge, YorkshireG, where Benjamin was a Congregational minister.14
     Benjamin left a will which was proved in Manchester, LancashireG, on 6 May 1999.5

Edinburgh University Degrees
Bachelor of Divinity
Benjamin Sackett, M.A.

Edinburgh Evening News, 30 Jun 1932

Pulpit Notes
The newly apointed minister of Roker Congregational Church, Mr B. H. Sackett, begins his ministry at Roker to-morrow, when he will preach at the morning and evening services on "The Minister's Calling and Message."
     A reception will be held for Mr Sackett in the church schoolroom on Wednesday night.

Sunderland Daily Echo, 7 Jan 1933

Ordination at Roker
Distinction for Family
Three Generations of Ministers

An interesting fact revealed by the Rev. Benjamin H. Sackett, at his ordination in Roker Congregational Church, Sunderland, last night, was that both his father and grandfather were Congregational miisters and his great-grandfather was a lay preacher.
     The Rev. G. W. Sackett, Mr Sackett's father, took part in the service.
     "I was born in a Congregational manse," said Mr Sackett, "and lived at home for the first 15 years of my life. I then went into an office in London as a junior clerk, but I have nearly always felt the call to do some sort of Christian work. Until I became 21, however, it had never occurred to me that I might serve in the Christian ministry. My call came quite spontaneously."
Unanimous Invitation
     Mr Sackett said he greatly appreciated the honour Roker Congregational Church had done him in asking him to become their minister.
     Mr E. B. Frail, church secretary, said there was complete unanimity in asking Mr Sackett to become their minister—they had been without a minister since April, 1931, and it was in October, 1932, that they first met Mr Sackett.
     "He had other calls, but it is to his everlasting credit that he chose the most difficult church," added Mr Frail, "and we think he will be a worthy successor to those ministers who have led our church through the past 140 years."
     In his charge to Mr Sackett the Rev. Principal E. J. Price said that the problems of the church members were the minister's problems.
     On behalf of Mr Sackett's fellow students at Yorkshire United College, Bradford, his former teachers, and the college governors, he congratulated him.

Sunderland Daily Echo, 14 Mar 1933

Young President
When the Rev. B. H. Sackett, M.A., B.D., was inducted to the presidency of the Sunderland and District Free Church Council he commented that it must be very many years since there was so young a president of the Council.
     It is just about two years since Mr Sackett came to the Roker Congregational Church, which was his first appointment. He came direct to Sunderland from the Yorkshire United College, Bradford, which is one of the Congregational training colleges for the North of England.
     Born at Morley, he is a son of the manse, his father, the Rev. G.W. Sackett, being minister of the Congregational Church at Stocksbridge, near Sheffield. His grandfather, the Rev. Benjamin Sackett, was also in the Congregational ministry. He took his degrees of M.A. and B.D. at Edinburgh University.

Sunderland Daily Echo, 23 Feb 1935, p. 2

Pastor Leaving Roker.
Mr Sackett's Call
The Rev. B. H. Sackett, of Roker Congregational Church, is leaving Sunderland at the end of September to become minister at Sowerby Bridge, Halifax.
This announcement is made by Mr. Sackett in the current issue of "The Congregational Monthly," in which he states that it was not until after a great deal of thought he decided to go.
"The more I thought about it," he continues, "the stronger became the urge to accept. Apart from the unanimity of the 'call' and the greatness of the opportunity at Sowerby Bridge, I have felt for a few months that a change of miinister at Roker would be in the best interests of the church.
"Five years of the same mind in the case of the first pastorate, unless, of course, the personality and the circumstances are exceptional, seems to me to be long enough."
Mr Sackett resumed his duties on Sunday after two months' illness.

Sunderland Daily Echo, 10 Jul 1937

Tributes to Roker Minister
Gifts and Good Wishes at Farewell Gathering
Glowing tributes to the good work of Rev. and Mrs B.H. Sackett during their five years' stay in Sunderland were paid at a farewell gathering in Roker Congregational Church, which Mr Sackett is leaving to take over the ministry of the congregational Church at Sowerby Bridge.
[List of presentations not transcribed]

