Genealogy "How To" 
Tracing Your Virginia Ancestry

American Indian Genealogy

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Site Index


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Bibliography of Essential Sources

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Getting Started in Genealogy ONLINE

by William Dollarhide


Getting Started in Genealogy ONLINE is so basic that it brings the world of Internet genealogy into instant focus. Designed as a beginner's guide, its 64 pages pack more clout than any 64 pages ever written on the subject of online genealogy. If you ever wanted to trace your family tree online, this book will help you do it. The object of the book is to reduce the process of genealogical research to its most basic elements, enabling the raw beginner to be brought up to speed in no more time than it takes him to read a handful of pages. At the same time, it is a handy resource for the more experienced genealogist, providing in one convenient place the names and web addresses of all essential record repositories.

It begins with a How to Start section outlining a unique seven-step system for gathering facts essential for any genealogical project: interviewing family members, contacting relatives, writing for death records, following up on death records, census searching, name searching, and Family History Library Searchingthe building blocks of genealogical research.

A Where to Find More section follows, giving the websites of the most important genealogy look-up sites, lineage-linked sites, genealogical software/GEDCOM sites, and a list of the various branches of the National Archives and their web addresses.

Next there is a comprehensive listing of Genealogy Resource Centers in the States, giving the websites of the most important genealogical collections in libraries, archives, and genealogical societies for all states, followed by a Research Help for the Addicted section, with a listing of research firms, genealogy magazines and newsletters, and the most important genealogy reference books.

At the back of the book are Master Forms used to keep track of the information gathered, including a Family Group Sheet, a Pedigree Chart, and a Family Data Sheet, all designed for making photocopies as needed.

In a world running on information overload, it's a relief to find all the right stuff in just a handful of pages!

William Dollarhide is the author of over ten books on genealogy and the editor of the popular magazine Genealogy Bulletin. His new book Getting Started in Genealogy ONLINE is a thoroughly revised and updated version of an earlier book called Genealogy Starter Kit.

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Jamestowne Ancestors 1607 - 1699
Commemoration of the 400th Anniversary of the Landing at James Towne 1607

By Virginia Lee Hutcheson Davis


The year 2007 marks the 400th anniversary of the founding of Jamestown, the first permanent English colony in America. From its tentative start as a small fort on an island in the James River, with scarcely more than 150 inhabitants, Jamestown became a model for the colonization of the New World. Its foundersplanters and indentured servants alikeestablished a formula for immigration and settlement, and laid the foundation for the leapfrog expansion into the hinterland. Because of its unchallenged position in American history, the 400th anniversary of Jamestown is a milestone, and celebrations are planned throughout 2007.For our part as publishers we are offering several books in commemoration of the founding of Jamestown, and the one announced here, Jamestowne Ancestors 16071699, by noted Virginia genealogist Virginia Lee Hutcheson Davis, reveals the names of the very people who established the colony, first under the auspices of the Virginia Company of London and then under King James I and the later Stuart kings of England.Thus Jamestowne Ancestors is a list of approximately 1,000 persons who are known to have owned land or resided on Jamestown Island between 1607 and 1699. They are listed here alphabetically along with their known dates of residence in Jamestown, their official position in the colony (landowner, burgess, etc.), and their place of origin or county of residence. In addition, the book contains details concerning the settlement of the island, a brief history of Jamestown plantations and hundreds and their evolution into the early counties of Virginia, and pen and ink drawings, together with maps of the fort and city of Jamestown.The 1608 map of James Fort and the diagram of the site show the original settlement and the progression of present-day archaeological work undertaken there. Other maps show the growth of the colony beyond Jamestown Island throughout the seventeenth century, first as shires, then as plantations and hundreds. From this you can determine the areas where the early settlers selected their home sites and plantations. Together with other facts assembled here, this information can be used as a starting point in establishing eligibility for membership in a number of hereditary societies that require proof of descent from an early Virginia ancestor.

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Adventurers of Purse and Person Virginia 1607-1624/5
Fourth Edition. Volume One, Families A-F

John Frederick Dorman, editor



This is Volume One of the fourth edition of the most celebrated compendium of family histories in the entire field of Virginia genealogy (see also Volume Two, Families G-P and Volume Three, Families R-Z). Prepared under the auspices of the Order of First Families of Virginia, 1607-1624/5 in anticipation of the 400th anniversary of the founding of Jamestown, and edited by the foremost authority on Virginia genealogy, John Frederick Dorman, this new edition extends the lines of descent of the founding families of Virginia from four generations to six, bringing most families down to the Revolutionary or early Federal periods.

The purpose of the book is to establish descents--through the sixth generation--of the approximately 150 individuals who can be identified as (1) Adventurers of Purse (i.e. stockholders in the Virginia Company of London) who either came to Virginia in the period 1607-1625 and had descendants or who did not come to Virginia within that period but whose grandchildren were residents there; or (2) Adventurers of Person, 1607-1625 (i.e. immigrants to Virginia) who left descendants. With roots deeply embedded in the social fabric of the United States, descendants of these original settlers today number in the hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions, and like descendants of the Mayflower passengers, they claim an ancestry that is unique in American history.

The foundation for this work is the famous "Muster" of January-February 1624/25-- essentially a census taken by the Royal Commission which succeeded the Virginia Company to determine the extent and composition of the Jamestown settlements. In the Muster (which is reproduced in entirety here in Volume One), the name of each colonist appears with the location of his home and the number in his family, together with information about his stock of food, his supply of arms and ammunition, his boats, houses, and livestock. In all, about 1,200 persons are named in the Muster, of whom approximately 150 are shown here to have left descendants to the sixth generation. Most scholars agree that the total population of Jamestown between 1607 and 1625 was about 7,000, so by 1624/5 only about one-seventh of the colonists had survived the punishing conditions of the Virginia wilderness.

In addition to the Muster, this work builds on the investigations of dozens of scholars, correcting, revising, and supplementing the best genealogical scholarship of the past half century. New discoveries, newly available information, and a further reevaluation of evidence concerning previously accepted relationships have led, in some instances, to wholesale changes in the accepted genealogies. In consequence, this fourth edition brings together the results of all the most recent scholarship on these families, expanding the limits of what is presently known and opening up possibilities for research beyond the sixth generation.

