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At Lulu.com, In Author Spotlight page (link above), look under ""About"" to find additional Discount Code. Buckingham County suffered significant loss of its early court records. This scarcity of records makes this tax list transcription a valuable one. Spanning a period of 29 years (1764,1773-4,1782-92) with over 12,700 individual records, statistical tables and graphs, plus a host of other information that will illuminate the lives and social structure of the county during the late Colonial and early Federal period. Information varies by year, but the curious researcher will find much of interest here. Included are the names of the taxpayers, their taxable male cohabitants, their slaves' names, number of their slaves, horses and cattle along with other taxable items like riding carriages and acres of land. Features a 160 page index of every name, allowing the researcher to quickly assemble the information needed in successive years for genealogical, historical, sociological or demographic analysis.
"The census taker came every ten years and often missed people. The tax collector came every year and seldom missed anyone." Few Buckingham County records survived the 1869 fire, making this tax list a valuable one. Spans 11 years, 14,355 individual records, 47,180 tithes, >600 surnames, summary tables, graphs & much other information. Includes taxpayers names, male cohabitants, slaves, horses, riding carriages and ordinary licenses. The originals' format and all information preserved. Includes preface, introduction, historical background, detailed explanations of the book's features, alternate surname spellings and abbreviations, a user's guide, population estimation, appendices and a complete bibliography and reference section to aid continued research. 130 page index, 261 pages of transcribed records of every name, enabling rapid assembly of information needed from a succession of years for analysis.
Richard Nunnally was among the earliest English settlers into America and found his way into Virginia where he married in about 1666. Descendants lived mostly in the South but others live in other parts of the United States. Thomas Ferrill was born about 1728 in North Carolina and his descendants lived mostly in the South.
Edward (d. 1740) and Susannah (d. 1743) Maxey of Henrico Co., Virginia. They had eight children: Edward Jr., d. 1726, Susannah, Elizabeth, John, d. 1779, William, d. 1768, Nathaniel, d. 1779, Sylvanus, d. 1770, and Walter, d. 1791. Later family members (to 1900) migrated to Washington, Idaho, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Kansas, Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, Missouri, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Virginia, West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia.
"The Jefferson Brothers introduces Randolph Jefferson, Thomas Jefferson's only brother, and brings him out from the shadow of his famous sibling, focusing on the years during which their paths crossed. Over twelve years Randolph's senior, Thomas Jefferson stood in for the father his brother never knew, guiding his education and helping the younger man establish himself as a successful planter in central Virginia. Particularly after Thomas Jefferson's retirement from the political stage, the Jefferson brothers related as planters and slaveholders - Thomas at Monticello in Albemarle County and Randolph at Snowden in Buckingham County, Virginia. Life at Snowden, during and after the American Revolution, illuminates not only Randolph Jefferson's commonplace existence, but also the everyday world of planters in central Virginia. Additionally, The Jefferson Brothers introduces a new Thomas Jefferson, not the great statesman of monumental intellect, but the thoughtful brother and dedicated farmer." -- Back cover.
Originally published in thirteen installments of U.S. Scots magazine, Dr. Millett's account of Scottish emigration to colonial America is, arguably, the best introduction to its subject. Chapter topics include the Scottish homeland and its peoples; the push/pull of emigration/immigration; Scottish colonial settlements prior to 1707; the establishment of the principal 18th-century Scottish communities along the Chesapeake, the Carolinas and Georgia, and throughout the Middle Colonies; and the role of Scots during the American Revolution. Readers will also find invaluable narrative and statistical background information on the Scottish presence in the colonies.