Bill, I read your posting and thought I should respond with the information you requested. I am also a descendant of William Randolph and Mary Isham Randolph. I will also post this on the Randolph-L for all to see. My wife and I visited Turkey Island a few years ago and took some pictures. I have made this into a list of items: 1. Turkey Island was never a true island, it was an Oxbow. This is where a river makes a bend that almost comes back on itself. In the winter, when the James River was high, the narrow neck became a swamp and was hard to cross. 2. Turkey Island has been renamed Presquile National Wildlife Refuge, SE of Richmond, VA, on the James River. Access is restricted, you must make reservations, and be escorted by a park ranger. The phone number I have is dated, but should still be good, (804) 733-8042. 3. In resent years, the Corp. of Army Engineers have cut a navigational channel through the narrow neck making Presquile National Wildlife Refuge a true island. 4. The cemetery you are inquiring about is not what you think. Based on the memory of a local farmer, it was reconstructed by the park department from random fallen monuments (5) that were found scattered about the property. 5. Non of the headstones are of William Randolph or Mary Isham Randolph (of Hermuda Hundred), even though they are buried some place on the island. 6. The names on the five headstones are: Sallie O. May, Harriet Watkins, Mary Page, M.P., and the 5th one is not marked. 7. The general location of the reconstructed cemetery is: as you walk up the road, from the ferry, the cemetery would be located behind and to the right of where the main Randolph house used to be, and on the edge of the berm or drop off. 8. FYI there is another cemetery located on the Hermuda Hundred other side of the channel, half way from the access gate and the ferry landing to Turkey Island, on the left side of the dirt road, about 500 feet out in an open field, are 6 additional graves. 9. The 6 headstones are made of white marble, they are lying flat on the ground. Most are broken and are hard to see from the road. 10. The names on the five headstones are: John Worsham (1774-1795), Edward Worsham (1710-1775), Michal Worsham (1771-1795), Margaret _____, ___rah Worsham Baugh or Paugh (1775-1795), and Edward Worsham (176_-1792). I hope this helps. You can find more Randolph information on our web site (http://www.best.com/~parsons). Mr. Gary A. Parsons Web Page Administrator & Associate Historian for The Parsons Family Association - Western Region