Families
Far too large to be published in a single volume, the new fourth edition is to be published in three volumes (see Volume Two for families G-P). This first volume covers founding families alphabetically from A-F, and includes the following:
Andrews, Bagwell, Baley-Cocke, Barkham-Jenings, Barne, Bates, Bayly, Beheathland, Bennett (Edward), Bennett (Samuel), Bennett-Chapman, Bernard, Bibby, Bickley, Bland, Boyce, Boyle-Mountney, Branch, Buck, Burwell, Bush, Calthorpe, Calvert, Carsley, Carter, Chaplaine, Chew, Chisman, Claiborne, Clay, Clements, Cobb, Codrington, Cole, Cope, Cox, Crew, Croshaw, Crump, Curtis, Davis, Dawson, Delk, Digges, Edloe, Epes, Evelyn, Farrar, Fisher, Fleet, Flood, Freeman.

Highlights

Volume One covers a total of fifty-two families that were established either by settlers of Virginia prior to 1625 or members of the Virginia Company whose descendants came to Virginia later.
Of these fifty-two families, seven have not been treated in previous editions and thirty-six are traced to the sixth generation.
Over 7,800 individual descendants resident in Virginia (or subsequently in other states) are identified.
Family accounts are supported by 10,000 footnote citations to manuscripts or published records.
The index volume contains 19,000 name, place, and subject entries, many with multiple page citations.
John Frederick Dorman
John Frederick Dorman has edited The Virginia Genealogist since 1955. He has also compiled seventy-eight volumes of abstracts of colonial Virginia records and fifty-one volumes of Revolutionary War records, and as if that were not enough to establish his credentials as Virginia's foremost genealogist, he has also compiled and published genealogies of the Robertson, Farish, Preston, Claiborne, Epes, and Sebrell families. A Certified Genealogist since 1965, and a former President and Executive Director of the Board for Certification of Genealogists, Mr. Dorman is a Fellow of the prestigious fifty-member American Society of Genealogists and a Fellow of the National Genealogical Society and Virginia Genealogical Society. With his long and distinguished career in Virginia genealogy, Mr. Dorman now brings his experience to bear on Virginia's most celebrated collection of genealogies.

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Adventurers of Purse and Person Virginia 1607-1624/5. Fourth Edition.
Volume Two, Families G-P

John Frederick Dorman, editor


This is the second of three volumes that comprise the fourth edition of the landmark Adventurers of Purse and Person, the most widely respected of all "first families" studies and the actual starting point of American genealogy (see also Volume One, Families A-F and Volume Three, Families R-Z).

Individuals ranging from G-P (Gaither to Purifoy) identified in the work must have been resident in Virginia during the period 1607-1624/25 or members of the Virginia Company of London in order to be designated "adventurers," and it is their descendants alone who qualify for membership in one of the most distinguished hereditary societies in America, the Order of First Families of Virginia. Adventurers of Purse and Person is their story, a collection of genealogies of all adventurers with proven descents into the sixth generation.

Families Included:
Gaither
Gaskins
Gilbert
Gookin
Gosnold
Granger
Graves
Gray
Grendon
Gundry
Hallom
Hampton
Hansford
Harris (John)
Harris (Thomas)
Harwood
Holt
Hooe
Hopkins
Johnson-Travis
Jordan (Samuel)
Jordan (Thomas)
Kent
Kingsmill
Knott
Laydon
Lloyd
Lovelace-Gorsuch
Lukin
Lupo
Macock
Martiau
Mason
Mathews
Menefie
Montague
Moone
Moore
Offley
O'Neil-Robins
Osborne
Pace
Parramore
Pead
Peirce
Peirsey
Perry
Pierce-Bennett
Price
Price-Llewellyn
Purifoy

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Adventurers of Purse and Person Virginia 1607-1624/25.
Fourth Edition. Volume Three, Families R-Z

John Frederick Dorman, editor



The final volume of the most important work ever to appear on Virginia genealogy!

This is the third and final volume of the legendary Adventurers of Purse and Person, a monumental compendium of genealogies of the founders of Virginia during the formative period 1607-1625 and the culmination of more than twenty-five years of research by the widely respected Virginia genealogist John Frederick Dorman.

It contains accounts of forty-six pre-1625 Virginia settlers or members of the Virginia Company of London whose families later came to the colony, with thirty-six of them traced to the sixth generation. Individuals ranging from R-Z (Reynolds to Zouche) identified in the work must have been resident in Virginia during the period 1607-1624/25 or members of the Virginia Company of London in order to be designated "adventurers," and it is their descendants alone who qualify for membership in one of the most distinguished hereditary societies in America, the Order of First Families of Virginia. Adventurers of Purse and Person is their story, a collection of genealogies of all adventurers with proven descents into the sixth generation.

FAMILIES (R-Z)

Reynolds
Robins
Rolfe
Rookings
Royall
St. Leger
Salter-Weld
Savage
Scarburgh
Sharp
Sharp-Baugh
Sheppey
Slaughter
Smith (Arthur)
Smith (Richard)
Smith (Roger)
Southey-Harmar-Littleton
Spencer
Stephens
Strachey
Swann
Tatum
Taylor-Cary
Thorowgood
Tooke
Townshend
Trussell
Utie
Utie-Bennett
Vassall
Waters
West
West (Anthony)
Whiting
Wilkins
Williams
Willoughby
Wood
Woodhouse
Woodliffe
Woodson
Woodward
Wroughton
Wyatt
Yeardley
Zouche


HIGHLIGHTS

Volume Three covers a total of 46 families that were established either by settlers of Virginia prior to 1625 or members of the Virginia Company of London whose descendants came to Virginia later.
Of these 46 families, 36 are traced to the sixth generation.
Over 6,500 individual descendants resident in Virginia (or subsequently in other states) are identified.
Family accounts are supported by nearly 10,000 footnote citations to manuscripts or published records.
The index contains 20,000 name, place, and subject entries, many with multiple page citations.

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Southside Virginia Families, Volume I

John Bennett Boddie


John Bennett Boddie's books on the early families of the Virginia lower Tidewater and Southside regions are among the most frequently consulted works on that area. The first volume in this valuable two-volume set contains lineages of families from the early counties of Isle of Wight, Prince George, and Surry. The families are: Allen, Bailey, Ballard, Barker-Bradford-Taylor, Batte, Bell, Bennett-Pierce, Bishop-Stokes, Blunt, Boyce-Scott-Tatum, Braswell, Biggs, Browne, Burges, Cato, Champion, Clark, Cocke, Cooke, Corker, Dixon, Eaton, Faulcon, Flake, Fort, Goodrich, Gordon, Graves-Hancock, Hamblin-Hamlin, Hancock, Hill, Hines, Howle, Irwin, Jennings-Hill, Johnston, Jones, Jordan, Lanier, Lewis, Long, Massengill, Norfleet, Overton-Harris-Day, Pitt, Plummer, Rudulph, Sitgreaves, Sledge, Smith, Sweeney, Tyrus, Weldon, West, and Whitmel.

The index refers to well over 10,000 names.

