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         Craft Ellen:     more books (100)
  1. Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom; or, the escape of William and Ellen Craft from slavery
  2. Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom: or The Escape of William and Ellen Craft from Sl by William Craft, 2007-03-14
  3. Running A Thousand Miles For Freedom Or The Escape Of William And Ellen Craft From Slavery by William Craft, Ellen Craft, 2010-05-23
  4. Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom Escape of William & Ellen Craft from Slavery by WiliamCraft&ElenCraft, 1999
  5. Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom; or, the escape of William and Ellen Craft from slavery
  6. Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom; or, the escape of William and Ellen Craft from slavery by Ellen Craft, 2010-07-06
  7. Running A Thousand Miles For Freedom Or The Escape Of William And Ellen Craft From Slavery by William Craft, Ellen Craft, 2010-09-10
  8. Running A Thousand Miles For Freedom Or The Escape Of William And Ellen Craft From Slavery by William Craft, Ellen Craft, 2010-09-10
  9. Rethinking the Slave Narrative: Slave Marriage and the Narratives of Henry Bibb and William and Ellen Craft by Charles J. Heglar, 2001-05-30
  10. Kids Around the World Create!: The Best Crafts and Activities from Many Lands by Arlette N. Braman, 2009-04-09
  11. 2006 Calendar Of Crafts For Life by Ellen's Calendars, 2005-06-30
  12. Artistry with Rubber Stamps (Lothian Craft Series) by Ellen Eadie, 1996-04
  13. Got Crafts? 25 Things to Do with a Milk Carton by Ellen Warwick, 2008-05-06
  14. Aunt Ellen's Holiday Almanac by Ellen Coleman, 1977

61. Capital City Craft Studio Ellen Tobey-Holmes
Beautiful and brilliant hand painted silk pouches. Each one is unique in it s color combinations. Hand made in New York state.
http://cccraft.zoovy.com/product/ETH
Ellen Tobey-Holmes
Beautiful and brilliant hand painted silk pouches. Each one is unique in it's color combinations. Hand made in New York state.
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62. Papercutting Designs By Ellen Brown
Papercutting Designs by Ellen Brown. The information on this page comes straight from At various times in the history of the Craft, mass production by
http://www.ao.com/ellenbrown/papercutting.html

Home
Papercutting Designs Contact ... Other Information
Papercutting Designs by Ellen Brown
The information on this page comes straight from the book Papercutting Designs by Ellen Brown. This book can be purchased from the author . The information is used with permission. This book has some information on how to do papercutting, as well as many designs. I have included many of the designs in these pages. Please keep in mind the author's intentions with these designs: you may use them for personal enjoyment, but please don't use these designs for sale.
Foreword
In the years I have been cutting paper, people have often asked where I got my designs. When I explained that they were all original, some have asked if they could get copies of them. Modern copying and editing methods make it practical to provide many of them in a form which can be copied. Pages of this book may be laid flat on a copying machine and enlarged to suit the user. In the web world, you can print the displayed page, or manipulate the saved image with a variety of graphics editors, and then finally print it to use as a pattern. It is hoped that people who use the book will learn to develop their own designs.

63. Daring Escape Of Ellen Craft: The Yellow Book Road
Author Cathy Moore Ellen and William Craft were slaves determined to escape to freedom. Their daring plan involved Ellen traveling as a white male slave
http://www.yellowbookrd.com/Merchant2/merchant.mvc?Screen=PROD&Product_Code=0876

64. Books By William And Ellen Craft
Author William and Ellen Craft. Entry 585 Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom. plain text format Gnu gzip format Unix Compress format
http://www.gutenberg.lib.md.us/index/by-author/cr0.html
Author: William and Ellen Craft

