Hi Booners, I found this on one of the Rootsweb Review sites today. 1813 INVALID PENSIONERS. Transcription of U.S. Military Pensioners List of 1813. http://www.homestead.com/pensioners/invalid.html 1813 Invalid Pensioners Kentucky "Paid at the seat of government but residing in Kentucky." No.on Names Rank or Annual the Roll Quality Stipend 1 William Little private 60 2 Robert Barron do 60 3 Oliver Bennett do 60 4 Henry Shaw do 30 5 Squire Boone do 36 6 Quintin Moore do 20 7 George Fennell do 30 8 James Warson do 40 9 James Berry do 20 10 Isaac Burnham do 48 11 John Shanks do 40 12 Andrew Allison do 36 13 John Brown sergeant 30 14 William Nieves private 30 15 Thomas Hickman do 24 16 John Jacobs do 60 17 Robert Patterson colonel 300 18 Virgil Poe private 30 19 Joseph Shaw do 24 20 Joseph Todd do 24 Total of annual stipends 1002 For other states of this record and its source, visit 1813 Invalid Pensioners Transcribed by Gordon Byers, December 27, 2000. And this. Don't some of these names look familiar?! Taken from: FREE AFRICAN AMERICANS OF VIRGINIA, NORTH CAROLINA, SOUTH CAROLINA, MARYLAND AND DELAWARE, by Paul Heinegg. http://www.freeafricanamericans.com/ BOON FAMILY Members of the Boon family in North Carolina and Virginia and were 1 i. Patt, born say 1742. 2 ii. James1, born say 1745. 3 iii. Daniel, born say 1760. iv. Milly, "free negro" head of a Fairfax County household of 7 "other free" in 1810 [VA:238]. v. Sarah, head of a Petersburg Town household of 4 "other free" in 1810 [VA:336]. vi. John, head of a Hyde County household of 1 "other free" in 1810 [NC:138], probably related to Hannah Boon, born 1776-1794, head of a Craven County household of 4 "free colored" in 1820 [NC:72]. 1. Patt Boon, born say 1742, was living in Bertie County in August 1774 when the court ordered her "bastard Mulatto" children, Lewis, Katie, Judah, and Arthur, bound apprentices to James Brown [Haun, Bertie County Court Minutes, II:92]. Her children were 4 i. Rachel1, born say 1760. ii. Lewis, born about 1763, "bastard Mulatto of Patt Boon," bound apprentice in 1774. He was head of a Northampton County, North Carolina household of 9 "other free" in 1800 [NC:429], 5 in Halifax County in 1810 [NC:5], and 5 "free colored" in Halifax in 1820 [NC:142]. iii. Katie, born about 1765, 9 year old "bastard Mulatto of Patt" ordered bound to James Brown by the August 1774 Court. 5 iv. Rebecca, born say 1768. v. Judah/ Judith, born about 1768, 6 year old "bastard Mulatto of Patt" bound to James Brown by the August 1774 Court, head of a Hertford County household of 4 "other free" in 1810 [NC:107]. vi. Arthur, born about 1773, one year old "bastard Mulatto of Patt" bound to James Brown by the August 1774 Bertie Court, head of a Hertford County household of 6 "other free" in 1790 [NC:25]. vii. ?Cader, born before 1776, head of a Bertie County household of one "other free" in 1810 [NC:160] and 16 "free colored" in 1820 [NC:54]. viii. ?James2, born say 1780, married Jincey Tann, 5 June 1826 Northampton County bond. On 18 August 1835 Mima Boon petitioned the Halifax County Court to bind her children, Lewis and Lam Boon, to their uncle James because the children's father was insane. He may have been the James W. Boon, "Male Mulatto," who was 80 years old in 1860 in Halifax County, household number 1513. He owned $652 real estate and was living with Caroline, 49 years old. ix. ?Patsy, head of a Hertford County household of 2 "other free" in 1810 [NC:107] and 2 "free colored" in 1820 [NC:206]. x. ?Ruth, born before 1776, head of a Northampton County household of seven "free colored" females in 1820 [NC:218]. 