Hampton, Dorothy Frances

87 12/28/1922 8/9/2010 Dorothy Frances Hampton, of
Portland, died at her home Aug. 9, 2010, with her family
gathered around her. She was 87. A memorial service will be
held at 1 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 25, 2010, in Bishop Funeral
Chapel, Pendleton. Interment will be in Olney Cemetery,
Pendleton. She was born Dec. 28, 1922, to John Patrick "Jack"
and Helen Harrington Sweet in Prescott, Ariz. Dorothy
graduated from grammar school in Phoenix, Ariz.; from Globe
High School in Globe, Ariz., in 1940; and from Arizona State
College in Flagstaff, Ariz., with a degree in English, in 1945.
She served in World War II in the U.S. Navy WAVES (Women
Accepted for Voluntary Emergency Services). She married
Robert S. "Bob" Hampton July 3, 1948, in University
Presbyterian Church in Berkeley, Calif. They built a home and
started a family, rearing four daughters and becoming a part
of the community of Orinda, Calif., where they were charter
members and early officers in the Lafayette-Orinda
Presbyterian Church. Her parents, Jack and Helen Sweet were
lifelong members of the family household. In 1956, Mr. and
Mrs. Hampton moved with their family to Livermore, Calif.,
where they established their business, LOX Equipment Co., a
corporation for the manufacture of liquid oxygen tanks for
transport and storage. From the beginning, Mrs. Hampton was
an officer and advisor in the company, which flourished with
sales to every major O2 producer in the U.S., and several
foreign companies. In 1964, the Hamptons created Almond
Circle, a unique subdivision that featured a pool, tennis
courts, and owner approved standards. Mrs. Hampton was a
devoted mother to all her girls, seeking opportunities for
each, and arranging for special schooling and training for their
beloved Jeannie, a special needs youngster. In 1977, the
Hamptons built and operated, the Hampton Courts Racquet
Club in Portland. Those facilities are still used today by the
Oregon Episcopal School. In 1987, the Hamptons moved to
Portland for their retirement. Mr. and Mrs. Hampton traveled
in the U.S. and abroad, especially enjoying attending the
Oberammergau Passion Play in Germany, and the famed
Wimbledon tennis tournament in England in 1980. Mrs.
Hampton was a member of the First Presbyterian Church in
Portland, the Portland Symphony, and American Contract
Bridge League. She was a talented singer and participated in
church choirs and madrigals all her life. She played tennis and
bridge regularly throughout her married life. Mrs. Hampton is
survived by daughters, Cherry (Bill) Moore, Jeannie Hampton of
Portland, and Kathryn (Bill) Schjelderup of Salt Lake City;
granddaughters, Sara Wood (Michael Gray) and Lisa Wood of
Portland, and Mia, Myra, Ani, and Ari Schjelderup of Salt Lake
City. Mrs. Hampton was predeceased by her husband in 2006;
and daughter, Helen Hampton Wood Lycklama in 2003.

Published in The Oregonian on August 24, 2010