A friend, a registrar for our State for the Huguenot Society, sent me this link. She noted that some of my Hanover, Louisa, and Albemarle Co. ancestors, many of whom later migrated to Madison Co., Kentucky, had intermarried with families of Huguenot origins. _Journey to Manakin, Virginia, 1700_ (http://manakin.addr.com/huguenothist.htm) On the website are links to other pieces of information. I highly recommend that you go through the whole list. I was surprised--and somewhat pleased--to learn that it is conceivable one of my ancestresses MAY have been of Huguenot origin. The maiden name was supposed to be Basye, but I cannot adequately prove that her husband, Richard Oldham, is MY Richard Oldham. Richard is a favorite name in some of the colonial Virginia and North Carolina Oldham families. Here is a reference to Edmond Basye Northern Neck Land Grants Bk B-76: "John and Thomas Taylor of Northumberland C. in 1704 receive a grant (or deed) of certain tracts of land, 1st, 200 A. granted to James Jones by pat. Sept. 27, 1660, and by him sold to John Taylor, deceased father of sd Thomas and John, and 699 A. granted to John Taylor, father, by pat. 1666, joins land possessioned by William Therriatt, and now in possession of Thomas Taylor, Branch of Corotomon River, joins Thomas and George Everett, Isaac Wall, and John Webb, also joins Lazarus Taylor, Edmond Baysey's land, Richard Condit, and joins some land formerly belonging to William Therriatt." (As quoted in Mrs. L. C. Anderson, "The Taylor Family of Northumberland and Lancaster Counties, Virginia," in THE VIRGINIA MAGAZINE OF BIOGRAPHY AND HISTORY, Vol. 35, pp. 211-218, with corrections on pp. 388 and 389) E.W.Wallace **************Ideas to please picky eaters. Watch video on AOL Living. (http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-duffy/ 2050827?NCID=aolcmp00300000002598)