Morning All, I took another ride on the Dixie Bell up the Kentucky River the other day. I thought about you folks that were here earlier this year for the Fest. You left some very good memories here, not only for myself, but many others. Speaking of memories, let me share this one with you. I WAS THERE THE DAY THEY DUG UP WILLIAM HUDSON. I lived in Lincoln County, about 75 yards west of the site of Logans Fort. We had managed to get a small grant to do a dig at the fort site. Not knowing the exact site of the fort, someone came up with this idea. We knew that the people living in the fort had dug a tunnel from the fort to a big spring down over the hill. The big spring had been filled in many years ago. But, we were able to plat it's location. Any how. It was taught, if we could find the tunnel, we could follow it to the fort. With a Back-Hoe they started digging a ditch. They had not went 10 feet, when everything came to a stop. They had uncovered some human bones. It's was William Hudson. The Indian had killed and scalped he there in the summer of 1777. You ask, how did we know it was William Hudson? Several others had been killed at Logan's Fort, but Hodson was the only one that had been scalped. It you had early ancestors in Kentucky, if a good chance that some of them came through Logan's Fort. Last year Ken Houp and I went to Shelby County and found the grave sites of Ben Logan and James Knox. It was a little sad. Here were two of Kentuckies most famous men, buried in a little family plot, that looked as bad as any that Howard and the others here are clean up. I taught you may enjoy reading the report on William Hudson. Look at the scalp marks. Can you get much closer to history? http://web.utk.edu/~herrmann/Logan/LOGANS.htm Clyde ________________________________________________________________ GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj.