Greetings...below is an extraction from a website at ancestry.com that is free until the 21st. I went looking for John Douthit and found Andrew Job instead. I found this page by going to the link for "All Databases" and selecting 'books' , then scrolling down to the Irish sites (at least I think that's what I did. If not exactly that, something similar) When I selcted this book to "search" I inserted "Ross" into the surname/keyword box and then surfed around. Enjoy....malinda Immigration of the Irish Quakers into Pennsylvania....PLACES OF SETTLEMENT http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?DB=IRISHQU&GS=ROSS&SRVR=SEARCH&TI=0&SE=SSE.DLL&QUERY=ROSS&SUBMIT=SEARCH&DATABASEID=3300&TITLE=IRISH+QUAKER+IMMIGRATION+INTO+PENNSYLVANIA&DATABASENAME=IRISHQU&SEARCHENGINE=SSE.DLL&SERVER=SEARCH&TYPE=P&ct=1208 Nottingham page 157 Among the Irish Friends who made their way to the Nottingham settlements, now in Maryland, were: Roger Kirk, son of Alphonsus Kirk, of New Castle County; his kinsman, Roger Kirk, son of Timothy Kirk, of Lurgan, County Armagh; Benjamin Chandlee, originally from County Kildare; and Eli Crockett, from Ballinacree, County Antrim, a settler at Bush River Meeting. UWCHLAN MEETING HOUSE, CHESTER COUNTY, BUILT 1756 Uwchlan Particular Meeting was established in 1712, and the Preparative Meeting two years later. The present meeting-house was built in 1756. page 158 The Friends of Nottingham were residents of Chester County, until about 1765, when the running of the famous Mason and Dixon line brought them within the limits of Cecil County, Maryland. In 1701, a company of friends, prominent among whom were John Churchman, Andrew Job, William and James Brown, and Henry Reynolds, removed from the old settlements in the vicinity of Chester and settled on a tract of some 18,000 acres of land called Nottingham on Octorara Creek. In 1705, they had a meeting settled among them, held at the home of William Brown, until the erection of a meeting-house in 1708-9. This building was replaced by one of brick in 1724. John Churchman notes in his journal that in 1748 the latter was destroyed by fire, and until a new meeting-house could be built the meetings were held in a private house. When rebuilt, a stone addition was made to the original brick-work. The wood-work was again destroyed by fire in 1810. In 1811 the present structure was erected, and although one-half stone, has always been known as the Brick Meeting. page 159 Nottingham Meeting constituted a part of Concord Monthly Meeting until in 1715 it was transferred to Newark Monthly Meeting. On the erection of New Garden in 1718 it became a part of that Monthly Meeting, thus continuing until [p.159] 1730, when Nottingham Monthly Meeting, consisting of the meetings of East Nottingham, West Nottingham, and Bush River, was established.