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Linda
02-05-2003, 10:32 AM
In a five week period,, between December 16, 2002 and February 4th 2003, I heard from 18 different people with the Blackfoot ID in their families. Of them, 50% had names which occur among families believed or known to be Saponi (Eastern Siouan) descended. Eighty-one percent had surnames associated with VA/NC families believed or known to be Indian descended. Thirty one percent named these ancestors' place of origin as Virginia or NC. Ninety-three percent were from states frequently mentioned by Saponi researchers as migration paths for Saponi descendants, WV, TN, IN, SC, VA, NC, SC, Al MS, PA, IL.

The names reported during this six week period that also occur among families believed to be Saponi are:

<blockquote>
Day
Williams
Jones
Scott
Lane
Williams
White
Matthews
Anderson
</blockquote>

<img src="http://www.saponitown.com/images/LouellaDay.jpg">
Day Family of Ohio

<img src="http://www.saponitown.com/images/RobertHayesFather75yrs.jpg">
Jones/Smith Family of Indiana

The other names reported during this period that are found among NC/VA families believed to be Indian descended are:

<blockquote>
Minor
Critchfield
Williamson
Smith
Jennings
Thompson
Moss
Lee
Turner
</blockquote>

I'll try to keep posting this on a monthly basis. I want you all to see what I'm seeing. Think about it. In January, 24 people found the site after searching on some variation of "Blackfoot" In five week's time, including January, I heard from 18 of those people. Half of them had names believed to be Saponi! If this is just some tribal name people were glomming onto because it was a household word in the 1890s, why would, 50 percent of the time, only people with these names glom onto it? Does that make any kind of sense? Is there any statistical probability to that?

This is a big country, Wild Bill got to all corners of it, I imagine. Why would 93 percent of the people who "glommed" onto the Blackfoot ID be from states other Saponi researchers constantly cite as involved in the Saponi migration?

By the same token, there are millions of surnames in this country. The English ones may be common, but what are the odds that the combination of names I keep hearing about from Blackfoot ID'd families just happen to also be on the list I use of SE Indian families, to the tune of 81%?

I'd be willing show the emails I've received during this period to someone interested in corroborating these figures. Or perhaps someone else would like to receive the same emails for a period. That would be easy enough to arrange.

vance hawkins
02-05-2003, 12:09 PM
Linda, I might take you up on that. And thanks for these comments. :)

vance

Linda
02-05-2003, 12:30 PM
You think so? Let me know, I'll just add your email address to the "To" line people send their questions to.

Linda
02-07-2003, 10:50 AM
So, what do you all think? How convincing does this data seem?

I know that all we can claim is that these are "believed to be Saponi" names, but I find the coinciding of names to strengthen both. There may be less than 10 names that are documentable to a tribal person, but there are a whole lot more than that being used among state recognized groups, that are being acceptable currently and socially. The fact that a large group of people with family histories of Indian descent also report the same batch of names lends credence to those names being accurate.

Do my arguments in the first post seem convincing? Is there any other way to explain this data?

Linda
02-09-2003, 08:35 AM
Since I've put this out there, I've been worrying about what the weaknesses were with this data, and I've thought of at least three possible ways the data is skewed. First, is the one I already mentioned in the article, the people coming to me have already read the article and are filtered by it -- I hear from people who are from the areas mentioned since the article effectively encourages them.

That wouldn't account for why there's such coincidence of names, but that might be accounted for by the "quantum" effect. I hope I'll hear from people with those names, therefore I do. (Like the quantum physicists who expected a quark to go left observed it going left, those who expected it to go right, found it going right -- somehow the energy of their thought processes influenced the result.)

The third possibility is one I'm always teasing about, that my Ancestors are great internet hackers, constantly stuffing my inbox with uncanny coincidences. I'm hearing from the people THEY want me to hear from. That would also account for why I'm often hearing from people with the same last names/locations, etc., who likely are related, IN THE SAME WEEK.

