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I'm
Rob Salzman of
4130 SW 117th Ave # 415 Beaverton, OR,
97005 USA.
Welcome to e-familytree.net. E-familytree.net is my personal genealogy hobby site.
The data contained here has been gathered through 20 years of genealogy. Some small
part of it is my original research, but most of it has been shared with me.
It is important to understand:
This is SPECULATIVE DATA. Most of it is unverified. Use it for hints and pointers, but DO
YOUR OWN RESEARCH!
You can leave a comment on each page here. If you want to be notified
when this site changes, you can leave contact information here. I can
always be reached at the mailing address above, or by email at genealogy at e-familytree dot net.
This website built on November 02, 2009.
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Family Sheet
HUSBAND
Name: Donald G. DammondMale
Born: 22 Nov 19141914-11-22
Married:
Died: 7 Jul 19941994-7-7
WIFE
Born: (suppressed / living)
Married: (suppressed / living)
Died:
Father: Henry Kempton Craft
Mother: Maude Trotter
CHILDREN
Born: 26 Oct 1944
Died: Feb 1972
Wife: Bluette Lambelet
Born: (suppressed / living)
Died:
Husband: Noel Agler Day
NOTES
2). From article in The Diaspora , African American Studies, University of California at Berkeley, Fall 1997, with picture of Ellen Craft Dammond Ellen Craft Dammond and daughter Margaret Preacely have generously donated family papers, pamphlets, books, photographs and memorabilia to the Bancroft Library. Dammond and Preacely are descendants of William and Ellen Craft, among the most renowned of runaway slaves. THE FAMILY HERITAGE The story of William and Ellen Craft is nothing short of amazing. The daring couple fled from Georgia to Boston, with Ellen garbed as a gentleman and husband William masquerading as her valet. With the passage of the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850, the Crafts traveled onward to England. where they lived comfortably for 18 years. They became highly successful, indeed inveterate lecturers on the abolition circuit, and helped sway public opinion against slavery. Ellen and William had five children, some of whose descendants remain in England to this day.
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