While her sisters became teachers, she entered employment with the Crompton family in 1913-14, "devoting three hours each afternoon to her duties." To her mother she contributed a sum, of support, of $300 per year.
Dorothy was lost, along with the Cromptons, in the sinking of the Lusitania, appearing on the Monday, May 10 New York Times' list of lost Americans. Her body was not recovered, but a letter providing details of her physical appearance has survived. In it she is described as being five feet, with blue eyes, brown hair, stub nose, freckles, and twenty-six years old.. Her mother was granted $7500.00 for loss of life, and $1267.00 for lost personal property in November 1923.
Dorothy Allen has maintained a high posthumous profile as governess to the ill-fated Crompton family, but few biographical details of her life are readily available beyond her employment record.
While her sisters became teachers, she entered employment with the Crompton family in 1913-14, "devoting three hours each afternoon to her duties." To her mother she contributed a sum, of support, of $300 per year.
Dorothy was lost, along with the Cromptons, in the sinking of the Lusitania, appearing on the Monday, May 10 New York Times' list of lost Americans. Her body was not recovered, but a letter providing details of her physical appearance has survived. In it she is described as being five feet, with blue eyes, brown hair, stub nose, freckles, and twenty-six years old.. Her mother was granted $7500.00 for loss of life, and $1267.00 for lost personal property in November 1923.
Dorothy Allen has maintained a high posthumous profile as governess to the ill-fated Crompton family, but few biographical details of her life are readily available beyond her employment record.
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