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    1. Joseph Benj. Hinds b MO
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. Found at another mail list archive.. Regards, Nan [email protected] - ------------------------------------------------------ >From: "mary flanders" <[email protected]> >To: [email protected] >Date: Sun, 31 Jan 1999 08:46:32 PST >Subject: [hinds] Hinds family > >Hi there, my name is Mary Flanders. I am a descendant of Joseph Benjamin >Hinds, born in Missiouri. His fathers name was Henry Levi Hinds. If this >sounds familiar or you have these names in you line, please contact me. >These names run very strong in the line. Have a lot of info on this >family. Will be very happy to share and meet new cousins, Hope to hear >from you all soon, Mary >

    07/27/2000 02:27:07
    1. Socrates Hinds
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. Found at another mail list archive. Regards, Nan [email protected] - -------------------------------------------------------------- From: "Greg & Kathy Hines" <[email protected]> If anyone wants info on this particular Socrates HINDS, I found him in the book "The HINDS of KY and TN" by David Trimble of TX. Socrates was the son of George HINDS and Mary HINKLE. George was the son of Joseph HINDS (b. abt 1759) and Margaret _______?. Kathy

    07/27/2000 02:27:05
    1. Hinds- Corliss-Butler-Bartlett
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. Found at another list archive: Regards, Nan [email protected] -------------------------- Subject: [hinds] Allegheny County, PA Hines From: Clif Hinds <[email protected]> > I want to extend my personal thanks for this information. Since I have not traced my line to the MA Hinds, I do not know how it applies to me personally. I am forwarding it to the Hinds Family Onelist. If someone on it has additional information, I will see that it comes to you. A friend, Clif Hinds From: [email protected] >Date: Thu, 28 Jan 1999 13:46:20 EST >To: [email protected] >Subject: Re: [hinds] Re: Allegheny County, PA Hines > >Thank you for your msg. > >My info shows that John Hind's father was also a John Hinds, b. 28 aug 1639, >m. Mary BUTLER as his 2nd wife, Frist wife is unknown. (Father of John HINDS >b. 28 aug 1639 was James Hinds who m 1637 to Mary. >child of John HINDS and Mary BUTLER >1. John b. 1683, m. Hannah Corliss > Children of John and Hannah: > 1. Corlis, b. 1724 m. Janet McMasters, m. 2nd Mrs. Mccutter > 2. Susannah, b. 12 Dec 1733 (My Line) m. 1752 (see below) > Susannah Hinds m. 1st John BELL and secondly in 1752 Matthew > BARTLETT b.8 Jul 1728. Their son was Wyman BARTLETT b. > 15 April 1754 who m. Betsy SMITH b. 1744 Franklin, MA. > >I am looking for the parents of Betsy SMITH> > >I have the Corliss family also, documented in the book "Old Families of >Salisbury and Amesbury" >You write: >> >>1-- James I "Immigrant" HINDS Senior-14304 (1614-1652) >> sp-Mary-16599 >> 2-- John HINDS-14300 (1639-1720) >> sp-Unknown-15636 > >Hannah Corliss was NOT a widow. She married John HINDS as her first husband. >When her father, John Corliss died 17 Feb 1697-8, her mother , Mary Wilford >Corliss married 23 Jan. 1702-3 to Wm. Whittaker and Hannah was still a young >girl. That is how they called her Hannah Whittaker Corlis. > >This is a quote from the book "Old Families of Salisbury and Amesbury, page >897. > >"Hannah or Anna [birth not on Hv. rec] m. 1st, John HInds; 2nd Oliver Heyward >[Chase's Hv. p. 221. Note, where the name is goven "Anna Whittaker", prob. >because her mother was then the wife of Wm. Whittaker. See Es. Inst. Hist. >Coll. vol 49, p. 43, Note]" Hope that helps. > >Bev >In a message dated 99-01-27 07:03:47 EST, you write: > ><< > sp-Mary Widow Butler-15428 > > 3-- John HINDS-16206 (1683) > > sp-Hannah Corliss CORLIS Widow Whittaker-15344 (1691) > > >> >

