You may or may not find a direct descendant for your VanBuskirk-Damon Bible, but on the other hand, you could come up with more than one. In the meantime, you can try a couple of things that may make the most of the information found in it. for instance, you might consider scanning or taking digital photos of all the significant pages and keeping them on your computer for an extended period of time until the related persons emerge. Those would be the title page describing the age of the bible with the version, date and edition, the signatures of the donors, and the pages with the various dates and family information. If you have several responses over time you can still share the full information with them even though you may have placed the actual bible with a genealogical or historical society, or an individual. I once purchased an old photo at an antiques fair because it had a name and place on it, and after posting the information to a couple of surname and location newslists, several people responded, so I was able to send the scanned images to all of them in addition to sending the photo to one of them. So it paid off for a number of people, not just one. Carol Boggs