Dusty, That is a wonderful offer. I need a week or so to really get it organized, because of a project for another organization that was due October 1. I have bits and pieces of these Perkins from what I know about the 3 children of Nicholas Cader Perkins who died in 1830 in St. Landry Parish. He was married to a lady named Angeline. For my g great-grandmother Angelico Jerricho (Jerico) Perkins to be full blood Choctaw, they all had to be. It is such a curiosity for this all beginning to surface now. There was a lady in Oklahoma who had researched the Perkins, quite extensively, but never came up with the Patriarch Nicholas Cader. I looked at the web page where the Cooper rolls are briefly today. They mention the Perkins Cemetery at Caney, OK (very close to Atoka). I found that cemetery too, by accident one day. Jerico's older brother David is buried there. He was born in 1809, died in 1888. Fought in the Civil War. Several of his children are also buried there. The other brother George Perkins and my great grandfather Turner Brashears Turnbull, known as Brashears were very close and practiced law together in Blue County. George and his wife Jane (notable family may have been a McCurtain). I can't remember when George was born. He and Jane were excommunicated from the Mt. Pleasant Presbyterian Mission. I would like to know more about the Pekinese family in Louisiana. According to Ancestry. com, if I read it correctly Nicholas Cader Perkins' wife Angeline may have lived into her 80s in Tennessee. As you can see this really needs sorting out. Is this enough to begin with? Thanks a million, Frankie James