    07/27/2000 02:27:03
    1. Hinds - Fairfield Co. SC
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. Found at another list archive: Regards, Nan [email protected] ============================== From: "M. Soontay" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Date: Wed, 27 Jan 1999 09:23:06 -0600 Subject: [hinds] Re: HINES, JOAB b.1788 SC From: "M. Soontay" <[email protected]> Clif, I may have a connection to your Joab Hines. My 4G grandfather lived in Fairfield Co. S.C. until he died in 1820. His children were Joab, Elizabeth (married a Godbold), Esther (married a Davis), James, Joseph, Loyd, Finnetta (married a Moore), and Thomas Jefferson. These names are from the probate. Some of the children went to Tenn. and La. I think all were gone by 1830 census. Inetta

    07/27/2000 02:27:01
    1. Hinds- Rockwood TN
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. Hinds message found at another list archive: Regards, Nan [email protected] ========================== At 08:16 PM 1/17/99 EST, [email protected] wrote: >Hello Clif Hinds, >My name is Edward Beu and my grandmother was Kathleen Hinds who was born >in Crossville Tenn. and died in Rockwood Tenn. Her father was Holman B. Hinds >with wife Martha (Mattie) S. Baker. I am not sure any of this information is >any help >to you but if it is, let me know. Thanks for your contact. Ed Beu >

    07/27/2000 02:26:58
    1. Hines at web page
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. Found at another list archive. Regards, Nan [email protected] ============================================== From: "William Hilles" <[email protected]> >To: "Clif Hinds" <[email protected]> >Subject: Re: Hines Research >Date: Mon, 11 Jan 1999 13:59:02 -0500 >X-MSMail-Priority: Normal >X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 4.72.2106.4 >X-MIMEOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V4.72.2106.4 > >My line was spelled "Hines." For what it's worth to you in your search, >feel free to open my personal webpage and pull down my Hines report. My >website is: >http://www.familytreemaker.com/users/h/i/l/William-C-Hilles/ > >Good luck. > >Bill Hilles >

    07/27/2000 02:26:56
    1. Thomas Jefferson & James Isaac Hines
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. Found at another mail list archive: Regards, Nan [email protected] =========================== From: "M. Soontay" <[email protected]> Christine, No I don't know anything about the children of Joel Hines. But one of the brothers of my ancester ( Thomas Jefferson Hines) named his son James Isaac Hines. Do you know when or where this Issac Hines was born. Thanks, Inetta

    07/27/2000 02:26:55
    1. Salem MA HInds
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. >From another list archive: Regards, Nan [email protected] - --------------------------------------------- From: "gen hinds" <[email protected]> Hi Kathy, well for once I can be of some assistance to you yanky doodle Hinds'!!! surprise surprise! "James HINDS... Recorded in a genealogy of Boston and Eastern Massachusetts as having come to Salem, Massachusetts as early as 1637. This was about the same time as 2 brothers, William and Richard, many of whose descendants spell their names, Haines, Haynes and Hayne. They owned a farm together, selling it in part on 29 June 1648 and William gave a letter of attorney on 25 November 1647 to Thomas Haynes, merchant of London for collection at Danes Balle, Bedfordshire. James and these two were believed to be related, possibly brothers, and that they probably came from London or Bedfordshire. James was admitted a freeman in March 1637-8 and sold land in Marblehead in 1649. he was a member of the salem church in April 1637. he moved to Southold, Long Island, New York and died there in March 1652-3. he was a cooper by trade. His widow Mary married Ralph Dayton of Southold on 2 June 1656. Hinds made his will on 1 March 165203 bequeathing to his wife Mary, eldest son John and other children not named in the will. Children: (1) John (born 28.8.1639), (2) James (born 2.8.1641), (3) Benjamin (bap 26.8.1643), (4) Mary (bap 19.2.1646), (5) James (bap 27.12.1647-8), (6) Jonathan (bap 11.4.1648), (7) Sarah (bap 11.4.1648 twin), and (8) Thomas (bap 4.3.1651)." Good luck this information comes via me from a Hinds researcher in the UK with whom I have corresponded for a long time and to whom I am extremely distantly related (via Kent in the UK) cheers Genevieve