SO . . . to create a control group, a second study would have to be done, combing the internet for people who have posted questions about Blackfoot heritage on other boards where this kind of energy doesn't exist. My intiial impression on this is that the incidence of 'Saponi' surnames would be lower, but the origin locations would remain the same. In all this, I HARDLY EVER HEAR ABOUT NEW ENGLAND. I'm sure Wild Bill did more venues there than anywhere, and it's highly populated, so if the theory about people just glomming onto the name once it became a household word is true, you would expect an equal showing from there, but those state names rarely ever come up as points of family origin for these "Blackfoot" lines.

itconani
02-11-2003, 09:20 PM
Maybe we can do a similiar study for Cherokee names.
Afterall, that designation would be the would be our first place winner, Blackfoot being our second.
I think the probability lies within these people being of mixed race, coming from a region known for exodus of colored people. The Indian conponent maybe Saponi, maybe Cheraw, maybe Monacan or Nottoway - unknown other than "indian" to their descendants. The popular Indian names fill in gaps for the unknown origin. The likely hood that these people come from an area with heavy trafic, missing indian groups (a region called the mulattoe belt), and that they may be related to the missing people from this region is high.
It would be interesting to see what the figures look like for individuals of the same current locality who are searching for Cherokee ancestors, or what percentage of people settled those areas (regardless of race) originated from VA/NC, or what the names and numbers look like for "blacks" in new england who've a tradition of being indian from the south (blackfoot or otherwise).
food for thought.

Linda
02-11-2003, 09:39 PM
I hear from mostly "white" Indian descendants, it seems, many of whom left the upper south before Blackfoot was a popular name, so I can't see how to quantify any data around those assumptions.

If the tribal origin could be so many different things, why is there such a preponderance of names that are always coming up in discussions of families felt to be Saponi?

itconani
02-11-2003, 10:14 PM
"It would be interesting to see what the figures look like for individuals of the same current locality who are searching for Cherokee ancestors, or what percentage of people settled those areas (regardless of race) originated from VA/NC, or what the names and numbers look like for "blacks" in new england who've a tradition of being indian from the south (blackfoot or otherwise)."

Im not sure people are searching for Saponnys. they may be searching for blackfoot or blackfeet and find saponi because of this search. maybe the word is out on the net that blackfoot may meen saponi?

All im saying is people may be related to each other and to indians from this region. they may say they're blackfoot or maybe cherokee or nothing but indian, or white or whatever. the probalbility that people who settled most of the US came from VA/NC at some point is very high regardless of race. how do we deciminate ones from the other? what about the exodus cherokees all over the country? i think every state has at least one tribe. I just think blackfoot is a good ID, and that maybe some of these people fit the association of Saponi or something from a related group nearby.

Linda
02-12-2003, 09:23 AM
I have a subscription to a database that keeps track of all the search terms people use in the world in a two month period. About 9 people in the world search on the words "Saponi." About 800 or 900 search on variations of the words "Blackfoot."

If you look at my logs, most of the people who come to the site, do so because they searched on the terms "Blackfoot." My site comes up on the first page of the engines for that word. They either come in at the main page, or straight to the page with the "Other Blackfoot" article. I get a lot of people reading that, many all the way through. I then hear from some of them, who write me directly.

If you search Google on the words "blackfoot indian tribe" my site comes up first, with the following blurb Google grabbed onto for whatever reason,

The Other Blackfoot Indian Tribe
... Let me first deal chronologically with what’s known about the village or tribe,
the Sissipaha, which I believe translates as “Blackfoot.” The Sissipaha ...

So in this case, there's no filtering of folks, anybody looking for any kind of information on the Blackfoot enters. I don't seem to be coming up for other variations at the moment. Once they read the article, I'm sure it, in effect, filters down to the people who have eastern, or southeastern roots, and that's who I'll tend to hear from. What constantly amazes me, though, is that when I hear the names they have in their families, and look them up on the list I have of names associated with southeastern Indian families, the names cluster by 50% around those felt to be Saponi, aka Eastern Siouan. The further back people can trace their families, the higher the correspondence of names, also.

Is there any way you can quantify how many "black" Indian descendants you've run across on the eastern seaboard who said they were Blackfoot? Where on the eastern seaboard? The only ones I've heard from fit this pattern the same as the "white" Indian descendants. One even has the story in her family that they're "S'poni Blackfoot." Nonetheless, the majority with the Blackfoot ID seem to be presently midwestern, and my impression is, that they're white identified now, though it could just be that the subject is not coming up. I haven't quantified that, but that would be interesting to look at.

Some of these descendants are offended by the inference that there is anything but a coincidence between the words black and blackfoot. Not because they don't want the racial designation, but because it just runs over their own family history. Like the lady who's family is from the Big Sandy in Ohio, who was shot down on a list by someone who was very adamant there's no such thing as eastern "Blackfoot." "Puleaze," she moaned, 'these are just phony family stories from people who grabbed onto something trendy, that sounded better than being called black."