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Southside Virginia Families, Volume II

John Bennett Boddie

The second volume of the set (see Item 531) covers more families from the early counties of Virginia's Lower Tidewater and Southside regions. Lineages are for the families of Arrington, Bailey, Barham, Barker, Branch, Chappell, Cloud, Cocer, Cofer, Coffer, Coker, Collier, Copher, Darden-Durden, Edmunds, Foliot, Green, Gurgany, Hargrave, Hart, Harvin, Herbert, Hill, Holt, Judkins, Lane, Lucas, McKain, Macon, Mann, Norwood, Perry, Philips, Rogers, Sorrell-Earle-Warren, Stover, Taylor, Tyas-Tyus, Westbrook, and Worsham-Marshall. With an index in excess of 10,000 names.


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Southside Virginia Genealogies

John W. Pritchett


Southside Virginia Genealogies is a compilation of several hundred family histories, each of which, typically, extends back to the colonial period in Southside Virginia. This remarkable CD compilation actually began life as an Internet site--Virginians.com--and it has racked up more than a million visitors since its inception in 2001. Since then it has grown to 4,000 pages and continues to be a popular destination for anyone researching Southside lineages. However, it has recently been configured to include only first generation data, so this new CD version of Southside Virginia Genealogies is now the only means of gaining access to the full range of information on all generations.

Based on the multi-generational family history of the author, John W. Pritchett, and the histories of various allied families, it includes hundreds of genealogies and nearly 400 autobiographical narratives of residents of Southside Virginia-- the area of Virginia south of the James River, east of the Blue Ridge Mountains, and north of the North Carolina border.

Each family topic contains information on several generations of descendants organized in an easy-to-follow format, with sources carefully arranged in 56,700 endnotes. Altogether Southside Virginia Genealogies contains more than 67,000 citations, including references to about 10,000 marriages, 9,000 wills, 10,000 deeds, 3,800 land patents and grants, and 5,000 census reports, with notes on more than 1,000 members of the Virginia legislature, 230 members of Congress, and hundreds of veterans of the Revolution and the Civil War.

The full-name index alone contains more than 90,000 entries, and all this information is instantly accessible via the popular Adobe Acrobat Reader platform. In addition, the CD contains four appendixes that identify about 45% of the residents appearing in specific county tithable lists of colonial Henrico, Chesterfield, and Amelia counties.

The following is a list of the principal surnames covered:

Abbott, Abernathy, Abney, Adams, Allen, Anderson, Archer, Atkinson, Austin, Ba(I)ley, Bagley, Bagwell, Baker, Ballow, Banister, Barber, Barrow, Baskerville, Bass, Batte, Batty, Baugh, Beauchamp, Belfield, Berkeley, Bevill, Biddlecomb, Billups, Binford, Blackman, Blanton, Blunt, Boisseau, Booker, Borum, Bott, Bottom, Bouldin, Bowman, Branch, Brasseur, Briggs, Brodnax, Browder, Brown(e), Bruce, Burton, Butler, Cabanis, Cabell, Carleton, Carr, Carrington, Carter, Cave, Chappell, Cheatham, Chisum, Christopher, Clack, Claiborne, Clarke, Clary, Clay, Clement, Cocke, Cole, Cook, Cousins, Cox, Craddock, Crawley, Cross, Dance, Daniel, DeJarnette, Dennis, Dickenson, Dickson, Dortch, Dupuy, DuVal, Echols, Edloe, Edmundson, Edwards, Eggleston, Elam, Eldridge, Ellington, Elmore, Embry, Epes, Evans, Farmer, Farrar, Featherstone, Feild, Finney, Fitzgerald, Flood, Ford, Fowlkes, Fox, Friend, Fry, Garland, Gee, George, Giles, Gilliam, Gillintine, Glascock, Goode, Green(e), Gunn, Guthrey, Hall, Hammock, Hampton, Hancock, Hardaway, Harris, Harrison, Harvey, Harwood, Haskins, Hatcher, Hatchett, Hicks, Hil(l)sman, Hill, Hooper, Howlett, Hubbard, Hudson, Hunnicutt, Isbell, Jackson, Jacobus, Jefferson, Jeffress, Jennings, Jeter, Johns, Jones, Jordan, Kelly, Kennon, Knight, Knowles, Laffoon, Lambert, League, Lewis, Ligon, Lilley, Lockett, Logwood, Lound, Mabry, Maclin, Mallory, Manly, Manly, Marchbanks, Markham, Marshall, Mayo, McGehee, Mitchell, Moody, Moore, Morgan, Morton, Moseley, Motley, Mumford, Munford, Muse, Nash, Neal, Nicholson, Oldham, Oliver, Osborne, Overton, Owen, Parker, Patram, Pemberton, Penick, Penick, Perkinson, Perrin, Peterson, Petty, Price, Pride, Pritchett, Pulliam, Quarles, Raines, Randolph, Rawlings, Read, Roberts, Robertson, Robinson, Rogers, Rowlett, Ruffin, Russell, Scarborough, Scott, Seay, Sheppey, Sherman, Simmons, Skerme, Skipwith, Smith, Snead, Sparrow, Stewart, Stone, Stratton, Stuart, Swepson, Sydnor, Tanner, Tarpley, Tatum, Thweatt, Tinsley, Traylor, Trent, Turpin, Tyus, Vaden, Vaughan, Walker, Wallace, Walthall, Ward, Watkins, Watson, Webber, Westmoreland, White, Wil(l)son, Wilkes, Winn, Wood, Woodson, Wooldridge, Worsham, Wynne, and Yarbrough.

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Early West Virginia Settlers

Format: CD


Made up of images of the pages of fourteen West Virginia reference works published by the Genealogical Publishing Company, and accessed by a single electronic index, this Family Archive CD contains the records of approximately 200,000 early West Virginia settlers. The reference works comprise wills, land grants, marriage records, military records, family histories, and local histories, and include many of the most important books ever published on West Virginia genealogy. Here, for example, you"ll find authoritative name lists and service records of West Virginians in the Revolution; an enumeration of the 25,000 residents of the thirteen West Virginia counties that were formed before 1800; and several volumes comprising genealogies of the pioneer families of various districts of West Virginia; plus a variety of books that cover slightly out-of-the-way subject matter such as architecture, topography, church history, and railroads. The following books are included on this CD:

*West Virginia Estate Settlements
*West Virginians in the American Revolution
*West Virginia Revolutionary Ancestors
*The Soldiery of West Virginia
*Genealogies of West Virginia Families
*Genealogies of Some Early Families in Grant and Pleasant Districts, Preston County
*Roane County, West Virginia Families
*Greenbrier Pioneers and Their Homes
*Pioneers and Their Homes on Upper Kanawha
*Capon Valley: Its Pioneers and Their Descendants
*Cabell County Annals and Families
*Early Records, Hampshire County, Virginia
*Mason County, West Virginia Marriages, 1806-1915
*Marriage Records of Berkeley County, Virginia, 1781-1854

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Genealogies of Virginia Families from The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography


This disc contains images of the pages of all five volumes of Genealogies of Virginia Families published originally by GPC in 1981. The five volumes together contain all the family history articles that appeared in VMHB from its inception in 1893 to 1977. The articles document more than 300 families from all parts of the Old Dominion, and the majority trace lines of descent through seven or eight generations, with the data spanning a time period of two or three centuries or more and naming over 75,000 individuals. Family history articles from VMHB have always been in great demand, and for that reason they were originally gathered together, indexed, and reprinted in five large and relatively expensive volumes. They are now available on this CD-ROM disc at a fraction of the original price--and with the simplicity of a single index.