    07/27/2000 02:26:53
    1. Van Buren Hinds
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. Found at another mail list archive: Regards, Nan [email protected] ====================================== Date: Thu, 28 Jan 1999 06:08:03 -0600 To: [email protected] From: Clif Hinds <[email protected]> Cc: [email protected] Subject: [hinds] Re: Van Buren Hines From: Clif Hinds <[email protected]> Thank you Floreine. Clif Hinds Floreine Kockritz [email protected] At 10:24 PM 1/27/99 EST, you wrote: >Cliff > >Van Buren Hines marr 26 Apr 1891 Sarah J. Badgley d/o James Badgley & >Malvina ?? >Van Buren is son of Ephriam Hines and America Young. >Ephriam & America marr 11 May 1863 > >Ephriam Hines is son of Thomas Hines and Mary Polly Lay who marr 07 Dec 1833. > >I found this from my books that I purchased from the Pul Co Historical Soc. >So the pge numbers etc will be from their books. To verify my work you will >have to check the real census & marr bks. > >I have a lot more of your family and their marriages on a Family Group Sheets >that I'll mail to you. Of course I'll need your address. If you want the >rest of the history, I'll mail it to you. I think you'll be amazed. > >Floreine Kockritz >FKockritz

    07/27/2000 02:26:50
    1. Hinds in Jay Co. IN
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. >From another list archive: Regards, Nan [email protected] =============================== Date: Thu, 28 Jan 1999 06:03:41 -0600 To: [email protected] ( THERESE M KOEHLER) From: Clif Hinds <[email protected]> Subject: [hinds] Re: Hinds / Hines From: Clif Hinds <[email protected]> Therese, Thanks for replying Clif At 07:35 PM 1/27/99 -0500, you wrote: >Hi Clif, > >I have a Levi Hines that m. Elizabeth Renner in 1871 in Jay Co., IN. >She was the sister to my GG grandfather. > >Therese

    07/27/2000 02:26:48
    1. Hinds in TN
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. >From another list archive: Regards, Nan [email protected] =========================== From: Clif Hinds <[email protected]> At 03:56 PM 1/25/99 -0700, Judy Ferrell Bannatyne [email protected] wrote: (Judy, your response is below your message.) >My name is not Hinds but Arminda (Minny) Hinds was my (paternal)great >grandmother. She was married to James Henry Ferrell. Her father was >Rufus M. Hinds from William J. Hinds. Most of these folks were from >Tennessee. Arminda is buried in Dallas County Texas. Her son, George >Henry Ferrell ( my dad's dad ), visited Dallas often to visit nieces and >nephews. The migration pattern of my family is very similar to what you >describe in your e-mail of Dec.28/98. > If there is any connection I would like to hear from you or others on >the onelist. > I am Judy Ferrell Bannatyne at: [email protected]

    07/27/2000 02:26:47
    1. 1810 Lenoir Co. TN
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. >From another list archive: Regards, Nan [email protected] =================================== From: [email protected] The only thing i have on Isaac hines is the 1810 census in Lenoir co Nc. Wish i had more. Christine

    07/27/2000 02:26:45
    1. Hinds in Hunterdon Co. NJ
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. Found at another list's archive: Regards, Nan [email protected] ================================ From: Clif Hinds <[email protected]> >From: "nancy roberts" <[email protected]> >Date: Tue, 12 Jan 99 00:26:04 PST > Nancy Roberts of "nancy roberts" <[email protected]> is not on the onelist, but would be willing to share information on the following line of Hinds / Hines > As I said I am on the line of Joseph from Hunterdon Co NJ to >Joseph to Wayne Co KY to Samuel to Wayne Co KY to Samuel to Knox Co TN to >Sarah who married William Bledsoe 1850. If you or anyone you know is >interested in this line I would like to exchange. > >Nancy > If you have anything to share, contact her personally.

    07/27/2000 02:26:42
    1. Another Hines researcher
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. Found at another list archive: Regards, Nan [email protected] ========================== >To: Clif Hinds <[email protected]> >From: BlackBart the Legend <[email protected]> > >Check out my pages: http://www.sptddog.com/sotp/hines.html >any connections there I have more info.... > >Genealogically Yours, >Floyd D.P. Oydegaard >Johannes fac totem >See my family lines at: http://www.sptddog.com/sotp/kinfolk.html

