Gabe and Peter, What a great find on your line! I hope someone will post the letter Nonette's family has. The SC Huguenots (and GA descendants), after they fled persecution in France, were in Switzerland, Holland, England, Scotland and Ireland, among other places, where they found refuge with or through other protestants before coming to this country. Some records of the de Neufvilles in Charleston, SC are confusing because one may show a person b. in England or France and another show him b. in SC. The Huguenots were pretty clannish at first. It probably would not have been unusual for them to call themselves French two or three generations after they arrived in this country. Has anyone interested in the de Neufville (sometimes Neuville/Neaville) family ever contacted the folks at Heritage Papers in GA? Mary Bondurant Warren, who was head of that organization until she retired, spent quite a bit of time running down connections of Huguenots here and in Europe. I think she could have some information on the de Neufvilles. While I don't know for sure that the NY de Neufvilles were related to the SC group, many of the family names were the same and according to what I have read, the Huguenots moved in and out of settlements up and down the coast. You can probably find the Heritage Papers address on-line. Jan