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Genealogies of Virginia Families from The William and Mary College Quarterly
With: Virginia Gleanings in England, by Lothrop Withington
 


This CD contains images of all five volumes of Genealogies of Virginia Families from the William and Mary College Quarterly and the single volume of Virginia Gleanings, which had originally been published serially in The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. Of the three periodicals which were originally devoted to Virginia genealogy and history, the William and Mary College Quarterly was the most scholarly. The five volumes offered here contain every family history article published in the Quarterly from 1892 to 1943, when genealogical contributions ceased. No fewer than 500 genealogies referencing over 100,000 individuals were published, and these, together with a substantial number of Bible records, appear in this CD in entirety, with an alphabetical index. Models of excellence, these genealogies are essential for any serious research in Virginia genealogy. Also included on this CD is Lothrop Withington"s Virginia Gleanings, which contains abstracts of 17th- and 18th-century English wills and administrations relating to Virginia and Virginians. Bearing reference to heirs and issue, family members, property, bequests, places of residence, and dates of emigration, the "gleanings" shed light on the English origins of thousands of early Virginians.

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Genealogies of Virginia Families from Tyler's Quarterly
With: Virginia Colonial Abstracts, by Beverley Fleet


This new Family Archive CD contains images of the pages of all four volumes of Genealogies of Virginia Families from Tyler"s Quarterly and the multi-volume Virginia Colonial Abstracts by Beverley Fleet. The four-volume collection from Tyler"s Quarterly contains all 350 family history articles published in the magazine from its inception in 1919 until its demise in 1952. It further includes Bible records and wills, as well as a very important group of articles published under the title "Copies of Extant Wills from Counties Whose Records Have Been Destroyed."

Fleet"s Virginia Colonial Abstracts, originally published in thirty-four paperback volumes which were subsequently consolidated into three large volumes by GPC, contains an enormous variety of genealogical information pertaining to Tidewater Virginia, such as vital records of birth, marriage, and death, tax lists, court orders, militia lists, wills, and deeds. The result of extensive research in county courthouses, municipal and state archives, and private collections, this work contains some of the earliest records known to exist. The two collections refer in total to approximately 130,000 individuals.

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Genealogies of West Virginia Families
Genealogies of West Virginia Families is a consolidation of all the family history articles to have appeared throughout the complete run of The West Virginia Historical Magazine Quarterly, from 1901 to 1905. Though a rich source of West Virginia genealogical data, this short-lived periodical is very scarce and, moreover, has never before been indexed. Clearfield Company is delighted to rectify both of these shortcomings by reprinting the genealogical meat of the magazine and by adding a complete name index of more than 5,000 entries. If your West Virginia ancestor came from one of the following main families, Genealogies of West Virginia Families is a work you won't want to overlook: Cameron, Clendinen, Doddridge, Duke, Elting-Shepherd, Hansford, Henderson, Henshaw, Hite, Houston, Lewis (Samuel and John), Lovell (Joseph), McWhorter (Henry and John), Miller, Morris (William), Nourse (James), Patrick (Virginia Harvie), Ruffner (Peter and Joseph), Rumsey (James), Shepherd, Stribling-Hereford, Teays, VanMeter, Van Metre-DuBois-Shepherd-Hite, and Yates-Aglionby.

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The Three Charters of the Virginia Company of London
With Seven Related Documents: 1606-1621. With an Introduction by Samuel M. Bemiss

The Virginia Company of London governed the affairs of Jamestown for 18 years. This work, a verbatim transcription of the three successful charters defining the scope and authority of the Company and listing its stockholders in England and Virginia, sheds light on the budding libertarian and entrepreneurial thinking which helped to sire the first British colony in North America.

The 10 documents transcribed for this publication are: The First Charter, April 10, 1606; Articles, Instructions and Orders, November 20, 1606; Ordinance and Constitution, March 9, 1607; The Second Charter, May 23, 1609; Virginia Council Instructions to Sir Thomas Gates, May 1609; Virginia Council Instructions to Sir Thomas West, 1609/10; The Third Charter, March 12, 1612; Virginia Company Instructions to Sir George Yeardley, November 18, 1618 (sometimes called "The Great Charter"); Virginia Company Instructions to Governor and Council in Virginia, July 24, 1621; and Treasurer and Company, An Ordinance and Constitution for Council and Assembly in Virginia, July 24, 1621.

The text of the charters is taken from a contemporary copy discovered among the Chancery Rolls of the Public Record Office in London shortly before this work's original publication, which marked the first time the charters had been published as a unit. The accompanying documents serve to illustrate some of the practical issues pertaining to the administration of the colony, and, taken together, this collection may be construed as the Virginia "constitution" for the colony's first 15 years of existence.
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Virginia Colonial Records
This is the largest and most complete collection of Virginia colonial records ever assembled on CD-ROM, representing the combined efforts of several generations of talented and dedicated genealogists. Anyone with suspected colonial Virginia ancestry will almost certainly find something of interest here in the form of original source records, manuscripts, lineage records, or family histories, for this Family Archive CD contains a treasure-trove of records that identify many of Virginia"s earliest immigrants and settlers.

From records of immigration, headright records, land and tax records, and early census records, to records of the colonial militia, vital records of birth, marriage, and death, and court records of wills, deeds, and administrations, this CD has it all--English origins, dates and places of immigration, places of residence in the new colony, names of wives, children, and other family members, occupations, ages, military service records--it even has the names of the earliest landholders in Virginia, lists of Virginia"s original immigrants and settlers, and the names of those who were listed in the colony"s first census of 1623/24. It also boasts a comprehensive list of Virginia"s colonial militiamen, giving data pertaining to each soldier"s place of birth, age, residence, occupation, and physical description, and a huge collection of records extracted from England"s Public Record Office establishing the colonists" family connections with the mother country and their former places of residence, as well as deeds, wills, and other records recorded in English courts.