    07/27/2000 02:26:39
    1. Quaker burial practices
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. Hi: Found this Hinds info at another list.. Regards, Nan [email protected] =========================== Date: Sat, 09 Jan 1999 19:13:28 -0600 To: [email protected] From: Clif Hinds <[email protected]> Subject: [hinds] Quaker burial practices From: Clif Hinds <[email protected]> I received this information from the Pearsall family list. It is very interesting. For Oliver and Wanda, this might explain why we can not find the burial place of Revolutionary War, John Hind. As I told you before, I had seen a lot of evidence that he may have been a Quaker. As some of you know, it is a myth that Quakers never fought. There is a lot of evidence that they fought in several instances to include the French and Indian Wars and the Revolution. At any rate, read the information below. Clif Hinds ------------ >From: "Rosalie V. Grafe" <[email protected]> >To: [email protected] > >Those of you wondering about the absence of Quaker tombstones for >Pearsalls in the graveyard at Flushing Meetinghouse or at others from the >seventeenth and eighteenth century might be heartened to read...or >not...the reasoning laid out below, forwarded from another list. > > Rosalie V.Grafe > >From: Dan Treadway <[email protected]> >To: [email protected] >Subject: Quaker burial practices > >The following post appeared on another list. I thought some >quaker-rooters would like to see it, so with the author's permission, >and some changes she suggested, I quote it here. > >> Subject: Re: Friends' mortuary practices >> Date: Wed, 25 Nov 1998 09:44:31 -0500 >> From: Mary Ellen Chijioke >> To: [email protected] >> >> I am sharing my Quaker burial practices stem from Quaker theology. >> Whatever their notions of an afterlife (and they have varied >> considerably), Friends have historically have not believed in bodily >> resurrection (other than the Easter event itself) and thus always regarded >> the physical remains of a person as spiritually insignificant. They also >> have a testimony of simplicity, discouraging anything that would tend to >> "puff up" individual pride. Burial or other disposal of the dead is, >> therefore, first and foremost a public health measure. >> >> That being said, Quakers have never been immune to the winds of change in >> the world's culture, and so funeral practices have changed over time. >> Headstones were not officially permitted for Friends until the late 1840s >> (the exact date varies by yearly meeting), but the best evidence of how >> common they had become by the end of the 18th century is the number of >> warnings being sent down to monthly meetings about stopping the practice. >> Even earlier are the warnings of excessive partying at weddings and >> funerals. >> >> Many stones for dates before the 19th century were added later, by family >> wanting to remenber their own dead or by Friends succombing to hero >> worship. This is certainly true for the grave of George Fox, which is not >> even in its original location. (Margaret Fell Fox's burial site is marked >> by a general historical marker noting that she is among 228 Friends buried >> in the general location.) We have at least one instance where a family in >> the early 1860s provided a whole line of about 10 identical stones to mark >> earlier burials. And the Penn family stones at Jordans (the only ones in >> the burial ground) are similarly modern. >> >> The primary way in which Friends remember the dead has changed remarkably >> little in the past 340 years. The "service" is a called meeting for >> worship, in which the silence is broken by those remembering various >> aspects of the person's life. A remarkably rich picture often develops as >> people testify to those elements they know, leaving a sense of celebration >> of the person more than mourning. The body is is generally not present at >> the meeting for worship. In the past, burial was usually immediately >> afterwards; today cremation is more frequent, and arrangements for >> disposal of the ashes (or burial) are completely private, with no mention >> at the memorial meeting. >> >> Meetings also wrote and recorded memorial minutes for adult members who had >> been active in the meeting. For those whose ministry was especially >> recognized, the minutes were forwarded to the quarterly and yearly meeting, >> and in the late 18th century, yearly meetings began publishing collections >> of memorials of ministers and elders. >> >> In the late 18th and early 19th century, the romanticization of death >> manifested itself in Quakerism by the emergence of a genre of publication >> generally entitled "Piety Promoted." These volumes, intended for religious >> education of children, were anthologies of reports of the beautiful deaths >> of young people. >> >> The increasing care about matters of death also show in the way in which >> records were kept. Many meetings kept either a record of the deaths of >> members (with or without a note about where buried) or a record of all >> burials in the burial ground. (Many non-Friends are buried in Quaker >> cemeteries.) A few kept both. The burial records of Philadelphia Monthly >> Meeting (for the Arch St. burial ground) give one of the first signs of the >> increasing concern about sentimental attachment to physical remains. (At >> Arch St., where burials ceased after the meetinghouse was built on the site >> in 1804, the burials are 4 layers deep; there are no headstones.) Until >> the mid-18th century, burials were simply chronological, with the next dead >> person taking the next available space in a row. Then toward the late 18th >> century, one notices that when an older person died, the next space was >> often left empty to await the spouse. By the 19th century, family >> groupings are common in Quaker burial grounds. >> >> I hope this isn't too much historical detail for those on the list. But I >> find the details fascinating in the way they illustrate continuity and >> change in our faith. >> >> Mary Ellen Chijioke >> Swarthmore MM