Sunderland Daily Echo, 29 Sep 1937

 Notes & Citations

  1. General Register Office, Online Index to Births, "Jun qtr 1903. Sackett, Benjamin Howard. Mother: Kingston. Dewsbury. 9b:591."
  2. Website The Surman Index Online (Dr Williams's Centre for Dissenting Studies) (http://surman.english.qmul.ac.uk), "Sackett, Benjamin Howard MA BD
    b. 29 April 1903 Morley, Yks
    (s. of Geo. Whitfield S (d. 1955); g'son of Benjamin S (d. 1900) qqv)
    Yks. Un. C
    [Parishes] Roker 1933–37; West End, Sowersby Bridge 1937–41; Chap. RAF 1941–46; Eccleshill, Bradford 1946–50; Wycliffe, Warrington 1950–71
    Ret. Southport.
    d. 7 Mar 1999
    m. Winnie. d, Jean & Judith
    cf. Hawthorn, "Centy, Wycliffe CC Warrington" (1951) p. 17
    URCYB 2000 304."
  3. 1939 Register.
  4. "England & Wales deaths 1837–2006" (Findmypast transcript), "Mar 1999. Sackett, Benjamin Howard, b. 29 Apr 1903. Sefton North. 0341B:55B:248:399."
  5. "England & Wales Government Probate Death Index 1858-2019" (Findmypast transcript), "Sackett, Benjamin Howard, d. 7 Mar 1999, probate Manchester, Lancashire, 6 May 1999, grant and will."
  6. General Register Office, Online Index to Marriages, "Mar qtr 1933. Sackett, Benjamin H. Spouse: Milnes. Rotherham. 9c:959."
  7. General Register Office, Online Index to Marriages, "Mar qtr 1933. Milnes, Winifred F. Spouse: Sackett. Rotherham. 9c:959."
  8. Census.
  9. General Register Office, Online Index to Births, "Dec qtr 1913. Milnes, Winifred F. Mother: Howe. Rotherham. 9c:1548."
  10. "England & Wales deaths 1837–2006" , "Jan 1996. Sackett, Winifred Faith, b. 11 Oct 1913. Sefton North. 0341A:49A:099:196."
  11. British Newspapers Collection, "Sunderland Daily Echo" (Findmypast image), 7 Jan 1933, Pulpit Notes; 10 Jul 1937, Pastor Leaving Roker; 29 Sep 1937, Tributes to Roker Minister.
  12. 1911 England census, 14 Beaumont Street, Todmorden, Yorkshire West Riding
    6 rooms
    George Whitefield Sackett, head, 38, married, Congregational minister, b. Oxon, Langford
    Elizabeth Finlay Sackett, wife, 38, m. 8y, 3 ch, all living, b. London, St George's-in-the-East
    Benjamin Howard Sackett, son, 7, b. Yorks, Morley
    Winifred Sackett, dau, 6, b. Yorks, Morley
    Irene Sackett, dau, 3, b. Yorks, Todmorden.
  13. 1921 England census, The Manse, South Ockendon, Essex
    9 rooms
    George Whitefield Sackett, head, 48y 3m, married, b. Langford, Oxfordshire, Congregational Minister, Congregational Church, South Ockendon
    Elizabeth Finlay Sackett, wife, 49y 0m, married, b. St George in the East, London, home duties
    Benjamin Howard Sackett, son, 18y 2m, single, b. Morley, Yorkshire, shipping clerk, Scruttons Ltd, Stevedores & Master Porters, 16 Fenchurch Avenue, EC3
    Winifred Sackett, daughter, 16y 9m, single, b. Morley, shorthand-typist, Baptist Missionary Society, 19 Fennivals St, EC4
    Irene Sackett, daughter, 13y 11m, b. Todmorden, Yorkshire.
  14. "1939 Register" (Findmypast image), Sackett household, 14 Rochdale Road, Sowerby Bridge U D, Yorkshire (West Riding): Benjamin Howard Sackett, b. 29 Apr 1903, married, Congregational minister; Winifred Faith Sackett, b. 11 Oct 1913, married, unpaid domestic duties.
Appears inSacketts in the Military
Sacketts in the Church
Sackett line9th great-grandson of Thomas Sackett the elder of St Peter in Thanet
1st cousin 9 times removed of Simon Sackett the colonist
ChartsDescendants of Benjamin Sackett
Generation.TreeR.3
Last Edited17 Feb 2024

Irene Sackett

FatherRev George Whitefield Sackett (1873-1955)
MotherElizabeth Finlay Kingston (c 1873-1936)
Birth15 July 1907, Todmorden, YorkshireG,1
DeathNovember 1993, Falmouth, CornwallG,2
Marriage1935, Wortley, YorkshireGClaude Neville Racey3,4
Irene Sackett, daughter of Rev George Whitefield Sackett and Elizabeth Finlay Kingston, was born in Todmorden, YorkshireG, on 15 July 1907.1 She died aged 86 in Falmouth, CornwallG, in November 1993.2 She married in Wortley, YorkshireG, in 1935, Claude Neville Racey.3,4 Claude was born on 11 July 1909 and died aged about 65 in CornwallG in 1974.5
     In 1911 Irene was living at 14 Beaumont Street, Todmorden, YorkshireG, in the household of her parents George and Elizabeth, and was recorded in the census as Irene Sackett, aged three and born in Todmorden.6
     In 1921 she was living at The Manse, South Ockendon, EssexG, in the household of her parents George and Elizabeth, and was recorded as Irene Sackett, aged 13.7