Naming nearly a quarter-million Virginians living in the colony between 1607 and 1776, this new CD is yet another collaborative effort between GPC and Broderbund; like other such products it is designed to simplify genealogical research by combining the images of pages of selected volumes published by GPC with a single electronic name index which allows you to search all the volumes quickly and effortlessly. Thus a search on a single name will turn up all references to that name found in any of the following volumes:

* Virginia"s Colonial Soldiers, by Lloyd Bockstruck

* Virginia"s Colonial Militia, 1651-1776, by William Armstrong Crozier

* List of the Colonial Soldiers of Virginia, by Hamilton J. Eckenrode

* Cavaliers and Pioneers: Abstracts of Virginia Land Patents and Grants, 1623-1666, by Nell Marion Nugent

* Early Virginia Immigrants, 1623-1666, by George Cabell Greer

* Virginia Colonial Abstracts (34 vols.), by Beverly Fleet

* Virginia Gleanings in England, by Lothrop Withington

* Personal Names in Hening"s Statutes at Large of Virginia, by Joseph J. Casey

* English Duplicates of Lost Virginia Records, by Louis Des Cognets, Jr.

* The Quit Rents of Virginia, 1704, by Annie. L. W. Smith

* Some Emigrants to Virginia, by William G. Stanard

* The Colonial Virginia Register, by William G. and Mary N. Stanard

* Colonial Records of Virginia, Committee of the Virginia State Library

Featuring records of every description, from supposedly "lost" records to records of "burnt counties," and from records of forced transportation to the invaluable records of "headright" used in support of land acquisition, this CD is an unrivalled tool in the researcher"s arsenal of colonial reference works. Imagine! A quarter-million of the most hard-to-find names on a disc no larger than the palm of your hand, at a fraction of the price of the original volumes!

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Virginia Genealogies and Biographies

 
This two-CD set encompasses a huge collection of Virginia genealogies and biographies, the majority of which were compiled by recognized authorities from source records dating from the 1600s to the early 1900s. Based on books originally published by the Genealogical Publishing Company that feature biographies, lineage records, pedigrees, genealogical sketches, and full-blown family histories, this CD identifies some 310,000 individuals in meticulously crafted studies that span as many as three centuries. Until now this body of material has been totally beyond the reach of the ordinary researcher, available only at a handful of public and university libraries.

Drawing liberally on private letters, diaries, and manuscripts, as well as church records, vital records, court records, wills and administrations, books, newspapers, and personal reminiscences, this is one of the best-documented collections of Virginia genealogies and biographies ever assembled. Intended as a one-stop resource, the collection contains hundreds, perhaps thousands, of separate genealogies, tracing descendants through six, seven, and eight generations. In general, the genealogies are augmented by will abstracts, obituary notices, manuscript entries, parish vestry and register notations, marriage notices, newspaper excerpts, gravestone inscriptions, and a great variety of biographical matter.

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Virginia Genealogy Records (4-CD bundle)


Over the years, we have published hundreds of collections of Virginia source records and compiled genealogies: Books like Lyon Tyler's massive 5-volume Encyclopedia of Virginia Genealogy and John Gwathmey's definitive Catalogue of Revolutionary Soldiers and Sailors of the Commonwealth of Virginia. Clayton Torrence's celebrated index, Virginia Wills and Administrations, 1632-1800, is just one of our many definitive sourcebooks that provide Virginia family historians with authoritative time-saving research aids. In fact, most of our Virginia books are the pre-eminent books on their subjects.

You'll find the Tyler, Gwathmey, and Torrence volumes plus 40 other titles (many of them multi-volume works) on the four CD-ROM publications included in this set. With these CDs you can acquire an outstanding collection of Virginia titles at a fraction of the cost of the books imaged and indexed on them, as well as a savings of $50.00 off the cost of the individual CDs.

Below are detailed descriptions of the four CDs that make up this phenomenal set:

Colonial Virginia Source Records identifies 350,000 individuals in a unique collection of colonial Virginia source records, namely, wills and administrations, marriage records, family histories, tax records, newspaper abstracts, and military records. In all, this CD contains images of the pages of 10 books originally published by GPC. Among the 10 are some of the most important Virginia reference books ever published, many of them classics!

Virginia Genealogies and Biographies, a two-disc CD set, identifies some 310,000 individuals in meticulously crafted studies that span as many as three centuries. Until now this body of material has been totally beyond the reach of the ordinary researcher, available only at a handful of public and university libraries. Drawing liberally on private letters, diaries, and manuscripts, as well as church records, newspapers, and personal reminiscences, this is one of the best-documented collections of Virginia genealogies and biographies ever assembled.

Virginia Colonial Records, which names nearly a quarter-million Virginians living in the colony between 1607 and 1776, is the largest and most complete collection of Virginia colonial records ever assembled on CD. From records of immigration, headright records, land and tax records, and early census records, to records of the colonial militia, vital records of birth, marriage, and death, and court records of wills, deeds, and administrations, this CD has it all--English origins, dates and places of immigration, places of residence in the new colony, names of spouses, children and other family members, occupations, ages, military service records--it even has the names of the earliest landholders in Virginia, lists of Virginia's original immigrants and settlers, and the names of those who were listed in the colony's first census of 1623/24. This rich CD is derived from 13 prominent Virginia genealogical reference works.

Virginia Military Records: Colonial Wars, Revolutionary War, War of 1812 contains a definitive collection of books dealing with the military records of Virginia in the colonial wars, the Revolutionary War, and the War of 1812. Naming 275,000 members of the militia and the established army, the books included on this CD are the undisputed favorites in their respective fields. From Lloyd Bockstruck's Virginia Colonial Soldiers, to John Gwathmey's Historical Register of Virginians in the Revolution, to the monumental Muster Rolls and Payrolls of Virginia Militia in the War of 1812, the contents of this CD cover the entire spectrum of Virginia's early military history.