My friend's family were very isolated, Appalachian people who carried the tradition long before it was a household word, who've never had to defend themselves from "accusations" that they were "black," and who have never in all their history been remotely interested in anything "trendy." Their issue was more one of whether they trusted the outside world at all.

By the way, I'm going to have to take those names off the front page, since that really would skew the results.

vance hawkins
02-12-2003, 10:57 AM
Itconani & Linda & others --

Itconani --

Hope all is well with yall.

What I am sayin' below could be done for Cherokee, or for any group for that matter, as well as Saponi.

I hadn't been here for a few days.

howdy --

Linda, when you do a search for "Virginia Indians", I think your sight also comes up pretty close to the top of the list. I know that's how I first found this web site a year or 2 ago. All I had to go on way back then was old census records sayin my g-g-g-grandpa (John Richey 1797-1861) was born in Virginia, and knew they were from what dad said Indian/Irish mixed.

[Dad's Brown's he said were mixed Cherokee and we eventually traced them back to "Brown's Valley" in NE Al about 1818 and some of them to around Holston Island area a generation or two earlier.]

So you could theoreticallly, like me, have never heard the word "Blackfoot" and get to your website by knowin' your ancestors were Virginia Indians and doin a search for it.

Also you need a control group -- data about surnames from the region in the historic period when Saponi lived there. With this data collected, call it a Random Sample Group, I could run some statistical tests to determine if the E-mail Group of surnames of your people are a random group of descendants from this area -- and they should be. You ALSO need to use your list of known Saponi surnames.

You need to hypothecize that your Email Group is significantly statistically closer to the Known Saponi surname list than the general public sample in the Control Group. Such statistical analysis exists and can be determined. This would not prove any individual is Saponi Indian, but it would constitute "proof" -- as much as you can probably ever get -- that your E-mail Sample Group as a whole DOES contain Saponi blood.

Now the hard part is connectin YOUR ancestors surnames (if they are not on the rolls) with known Indian families with known surnames.

I can run statistical analysis of data if someone knows how to collect it. The hard part is knowin how to insure the control data is random.

vance

Forest
02-12-2003, 12:31 PM
I have met a small number of mixed race folks from the Granville County, NC area, Pettiford descendants, as I recall, who said they had been called "Blackfoot Indians" by local whites. Their interpretation was that it implied African ancestry, which indeed, they acknowledged having, in addition to Indian and white.

Just to further muddy the water.....

Linda
02-12-2003, 01:54 PM
Vance, I do have hard data on what search terms people have used to find the site. I don't remember seeing 'Virginia Indians' much, though I wasn't looking specifically for it. I may be at the top for those terms, but if not many people are searching on it, it doesn't matter much. I do get a very steady amount of traffic on variations of Blackfoot, though.. Big demand! 8-) I guess if I hadn't happened to have that word on the site, I wouldn't have much outside traffic at all.

Here are the search terms people came in on in December

5 blackfoot indian
5 blackfoot indian tribe
3 saponitown
2 blackfoot
2 blackfoot tribe
2 famous people from mississippi indian tribe
2 saponi town blackfoot
1 africansandindians
1 blackfoot indians
1 blackfoot indians ohio
1 blackfoot indians texas
1 blackfoot town saponi
1 blackfoot tribe ohio
1 indians staunton virginia
1 information on blackfoot indians
1 iroquois history in virginia
1 maroon colonies haiti
1 natchez living with cherokee
1 nc indians
1 nottoway falls


Forest, I haven't heard before of people who were being called that by others. All the people I've talked to have had that ID in their families for a long time. That's interesting.

I know you're from Maryland. Had you ever heard of Blackfoot Town, MD (now known as Dagsbury, DE)? That was the name of the town between 1740 and 1780.

rosebudsaponi
02-13-2003, 07:39 PM
deleted

Linda
02-13-2003, 09:58 PM
I've been looking at the Executive Journals of the Colonial Council and kept my eye out for any mention of Cherokee in Virginia. Between 1699 to 1739, the only thing I saw that might signify something was a request from the Cherokee to move some people into southeastern Virginia to enhance their trading capabilities. The governor advised them not to do so, since there were so many raids from the Five Nations at the time.

So, that might provide a motivation, but would it apply to later on, after the tribes we have record of had been neutralized, defined out of existence, transported, dispersed, whatever? In say, 1760, would the Cherokee have been interested in moving into southeastern Virginia, or down into the flatland of NC in enough numbers to be leaving all these descendants?

