I enjoy finding out where ancestors lived and who their neighbors were. Many of the early records for plats, grants, Memorials and deeds are indexed by the SC Dept. of Archives and History at www.archivesindex.sc.gov. Maybe that will tell you that your Quaker ancestor got a grant in 1765 on "Palmetto Branch Creek" or "Scotch Creek" of the Bush River. So where is that, in relation to the cemetery? A plat-map for Newberry District Dutch Fork compiled by Dr. Carl Nichols is described at http://dutchforkchapter.org, click on Chapter Publications. The plat-map shows the cemetery at the far southwestern edge, because it covers Newberry properties east and north of the Bush River. You'd need to contact the Dutch Fork society to find out if copies are still available, and if the cost is still $12 plus $2.40 S&H. Most (but not all) of the Bush River Quakers lived in the region covered by the plat-map, and their lands--including plat, sale and purchase dates--are marked on it. How do you find out if your ancestors were included in the records of the Bush River Monthly Meeting? One source is Silas Emmett Lucas Jr. (Ed.), Quakers in South Carolina: Wateree and Bush River, Cane Creek, Piney Grove and Charleston Meetings (Greenville SC: Southern Historical Press, Inc., 1991). It includes a summary of the Hinshaw entries for SC. It is no longer in print, but probably available in libraries or via used-book sites. Some of the Bush River MM members lived south and west of the Bush River (or owned lands on both sides), so are not marked on the Nichols plat-map. The plat-maps for those lands are in Jesse Hogan Motes III & Margaret Peckham Motes, Laurens and Newberry Counties South Carolina: Saluda and Little River Settlements 1749-1775 (Greenville SC: Southern Historical Press, Inc., 1994). I located a copy a couple of years ago, so there are probably some of them still on the market. If you're planning to attend the reunion and you also like maps (as I do), you can use the SCDAH search-engine to find out where your families lived, then locate the plat-maps--different references, depending on which side of the Bush River. Those will tell you which county road will take you to which creek, and roughly how far to drive before you get to the "old home place." Harriet Imrey