Jane: Thanks for the birth and death dates on Rhoda Davenport Boyd, daughter of James Davenport, Sr., of Halifax. Sarah Boyd, Rhoda's daughter, who married Joel Davenport c1795, and was widowed in 1807, married second, after several maters of concern for the Randolph County Grand Jury, Burrell Barnes, a Revolutionary War veteran. After both William Boyd, Sr., and Burrell Barnes died, Sarah moved, in the late 1830s as I recall, with a married daughter to Indiana. My search came up with her as "Sarah Barnes," age 70, in a daughter's household in the Census of 1850, in Warrick County, Indiana. She's in the 1850 Census Index for Indiana. I did not pursue the Census ID, which was done for me in the late 1960s by Ruth Slevin, a Quaker lady of advance age and failing eyesight in Indianapolis, who did many of my early Census searches. Mrs. Slevin was a jewel, but subsequently much of her work had to be redone. Eyesight and Quaker principles--she refused to read Slave Schedules, but did not tell me that she was by-passing them, and I was then a novice. She also gave me moral judgments on what she found in the Censuses. I remember that when she located Sarah Boyd Davenport Barnes, she gave me a "Tisk, tisk" on the side of her Census extract, saying "Your grandmother was only 14-years-old when your Uncle Jesse was born! Shameful!" As near as I could tell, Sarah had five sons by Joel, three daughters by Burrel Barnes, and two daughters that got the attention of the Randolph County Grand Jury. It's a sticky wicket, fraught with perils and situations of the awkward sort, and refutations of at least one published family history. You're welcome to sort it out if you're comfortable with that sort of thing. When I got to the point of either dropping the pursuit or having to contradict a spurious, puffed-up published family history that I had concluded to have involved two successive generations of Grand Jury concerns, terminating in a family that included one of the foremost Disciples of Christ ministers in Indiana, his four sons who were also ministers, and a daughter married to a missionary in China, I let prudence be the better part of valor, said "To hell with it," and went off in other directions. You are welcome to reopen the subject if you're so inclined. John Scott Davenport Holmdel, NJ