If you responded to a query from me today about any of these names, and I did not get back to you, PLEASE email me again. My mail went kablooey! Thanks, Rose
Friends, A good and generous friend has given me a copy of High On A Windy Hill, by McConnell. This book contains thousands of names of individuals buried in cemeteries in Washington Co., VA. In the spirit of this blessing I would be pleased to do limited lookups for anyone. I can do a look up for an individual or a blanket SURNAME. The Rules: 1) Limit each request to three or less names. 2) Try to give some date to help narrow the search. 3) This is ONLY the people buried in Washington Co., VA -eddie
Hi, I am researching James Honaker who married Jane Diggins in Boyd Co, KY, in 1875. Does anyone have any info he/she is willing to share? I believe James may have been born in VA. Thanks very much, Rose
Hello! I am researching Reuben Hicks who married Christena Powers in 1815 in Russell Co, VA, in 1815. Reuben and Christena had a son, Smith Hicks, who married Sarah Martin. They had a daughter, Elizabeth Hicks, who married James Harvey Jobe in Lawrence Co, KY, in 1861....Any help would be very much appreciated. Rose
Hello, Does anyone have any info on a Sarah Clasby/Glasby who married Sharick Estep? Sarah and Shad were the parents of Margaret Rachel Estep who married George W Estep in 1868 in Boyd co, KY. Does anyone know anything about the Clasby/Glasby name? Thanks VERY much, Rose
Does anyone have any info at all on a Martha Elkins who married Shadrick Estep and was the mother of George W Estep who married Margaret Rachel Estep in 1868 in Boyd co, KY? Thanks very much, Rose
Hello, I'm searching for any info on Susan Elizabeth Glasby who married John W. Prichard in the late 1870's in Lawrence co, KY. John had had a previous marriage. Elizabeth may have been the only Glasby in the USA! :-) Thanks, Rose
Hello, Doest anyone have any info on the lineage of George W Estep who married Margaret Rachel Estep in 1868 in Boyd co, KY I have some Estep info and I am willing to share! Thanks, Rose
Just made a major breakthru. My uncle had failed until last night to tell me his mother had a younger sister, WHO WAS STILL ALIVE. I called Viola this evening and she remembers their grandfather on their mom's side was ANDREW WINTON CARRICO. Andrew and his wife had a daughter Mary who married Stephen Wilcox who was a farmer in Friese, VA. Someone here on this list and given me information on a Andrew Carrico and a Mary Carrico but I must have accidently deleted it cause I sure cannot find it. Does this Andrew ring bells with anyone and is Friese, VA in Wise Co? Thanks. George gebasden@worldnet.att.net http://www.basden.com
Does anyone have listings for Methodist ministers for Wise County? RESEARCHING WILCOX AND CARRICO George gebasden@worldnet.att.net http://www.basden.com
Dr. N. Brent Kennedy will speak at 1:30pm Sat. Jan. 16, 1999 in the auditorium of the Main Library in Roanoke, VA. Any of you near enough to attend, pls do so and I will be glad to meet you! ;-) Nancy S
I am looking for information on my great-great-grandfather, William Samuel Pendleton or his children who moved to Mulberry Gap, Hancock Co ca 1868 from Scott Co, VA. He was born ca 1833 in Scott Co, married Julia Ann Quillen (ca 1836 - ? ) on 17 Sept 1850 in Scott Co. Children were: Lydia (1853), James M. (17 Sept 1852) married Mary Jane Sumpter ca 1873, Ira (1856), Rebecca (1858), William Benton (1860), Sarah (1863), Thomas L. (1866) married Martha Strong on 29 Jul 1882, Christopher (1867), Molly (1869), Laura (1872), Emlie (1874), Lodussa (1877) and Ulyses (1883) who married Mattis Rainey (1884). Any information welcome, I have much on earlier Pendleton's in Scott Co to exchange.
