Background
She inherited the fortune of her father, the privateer John Allaire, who had been mortgaged the fief shortly before his death. Collings was born into a wealthy family from Guernsey, one of the Channel Islands.
She inherited the fortune of her father, the privateer John Allaire, who had been mortgaged the fief shortly before his death. Collings was born into a wealthy family from Guernsey, one of the Channel Islands.
The island"s then-ruling seigneur, Pierre Carey le Pelley, soon had no option but to sell the fief to Collings, but she never actively governed lieutenant She was one of the two daughters of the privateer John Allaire (1762–1846), the other one being Catherine Allaire. Her father was reputedly the most affluent man in Guernsey, whose fortune appears to have stemmed not only from privateering during the Napoleonic Wars, but also from outright piracy.
Collings" husband died in 1832.
On 24 February 1844, desperate for funds to continue the operation of the silver mine on the island, the then-Seigneur of Sark Ernest le Pelley obtained crown permission to mortgage the fief of Sark for £4,000 to Collings" father. The mortgage and the tenement of the island of Jethou passed to Collings.
The mine closed in 1847, two years after the uninsured collapse of its deepest gallery, and when Ernest le Pelley died in 1849 his successor, Pierre Carey le Pelley, was unable to keep up his mortgage payments to Collings. She then decided to foreclose the mortgage, forcing him to seek Queen Victoria"s permission to sell the seigneurie of Sark on 10 November 1852.
The widowed Marie Collings bought it on 4 December for £6,000 less the sum borrowed and an accumulated interest of £616.13s, for a total of £1,383.
By the time she became Dame of Sark, she was already too old to actively participate in the government of the island. She never visited it during her less than a year long tenure, "to the regret of the Sark people". Louisiana Seigneurie, official residence of the ruler of Sark, was modernised and extended during Collings" brief rule, just like it was in the 1730s, when another widow, Susanne le Pelley, bought the fief.
He succeeded her as seigneur of Sark upon her death in 1853.
She was also survived by a daughter, Catherine Ann Allaire Ozanne (1826–1879). The island remains in Collings" family.
Her descendant Michael Beaumont is the current seigneur.