Don, in 1774, Orange County was divided into 16 districts. St. Asaph district (probaly related to a church parish) was in the very southwest corner of the Orange Coumty of that time, and now would be in the very southwest corner of the present Alamance County, which was carved off Orange. Some details about formation of districts appeared in the Feb 1977 NC Genealogical Society Journal, Vol III, No. 1, if files are avaible to you. The other 15 districts were St. Martins, Richmond, St. Laurinces, Dunmore, St. David, Glocester, St. Lukes, St. James, Chatham, Oramge, Hillsborough, St. Mary, Tryon, St. Thomas, and St. Marks and were all roughly the same size. I hope I have these spellings right. The districts are squared off on a grid and also were numbered.St. Asaph was No. 1, and appears to occupy about a third of the present Alamance County. The author of the article in the NCGSJ overlaid the old Orange County map area with these districts and also outlined the present counties. Since the lines were laid out by surveyors, they cross the farms and other properties of the occupants of that time and the owners were named. I have the map and part of this list of property holders. I've never seen a complete list of properties that were intersected by the surveyors, but you can tell roughly where certain people lived at the time the districts were formed. Harold Hopkins.