Thank goodness for the history feature. I found it. http://piedmontwanderings.blogspot.com/2010/10/early-land-claims-on-saxapahaw. On the blog, to the right he has dates and in parenthesis the number of pages, so this site has over 100 pages of material and is not searchable. A real pain. But this page has a map and all those men should be on it if I am reading it right. He is an author and he does sell the maps, so the resolution is small on the blog so that they load easy. I was able to save it to my desktop and make larger but only the larger names are legible. I can say that Valentine Hollingsworth in date 1760 and in the lower left hand corner and a Thomas Lindsay lays just north of him but I can't read the rest of the writing around him. It is a rather large rectangular shape. I personally don't think that $10.00 is too bad considering we all know how much time it takes to verify and then plot all these early land grants. I too think it is important to learn as much about all the branches of the family not just my immediate branch. I don't have any direct Hollingworth's that I know of yet, but there are several that have marriages that I am hoping may break down some walls if I could get more information. I don't know if every Bush River family has a big connection to Orange County but I sure seem to plus some of these families seem connected to my none Quakers in Va/NC/SC. I am hoping to meet this guy when I go to North Carolina to see my son and thought I would be going this summer, but my son bought a little country spread back here as a "vacation/retirement" home (he is only 39 but in the Navy) so now they will be home in July and August so I am not sure. Hillsborough is just the right distance to stay overnight and I plan on stretching it into a couple of days of research. LOL I want to try to read all his pages before I go back down, so I can glean his mind with relevant questions. We could not meet up last time I was down there and I had just found him. I have a grandfather that they only clue I have on him is that "he was born on the Haw River" and the Haw River is one of Mark's focus and how I found his site. His book is "An Historical Atlas of the Haw River". I am not sure he is really into "selling his ware" as I have never found a way to order. I was wanting to meet him and get his book then and the only way I could find him was through the mayor's office and I was only going to be there for two days so his schedule was already full.