Could the need for cash have risen enough that people needed to go down into the flatlands for work? Wouldn't there be record in people's ledgers of having employed such people?

itconani
02-14-2003, 12:16 AM
i dont think there are anyway "historic" cherokees doing anything in eastern va or nc except for raiding if at all. some visit on diplomacy, some en route to other locations. later duirng the late 1800s and early 20th century, some cherokees move east for work and for schooling. i know that from my own experience (my mom went to school with a few Qualla cherokees in grade school) and a few local histories that are very well documented (as in still living enrolled members recounting their parents / grandparents plights)

i know the struggle for searching history with "cherokee" overtones. my grandfather was not a researcher of merit, but did dable. with the cherokee matra in hand, he looked up in down in records in raliegh for our relations in the civil war and within enrollment docs. upon finding similiar named individuals in both areas he felt confident of his Cherokee ID. however, these folks were not related directly, maybe cousins at best (my own research) and were definately not cherokee living east of present I-95. So grandad died a cherokee at heart - but not one by record. some people see what they want - others feel okay about "what theyve been told" So i stand asking, who are these people of mixed ancestory (mulatoes) with tales of being indian from this region? more digging, some luck, and alot of hours.

on rose's surry:
originally the south james had these folks in order from hopwell to suffolk:
Appamatucks, Weyanokes, Quiyocohonnacks, Werroskoiacs, and nansemonds(forgive spelling, notes not in hand). they pretty much come down in county order: hopwell - Appamattox; prince george - Weyanokes; surry - quiocohannock; isle of wight - weroskoyacks; suffolk - nancemond.
Now these groups didnt always fall in this vain, but pretty much (weyanokes were also in charles city and moved alot later) but this is how they looked by 1610. Weyanokes stick around for along time in the records in both VA & NC, quiyocohonnacks are not mentioned after 1635ish and neither are the weroskoyacks by 1644. that leaves pretty much the nancemond, and the weyanokes by 1700 (others probably consolidated)
The weyanokes travel and split alot during this time, with pettitons to the governor for land, and shacking up or quarreling with chowanokes, nancemonds, nottoways (and presumebly meherrin), and tuscaroras, and invariably - saponis at different points. Algonquian speakers - allied with chowanokes - but by 1700 most spoke english really (bilingual if not more) well. Ive seen arguments that make both nottoway and meherrin sioun speakers - and of course saponi as siouns. i think banding at this point is out of defenswe and strength in numbers, not lingiustics. indians were severely marginilized by this point in eastern va. they were monitored, and required to check in at several points, recieve coats of color as badges before moving forward into va. they had huge pop deciamtion, large land loss, etc all the usual biz we all know. northhampton maybe remnants of all these peoples.

Forest
02-14-2003, 12:43 PM
I have never heard of "Blackfoot Town" in Maryland or Delaware, at least, not on the Eastern Shore. There is a Dagsboro, in Sussex County, Delaware, not far north of the Maryland line. There is a vague tradition among some of the mixed Indian people around Cheswold, Delaware of "Blackfoot" ancestry, At least, that is what I'm told.

Linda
02-14-2003, 03:27 PM
I found the information on Blackfoot Town on the Sussex County site, http://www.sussexcountyonline.com/towns/dagsboro.html


The town, in the Indian River School District, was founded in 1747 and has been known as Blackfoot Town, Dagsbury and Dagsborough.

On the link to info on General Dagsborough it goes on:


General John Dagworthy, commander of the Sussex County Militia during the Revolutionary War, is regarded as Dagsboro's founding father after establishing industry in the area with grist and lumber mills, tanneries, and an export business shipping cypress lumber to Philadelphia and Trenton, New Jersey.

SenecaSaponi
10-04-2003, 09:06 AM
I have not been on the forum for quite sometime. I do miss reading all of the interesting info. I am wondering if anyone has checked into the fact that there are Seneca on the reservation in NY that refer to themselves as Shaponi. I was going to look into this myself but unfortunatly I am no longer with my girlfriend who is from the Seneca Nation. I still may look into it.. It would be interesting to learn what they may know.

Linda
10-04-2003, 09:50 AM
What's the name of that reservation? Sorry to hear you all broke up. I was hoping to talk to her about that.

Good to hear from you. Hope you've been doing well.

lynellarainhawk
11-25-2004, 12:18 PM
Linda,

You mentioned earlier in this thread about doing a possible Cherokee Surnames list. My Hodges and possibly a Ferguson have Cherokee Numbers. Just thinking.....Love & light, Lynella.:)

Kevin Minor
02-18-2006, 09:10 PM
Hi Linda. I realize this is a old thread. My name is Kevin Minor , I come from the Minors of Hawkins county / Kyles Ford / KIngsport Tenn. on my fathers side We are known as Melungeons. I was always told by my father that my great grandpa Richard C, Minor and Grandma Cynthia Roberts /Minor were cherokee . I have found out threw a old family tree / internet / book reasearch that my great grandpa Richard Minor was Melungeon / portuguese/ Indian and my great grandmother Cynthia Roberts / Minor was portugese / indian . I was also told by my mothers side that we had Cherokee indian blood in us. They were from Leslie County Kentucky Smiths / Sizemore / Brock / simpson . Linda Now from what Ive been researching my family may be Saponi not cherokee, is this possibly true ? My family resemble indian / oriental / mederatainian . Please anybody who may read this thread feel free to contact me with any info / question . I always wonderd why my family looked so diffrent from other so called anglo families. And we also go so far back in this countries History . And we are clanish and always have kept to our owne. Thank you Kevin Minor

Bill Childs
02-20-2006, 10:35 AM
Hi Kevin, Welcome.
Is that Richard C., (Guilford2, Zachariah3) Minor, b. 1870/71?
Do you know where Cynthia Roberts came from in Virginia?

Based on a number of sources, I've thought for some time that Cherokee was the least likely explanation and was applied much later in time. By the time Cherokee had married whites in even small numbers (1760s), the 'melungeon' Collins, Gibson, Goins, Minor and a few other early 'melungeon' families, were already going strong and had been for many decades and generations, and tracable back into central and eastern Va and NC. That they were Saponi is unclear.
Bill

Kevin Minor
02-20-2006, 06:31 PM
Yes Gilford Minor was my G.G. grandpa, and Zacriah Minor was my G.G.G. grandpa. The family tree I have shows my G.G. grandma Ussley Roberts who was my G.G. grandpa Gilford Minor wife was from Virgina , but gives me no town / county etc. Now from what I have read G.G. grandma Ussely Roberts / Minor was born 1843 in Scott county virginia, and my G.grandpa Richard c. Minor who is Gilford and Ussely Minors son was married to my G. grandma Cynthia Roberts / Minor born 1873 in south carolina , her great grandmother was said to have been full blooded portuguese. Kevin Minor

Red Metis
02-20-2006, 08:51 PM
Hi Linda,

I don't know if you've most passed this subject in this thread but here goes...
I came across a paper written by Dr. V. Marce (I think this is her name--a wild guess here)--it's called 'triracial isolates of the southeast' (try this for the keyword). She mentions in the article that a lot of blacks in the southeast say that they have 'blackfeet indians' in their family. She dismisses this because of the Blackfoot tribes being in Montana(?). This is the only other reference to Blackfeed that I've heard outside of Saponi Town.

Drae

Linda
02-20-2006, 09:08 PM
Yes, Red Metis, it's Virginia de Marce, I believe it's spelled. We've commented on here about her in the past. It is disappointing she would give us such short shrift. Try searching on her here with that spelling and see if you can find that post.

Kevin, welcome to the forum. It does indeed sound like your family is connecting with others here. The Portuguese ID is very intriguing. Rosebud Saponi is from the Portugeuse settlement in Northampton county, NC. That group of families is one of the closest groups associated with the Fort Christanna reservation, the last historical location, stateside, of the Saponi nation. Also, search on Coharie Roy's posts. I believe it's been commented that Maynard may be a variant of Minor.

To search on a member's posts, find their name in the member list (upper right hand button), click on their name, which takes you to their profile, then on the upper right hand there's a link to all their posts.

fromOntario
02-21-2006, 01:01 PM
Interesting. Also as we move closer to 2007, more of this will happen, I'm sure.
Keep up great work.
Deb

lentz of nc
06-20-2006, 07:32 AM
Linda, Do you know much about the Anderson name I have a Rebbeca Anderson from the 1700s

Koreana
06-22-2006, 06:51 PM
Hi Linda. I realize this is a old thread. My name is Kevin Minor , I come from the Minors of Hawkins county / Kyles Ford / KIngsport Tenn. on my fathers side We are known as Melungeons. I was always told by my father that my great grandpa Richard C, Minor and Grandma Cynthia Roberts /Minor were cherokee . I have found out threw a old family tree / internet / book reasearch that my great grandpa Richard Minor was Melungeon / portuguese/ Indian and my great grandmother Cynthia Roberts / Minor was portugese / indian . I was also told by my mothers side that we had Cherokee indian blood in us. They were from Leslie County Kentucky Smiths / Sizemore / Brock / simpson . Linda Now from what Ive been researching my family may be Saponi not cherokee, is this possibly true ? My family resemble indian / oriental / mederatainian . Please anybody who may read this thread feel free to contact me with any info / question . I always wonderd why my family looked so diffrent from other so called anglo families. And we also go so far back in this countries History . And we are clanish and always have kept to our owne. Thank you Kevin Minor

Those surnames you listed are all my family as well. My gm Ola Roberts d/o Avis Napier and Charlie Roberts and GF Reuben Baker s/o Magdalene Sizemore & Tommy Baker grew up in Leslie Co and Clay Co. I have all the others as well heavily in my tree. I was always told Cherokee as well. I have the same migration patterns (all over the damn place:D ). I have all the surnames in Linda's initial post as well. I was always told we were Indian growing up. I was lead to believe it wasn't distantly either. :o

Linda
06-22-2006, 10:57 PM
Whether all the names discussed on this thread are Saponi is unclear, but what jumps out are all the names coming up that are common among the recognized tribes in NC and VA -- way too many to be accounted for by statistical probabilities. With all those names and locations, if you're family says you're Indian don't dismiss what they're saying. As Bill says, the Cherokee ID is likely something that worked in later when the word was being used generically for any 'friendly' Christianized Indians.

Check into Coharie Roy's posts, the Minor name is probably a variant of the Maynor name. Sizemore comes up a lot, I think with the Lumbee.

Clearly, a lot of Indian/mixed blooded people from the upper south migrated into Appalachia, and your family was a part of that community.

aminky
06-23-2006, 01:54 PM
Linda,

This is a fascinating discussion and I feel your insights and analysis are right on the mark. I found the SaponiTown forum through searching for a possible Cherokee ancestor. This forum has been more valuable to me than any other for learning about my possibile southeastern family origins.

I have been wondering if we can track down the names of all of the Indian traders that may have been the origin of "English" names of many of the Saponi and other NA descendants. Also, I read that there were several slave revolts right from the first colonies in the Carolinas wherein slaves escaped and joined the local Indians. I wonder if there are ANY sort of records of the names?

AMinKY

techteach
06-23-2006, 06:50 PM
Amiky:
Do a search for traders. There was a discussion of this some time back and lists got posted.
Also common names are the ministers. My names were almost all surnames of Presbyterian ministers.

Techteach

ngraham
06-24-2006, 06:25 AM
Linda,
As you know from the Buck thread, I have been working hard to trace my direct line of Buck ancestors. They dead-end in the Mohawk Valley. However, I have two of the surnames you mention also in my direct line.
gr-gr-gr-gr-gr grandparent Daniel (?) Smith VA (?)
gr-gr-gr-gr grandparents Joseph H. Smith b. about 1784 VA (?) and Sally/Sarah Covington b.NC
gr-gr-gr grandparents: Benjamin Covington Smith b. 1805 Richmond County, NC and Ellen O. Hill b. 1805 SC (Ellen's niece married Guy Jewell Turner)
gr-gr grandparents: Thomas Scott claims to be CAN/IRE b.1840 and Julia Elizabeth Smith b. 1840 Warren County, KY
gr-grandparents:Harry Madison Buck b. 1878 Waukesha, WI and Elizabeth Julia Scott b. Cook Co., Ill

Hope this helps,
Nadia

sammarroq
06-24-2006, 09:37 AM
Nadia,

I am from Southern Minnesota, and the Buck surname is very common among the Mdewakanton Dakota Sioux. I don't know if these could be related to your Buck's or not. I noticed you had relatives as close as Waukesha, this is pretty close to where I live.

Shirley

ngraham
06-24-2006, 09:42 AM
Shirley,
Funny....you look sort of like me. Please look at the posts I have in Saponitown that are in the genealogy section (Buck thread). if you do a search for Buck you will find it. If you can tell me anything, i would certainly appreciate it. Maybe you know a Buck family that could check it out.

Peace to you,
Nadia

sammarroq
06-24-2006, 09:59 AM
Nadia,

Thank you for the compliment. I know a couple of the Buck families, and will see what I can find out for you. I won't be home for another week or so, I am currently in Montana, my niece passed away (a couple of months ago), and I am back home for the funeral. Take care, I will be back in MN on the
3rd.

Shirley

ngraham
06-24-2006, 10:04 AM
Thank you Shirley. Sorry to hear about your niece.

Nadia

sammarroq
06-24-2006, 10:06 AM
Thanks Nadia, talk to you soon.

Shirley