For the new members and the ones who missed this before. The Buchanan County Historical Society Newsletter is now available. This first issue contains articles on these families: Davis, Fuller, Keen, Vance, and Vandyke, along with some early Marriage records, and some other interesting stuff. Info on the Historical Society Site at: http://www.mtinter.net/bcpl/History/History.htm or contact me personally, or the Library in Grundy. God Bless!!!!! Peggy C (Fuller) Keen Website: http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Valley/5049 *********************************************************** AMERICAN BY BIRTH, DAUGHTER OF THE MOUNTAINS BY THE GRACE of GOD...Diana Kinzer Heath ***********************************************************
G. Lee, Have you tried the land grants in the Library of Va webpage? Or the land surveys of Smyth or Wythe Co.?? Laurel sounds like Smyth Co. -eddie I am interested in information which might help me locate a survey in Washington, Smyth or Scott counties called "Campbells Choice" it was located, according to a deed , as being "on the North side of North Fork Holston river at the Laurel Branch of the river. Specifically, i am trying to locate land bought about 1780 by Billingsley Roberts and willed to Richard and John Roberts, sons of Billingsley, in his will of 1790.. Will appreciate any help on this... G. Lee Hearl Abingdon, Va. glh@naxs.com ==== SW_VA Mailing List ==== #4 Chain letters, gossip, non-genealogical notes, commercial ads, pleas for help, etc. are PROHIBITED on this List. Violators will be promptly locked out. -sysop
I am interested in information which might help me locate a survey in Washington, Smyth or Scott counties called "Campbells Choice" it was located, according to a deed , as being "on the North side of North Fork Holston river at the Laurel Branch of the river. Specifically, i am trying to locate land bought about 1780 by Billingsley Roberts and willed to Richard and John Roberts, sons of Billingsley, in his will of 1790.. Will appreciate any help on this... G. Lee Hearl Abingdon, Va. glh@naxs.com
G. Lee, I hope you don't mind me sharing your reply with the List members. EVERYONE PLEASE notice that when you click reply, you are responding ONLY to the original sender, not the whole List. Sometimes you will want to respond to the sender only, but other times you should reply to the entire group. Just make sure you do what you intended. -sysop I am not a lawyer and if my interptation is wrong please correct me..I understand that a person could buy a land warrant or receive a warrant for military service..and these warrants could be sold to another person whereupon the assignee of the warrant could select land and have it surveyed by the county surveyor. He could then present the survey and receive a deed for the land.. I understand that many who fought in the Rev. War received military land warrants and sold, or assigned them to others.. G. Lee Hearl Abingdon, VA...
The following is a typical deed or land grant from Virginia to citizens of Washington Co. See below. What does the "assignee" part mean? Is one person transferring ownership to another?? Is one acting as the agent for the other?? XXXXX , Michael 162 acres Washington Co., VA James Wood Esquire Governor of the Commonwealth of Virginia. To all To whom these Presents shall come Greeting, Know ye that by virtue of a Land Office Treasury warrant Number fourteen thousand three hundred - seventy-nine? (dated) twenty-fifth of September One thousand seven hundred and eighty-two there is granted by the said Commonwealth unto * Michael Xzzzzzz's Assignee John Fox * a certain tract or parcel of Land containing one hundred and sixty-two acres, by survey bearing date the nineteenth day of January One thousand seven hundred and ninety-three, lying and being in the County of Washington at the foot of Clinch Mountain in the Poor Valley on the Waters of the North Fork of Holstein River and bounded as followeth, To wit, Beginning at the white oaks by a hollow, thence North forty-five degrees West thirty posts to a white oak, two Hickory saplings and Dogwood. North sixty degrees East one hundred and ninety poles to a black Gum and white oak sapling on the southside of a ridge. North forty degrees East thirty-seven poles to a black oak corner to Abraham Newland's land thence North seventy-three degrees East 61 poles to a white oak up (162B) the Poor Valley. North ten degrees West forty poles to a black gum and white oak up a branch South seventy-three degrees West two hundred and sixty-four poles to a pine on spur of Clinch Mountain. North seventy-six West 44 poles to a hard? oak on the east side of a spur of said mountain South five degrees East 178 poles to a beech at a branch in the Poor Valley North sixty degrees East 73 poles to the Beginning, with its appurtenances to Have and To Hold the said tract of parcel of land with it appurtenances to the said Michael Xzzzzz and his Heirs forever. In Witness whereof the said James Wood Esquire Governor of the Commonwealth of Virginia hath hereunto set his hand and caused the Lesser seal of the said Commonwealth to be affixed at Richmond on the twenty-sixth day of November in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and ninety-eight, and of the Commonwealth the seventy-third. Signed: James Wood
