On November 6, 2000, June wrote: <Do we know where he ["Tough" Daniel Maupin] is buried?> My response: According to the article in Dorothy's book at pp. 247-48, "Tough" Daniel Maupin was buried in "a little, neglected and forgotten cemetery on the Big Hill Road, three or four miles out of Richmond, Kentucky." William H. Miller's notes for his 1907 book on the Maupins and others described it as "the Daniel Maupin grave yard on the Big Hill Road adjacent to the yard of the residence of Mrs. Thomas D. Chenault, the land formerly owned and occupied by Daniel Maupin, whose resident [residence?] was on or near the spot of the present magnificent Mansion of Mrs. Chenault." The Chenault home originally was called "Cumberland View." As described in "Place Names of Madison County, Kentucky" by the Boonesborough Chapter DAR (1940-41), pg. 49: "On the right of the highway is "Cumberland View", built by Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Tribble in 1855, it is of brick with beautiful Colonial pillars of Doric style, and its magnificent view of the Cumberland Mountains. After the death of Mr. Tribble, Mr. Thomas D. Chenault occupied the home for many years, and it is now occupied by Douglas Chenault and his wife Sara Hall Smith. This land here was where Daniel Maupin III from Virginia, and his wife Margaret McWilliams lived. It was a large rambling log house stood on the hill to the right of the present home, and the slave quarters were to the left of the house and running back some distance. Here they raised a large family and acquired much property on Muddy Creek, Little Muddy Creek, Otter Creek, Silver Creek, and Hart's Fork. Daniel Maupin and his wife are buried in the family burial lot on the farm near the Chenault home and near the highway." Unfortunately, the grand Chenault home no longer is standing there. The little graveyard, once neglected and in a field, now lies in the back yard of the middle stone house on the property of the Okinite Cable Company on the west side of US Highway 25 about 3 miles southeast of Richmond, KY, and about one mile north of Terrill Junction. There are only a few remaining headstone now: Bates, several Cornelisons, Elimore, Goodman and Kindred. I understand from Loren Adams that many years ago, someone took a number of the headstones and placed them in the Richmond Cemetery near the grave of George Washington "Wash" Maupin. Warren B. Wood