    07/27/2000 02:26:36
    1. Hinds- Ireland connection
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. Hi: I'm forwarding this message from another list. Regards, Nan [email protected] ====================================== From: [email protected] (MRS GWENDOLYN M HUBBARD) >Date: Sat, 9 Jan 1999 08:59:19, -0500 >To: [email protected] >Subject: Hinds > >You had ask for a check of HINDS family inf. ...Here in Brooke Co. WV > I see ( quick look) one Hinds, Sarah in a will as daugher of >Robert Patterson. His will dated 28 Mar 1825. >There are these in the marriage records: Bartley HINES to Anne Fitx- >Patrick 29 Jan 1868, WV Bk 4A pg 41 >Bartley Hines b Ireland age 30 child of Patrick and Ellen Hines. >Anne b Ireland age 21 child old James and Mary Fitz-patrick married >by Stephen Huber. > >Isaac HINES to Sarah Patterson 27 Jan 1815, Va bk 1A pg 65 > >Hope this is a help to you. > >Check out our Brooke County Genealogy site: http://www.angelfire. >com/wv/bcg > > >____ >NENT78C Old Mother Hubbard in WV >

    07/27/2000 02:26:30
    1. Transcribing info from anothe Hinds archive
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. Hinds-L mail list members: WARNING <g> Clif Hinds the administrator of the Hinds list at egroup aka onelist.com is leaving the country for three to five years. He has discovered that his archives cannot be searched as the Rootsweb archives can be searched. To look through his archives at egroup - one has to read every message - only the subject is shown. Clif wants his archives moved to Rootsweb and the Rootsweb "higher-ups" are trying to figure out if it can be done. But, it is taking too long - Clif leaves in a couple weeks and wants to transfer his archives now. So, the group at the Hinds onelist.com list are going to be transferring just the information from the Hinds onelist.com messages to the Hinds-L list - one message at a time. The Hinds onelist.com archives will stay intact where it is. His list has been archived only since March of 1999 so there are only about 314 messages. Half to 2/3s of them are mine which I will send two at a time at a later date. So we are looking at a bombardment of about 100 messages in the length of a week probably. You can attempt to read them as they come to the list or simply delete them and then search the archives later using keywords. If you are worried about your mailbox getting too full - you can unsubscribe from the list and then re-subscribe after the hullabaloo is over. Send me a private message after unsubscribing - saying "Nan, let me know when the Hinds egroup messages are transferred." I'll be happy to let you know when it is "safe" to subscribe again. We don't know any other way to do this. We know you will like the information that will be available in these messages. It is from many varied Hinds lines and Hinds researchers. If any of you are willing to help with the transfer - please contact us Nan Wolf - [email protected] or Clif Hinds - [email protected] Regards, Nan Wolf List Administrator Hinds-L [email protected]

    07/26/2000 01:38:09
    1. Re: 2 Hinds Valleys in TN?
    2. Barbara Finney
    3. One stream called Beaver Creek is close to Knoxville. One stream called Beaver Dam Creek is in Guilford County and runs into the Haw River. I found it on the Collett Map of 1770 in Clayton Library. Another Beaver Creek is a little bit south of this Beaver Dam Creek and runs into the Reedy Fork of the Haw. However, this is probably not the creek referred to in the NC grants in the Eastern Division. One grant refers to the head of Bull Run and Beaver Dam Creek. I did not find this Beaver Dam Creek but Bull Run Creek runs generally parallel to the Anderson-Knox County lines. There may be others. The grants are numbered and can be located in a survey book with plats attached. Alternatively, copies of the deeds may be secured and the descriptions checked.. Pole Cat Creek is easier to locate. The main road to Cape Fear runs through Pole Cat Settlement. Regards, Barbara