I thought this was a very important website and felt there are many out there who would also want it. This is a listing of the Confederate POWs who died while prisoners in the Louisville Military Prison, and were buried in Cave Hill Cemetery, Louisville, KY. Most of these were either wounded, or too sick to send to prisons further North, such as Camps Morton, Douglas, Chase, &c. As POWs began to die there, local Unionists did not want them buried with the Union dead, so a couple of well-to-do Confederate sympathizers bought and donated ground in Cave Hill Cemetery, which later became the Confederate sections. (Some CS POWs did, however, end up buried among the Federals in what became the National Cemetery.) ftp://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/ky/jefferson/cemeteries/cavehill.txt There is also a Georgia woman, Elizabeth Timms, buried among the CS POWs. She was taken from her home when the Federals passed by in 1864 and shipped North (her husband was away in the ANV). She was imprisoned in the women's section of the LMP, and died there (reportedly due to mistreatment at the hands of Dr. Mary Walker). Her dying wish was "bury me with my people," which is where she lies to this day. If anyone has any corrections to the names, ranks, or units on this listing, based on research into unit records, I would very much appreciate it if you would pass it on, so I can correct the list. ============================== ============================== Geoff Walden <gwalden@sw.cybersurf.de> Sons of Confederate Veterans Gen. Ben Hardin Helm Camp 1703 ============================== ==============================Diana Kinzer Heath
Hi guys! I have received several posts asking what a Melungeon is. I sent Post #1 w/ that info to this list. It contains several URLs and much info. I am sending it again in case it didn't go through the first time. Please read this carefully and print out the info if you think you have a connection. Pls use the URLs to help you start researching. You will not have an easy time! BUT it is fascinating! Good Luck! Nancy S Nancy Sparks Morrison Roanoke, VA 24015 USA Email nmorri3924@aol.com January 08, 1999 The opinions in this post are strictly my own, but have been based upon my reading and research of various materials noted herein. You may SHARE my work with anyone, but it is not to be sold or used for profit in any way, without my permission. Because there is so much information here, you may want to print out this material for future reference. Are you familiar with the term Melungeon? If you answer, Who or what are Melungeons, you are like most people. If you have been researching your family in the Cumberland Plateau of Virginia, Kentucky, North Carolina, West Virginia, and Tennessee, during the early migration years, you may be able to find them through a connection to this group of people who are only now being researched with unbiased eyes. The Melungeons are a people of apparent Mediterranean descent who may have settled in the Appalachian wilderness as early or possibly earlier than 1567. (The Melungeons: The Resurrection of a Proud People; N. Brent Kennedy, Mercer University Press, Macon, GA, USA, 1997; introduction, p. xiii) The Mediterrean includes areas of North Africa, southern Europe and Central Asia. According to Dr. Kennedy, the Melungeons were a people who almost certainly intermarried with Powhatans, Pamunkeys, Creeks, Catawbas, Yuchis, and Cherokees to form what some have called, perhaps a bit FANCIFULLY, a new race. Dr. Kennedy does not believe that we can call the Melungeons a race.. No dictionary definition of race fits with what we know of the Melungeons and recently, The American Anthropological Association, declared that race, was an inaccurate, artificial way of defining a people and was no longer of any value. Certain surnames are associated with this highly interesting group of people. I am including a copy of those names. Be aware, however, that many people bearing these surnames, even if they come from the Appalachian area, are NOT connected to the Melungeons. The surnames are to be used as an INDICATOR of POSSIBLE Melungeon ancestry. Also, note that many Melungeon women out-married, carrying the heritage with them, but not the names. Not having one of these names DOES NOT mean that the family was not of Melungeon descent. Finding out about the Melungeons and my possible connection to them is the MOST fascinating thing I have EVER run into in my 20 years of genealogical research. The so-called, Melungeons were discovered in the Appalachian Mountains in 1654 by English explorers and were described as being dark-skinned, reddish-brown complexioned people supposed to be of Moorish descent, who were neither Indian nor Negro, but had fine European features, and claimed to be Portuguese. (Louise Davis, The Mystery of the Melungeons. Nashville Tennessean, 22 September, 1963, 16.) In April of 1673, James Needham, an Englishman and Gabriel Arthur, possibly an indentured servant came with approximately eight Indians, as explorers to the Tennessee Valley. There, Needham described finding hairy people .... (who) have a bell which is six foot over which they ring morning and evening and at that time a great number of people congregrate togather and talkes in a language not English nor any Indian dialect that the accompanying Indians knew. And yet these people seemingly looked European. Needham described them as hairy, white