Indian Creek is a stream of southern Monroe County that flows into the New River at Junta, Summers County, WV. There were many settlements along this Creek in the early days when this area was all Greenbrier County. Monroe was separated in 1799, and Summers was created after the Civil War. I believe Indian Creek is so named because of a large Indian meeting area/camp that was located along the New at the mouth. For more data, see "New River Early Settlement", by Patricia Johnson; and/or "West Virginia, The State and Its People," by Otis Rice. For a map, here is a map from Mapquest.com. http://www.mapquest.com/cgi-bin/ia_find?link=btwn%2Ftwn-map_results&random=670&event=find_search&uid=uf_5rate34adw7ne%3Ar2dwt00y1&SNVData=3mad3-5.fy%2528ats9yt_%2529r7glr8%253bpq%257c0u6%2Cp7%253bz2u.hqu%253b%2528_%251225m45qr%253d%2519H_%253dGG_lztldr%2528.56z51u%2528l%2524efiid%257c7xbfjw.lq%25286&address=&city=Crumps+Bottom&state=&zip=&country=&Find+Map=New+Map If this does not work, just go to the mapquest search area and type in Crumps Bottom and WV (under state. Good Luck, Ed Patrick Kenney wrote: > Does anybody know the modern day location of the Indian Creek that was > located in Greenbrier County before 1800? > In addition, General Samuel Lewis owned 1000's of acres of land along said > Indian Creek as well as a couple other Lewis's, I am trying to either locate > a plat map for pre-1800 Greenbrier County or create a facsimile of one for > at least the area along Indian Creek that ran through General Andrew Lewis's > property... > > thanks in advance, > > Patrick