    07/22/2000 09:20:57
    1. 1754 Tax list Perquimans Co NC
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. Hi: I included only the group that contained Jno. Hinds who seems to have two of taxable age in his household - could be a hired man. The list is a lot longer. I put the url below in case you want to search the list for others. Regards, Nan [email protected] - --------------------------- http://searches.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/ifetch2?/u1/data/nc+index+541161744477 +F The file you requested is shown below. The free access to this USGenWeb Archives file is provided through the courtesy of RootsWeb.com Inc. - ------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- CNIDR Isearch-cgi 1.20.06 (File: 1754tax.txt) 1754 Tax List, Perquimans County, North Carolina ******************************************************************* USGENWEB NOTICE: In keeping with our policy of providing free information on the Internet, material may be freely used by non-commercial entities, as long as this message remains on all copied material, AND permission is obtained from the contributor of the file. Transcribed from the original by Harold Colson in July 1998. Return to the NCGenWeb Archives Table of Contents http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/nc/ncfiles.htm#NC ****************************************************************** Source: North Carolina State Archives, Colonial Court Records, Taxes & Accounts, 1679-1754, CCR 190, Tax Lists, Perquimans County, 1702-1754. A List of the Taxables in Perquimons County for the Year 1754 [6] ------------------------- Robert Boge 1 Jonathan Pearson 1 Robert Evans 1 Joseph Barrow 8 Jno: Hinds 2 Jno: Barrow 1 Thomas Lamb 1 Aaron Albertson 2 Israel Perry 2 Jno: Williams 3 Jno: Reddick 3 Peter Pearson 2 Ralph Bufkin 1 James Sitteson 4 Robert Roe 4 James Price 3 Samuell Perry 1 Joseph Eliot 1 Robert Newby 4 Elizabeth Price 2 Josiah Gilburt 4 Thomas Brigs 1 Jno: Murdaugh 4 Joseph Creecy, Esq. 7 Jonathan Phelps 4 Benjamin Simson 4 Sarah Callaway 2 Timothy Trulove 1 Thomas Ford 5 Sarah Long 2 Edward Hall 4 Jacob Hall 1 Jno: Wilkins 3 Richard Banks 1 Henry Warren 1 William Johnson 1 James Brinkley 2 Ester Hicks 3 William Stacey 1 A True Coppy Taken and Examined Containing one thousand and seventy Six Taxables, as Certified By the Clerk Test Will Skinner Sherf [10]

    07/22/2000 07:56:58
    1. 2 Hinds Valleys in TN?
    2. Nan & George Wolf
    3. Hi: Since we are taking a trip in Oct to NC & N - we are trying to decide where some of the Hinds lands were. In using the Topo Map CD by DeLorme - we have found two Hinds Valleys in TN - one in the very north of Knox Co. near the border of Union and Anderson Counties. It can be reached driving West from Halls Crossroads or east from Norris. The other Hinds Valley is in Roane Co. reached by driving Hwy 27 south from Rockwood or north from Roddy. I presume that the Roane Co valley is the one mentioned in this family: "John was a Revolutionary Soldier. In 1792 he came to Roane County, Tennessee, with his sons, Sylvanus, Joseph Simeon and John, Jr., and his two daughters. He acquired one thousand acres of land which became known as Hinds Valley." (This is the one that married Abigail Bayless and had a son Sylvanus that served in the War of 1812 and the Creek and Indian War.) Can anyone tell us about the other Hinds Valley in northern Knox Co? Where did it get its name. I have this timeline on my Levi, son of Joseph Sr. and wonder if this Beaverdam Creek is anywhere near this Knox Co. Hinds Valley. Feb 19, 1783 He sold his 200 acres in Randolph Co. NC to Hiram Geron 1786 On voting rolls in Washington Co. TN 1788 He rec'd a grant of 200 acres on the waters of Beaverdam Creek in Hawkins (now Knox) Co. TN Jun 24, 1793 Rec'd a grant of 980 acs in Hawkins Co near Blair Station July 29, 1793 Rec'd another 200 acs grant on Beaverdam Creek Oct 31, 1796 Sold the 200 acs above of Beaverdam Creek to Jesse Stubbs. Sep 17, 1796 Bought 183 acs on the W. Fork of Flat Creek from John (John who?) Feb 04, 1799 Sold same 183 acs to Boston Graves Dec 09, 1801 Bought 350 acs on the S. Fork of Beaverdam Creek from Thomas Jeffries; Feb 29, 1804 Sold the 100 acs on which he lived to Thos' brother, John Jeffries, but continued to live there; Oct 02, 1816 Sold another 50 acs to John Clibourn Before 1817 Moved to Wayne Co. KY Aug 28 1817 Made his will in Wayne Co. KY Jan 1818 Estate probated Feb 18, 1818 Sons Levi & Joseph sold his remaining 200 acre in Knox Co. TN to Samuel Tindle for $800.00. We cannot find a Beaverdam Creek - only Beaver Creeks. Regards, Nan Wolf [email protected]

    07/22/2000 07:56:51