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Virginia Marriage Records
from The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, the William and Mary College Quarterly, and Tyler's Quarterly
 
Virginia Marriage Records contains almost every list of marriages published in three esteemed periodicals--The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, the William and Mary College Quarterly, and Tyler's Quarterly. The combined lists--fully indexed--comprise some 20,000 marriage records, most of which derive from bonds, ministers' returns, licenses, registers, ministerial records, and newspapers. In the aggregate they form the largest collection of Virginia marriage records ever published. In addition to a handful of miscellaneous lists of marriages, the Virginia counties represented in the work, with the marriage dates of coverage, are as follows: Albemarle, 1800-46; Amelia, 1735-55; Augusta, 1749-73; Bedford, 1759-1800; Brunswick, 18th century; Buckingham, 1784-94; Campbell, 1800-10; Caroline, 1797-1852, 1822-45; Charles City, various dates; Charlotte, 18th century; Cumberland, 1806-09; Dinwiddie, 1819, 1832, 1833; Elizabeth City, 1689-1702, 1715-21; Essex, 1692-95; Fairfax, 18th century; Gloucester, 1777-78; Goochland, 18th century; Greensville, 1781-1827; Halifax, various dates; Hanover, 1780-81; Henry, 1778-1795; Isle of Wight, 1773-74, 1785-86; King George, 1768-76, 1787-1849; Lancaster, 18th century; Lunenburg, 18th century; Middlesex, 1740-1803; Norfolk, 1809-29; Northampton, 18th century; Northumberland, 1735-1795; Orange, 1753-76, 1756-72, 1772-1818; Pittsylvania, 1767-80, 1775-79; Prince Edward, 18th century; City of Richmond, 1801-13; Richmond, 18th century; Rockbridge, 1783-88; Rockingham, 19th century; Spotsylvania, 1722-50, 1726-44; City of Staunton, 1802-50; Surry, 1772-91; Sussex, 1754-83; Westmoreland, 1691- 92, 1788; and York, 1772-92, 1794-98.

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Virginia Military Records
from The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, the William and Mary College Quarterly, and Tyler's Quarterly

This work is essentially a compilation of articles that deal wholly or in part with muster and pay rolls, court order books, pension records, land claims, depositions, petitions, militia lists, orderly books, and service records. The majority of the articles focus on the records of the colonial and Revolutionary War periods, but there also are some that relate to the War of 1812. In the aggregate these comprise data of almost unequaled variety and magnitude. Produced over the years by an army of specialists, they were spread throughout the three periodicals named in the title. This varied and immense body of data is brought together in a handy and well-indexed volume, which will make its use by the researcher very easy.

As concerns the contents of the volume, the researcher will find colony- or state-wide articles on Virginia military records from the French and Indian War, the Revolution, the War of 1812, and the Civil War. Still other articles concern Virginia Revolutionary Pensioners, the Virginia Society of the Cincinnati, and Virginia Surgeons and Surgeons' Mates Granted Land Before 1836. Of greatest importance, perhaps, is the collection of articles that are each associated with a single Virginia county; namely, Albemarle, Amelia, Amherst, Augusta, Bath, Brunswick, Buckingham, Caroline, Charles City, Charlotte, Dinwiddie, Greenville, Isle of Wight, King George, King William, Middlesex, Montgomery, Nelson, Northampton, Northumberland, Pittsylvania, Powhatan, Prince Edward, Richmond, Surry, and York.

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Virginia Military Records: Colonial Wars, Revolutionary War, War of 1812


Virginia was the stage for some of the most momentous events in American military history. In fact, American military history began with the establishment of the Virginia militia in the seventeenth century, and Virginia"s achievements in the various theaters of war can be traced in a straight line to the decisive Battle of Yorktown more than a century later. Immediately after the Revolution, and both during and after the War of 1812, Virginia continued its historic contributions in men and materiel, culminating, of course, in the great battles of the Civil War. So enormous was Virginia's contribution in manpower, in fact, that a record of early Virginia soldiers is nothing less than a directory of Virginia"s early residents!

This Family Archive CD contains a definitive collection of books dealing with the military records of Virginia in the colonial wars, the Revolutionary War, and the War of 1812, all published originally by the Genealogical Publishing Company. For persons interested in tracing the descendants of Virginia soldiers and who wish to understand the magnitude of Virginia"s contribution to the American cause, this CD is invaluable. Naming 275,000 members of the militia and the established army, all of whom can be instantly traced by means of a single electronic index, this CD is one of the most powerful and versatile tools in the entire arsenal of early American genealogical research.

The books included on this CD are the undisputed favorites in their respective fields, and collectively they provide an unparalleled body of genealogical research materials. From Lloyd Bockstruck"s Virginia Colonial Soldiers to John Gwathmey's Historical Register of Virginians in the Revolution to the monumental Muster Rolls and Payrolls of Virginia Militia in the War of 1812, they cover the entire spectrum of Virginia"s early military history. Based primarily on original record sources such as muster rolls, payrolls, bounty land warrants, and pension applications, it is possible to follow a soldier"s entire military career from the date and place of his enlistment, to the battles and skirmishes he was engaged in, to his mustering out, while also gleaning details regarding his age, place of birth, place of residence, occupation, marital status, rank, bounty land awards, and names of spouse and children. The following is a list of the books included on this CD:

*Virginia"s Colonial Soldiers
*Virginia Colonial Militia, 1651-1776
*List of the Colonial Soldiers of Virginia
*Revolutionary War Records. Virginia Army and Navy Forces with Bounty Land Warrants for the Military District of Ohio, etc.
*Virginia Soldiers of 1776. 3 vols.
*Historical Register of Virginians in the Revolution
*Records of the Revolutionary War
*History of Virginia"s Navy of the Revolution
*Catalogue of Revolutionary Soldiers and Sailors of the Commonwealth of Virginia
*Muster Rolls and Payrolls of Virginia Militia in the War of 1812. 2 vols.
*Virginia Military Records from The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, The William and Mary College Quarterly, and Tyler"s Quarterly

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Virginia Militia in the War of 1812
Two Volumes


Virginia Militia in the War of 1812 is a two-volume work containing the names of some 40,000 Virginia militiamen. The first volume was originally published in 1851 by the Virginia Auditor's Office, and the second, much larger, volume was published a year later as a "Supplement." When it was originally published the first volume carried the title Pay Rolls of Militia Entitled to Land Bounty Under the Act of Congress of Sept. 28, 1850; while the second volume was designated Muster Rolls of the Virginia Militia in the War of 1812, Being a Supplement to the Pay Rolls.

Both volumes have now been reprinted under the simple title Virginia Militia in the War of 1812, and an index--entirely lacking in the original publications--has been added to each volume for the ease and convenience of the researcher. Since the rolls were printed somewhat haphazardly--neither in chronological order nor in regimental order, and certainly not in alphabetical order by soldier's name--these new indexes are absolutely indispensable.

Copied from rolls in the Auditor's Office at Richmond, the two volumes have identical formats: both are arranged by company, under which are columns which give the soldier's name, rank, the time of his service in months and days, and a final "Remarks" column which sometimes provides alternate readings of the soldier's name, names of substitutes, and service notes, including such details as whether the soldier was discharged, transferred, or had deserted. In many cases the militia companies are identified in relation to the Virginia county in which the company was raised, making research in early Virginia records just a touch easier.

