Colonial Surry

Colonial Surry
Author: John Bennett Boddie
Publisher: Genealogical Publishing Com
Total Pages: 256
Release: 1966
Genre: Land grants
ISBN: 0806300264

This is a collection of genealogical data from important name lists for Colonial Surry, which once encompassed almost the entire southern part of the state of Virginia (i.e., fourteen present-day Virginia counties). Noteworthy lists include Surry land grants, 1624-1740, and various Surry and Sussex censuses and marriage bonds.

Ancestral Notebook of Jackson and Related Families

Ancestral Notebook of Jackson and Related Families
Author: Winston Jerome Jackson
Publisher:
Total Pages: 332
Release: 1973
Genre:
ISBN:

Our first documented Jackson ancestor was Ambrose Jackson, who, with Ralph, Thomas and John Jackson were settled along the Meherrin River and Reedy Creek section of Surry County, Virginia in 1719. Includes Baldwin, Puckett, Warren, Jackson and related families.

Surry County Virginia Tithables, 1668-1703

Surry County Virginia Tithables, 1668-1703
Author: Edgar McDonald
Publisher: Genealogical Publishing Com
Total Pages: 302
Release: 2007
Genre: Segraves Collection
ISBN: 0806353589

Reprints. Lists originally published in the Magazine of Virginia genealogy, February 1984-August 1986; Interpreting headrights in Colonial-Virginia patents: uses and abuses originally published September 1987 in National Genealogical Society quarterly.

Thomas Ancestors

Thomas Ancestors
Author: Helen Lucille Chapman Thomas
Publisher:
Total Pages: 640
Release: 1983
Genre:
ISBN:

Baron Albert Maria von St. Luz-Boden (1818-1891) emigrated from Germany to Australia about 1849 as a political refugee. He married Mary Kirby, widow of Alexander MacKinlay. She had four children when they married and they had six more. About 1935, the family immigrated to California where he died.

Civil War Courts-Martial of North Carolina Troops

Civil War Courts-Martial of North Carolina Troops
Author: Aldo S. Perry
Publisher: McFarland
Total Pages: 373
Release: 2012-08-08
Genre: History
ISBN: 0786488573

During the Civil War, Confederate military courts sentenced to death more soldiers from North Carolina than from any other state. This study offers the first exploration of the service records of 450 of these wayward Confederates, most often deserters. Arranged by army, corps, division and brigade, it chronicles their military trials and frequent executions and offers explanations of how the lucky and the clever were able to avoid their fate. Focus on court activity by company allows for comparisons that emphasize the wide disparity in discipline within a regiment and brigade. By stressing the effectiveness of these deadly decisions as deterrents to others, this work maintains that an earlier and wider reliance on execution would have strengthened the Confederacy sufficiently to force a negotiated end to the war, thus saving many Confederate and Federal lives.