people which have long beards and whiskers and weares clothing. This bell seems to me to speak of a Latin influence among these people. Other, later explorers, found people who lived in log cabins with peculiar arched windows. Dr. Kennedy says that by the late 1700s they were practicing the Christian religion. These people claimed that they were descended from a group of Portugese who had been shipwrecked or abandoned on the Atlantic coast. (Byron Stinson, The Melungeons, American History Illustrated, November, 1973:41) The term they used was Portyghee. In other documents, some of these peoples were also described as having red hair and others with VERY distinctive blue or blue/green eyes. This description leads me to believe that these people were not Native American Indians. Altogether they must have been a striking looking people. Most Americans have been taught in school about the Lost Colony and Jamestown in 1607, Plymouth in 1620, with a few Spaniards and a smattering of Viking thrown in for good measure. Where did these people come from? First of all, as the mixed- ancestry descendents of native Americans as well as other ethnic identities, many Melungeons will find this question to be offensive-- many of their true ancestors were ALREADY here, prior to contact with European and African in-migrants, the Official Voice of the Second Union Planning Committee says. But recent research is giving an interesting answer to that question. Again, from the Official Voice of the Second Union Planning Committee comes the answer to this question. They are a sizable mixed-ethnic population spread throughout the southeastern United States and into southern Ohio and Indiana. While the term Melungeon is most commonly applied to those group members living in eastern Kentucky, southwestern Virginia, eastern Tennessee, and southern West Virginia, related mixed-ancestry populations also include the Carmel Indians of southern Ohio, the Brown People of Kentucky, the Guineas of West Virginia, the We-Sorts of Maryland, the Nanticoke-Moors of Delaware, the Cubans and Portuguese of North Carolina, the Turks and Brass Ankles of South Carolina, and the Creoles and Redbones of Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana. >From the same source we find that new evidence or rather old evidences re- examined without prejudice, show a significant Spanish and Portuguese presence in sixteenth-century America, including the large South Carolina coastal colony of Santa Elena, as well as five outlying forts in what is now present day South Carolina, North Carolina, north Georgia, and east Tennessee. Additionally many of the Spanish and Portuguese newcomers were so-called Conversos, - that is, ethnic Jewish and Moorish people who had converted to Catholicism prior to or during the Spanish Inquisition. Evidence is also strong (see the work of English historian David Beers Quinn) that in 1586 Sir Francis Drake deposited several hundred Turkish and Moorish sailors, liberated from the Spanish, in present-day Central America, on the coast of North Carolina at Roanoke Island. No trace was found of these people when later English vessels dropped anchor for re-supplying. If you believe the Bering Strait migration of the Native American Indians and you consider that most sixteenth century Turkish sailors were of central Asian heritage, thus making them literal cousins to the Native Americans they would have encountered, you will see that they would have had little trouble fitting in. There is more evidence of Karachi, and Kavkaz Turkish, and Armenian, textile workers, artisans and servants who were brought in by both the English and Spanish into sixteenth century Virginia and other areas.This seems to lend support to previous claims of Melungeons to be of Turkish origin. These people survived by blending into the surrounding groups of peoples. Over time, they were put in to one of four permissable, inflexible and artificial racial categories: White (northern European), black (African), Indian, or mulatto, a mix of any of the first three. By the time that the first U.S. census was conducted, there had been 200 years of admixture and cultural fusing. This ensured that the story would remain hidden and buried, and that no amount of the census research could ever tell the story accurately. Traditional genealogy can not be used to find these people. There are are no written records, no censuses, no marriage or death notices. Dr. Kennedys interest in the Melungeons began with an illness that took him to the emergency room in Atlanta, Georgia where he was diagnosed with erythema nodosum sarcoidosis. In researching his own illness, Dr. Kennedy found that it is a disease of primarily Middle Eastern and Mediterrean peoples, although it is not unknown among the Irish and Scandanavians. He later discovered it was equally common among the Portuguese immigrants of New England, and both southeastern Blacks and Caucasians of seemingly unrelated backgrounds. He was told that he would just have to wait to see if he lived or died. How could a southerner, of Appalachian roots, have a Mediterrean disease? It was this question that Dr. Kennedy set out to answer, by tracing his family background, and in the process he rediscovered his heritage. His book, mentioned earlier, is not about historical research, but his familys genealogy and theoretical problem