65. Sam Sloan's Big Combined Family Trees - Pafg655 - Generated By Personal Ancestra
Ellen Craft Dammond and daughter Margaret Preacely have generously donated family Dammond and Preacely are descendants of William and Ellen Craft,
http://www.anusha.com/pafg655.htm
Sam Sloan's Big Combined Family Trees
William MAUDUIT was born about 1186 in Of, Hanslope, Buckinghamshire, England. He died in Apr 1257. He married Alice De NEWBURG about 1211 in Of Hanslope, Buckinghamshire, England. Alice De NEWBURG was born in 1196 in Of, Hanslope, Buckinghamshire, England. She died before 1263. She married William MAUDUIT about 1211 in Of Hanslope, Buckinghamshire, England. They had the following children: F i Isabel MAUDUIT was born about 1214. She died before 1268. M ii William MAUDUIT was born about 1220 in Of, Hanslop, Buchinghamshire, England. He died on 8 Jan 1268. Edmund (Le Boteler) BUTLER was born about 1271 in Of, Kilkenny Castle, Kilkenny, Ireland. He died on 13 Sep 1321 in , London, Middlesex, England. He was buried on 9 Nov 1321 in , Gowran, Kilkenny, Ireland. He married Joan FITZTHOMAS. Joan FITZTHOMAS was born about 1281 in Of, Fermoy, Cork, Ireland. She died on 2 May 1320. She married Edmund (Le Boteler) BUTLER. They had the following children: M i James Le BOTILLER was born in 1304. He died on 6 Jan 1338. William BUTLER BOTILER was born on 11 Jun 1274 in Of, Wem, Shropshire, England. He died on 14 Sep 1335. He married Ela HERDEBURGH before 1298.

66. Property
Property is loosely based on the story of Ellen Craft. Along with William Craft, Ellen boarded a train heading for the north.
http://www.culturewars.org.uk/2003-02/property.htm
archive about us links contact current
Buy this book

Property
Valerie Martin Stuart Simpson Property is loosely based on the story of Ellen Craft. A slave in the American south, Ellen's story is that of an heroic escape to freedom. Along with William Craft, Ellen boarded a train heading for the north. Passing herself off as a white man with William posing as her slave, the pair were pursued by slave catchers; men who had as much respect for the law as they had for human dignity, and who resorted to any means necessary to earn their bounty. Property is only loosely based on Ellen's story, however. Or rather it is based on a character who played an important bit part in Ellen's story, her owner. This story is not an heroic story. Manon, the narrator of Property , was given a girl called Sarah (aka Ellen) by her mother as a wedding present. Her mother's idea was that Sarah would manage Manon's new family home. Manon doesn't like her home, her husband, her mother, plantation life, and she certainly doesn't like Sarah. It appears to Manon that Sarah has a will of her own, and this appears threatening. Martin describes her novel as an attempt to show the perversity of the oppressor feeling victimised by the oppressed. And this certainly is perverse. Manon even feels that the little bastard redhead is an attempt by Sarah to get at her.

67. Publications About Boston Women
Craft, Ellen and William. Running A Thousand Miles for Freedom. http//etext.lib.virginia.edu/toc/modeng/public/CraThou.html Crawford, Deborah.
http://www.bwht.org/publications_women.html

Acknowledgements

Resources

About Us

Who We Are
...
Buy the book!
Publications About Boston Women:
A Selected List Books
Alcott, Louisa May. Hospital Sketches . Bessie Z. Jones, ed., Harvard University Press, 1960.
Blanchard, Paula. Margaret Fuller: From Transcendentalism to Revolution . Addison-Wesley, 1987.
Cantarow, Ellen. Moving the Mountain: Women Working for Social Change [Florence Luscomb] . Feminist Press, 1980.
Clifford, Deborah. Mine Eyes Have Seen the Glory: A Biography of Julia Ward Howe . Little, Brown, 1979. Cott, Nancy F. The Bonds of Womanhood: Woman’s Sphere in New England, 1780-1835 . Yale University Press, 1977. Craft, Ellen and William. Running A Thousand Miles for Freedom. http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/toc/modeng/public/CraThou.html Crawford, Deborah. Four Women in a Violent Time: Anne Hutchinson, Mary Dyer.... Crown, 1970. Cromwell, Adelaide M. The Other Brahmins: Boston’s Black Upper Class, 1750-1950 . University of Arkansas Press, 1994. Davidson, Margaret. Helen Keller’s Teacher [Annie Sullivan] . Scholastic, 1996.