Both of these volumes have lain in relative obscurity until now--probably for want of an index--so we are delighted to add them to our list of important genealogy reference books and to make them available for research. Publication of these scarce and invaluable books should give a tremendous boost to Virginia genealogy.

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Virginia Vital Records
This Family Archive CD contains images of the pages of the following six books which were originally published by the Genealogical Publishing Company: (1) Virginia Vital Records, (2) Virginia Marriage Records, (3) Virginia Will Records, (4) Virginia Land Records, (5) Virginia Military Records, and (6) Virginia Tax Records. All six volumes contain articles that originally appeared in the three major Virginia periodicals: The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, the William and Mary College Quarterly, and Tyler"s Quarterly. Altogether the articles refer to 130,000 individuals, making this CD one of the largest existing collections of Virginia genealogical records.

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Virginia Vital Records: Births (1656-1896)
Spanning nearly 250 years, this collection of Virginia vital records can help you locate and confirm the history of your "Old Dominion" origins. The CD lets you move seamlessly between online and CD research. From 21 Virginia counties, you will find over 317,000 records that are searchable by names, dates, locations, etc. In most cases, the record entries give the child's name, date of birth, and details on the child's family, residence, and more.

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Virginia Vital Records: Deaths (1660-1896)
(Selected Counties)

Spanning nearly 250 years, this collection of Virginia vital records can help you locate and confirm the history of "Old Dominion" origins. The CD runs lets you move seamlessly between online and CD research. You will find over 73,000 records--from 10 Virginia counties--that are searchable by names, dates, etc. Typically, these records state the decedent's name, dates of birth and death, and sometimes names of family members and more.

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The Georgia Frontier
In Three Volumes
Volume I: Colonial Families to the Revolutionary War Period
Volume II: Revolutionary War Families to Mid-1800s
Volume III: Descendants of Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina Families

By Jeannette Holland Austin

Following General James Oglethorpe's initial settling of Europeans from England, Scotland, and the Palatine to the Georgia Colony and the dissolution of the Georgia trustees' charter, the British Crown offered substantial land grants to entice other colonists to settle and work the Georgia countryside.

As early as 1752, colonists from New England, Virginia, and the Carolinas poured into Georgia, bringing with them their families, servants, and sometimes entire religious communities. By 1775, these "frontier" settlements had established extensive coastal cotton and rice plantations. After the Revolution, Patriot veterans established homesteads by taking up land grants for their war services. During the early 1800s, Georgia employed a series of land lotteries to attract even more settlers. Once the federal government had "removed" Georgia's Cherokee and Creek populations during the late 1820s, the stage was set for a climactic state lottery of middle and western Georgia lands in 1832.

Set against the history of Georgia's advancing frontier, this unprecedented three-volume work, the outgrowth of one genealogist's professional lifetime of tracing Georgia family histories, sets forth the genealogies of 591 families, referencing tens of thousands of Georgia settlers. The families are divided into three convenient groupings: (1) those who settled prior to 1775, (2) families who first entered Georgia between the Revolution and before the Civil War, and (3) families that migrated to Georgia from Virginia, North Carolina, or South Carolina during various periods.

It is impossible to praise this new compendium of family histories too highly. Mrs. Austin's work is destined to be regarded as a landmark in Georgia genealogy. Scan the surnames of the main families covered, below, to learn if your Georgia ancestors are those who pioneered the Georgia frontier.

Volume I:
Adams, Adkerson/Adkinson/Atkinson, Akens/Akins, Alfriend, Allen, Allison, Anderson, Andrew/Andrews, Armor/Armour, Arnett, Arnsdorff, Askin/Askins, Atwell, Austin, Aycock, Ayres, Bacon, Baillie, Baker, Baldwin, Ball, Banks, Barnard, Barnett, Barron, Battle, Baxley, Bazemore, Bechtle, Beddingfield, Bedell, Berkner, Berry, Biddenback, Bignon (du bignon), Billingslea, Bird, Blackstone, Blount, Blow, Blue, Bohannon, Bohrman, Bolzius, Bond, Bostick/Bostwick, Bowen, Bowling, Boykin, Braddy, Bradley, Bradshaw, Bradwell, Brandner, Branham, Brannon, Brantley, Braswell, Breedlove, Brewer, Brincefield, Broach, Browning, Bryan, Bryant, Buckner, Bulloch, Buntz, Burford, Burgholder (Bourghalter), Burnley, Butler, Caldwell, Calhoun, Cameron, Candler, Carlton, Carr, Carter, Cassells, Castleberry, Castlin, Chaffin, Chapman, Chappell, Chattin, Cheney, Childs, Choate, Clarke, Clay, Clements, Cleaveland/Cleveland, Cleveland, Clower, Cocke, Cofer, Cole, Collier, Collins, Comer, Congleton, Conner, Cook, Cooper, Corneck, Cornwell, Cotton, Cowan, Cox, Crenshaw, Cross, Crutchfield, Cuthbert, Damour, Darden, Darsey, Davis, Dawson, Delegal, Delk, Dent, Dewberry, Dickson, Dozier, Drawhorn, Dregors, Driggers, Driver, Dukes, Dumas, Dunn, Durden, Durham, Dwight, Dyson, Early, Earnest, Easterling, Edge, Edwards, Elliott, Ellis, Emerson, English, Epps, Etheridge, Evans, Fambrough, Feagin, Feaster, Few, Finney, Fisher, Fletcher, Flewellen, Fraser, Freeman, Fryer, Fullilove, Futch, Gafford, Gardner, Gates, Gay, Gee, Germain, Germany, Gibbons, Gibbs, Gibson, Gilbert, Gilder, Gilmer, Giovanoli, Glascock, Gober, Godfrey, Goggans, Golden/Golding, Goldwire, Goodall, Goodman, Goodwin, Gordon, Graham, Gray, Greer, Grier, Griminger, Gronau, Guerry, Gunter, Gwinnett, Habersham, Hall, Hammond, Hancock, Hansford, Hanson, Hardeman/Harman, Harmon, Harper, Harrell, Harris, Harrison, Hart, Hatcher, Hatchett, Hawkins, Haygood, Healy, Helfenstein, Henderson, Hendricks, Hendry, Henry, Herron, Hickman, Hicks, Hiers, Hill, Hillhouse, Hines, Hird, Hodges, Hodges, Hogan, Holcombe, Holland, Hollis, Holt, Hood, Hooper, Horne, Horton, Houstoun, Howard, Howard, Huckaby, Hudson, Huffstetler, Hughes, Huguley, Humphrey, Hutchings, Hutchings, Ingram, Irby, Irwin, Jackson, James, Jarrard, Jay, Jemison, Jewett, Johnson, Johnson, Johnston, Jones, Jordan, Justice, Kelly, Kennedy, Kennon, Kibbee, Kieffer, Kilgo/Kilgore, Kimbrough, King, Knighton, Lamar, Lane, Lanham, Lanier, Lasseter, Lastinger, Lavender, Layfield, Lee, Lester, Lester, LeSueur, Letson, Lewis, Lightner, Loggins, Long, Love, Lowe, Loyd, Mabry, MacBean, Macintosh, Mackay, Madison, Mallard, Malone, Mann, Marbury, Marshall, Martin, Mason, Massey, Maxey, Maxwell, May, McCall, McClendon, McCord, McCormick, McCorquodale, McCoy, McDonald, McGinty, McKee, McKey, McLean, McMichael, McRight, Means, Melson, Mercer, Merriman, Merritt, Messer, Middlebrooks, Milledge, Miller, Mills, Minis, Mitchell, Money/Mooney, Montgomery, Moon, Moore, Morel, Morgan, Morris, Morton, Moss, Mullins, Murphy, Napier, Naylor, Nesmith, Norman, Norris, Odingsell, Oglethorpe, Oliver, Orr, Ortman, Osgood, Overton, Owen, Oxford, Padgett, Parker, Parr, Paterson, Paulk, Payne, Peacock, Pearson, Peek, Peeler, Pendley, Penrose, Perdue, Perkins, Perry, Perryman, Phifer, Phillips, Pike, Pitts, Polhill, Pope, Potts, Prather, Prince, Proctor, Pye, Quarterman, Radford, Rae, Rahn, Ramsey, Ray, Redding, Reeves, Reid, Remshart, Rich, Richardson, Roberts, Robinson, Rogers, Roquemore, Rountree, Rouvier, Rumble, Russell, Sappington, Satterwhite, Scarborough, Schaeffer, Schweighofer, Scott, Searcy, Seckinger, Shannon, Shattles, Shepherd, Sheppard, Shiflet, Shirey, Shockley, Sikes/Sykes, Simmons, Singleton, Sisk, Skinner, Slaughter, Slocumb, Smith, Smylie, Stallings, Stallsworth, Standley, Starr, Stewart, Stocks, Strickland, Stripling, Struthers, Stubbs, Sumner, Surrency, Tankersley, Taylor, Tekell/Teakell, Tennille, Thomas, Thornton, Todd, Tomlin, Treadway, Trotman, Upton, Ussery, Valentine, Vanderplank, Vanzant, Veazey, Vernon, Wade, Waldhauer, Warnell, Warren, Watkins, Watson, Way, Welch, Wells, Wereat, Wheelis/Wheeless/Wheelus, Whitefield, Wilcher, Wilder, Williams, Williamson, Wilson, Wimberly, Winn, Wright, Young, Zant, Zellner, Zettler, Ziegler, Zipperer, Zitterauer, Zorn, and Zouberbuhler.