solving. There are some physiological characteristics which are called ethnic markers, that seem to be passed on through the lines of some Melungeon descendants. There is a bump on the back of the HEAD of SOME descendants, that is located at mid-line, just ABOVE the juncture with the neck. It is about the size and shape of half a golf ball or smaller. If you cannot find the bump, check to see if you, like some descendants, including myself, have a ridge, located at the base of the head where it joins the neck, rather than the Anatolian bump. This ridge is an enlargement of the base of the skull, which is called a Central Asian Cranial Ridge. My ridge is quite noticeable. It is larger than anyone elses that I have felt, except my fathers. I can lay one finger under it and the ridge is as deep as my finger is thick. Other ridges are smaller. To find a ridge, place your hand at the base of your neck where it joins your shoulders, and on the center line of your spine. Run your fingers straight up your neck toward your head. If you have a ridge, it will stop your fingers from going on up and across your head. ONLY people who live/d in the Anatolian region of Turkey or Central Asia also have this bump/ridge. See the following diagram for the site of both the ridge and bump. Back of Head ears ( ___x___ ) ears x marks the bumps location \valley / the ridge is the line __ shown \ / neck / \____shoulders There is also a ridge on the back of the first four teeth - two front teeth and the ones on either side (upper and lower) of some descendants. If you place your fingernail at the gum line and gently draw (up or down) you can feel it and it makes a slight clicking sound. The back of the teeth also curve outward rather than straight as the descendants of anglo-saxon parentage do. Teeth like these are called Asian Shovel Teeth. Many Indian descendants also have this type of teeth. The back of the first four teeth of Northern European descendants are straight and flat. An example of northern European teeth would be similar to this diagram: \l Shovel teeth look like this diagram. Back of teeth )/ front of teeth, straight. SOME Melungeon descendants have what is called an Asian eyefold. This is rather difficult to describe. At the inner corner of the eye, the upper lid attaches slightly lower than the lower lid. That is to say that, it overlaps the bottom lid. If you place your finger just under the inner corner of the eye and gently pull down, a wrinkle will form which makes the fold more visible. Some people call these eyes, sleepy eyes, dreamy eyes, bedroom eyes. Many Indian descendants also have these kinds of eyes. Some families may have members with fairly dark skin who suffer with vitiligo, a loss of pigmentation, leaving the skin blotched with white patches. Some descendants have had six fingers or toes. There is a family of people in Turkey whose surname translated into English is Six Fingered Ones. If your family has an Indian Grandmother(father) myth which you have been unable to prove, an adoption story that is unprovable, or an orphan myth, and they have been hard to trace and they lived in NC, TN, KY, VA, WV areas in the early migration years or if they seem to have moved back and forth in these areas and if they share any of the mentioned surnames and characteristics, you MAY find a connection here. Some descendants do not show the physical characteristics and of course, there are many people with the surnames who are not connected to this group. Now, if I have piqued your interest, here is a URL for the Melungeon Homepage, designed and hosted by Darlene Wilson, that I have found which has a lot of information on the Melungeons. There is also a guestbook/forum on this list where you can place your queries and read those of others: http://pluto.clinch.edu/appalachia/melungeon/ Be sure and read all the pages and connected links! This is NOT a genealogy page, but carries Melungeon information and research. Darlene is NOT a genealogist and she has not set up this site to handle queries to her. She is a researcher and a doctural candidate with a very busy schedule. There is excellent documentation on this interesting group and it will give you the necessary information so that you can more easily understand the Melungeons, and their reasons for doing what they did. What I am giving you summarizes some but NOT ALL the information. Dr. N. Brent Kennedys book, The Melungeons: The Resurrection of a Proud People, both a genealogy and theoretical search for answers, is a must read for anyone who is connected to this group. Most bookstores can order this book in paperback for you. >From some information in Dr. Kennedys book and information from the Second Union Planning Committee, you can see the necessity for these people to hide. These proud, strong, courageous, people were discriminated against by their Scots-Irish and English neighbors as they moved into the areas where the Melungeons lived. They wanted the rich valley lands occupied by the Melungeons they found residing there. They practiced RACIAL discrimination against the Melungeons because they were darker skinned than their own anglo-saxon ancestors and because this helped them obtain the lands they coveted. In a society where slavery was an accepted way of life, where genocide against the American Indian was government policy, hiding was sometimes the only way to survive. This