68. AAP Biography: Craft, E. & W.
William and Ellen Craft were two fugitive slaves who sought refuge in Boston after escaping their master, Robert Collins of Macon, Georgia, in December 1848
http://americanabolitionist.liberalarts.iupui.edu/craft.htm
Ellen and William Craft
William and Ellen Craft were two fugitive slaves who sought refuge in Boston after escaping their master, Robert Collins of Macon, Georgia, in December 1848. Two agents for Collins, Willis H. Hughes (?-1851) and John Knight, arrived in Boston in October 1850 intending to recapture the Crafts under the new Fugitive Slave Law. The Boston Vigilance Committee and local black community took immediate action to defend the fugitives. Each time Hughes and Knight approached the Crafts, the southerners were arrested, once for slander and once for kidnapping. Large crowds of blacks besieged the agents’ hotel and shadowed their movements. This harassment, coupled with thinly veiled threats against their lives delivered by the Reverend Theodore Parker, eventually unnerved Hughes and Knight and persuaded them to return to Georgia empty-handed. The Crafts soon after fled to England. Lib. , 6 December 1850, 24 January 1851; R.J.M. Blackett, "Fugitive Slaves in Britain: The Odyssey of William and Ellen Craft," Journal of American Studies , 12:41-44 (April 1978); Donald Martin Jacobs, "A History of the Boston Negro from the Revolution to the Civil War" (Ph.D. diss., Boston University, 1968), 273-74.

69. IngentaConnect Content Not Found
Ellen Craft and the Case of Salomé Muller in Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom. Author WARDROP, DANEEN 1. Source Women s Studies, Volume 33, Number 7,
http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/tandf/gwst/2004/00000033/00000007/art00004

70. Craft Family
Henry is a direct descendant of Nannie Ellen Craft. Ellen S. Craft (18651947) did not marry (living with her mother in 1910, Lewisville, NC)
http://www.fmoran.com/craft.html
Craft Family
Update: In an e-mail dated June 8, 2001 Henry Land identified the parents of Thomas and Vachel Craft as Nathan Craft and Betsey Cooper. Henry is a direct descendant of Nannie Ellen Craft. Henry's e-mail address is: hland@vnet.net
First Generation
Children of Nathan Craft and Betsy Cooper
Thomas Craft (1802-1869) m. Summerville Hudson (ca. 1801-after 1880)
Vachel Craft (1804-1866) m. Mary Payne (1810-1872) Thomas Craft married Summerville Hudson in 1823, Surry Co., NC (she was born in VA about 1801). Vachel Craft (1804-1866) married Mary Payne in Davidson County NC in 1828. Both are buried at Sharon Methodist Church, Forsyth County, as is Mary Payne Craft. In 1880 Summerville Craft, widow of Thomas, is living next to Vachel's son Stephen W. Craft. Vachel's sons Albert and Junius Craft were witnesses to Thomas Craft's will. These associations suggest a close family connection.
Second Generation
Children of Thomas Craft and Summerville Hudson
Richard L. Craft (1824-1893) m. Jincy C. Harper

71. The Daring Escape Of Ellen Craft: African-American History Book
Ellen Craft escaped slavery by disguising herself as a white man. The Daring Escape of Ellen Craft tells her story for young readers (grades 13).
http://www.cathy-moore.com/ecbook.html
The Daring Escape of Ellen Craft is very closely based on the autobiography of Ellen and William Craft. It includes an afterword that describes what Ellen and William did when they were free; it also has a timeline of Ellen's life. 48 pages with color illustrations, for grades 2 through 5. Awards Carter G. Woodson Honor award for the most distinguished social science books for young readers that depict ethnicity NCSS/CBC Notable Social Studies Trade Book for Young People Storytelling World Awards Honor Title 2003 Best Children's Book, Children's Book Committee of Bank Street College Reviews New readers will appreciate the fast-paced adventure, simple language, large typeface with plenty of space for detailed illustrations, and a relatively obscure story set in a familiar historical time. Though this series is written for new readers, Moore manages to include some difficult and important angles to the adventure. She allows the young reader to see clearly the differences between the way William has to live as he travels as a slave and how Ellen, posing as a white man, lives....Young readers will be inspired by this tale of personal courage in the face of prejudice. Kirkus Reviews, February 2002

