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Includes entries for maps and atlases.
The personal property tax lists for the year 1787.
Bath has a small number of people, and a considerable share of this small number is a new element. To many individuals of the latter class a history of the county will appeal very little. For the above reasons we confine ourselves to a presentation of the more striking and important features in the story of this county. But if, in a commercial sense, this county seemed only a moderately promising field for a local history, it remains very true that Bath is one of the best known counties of the Old Dominion. It is one of the older counties in the Alleghany belt, and it lies on a natural highway of travel and commerce. The story of its evolution is one of much interest. -- Foreword.
A genealogy of the descendants of David Cail born about 1717 in Virginia. He married Parthenia or Alberdina. His will was probated 17 July 1787 in Augusta County, Virginia.
John Thomas Galford (1757-1818) was the son of Thomas Galford who immigrated from England prior to the Revolutionary War. He married Naomi V. Slaven and they had at least ten children. From Virginia they moved to Ohio. Descendants also lived in Iowa, West Virginia, Michigan, Minnesota, California and elsewhere.
The Glazebrooks succeeded in extracting those documents pertaining to Hanover County that survived the burning of Richmond in April 1865 and that were not published in William Ronald Cocke's Hanover County Chancery Wills and Notes. The surviving materials consist of a great many deeds, wills, inventories, accounts, letters, depositions, etc., pertaining to Hanover County for the colonial and early Federal periods. Many of the suits, in particular, stem from the period prior to the French and Indian War. One of the richest sources examined by the Glazebrooks were the files of the United States District Court at Richmond. With references to nearly 5,000 early inhabitants of Hanover County, this hard-to-find sourcebook will unquestionably be in great demand among researchers.
A genealogy of the descendants of Richard Morris born about 1740 in Ireland and died in 1805 in Bath County, Virginia and his wife Jane Callison. They were married in Nov 1761 in Augusta County, Virginia. They had at least eleven children. Most of the children migrated to Ohio.