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Heinrich Nagel (Henry Nail) (1771-1827), son of Gottlieb Nagel (Caleb Nail) and his wife Margaret of Döffingen, Germany, married 1798 in Rowan Co., North Carolina, Mary Keller (1776-1857), the daughter of Jacob and Barbara Keller. Henry Nail died in Addison Twp., Shelby Co., Indiana. They were parents of thirteen children. Gottlieb Nagel (Caleb Nail) arrived in Pennsylvania in 1754 where he spent the next twenty years. By about 1774 he had left Pennsylvania and moved with at least four of his children to North Carolina. Thomas Ray (1762-1829) was the son of William Ray of Wake Co., N.C. He was born in Granville Co., North Carolina. He married in Wake County Elizabeth Pearce (ca. 1764-1844) in 1783. She was the daughter of Nathan and Nance Weston? Pearce. Family members migrated to Shelby County, Ind. in the early 1820s.
Henry Nail and Mary Keller were married in about 1798. They had twelve children. Their first son, John, was born in 1799 in Rowan County, North Carolina. In about 1820 John married Martha Ray, the daughter of Thomas Ray and Elizabeth Pierce. In 1822 and 1823 the two Nail families migrated to Shelby County, Indiana. John's family and his widowed mother moved to Montgomery County, Illinois in 1852. Descendants and relatives lived in North Carolina, Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky, Iowa, Missouri and elsewhere.
Christian Nagel II (1693-1751) married twice, and immigrated in 1751 from Germany (via Rotterdam) to Berks County, Pennsylvania. Descen- dants lived in Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota and related families.
A doomed lord, an emergent hero, an array of bizarre creatures, and an ancient royal family plagued by madness and intrigue--these are the denizens of ancient, sprawling, tumbledown Gormenghast Castle. Within its vast halls and serpentine corridors, the members of the Groan dynasty and their master Lord Sepulchrave grow increasingly out of touch with a changing world as they pass their days in unending devotion to meaningless rituals and arcane traditions. Meanwhile, an ambitious kitchen boy named Steerpike rises by devious means to the post of Master of the Ritual while he maneuvers to bring down the Groans.In these extraordinary novels, Peake has created a world where all is like a dream: lush, fantastical, vivid; a symbol of dark struggle. Accompanying the text are Peake's own drawings, illustrating the whole assembly of strange creatures that inhibit Gormenghast.Breathtaking in its power and drenched in dark atmosphere, humor and intrigue, The Gormenghast Trilogy is a classic, one of the great works of 20th century British literature.