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One volume of genealogical references was not nearly enough. There were fifteen years of chancery suits that were unable to fit teh first volume. There were plenty of other court orders pertaining to exemptions, guardianships, removals, and illegitimate children. There were quite a few more references to include! Volume two covers much of teh same territory as teh first volume of genealogical references! included are all references to administrations and executorships on estates that were recorded in the court order books between 1793 and 1870. Additionally, chancery records containing familial information between 1855 and 1870 are included, in addition to more land records and pensions. New sources mined for this book include the records of teh Mount Pleasant Monthly Meeting, the lists of free blacks and mulattos in the county from 1837, 1839-40, and also for teh years 1856 and 1857. If you are looking for something that was not in teh first volume of genealogical references, uou'll want to look through this volume!-- back cover
Have any genealogical connections to Grayson County, Virginia? This book takes out a large portion of the work in trying to screen through the county's court and land records for all marriage references and genealogical information. The following records have been scanned for this book:*The first 12 volumes of land records for Grayson County (through 1868), plus part of the 13th volume*County Court Order Books (1793-1869), plus plea books for the Superior Court of Chancery for Wythe District to 1832*Chancery minute books through 1870*Loose chancery record papers from the Library of Virginia for years 1793-1855*Overseer of the Poor Records to 1870*Coroner's Reports*Revolutionary War pensioners*Select War of 1812 pensioners (incomplete, as the files are still being digitized)*Early deed and court records from neighboring counties in VA and NC with ties to Grayson County*Newspaper articles from VA and NC through 1870*1865 Census Returns of Black Populations (most of the return is included)*This book makes a near comprehensive scan of references regarding marriages, age, genealogical relationships and references (such as heirship), and migrations. The book does not ignore any references to slaves or free blacks as well from chancery suits, court order books, land records, and some of the Freedmen's Bureau records. Some of these records (War of 1812 pensions, Freedmen's Bureau) are not fully included, as well as the loose chancery records for 1855-1870; the length of this book is already large, and a subsequent publication will serve an extended period of time for the county's genealogical references. No will or probate records are included in this book except those which are included in the early deed books or found in chancery suits; these records will be covered in a subsequent book on the county's probate records. Served by a full name and place index, this book is necessary for any researcher with Grayson County, Virginia research prior to 1870. It saves much of the time in trying to review many repositories and resources by providing the most necessary genealogical information into one book!
Grayson County is famous in southwestern Virginia as the cradle of the New River settlements--perhaps the first settlements beyond the Alleghanies. The Nuckolls book is equally famous for its genealogies of the pioneer settlers of the county, which, typically, provide the names of the progenitors of the Grayson County line and their dates and places of migration and settlement, and then, in fluid progression, the names of all offspring in the direct and sometimes collateral lines of descent. Altogether somewhere in the neighborhood of 4,000 persons are named in the genealogies and indexed for ready reference.
This volume contains abstracts of volumes 6 and 7 of Grayson County, Virginia deeds and land records, spanning the years 1830-1838. The researcher will find direct transcriptions of land measurements and descriptions, as well as pertinent genealogical information found in each record. A full name index is found at the end of the book.
This volume contains abstracts of Book 3 of Grayson County, Virginia deeds and land records, spanning the years 1811-1818. The researcher will find direct transcriptions of land measurements and descriptions, as well as pertinent genealogical information found in each record.
This volume contains abstracts of Book 4 of Grayson County, Virginia deeds and land records, spanning the years 1818-1824. The researcher will find direct transcriptions of land measurements and descriptions, as well as pertinent genealogical information found in each record.
In 1792, Caty Sage, a 5-year old white girl was kidnapped from Virginia by Cherokees & taken to Ohio. At 17 she married the Wyandot Chief. At 28 she was widowed & recieved a big land tract. She then married a Wyandot warrior who became a chief & famous preacher. In 1843 her tribe was driven from Ohio. They traveled in wagons across Ohio then in steamboats to Kansas. She had forgotten her childhood but a brother discovered her 56 years later. (80 illustrations).