2. James1 Boon, born say 1745, was a "Mixt. Blood" taxable in Hertford County in 1770 [Fouts, Tax Receipt Book, 31] and head of a Gates County household of one "other free" in 1790 [NC:23]. In February 1790 the Gates County Court ordered his twelve year old "orphan" son Thomas Boon bound an apprentice shoemaker to Thomas Marshall. The inventory of his estate was recorded in Gates County Court on 20 February 1794 [Fouts, Minutes of County Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions 1787-93, 8, 14]. He was the father of i. ?James2, born before 1776, head of a Halifax County household of 8 "free colored" in 1820 [NC:142]. ii. ?Moses, born before 1776, head of a Gates County household of 8 "free colored" in 1820 [NC:144]. iii. ?David, born before 1776, head of a Northampton County household of 1 "other free" in 1810 [NC:714] and 10 "free colored" in Hertford County in 1820 [NC:182]. He was in the Northampton County Regiment in the War of 1812. iv. ?Elias, born before 1776, head of a Halifax County household of 6 "free colored" in 1820 [NC:142]. v. ?Elisha, born before 1776, head of a Northampton County household of 4 "free colored" in 1820 [NC:218]. He was in the Northampton County Regiment in the War of 1812. vi. ?William, head of a Halifax County household of 6 "free colored" in 1820 [NC:142]. vii. Thomas, born about 1778, a twelve year old bound apprentice in Gates County in 1790. 3. Daniel Boon, born say 1760, was a "negro" head of a Nansemond County household of one black person in 1783 [VA:56]. He may have been the father of i. James4, born say 1790, a "Free Negro" taxable in Nansemond County in 1815 [Yantis, Supplement to the 1810 Census of Virginia, S-14]. ii. Jesse, born about 1796, received one of the "Certificates granted to Free negroes & mulattoes from October 1800" in Sussex County on 28 February 1820: brown complexion, 5'10", free born, 24 years old [Certificate no.383]. 4. Rachel1 Boon, born say 1760, was a "Molatter" taxable in 1772 in James Purvis' household in the Bertie County List of Reddick Rutland [CR 10.702.1]. She was head of a Bertie County household of 3 "other free" in 1800 [NC:34]. Her children were i. ?Sarah, born about 1776, ordered bound to Thomas Pugh, Junior, by the Bertie Court in February 1789 (no parent named) [Haun, Bertie County Court Minutes, VI:728]. She was head of a Bertie County household of 2 "other free" in 1810 [NC:166]. ii. ?Rachel2, born about 1779, four years old on 14 May 1783 when she was bound apprentice in Bertie County (no parent named) [Haun, Bertie County Court Minutes, XIV:160]. iii. Willis, born about 1782, son of Rachel, bound an apprentice shoemaker to Richard Veal on 16 May 1791 [NCGSJ XIV:165], head of a Chowan County household of 2 "free colored" in 1820 [NC:118]. iv. Hill, born about 1783, son of Rachel, bound an apprentice shoemaker to Richard Veal on 16 May 1791 [NCGSJ XIV:165], head of a Bertie County household of 15 "other free" in 1820 [NC:54]. 5. Rebecca Boon, born say 1768, was living in Bertie County on 7 May 1792 when her seven year old son, Cary, was bound to Richard Veal to be a shoemaker [NCGSJ XIV:166]. She was head of a Northampton County household of 8 "free colored" in 1820 [NC:218]. Her children were i. Cary, born about 1784. ii. ?Benjamin, head of a Bertie County household of 3 "other free" in 1810 [NC:166]. iii. ?Robert, born about 1795, bound an apprentice cartwheel maker to William Sowell on 13 May 1799 (no parent identified) [NCGSJ XIV:169].