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!



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This website built on November 02, 2009.



 
 
Family Sheet
HUSBAND
Name: Preston PammentMale [1] Note Born: 24 Jun 17871787-6-24 at Isleham, CambsIsleham, Cambs [2] Married: 15 Aug 18121812-8-15 at Stetchworth, CambsStetchworth, Cambs Died: Abt 18711871-1-1 at Webberville, Michigan, U.S.AWebberville, Michigan, U.S.A [4]

WIFE
Born: 19 Oct 1791 at Stetchworth, Cambs [6] Died: 10 Nov 1822 at Isleham, Cambs [7] Father: Edmund Hobbs Mother: Phoebe Norton
CHILDREN
Name: Elizabeth Pamment
Born: 13 Jan 1814 at Isleham, Cambs Died: Jun 1814 at Isleham, Cambs
Name: Susan Pamment
Born: 10 Dec 1815 at Isleham, Cambs Died: 1816 at Isleham, Cambs
Born: 1817 at Isleham, Cambs Died: 31 Jan 1901 at Webberville, Michigan, U.S.A Wife: Mercy Alchin
Name: Preston Pamment
Born: Dec 1820 at Isleham, Cambs Died: Mar 1821 at Isleham, Cambs
Name: Matilda Pamment
Born: 9 Jun 1824 Died:
SOURCES
1). hurr01.GED 2). hurr01.GED 4). hurr01.GED 5). hurr01.GED 6). hurr01.GED 7). hurr01.GED
NOTES
1). hurr01.GED hobbs.ftw The name Pamment derives from pamment , a tile or brick used for paving a malthouse floor. Possibly from the French parement, meaning a facing of stone. It is believed that thePamments were Huguenots who fled France in the 1600s, as those who came to England were mainly masons & weavers. In 1996 advertisements were in the Norfolk newspapers for the sale of pamments referring to square blocks paving stones. Isleham was the principal site for quarrying Clunch, a soft building stone particularly suitable for carving. This Clunch came from a site just south of Isleham known as The Pits, mostly populated by quarrymen and their families. In 1853, this hamlet consisted of one room homes, no sanitation and dirt floors where about 500 people lived, in what was described by the Cambs FHS, as unimaginable deprivation and squalor. Some homes did not even have one blanket and the staple winter food was turnips. The Cambridge Chronicle ran an appeal for charity for these people to counter a cholera epidemic that was rampant in Cambridgeshire in 1853.

											
											

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