discrimination carried into the 1940s-50s and perhaps even longer, because of the work of a man named Walter A. Plecker, who was the state of Virginias first Director of Vital Statistics and an avowed racist. Some Germans say that it was he, who first gave them the idea of eugenics, that was used during WWII to help exterminate 6 million Jews. Plecker labeled the Melungeons, calling them mongrels and other worse terms - some were labeled FPC - Free Person of Color in Virginia. This in turn led to their children being labeled as Mulatto (M) and both of those terms came to mean BLACK. (There is information on Plecker and the letters he wrote to all the counties in VA and the surrounding states to marginalize and discriminate against the Melungeons on the Melungeon Homepage. Check under the Archives section.) Some Melungeon families married white, some black, some Indian, some a combination. But for all of them, the terms led to rulings in which they couldnt own property, they couldnt vote, and they couldnt school their children. Is it any wonder that they became ANYTHING else in order to do these things? They hid their backgrounds with the Indian myth, with the orphan myth (my family are all dead) , and the adopted myth, and they changed either the spelling of their surnames or they picked an entirely new name, moving many times, anything to distance themselves from their Melungeon heritage. They became Black Dutch, Black Irish, Black Scot or Swede, or some other combination to hide their otherness. Is it any wonder they are so hard to find? They deliberately made it so, in order for their descendants to have a better life than they had had. I have a Ramey family that I have traced to France where they were the Remy family. This Ramey family is also considered to be Melungeon. I will be glad to share the information I have on them. I also have some one name lines that married into some of my other lines. The names considered to be Melungeon are Thompson, Wood, and possibly Smith. I would love to talk with anyone who shares these surnames and locations. The closest Melungeon family, for whom I have searched the longest, were Collinses that were connected with the Cunningham family. It took me twenty years of searching to find only this little bit of information on them. I have this: 1. William Cunningham m. Susan Wood abt 1770 2. John Cunningham m Nancy Crump in 1794 in Washington Co., VA 2. Mary Ann Cunningham m. John Hutton in 1791 in Washington Co., VA 2. Elizabeth Cunningham m. John Dickenson in 1796 in Washington Co., Va. 2.William Cunningham, Jr. b. abt 1777, d. aft 1850, prob. in Johnson Co.,KY m. 1810, Washington Co., VA, Rachel Ann Elizabeth Countiss, b. May 05, 1791 in MD, dtr of Peter G. Countiss and Mary Burrt. 3. Maca/Macha Cunningham b. abt 1826 m WILL COLLINS, d. 1848-1850 4. MARY COLLINS b. abt 1843 in the Scott, Russell, Lee Co.,VA area that is now Wise Co., VA, was a partner of Abraham Musick b. abt 1836 in VA, d. bef May 15, 1914, son of James Musick and Mariah Shell. 5. Mary Arminta Musick 4. RACHEL COLLINS b. Jan. 01, 1844 inKY, d. May 15, 1914 m. Abraham Musick of above. 4. CHARLES COLLINS b. abt 1848 4. CHRISTOPHER COLLINS b. abt 1850 I have information on other Cunningham siblings, the Countiss family, as well as the Musick line back to the immigrant founding father. I dont have all that information up on my familys webpage, which was set up by my cousin Harold Sparks, yet, but I do have some information on my greatgrandmother Mary Arminta Musick Hager whose mother was Mary Collins. The address is: http://www.awod.com/gallery/rwav/sparky On the first page, click continue and on the second page, scroll down until you come to the words Nancys Corner , Click and my picture will come up. Further down that page is a listing of all the surnames that I am researching. Please be sure to contact me if you see any common surnames. If you feel that any of this information applies to you, then please join a group of us, searching our Melungeon roots on a mailing list that began when MaryK Goodyear learned that she might have Melungeon heritage and wanted to find out more. We will be forever grateful to MaryK for starting this list. We share genealogy, folklore, cultural likenesses, even a recipe now and then. We are a friendly group who has come to feel like family. We have a lot to offer. To join, send an e-mail to: Melungeon-L-request@rootsweb.com or Melungeon-D-request@rootsweb.com In both the subject and body boxes put: subscribe You will receive a letter saying you have been subbed and giving directions for posting the list. Send in your family info and let us see if we can help you. I know that you will be able to help someone as well! I will look forward to hearing from you and seeing you on the list. There is also a Melungeon chat list for more cultural, social gathering and getting to know one and other, that you might enjoy. Pam Cresswell can give you directions for subbing this list. Visit her URL at: http://cresswells.com/alhn/melung/index.html Here are several other sites with Melungeon queries and information: http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Pointe/3778/ http://www.clinch.edu/appalachia/melungeon/mel_nmr.htm http://www2.privatei.com/~bartjean/mainpage.htm
I forget to add my maternal line surnames: BAKER COOPER CRAIG EVANS Camilla Morton morton-3c4k@erols.com