72. Ellen Craft: Online Activities And Lesson Plans For African-American History
Kids activities, lesson plans for grades 13, and links on African-American history. Based on the story of Ellen Craft, who escaped slavery by disguising
http://www.cathy-moore.com/ellencraft.html
The story In 1848, Ellen Craft escaped slavery by disguising herself as a white man. For four days, she convinced ticket agents, guards, and fellow passengers that she was a white gentleman travelling north for medical treatment. Her husband went with her as her slave. Ellen's daring act brought her and her husband to Philadelphia and to a future in the abolitionist movement. The book The Daring Escape of Ellen Craft tells the story in easy language for new readers. It was written by Cathy Moore, illustrated by Mary O'Keefe Young, and published in 2002 by Carolrhoda, a division of Lerner. Learn more about the book The site On this site, kids can learn more about slavery through multimedia links, and teachers and parents can find lesson ideas that use the book.
Please your comments and questions. Credits Ellen disguised herself as a sickly white gentleman.

73. Brookfield Craft Center
Kiln Fired Glass with Mary Ellen BuxtonKutch Chunky Treasure Bracelets with Ellen Hess Spiral Beaded Nets with Ellen Hess. Weekend of March 5 - 7
http://www.craftweb.com/org/brookfld/wrkshops.htm
Brookfield Workshops
Winter 1999 Classes and Workshops
Weekly Classes Starting January 18 Jewelry Making PM with Anne Marie Ciuffini
Intro. to Jewelry AM with Lessley Burke
Jewelry/Enameling AM with Joanne Conant
Ceramics on the Wheel AM with Kristin Muller
Ceramics on the Wheel PM with Kristin Muller
Intermediate Clay with Kristin Muller
Chair Seat Weaving with Dee Wagner
Wire Jewelry Techniques with Tony Haruch
Table Loom Weaving with Barbara Dull
Glass Fantasy with Linda Banks
Stonecarving with Andy Davis Bas Relief with Bruce Wallace Handmade Stools with Larry Hendricks Video Productions with Claire Mortilla Basic Photography with Mike Serao Weekend of January 16 - 17 Shoji Screen with Toshio Odate Repousse with Sue Sachs Mural Painting with Virginia Teichner Mosaics with Jeff Havill Weekend of January 23 - 24 Introduction To Bowl Turning with Andrew Barnum Silversmithing with Raychel Wengenroth Handcoloring Photography with Laurie Klien Advanced Polymer with Steven Ford Basic Glassblowing I with Chris DeMott Pop-Up Books with B.J. Greenberger

74. CWF - Ellen Oppenheimer
“Peralta Quilt,” made by artist Ellen Oppenheimer with kindergarten students Both the Renwick and the American Craft Museum have important quilts by her
http://www.creativeworkfund.org/pages/bios/ellen_oppenheimer.html
David Abel Opal Palmer Adisa Seyed Alavi Lawrence Andrews Ray Beldner Claudia Bernardi Gilbert Blacksmith Roberto Borrell Sam Bower Ricardo A. Bracho Elise Brewster Christian Burns Susan Cervantes Ann Chamberlain Ellen Sebastian Chang Kate Connell Margaret Crane E.G. Crichton Sharon Daniel Christopher Daniels Sergio De La Torre Meera Desai Millicent Dillon Heather Drohan glenda drew Rinde Eckert Erik Ehn Harrell Fletcher Brian Freeman Michael Fried Gloria Frym Lisa Gray-Garcia Birgit Gehrt Joe Goode CWF LEAD ARTISTS: ELLEN OPPENHEIMER GRANT AMOUNT: $30,035 A FUND FOR NEW WORK
DEADLINES

HOW TO APPLY

CWF RECIPIENTS
...
s e a r c h
VARIABLE STARS: QUILTS AND CHILDREN IN THE LIBRARY
Project Title: Variable Stars: Quilts and Children in the Library
Recipient Organization: Oakland Public Library
Fiscal Sponsor: Friends of the Oakland Public Library
Lead Artist: Ellen Oppenheimer
Genre and Date Awarded: Visual Arts, June 2000
To be completed: June 2004 Over a three-year period, quilter

