Llewellyn Traces


Book Description










Dixon and Amburn Family History


Book Description




Duncan Descendants of Frost Bottom, TN


Book Description

William Duncan was born in 1630 in Scotland. He married Susan Haldane who was born in 1635 in Scotland. His son William Duncan was born in 1659 in Scotland. He married Margaret McMurdo, who was born in about 1720 in Virginia. Their son William Robert married Ruth Rawley or Raleigh in 1722. Their son Benjamin Duncan was born in 1752 in Virginia. He married Mary Davis who was born around 1756 in 1776. They had 8 children. Their daughter Juanna (Juda/Judy) was born in 1788. She had 12 children. Her son Thomas R. was born in 1829. He married Reeny Low who was born in 1824 in 1843. Their son Wilson L. who was born in 1849. He married Sarah "Salley" Patterson who was born in 1855 in 1871. Their son Paul was born in 1922, He married Mattie Evoit Kirby in 1943. They had 2 children. Their daughter Margorie Marie was born in 1944. He married Thomas Crisp who was born in 1944 in 1966 and divorced him in 1980. She then married Phillip Wayne Byrd in 1983.







History of Scott County, Virginia


Book Description

Brimming with information, this text begins with Scott County territory as claimed by the French prior to 1763. The final chapters include interesting facts and figures from a survey made in 1930. Filling the pages between with great variety, Addington shares an abundance of knowledge.




Douglas County, Nebraska Marriages, 1854-1881


Book Description

Windsor, Connecticut was one of the three towns that united to form the Colony of Connecticut in the 17th century. A great deal of data concerning Windsor's early inhabitants can be garnered from this work, which is based on records in the possession of the Connecticut Historical Society. By far the largest source transcribed for this publication is the Matthew Grant, or "Old Church," Record, 1639-1681. Comprising the first half of the volume, the Matthew Grant Record consists of several thousand births, marriages, and deaths for Windsor families throughout much of the 17th century. Though not an "official record" of the town, it nonetheless is one of the most important sources of Windsor "vital records" in existence. Various addenda to the Matthew Grant Record are appended to the back of the book.The balance of the volume is made up of a variety of records, each of which has the virtue of placing a particular colonist in Windsor during the 17th or early 18th century, namely: (1) Town Votes, which speak loudly on the methods of town governance and the persons who were assigned to carry out tasks; (2) Lists of Freemen, 1669, 1703; (3) Documents Relating to the Church Controversy of 1669-1679, which affected towns throughout Connecticut; and (4) A Ratable List of Persons and Estates, 1686, representing the second longest record in the volume and disclosing the real and personal property (with the assessed values) for each property owner in town.This book is also available on our CD Settlers of Augusta County, Virginia.