I'm looking to see what can be learned about these unplaced Paces. As far as I have found, Edward Pace is mentioned only in a patent to Richard Todd, Elizabeth City County, 9 October 1655: "600 acres ... 350 acres part of the land bounded &c. Beg. by the water side extending from the land of Edward Pace and up the creek ... and 250 acres the residue near the back river Northerly upon the land formerly John Graves's..." John Graves was the grandson of Thomas Graves who was a member of the Virginia Company and came in the Second Supply in 1608 (Dorman, AP&P, v2, p131). When William Epes, Commander of Smythe's Hundred, was arrested for killing Capt Stallings, Thomas Graves was asked by Yeardley to take over as Commander (also AP&P). Dorman says that John Graves (son of Thomas Graves' son Thomas) "owned 600 acres in Elizabeth City..., and to this land, which lay at the headwaters of Back River adjacent to York County, he subsequently added..." So this looks like the location of Todd's land that adj Edward Pace. Raleigh Croshaw, presumed father of Maj. Joseph Croshaw and his brother Richard (the relationship is not proved; see AP&P v1 p769 fn14 for Dorman's comments on its probability) also came in the Second Supply in 1698 along with Thomas Graves. The Graves and Croshaw families intermarried: Joseph Croshaw's daughter Rachel married John Graves' son Ralph. Thomas Graves' daughter Ann (she would be an aunt of the John Graves who had land in the same area as Edward Pace) was born about 1620 and, says Dorman, "married successively three ministers of Hungar's Parish, Accawmack." Presumably one of her three husbands would have been minister in April 1661, when John Pace, son of John and Mary Pace, was baptized. Let's see, yes, according to Dorman the minister in 1661 was Rev. Francis Doughty, Ann Graves' third husband. Whether there might have been any connection between Edward Pace of Elizabeth City County; John and Mary Pace of Hungars Parish; and James and Richard Pace of York Co., I have no idea. James