75. Mouse Craft Or Greeting Card | Valentine's Day | Preschool Lesson Plan Printable
Mouse Craft and preschool lesson plan printable activities alphabet letter M Mouse Paint and Mouse Count by Ellen Stoll Walsh are wonderful for toddlers
http://www.first-school.ws/activities/shapes/animals/mouse_hearts.htm
Home Search Printer friendly page Mouse Craft or Greeting Card - Heart Shapes
Valentine's Day
Preschool Lesson Plan Printable Activities
Themes/
Activities Instructions and Suggestions Materials Craft or Greeting Card: Hearts Mouse
Alphabet Activity: Letter M: Mouse
Animal/Wild/
Pet/Farm/
Forest:
Visit the Mouse Section for related activities
Colors: Pink/Magenta for Valentine's Day or Gray/Pink or any color the craft is made
Number/Math: Activities: Counting, Sizing, Sorting *Valentine's Day *June-Zoo Month Picture Book Recommendations Ages 2.5 + to 6 Activities: The mouse is an animal that is a certain favorite for young children. Visit the mouse activity section for various related activities that include online stories letter M Mouse activities, and more to tie in to the activities below. The children will have fun making an easy and fun craft or greeting card of a mouse almost entirely made with and during the process many skills can be addressed. Many other printable support materials and links to related activities are provided. Let's get started.

76. Bookshare.org - Books By Author
Here is a list of our books by Ellen Craft . There is 1 book by this author in our collection. These are books 0 through 1 of 1.
http://www.bookshare.org/web/BooksByAuthor.html?author_id=2444

77. William And Ellen Craft@Everything2.com
William and Ellen CraftWilliam and Ellen Craft, Running a Thousand Miles to Freedom. Preface OR, THE ESCAPE OF WILLIAM AND Ellen Craft FROM SLAVERY.
http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1204149

78. William And Ellen Craft
William and Ellen Craft, Running a Thousand Miles to Freedom. Part II. 81. AFTER my wife had a little recovered herself,
http://www.lehigh.edu/~dek7/SSAWW/writCraft3.htm
William and Ellen Craft, Running a Thousand Miles to Freedom
Part II
AFTER my wife had a little recovered herself,
she threw off the disguise and assumed her own
apparel. We then stepped into the sitting room, and
asked to see the landlord. The man came in, but
he seemed thunderstruck on finding a fugitive
slave and his wife, instead of a "young cotton planter
and his nigger." As his eyes travelled round the
room, he said to me, "Where is your master?" I
pointed him out. The man gravely replied, "I am
not joking, I really wish to see your master." I pointed him out again, but at first he could not believe his eyes; he said "he knew that was not the gentleman that came with me." But, after some conversation, we satisfied him that we were fugitive slaves, and had just escaped in the manner I have described. We asked him if

79. My Craft Books
Craft books by Kelly Milner Halls. Ellen was an advocate for kids at risk and the homeless and I learned so much from her. She was an amazing woman and
http://www.kellymilnerhalls.com/index.2ts?page=crafts

80. An Interview With Ellen Dugan By Jill Johansen, Publicist Published By New World
Article from New Worlds titled An Interview with Ellen Dugan published in issue It is an uncomplicated Craft that is worked with downto-earth supplies
http://www.llewellyn.com/archive/nw/790/
Articles from the Archives of New Worlds
Today's Date: September 10, 2005 An Interview with Ellen Dugan
Feature Story New Worlds issue: NW052
by Jill Johansen, Publicist
NW: How did you become involved with and active in the Craft? Where did you start your path?
NW: Why did you decide to become a writer and how did you settle on writing about Wicca and magick? Who has influenced your work, not only as a writer, but as a Witch?
ED: It wasn’t so much a decision as something I’ve always done. I carried around three-ring binders filled with my own stories and ideas. As I grew older, it was just a matter of finding my niche. I started out writing contemporary romance — no kidding — and I became frustrated with that right away; it’s a tough market to break into. My goal was to get something in print before I turned 40. Finally, I decided if I was ever going to succeed then I should write about what I knew and loved — the Craft and the natural world. I started out writing articles for the Llewellyn annuals and had so much fun and positive feedback with those that I dove into writing my first book, Garden Witchery. The writers who have influenced me the most as a Witch are Scott Cunningham, Claire Nahmad and Doreen Valiente. People may find it surprising that the late Erma Bombeck has influenced me as a writer. Erma was honest and hilarious. When I read her stuff, I just shriek with laughter.
NW: Society’s perception of Witches generally tends to be negative. How do you feel about this and what do you think can be done to change it?

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