*Page* John Henry Dunn married Trissie Ann Page; his uncle, John Dunn, married her sister, I believe named Sarah Jane Page. Both were daughters of *Gazaway Page,*born about 1817 in Union County, South Carolina, died in Gilmer County, Georgia, in late 1883. His (first) wife, their mother, was named * Nancy*; I do not know her maiden name. Gazaway was also an ardent Methodist in the Cartecay, Georgia area, and also pro-Union (like the Dunns) during the Civil War. Another daughter married another Methodist minister, so he had two sons-in-law who were Dunns and two who were Ministers. Our ancestor, his wife, was named Nancy but we do not know her maiden name. After she died, Gazaway married Julia Sorrels and moved to Flat Mountain in remote northwestern Gilmer County, where he died on November 1, 1883. Gazaway Page was the son of *Richard Page* (born about 1786 in *Virginia*; died in Georgia after 1870) and his wife *Ann.* I suspect her maiden name was Gazaway, because this was a prominent Methodist family living near the Pages in Union County, South Carolina, and would explain the name Gazaway Page for the eldest son. I cannot prove her maiden name at this time, however. Richard Page was born in Charlotte County, *Virginia*, moved as a boy to Union County, South Carolina, and moved some time in the 1840s to Gilmer County, Georgia, perhaps after a residence in Rabun County, Georgia. His parents were *Richard Page*, born in the 1750s in *Virginia*, who served in the Revolution (we have at least two Revolutionary veterans on the Dunn side, James Kell and Richard Page), married*Elizabeth Jones *in 1779 in Charlotte County, *Virginia*, and later moved to Union County, South Carolina. He lived there until his death in 1833; she died there in 1838. The elder Richard Page was almost certainly the son of *Nathaniel Page, *who seems to have lived in a couple of *Virginia* Counties before moving to South Carolina. His wife was probably *Hannah, *name unknown.There is some reason to suspect his parents were *Robert and Wine Page, *though this is not yet proven. They're shown so on the enclosed charts but the proof is not complete. As for Elizabeth Jones, who married Richard Page in 1779, she was a daughter of *Richard Jones *of Caroline County, who may have been the son of another Richard Jones. They seem to be linked to a fairly widespread Jones family of central *Virginia*, ut these links are not yet complete.