 Notes & Citations

  1. General Register Office, Online Index to Births, "Sep qtr 1907. Sackett, Irene. Mother: Kingston. Todmorden. 9a:213."
  2. "England & Wales, Civil Registration Death Index, 1837–1915" (Ancestry transcript), "Nov 1993. Racey, Irene, b. 15 Jul 1907. Falmouth. 7D:3591:157."
  3. General Register Office, Online Index to Marriages, "Dec qtr 1935. Sackett, Irene. Spouse: Racey. Wortley. 9c:788."
  4. General Register Office, Online Index to Marriages, "Dec qtr 1935. Racey, Claude N. Spouse: Sackett. Wortley. 9c:788."
  5. "England & Wales, Civil Registration Death Index, 1837–1915", "Sep qtr 1974. Racey, Claude Neville, b. 11 Jul 1909. Camborne-Redruth. 21:0115."
  6. 1911 England census, 14 Beaumont Street, Todmorden, Yorkshire West Riding
    6 rooms
    George Whitefield Sackett, head, 38, married, Congregational minister, b. Oxon, Langford
    Elizabeth Finlay Sackett, wife, 38, m. 8y, 3 ch, all living, b. London, St George's-in-the-East
    Benjamin Howard Sackett, son, 7, b. Yorks, Morley
    Winifred Sackett, dau, 6, b. Yorks, Morley
    Irene Sackett, dau, 3, b. Yorks, Todmorden.
  7. 1921 England census, The Manse, South Ockendon, Essex
    9 rooms
    George Whitefield Sackett, head, 48y 3m, married, b. Langford, Oxfordshire, Congregational Minister, Congregational Church, South Ockendon
    Elizabeth Finlay Sackett, wife, 49y 0m, married, b. St George in the East, London, home duties
    Benjamin Howard Sackett, son, 18y 2m, single, b. Morley, Yorkshire, shipping clerk, Scruttons Ltd, Stevedores & Master Porters, 16 Fenchurch Avenue, EC3
    Winifred Sackett, daughter, 16y 9m, single, b. Morley, shorthand-typist, Baptist Missionary Society, 19 Fennivals St, EC4
    Irene Sackett, daughter, 13y 11m, b. Todmorden, Yorkshire.
Sackett line9th great-granddaughter of Thomas Sackett the elder of St Peter in Thanet
1st cousin 9 times removed of Simon Sackett the colonist
ChartsDescendants of Benjamin Sackett
Generation.TreeR.3
Last Edited23 Nov 2022

Phyllis Maud Sackett

FatherRobert Moffat Sackett (1880-1951)
MotherSusan Maud Oliver (-1954)
Birth1909, West Ham, EssexG,1
Death1990, AustraliaG,2
Marriage1926, Burrowa, New South WalesGArchibald Stutsel3
Phyllis Maud Sackett, daughter of Robert Moffat Sackett and Susan Maud Oliver, was born in West Ham, EssexG, in 1909.1 She died in AustraliaG in 1990.2 Phyllis emigrated to Australia with her parents when she was just three months old, the family arriving in Sydney, New South WalesG, from London on 22 October 1910.4,5 She married in Burrowa, New South WalesG, in 1926, Archibald Stutsel.3

Child of Phyllis Maud Sackett and Archibald Stutsel

  • Kenneth Stutsel2 b. 1929 or 1930, d. before 1994

 Notes & Citations

  1. General Register Office, Online Index to Births, "Dec qtr 1909. Sackett, Phyllis Maud. Mother: Oliver. West Ham. 4a:222."
  2. Email from Sheila Phythian to Chris Sackett, 8 Dec 2010.
  3. "Australia marriage index, 1788-1949" (Ancestry transcript), "1926, Archibald Stutsel & Phyllis M Sackett, Burrowa, New South Wales, reg. 3309."
  4. "New South Wales, Australia, Unassisted Immigrant Passenger Lists 1826–1922" (Ancestry image), "Mr & Mrs Sackett & infant (13/52), 3rd class, from London, to Sydney, arr. 22 Jan 1910, SS Ophir."
  5. Website Australia, Incoming Passengers (National Archives of Australia), RMS Ophir, from London to Sydney, arr. Fremantle 13 Jan 1910, "Robert Moffat Sackett, English, adult, clerk; Susan Maud Sackett, wife; Phyllis Maud Sackett, infant."
Sackett line9th great-granddaughter of Thomas Sackett the elder of St Peter in Thanet
1st cousin 9 times removed of Simon Sackett the colonist
ChartsDescendants of Benjamin Sackett
Generation.TreeR.3
Last Edited25 Nov 2022
 

Place names

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Sackett lines

English line of Thomas Sackett the elder & other English lines
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