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The Bacon, Crockett, and Donovan families were some of the early settlers in the mid to late 1800s in the Puget Sound area, including
present-day Bellingham and Whidbey Island.
Frances Bacon Roberts is a descendent of the Crockett and
Donovan families who came to Puget Sound in the early 1850s and
1873, respectively. Born in 1907, Roberts grew up in Bellingham,
attended the University of Oregon, and then taught for one year.
She married in 1934 and then worked as an Employment Service
interviewer. She wrote "The Crocketts, the Donovans and Their
Times: A History of Two Pioneer Families" sometime after 1972.
Bertha Crockett Jenner grew up in Seattle and married Ernest
Jenner in 1901. She spent many summers of her youth on Whidbey
Island with her grandmother and extended family where she heard
many of the stories of her family related in "Over Uncertain
Trails," written in 1940.
George Bacon was the first of his family to arrive. His
memoir, "Booming and Panic-ing on Puget Sound" written circa
1932, describes his experiences in the town of Whatcom from 1889
to 1897. Bacon, born in 1867, was a resident of Illinois before
he moved to Whatcom. During the years covered by his account he
engaged in land speculation, a logging enterprise, and lastly in
the loan business. He died in 1937. The three authors are
related: George H. Bacon, the author of the published memoir, is
the father of Frances Bacon Roberts. Bacon’s wife is a first
cousin of Bertha Crockett Jenner. |