Volume II:
Aaron, Adams, Albritton, Aldredge, Alexander, Alston, Anglin, Ansley, Ash/Ashe, Atkinson, Avera, Avery/Avary, Baldree, Baldwin, Bankston, Barfield, Barksdale, Barnett, Barnwell, Bartlett, Battle, Bell, Berry, Biddy, Bingham, Blackstock, Blackwell, Blair, Blandford, Bond, Bonnell, Bonner, Borders, Bostick, Bowen, Braselton, Brooks, Brunson, Bullock, Burgess, Burney, Butler, Butner, Buttrill, Caldwell, Campbell, Candler, Cannon, Carithers, Carlton, Carmichael, Carnes, Caruth, Castlin, Causey, Cauthern, Chalker, Chamlee, Childs, Cline, Cloud, Clower, Cochran, Coggins, Colbert, Collins, Comer, Conner, Cooper, Cordle, Crawford, Creel, Creighton, Crisson, Crosson, Crowley, Cunningham, Curls, Day, Deason, Denson, Dobbs, Dooly, Dover, Dowdy, Drawhorn/Draughton, Dyer, Easley, Eberhart, Evans, Eve, Fitzpatrick, Fleming, Flewellen, Fountain, Franklin, Freeman, Garrard, Gilmer, Gober, Golden, Goodson, Goss, Greer, Guess, Gunnells, Guthrie, Guyton, Hammock, Hargis, Hargrove, Harris, Harrison, Haygood, Haynes, Heard, Heath/Heeth, Henderson, Hicks, Hill, Hilley, Hodge, Holt, Hooper, Hopkins, House, Howard, Howell, Hubert, Huff, Human, Hume, Humphrey/Humphries, Hurt, Inman, Irby, Irwin, Jeffers, Jolley, Jones, Keaton, Kemp, Kendrick, Key, Kirk, Kiser, Kitchens, Knox, Kontz, Lamkin, Ledbetter, Lee, Lemon, Lester, Lewis, Liddell, Lindley, Little, Lockett, Lockhart, Long, Lord, Lovelace, Lowry, Lyon, Mangum, Matthews, Mayes, McCall, McCardle, McClure, McCurdy, McGuire, McRee, Meeks, Merritt, Miller, Millican, Moone, Moore, Morris, Moseley, Mullins, Mundy, Neal, Nephew, Newsom, Nicholson, Nunnalee, Ogletree, Oliver, Orr, Parker, Parris, Peace, Pentecost, Perdue, Perkins, Peters, Phinizy, Powell, Power, Preston, Pullen, Quillian, Ragsdale, Raiford, Redding, Redman, Renfroe, Rollestone, Rouse, Rucker, Rumph, Russell, Rutherford, Ryals, Satterfield, Sanford, Scroggins, Selman, Sewell, Shackleford, Shankle, Shannon, Sheffield, Sheftall, Sheppard, Simmons, Sims, Siniard, Smith, Stansel, Stapler, Steed, Steele, Stephens, Stephenson, Stevens, Stokes, Stovall, Strickland, Strong, Stroud, Stubbs, Summerhill, Swift, Swinney, Talley, Tatom, Taylor, Tibbitts, Tidwell, Todd, Tomlin, Townsend, Trammell, Trotman, Trout, Tucker, Tuggle, Turk, Turner, Upton, Varnedoe, Veal, Vickers, Wadsworth, Wakefield, Waldrep/Waldrop/Waldroup, Waldrop, Walker, Wall, Waller, Walraven, Walton, Watkins, Watts, Wellbourne, Whatley, Wheeless, Whelchel, Whisenhunt, White, Whitehead, Whitehurst, Wigley, Wilburn, Wilkins, Wills, Wilson, Wimberly, Wimpy, Wisener, Wommack, Woolfolk, Wootten, Worley, Wortham, Wyche