Found at same site below listed by Brenda: Go to page two: This appears to be the first edition, not the revised edition by St. Amand. Trish [NELSON, &c.]. Cox, Rev. William E. & Mrs. Olivia CoxMcCormac, et al. Our Family Genealogy. Including the Nelson,Johnson, Roach, Smith, Little, Cox, Dawson-Wooten, and Chapman Families,Each Related to the Other by Descent or Marriage, or Both. [Np.,Southern Pines, N.C., Privately Printed], 1938. 8vo. Pp. [x], 109, [4-blank]. Frontis., 1 fullpage plate (portraits). Orig. cloth, ex-library. Discreet date stamps on endpapers, lightlibrary marks on spine, otherwise very good. First and only edition. A voluminous family history involving the aforesaid families in and aboutPitt County, North Carolina; with the Nelsons having been settlers of theJamestown community in Virginia. The book is not indexed, but hasa detailed table of contents at its beginning. This is a presentationcopy, signed by the author, Rev. Wm. E. Cox, and is one of only300 copies printed. The last four pages are blank sheets forpersonal genealogical annotations. On Sunday, January 19, 2003, at 03:02 PM, Brenda Stocks wrote: > I ran across this book review on a site of rare and out of print books. > They have 1 copy and it is $85. If anyone is interested, the website > address > is: > http://www.raregenealogies.com/ > On the web page click on the link for Current stock . > > HARRIS, JAMES COFFEE. The Personal andFamily History of Charles Hooks > and > Margaret Monk Harris. [Np.,Privately Printed], J.C. Harris, 1911. > 8vo. > Pp. 116. 19 fullpage plates, mostly portraits,fullpage genealogical > charts. > Later mustard buckram, ex-library,black leather label on spine printed > ingilt, discreet date stamps on topof few pages in rear, orig. wrappers > boundin, blind library stamp on titlepageand a few others, otherwise a > very > goodcopy of a very scarce book. First and only edition. In > establishing the > family lines to be delineated,Harris' Foreward states: "In 1800 ... > They > were four pairs, mated as follows: William Harris and Sarah Coffee; > Charles > Hooks and AnnHunter; Jacob Monk and Sallie Wilkinson,Henry Maxwell and > Margaret Hunter. At that time they all lived in the eastern part of > North > Carolina, except William Harris, born in New Bern, N.C.and Sarah > Coffee, > born in PrinceEdward County, Virginia who were then living in Middle > Georgia > ..." Uses anecdotal and historical data as well as genealogical to > describe > this family's Scotch-Irish origins, their sufferings and survival > through > the Civil War, and its more prominent members, including William > HarrisCrawford, U.S. senator from Georgia, 1807-1813, who was > Ambassador to > France and candidate for U.S. President; William A. Harris, U.S. > senator > from Kansas; Andrew L. Harris, governor of Ohio, Thaddeus William > Harris, > who was founder of the Harvard Natural History Society, and Townsend > Harris,who established the Free Academy, which eventually became the > City > Collegeof New York. A rich account. Perhaps most interestingis the > discussion of Charles Hooks Harris' parole from prison at the end of > the > Civil War, returning to his native Tuskegee, Alabama and seeing about > him > the destruction of the Confederacy; slavery and the Civil War are > discussed > at length. > > Brenda