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Diana, Goddess
of the Hunt — for Ancestors!
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Every-Name Index |
especially Our DAVIS and THOMPSON Kin |
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There's no significance to my breaking the counties into parts beyond the fact that my HTML editor balks at tables with more than 100 rows. |
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Kentucky Counties
- Adair - Allen - Anderson - Ballard - Barren - Bath - Bell - Boone - Bourbon - Boyd - Boyle - Bracken - Breathitt - Breckinridge - Bullitt - Butler - Caldwell - Calloway - Campbell - Carlisle - Carroll - Carter - Casey - Christian1 - Christian2 - Christian3 - Christian4 - Clark - Clay - Clinton - Crittenden - Cumberland - Daviess - Edmonson - Elliott - Estill - Fayette - Fleming - Floyd - Franklin - Fulton - Gallatin - Garrard - Grant - Graves - Grayson - Green - Greenup - Hancock - Hardin - Harlan - Harrison - Hart - Henderson - Henry - Hickman - Hopkins - Jackson - Jefferson - Jessamine - Johnson - Kenton - Knott - Knox - Larue - Laurel - Lawrence - Lee - Leslie - Letcher - Lewis - Lincoln - Livingston - Logan - Lyon - Madison - Magoffin - Marion - Marshall - Martin - Mason - McCracken - McCreary - McLean - Meade - Menifee - Mercer - Metcalfe - Monroe - Montgomery - Morgan - Muhlenberg - Nelson - Nicholas - Ohio - Oldham - Owen - Owsley - Pendleton - Perry - Pike - Powell - Pulaski - Robertson - Rockcastle - Rowan - Russell - Scott - Shelby - Simpson - Spencer - Taylor - Todd1 - Todd2 - Trigg-Southern - Trigg-Northern - Trimble - Union - Warren - Washington - Wayne - Webster - Whitley - Wolfe - Woodford - |
Christian
County1 — Part 1
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Christian
County1 — Part 2
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Christian
County1 — Part 3
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Livingston
County2
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Todd
County3 — Part 1
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Todd
County3 — Part 2
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"The southern part of Trigg County as divided by Little River and Cumberland River."
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"The northern part of Trigg County as divided by Little River and Cumberland River."
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Footnotes:
1. Regarding Christian County (Roll 20): Ancestry.com has everyone in Christian County indexed as being in Hopkinsville, which obviously cannot be the case. Only those on Image #1 appear to actually be in Hopkinsville. The pages are torn, and many names are missing (the numbers are there, just the names are missing). If someone is not listed who should be, do consult the tax rolls, which are extant. 2. Regarding Livingston County: 3. Regarding Todd County (Roll 26): A problem with the Todd County census is that, like many early counties, the pages were numbered and filmed backwards, that is, in reverse sequence. This happens, in part, because some total idiot at NARA decided to unbind the individual townships and counties and rebind them in combined, larger books. Please see my sorting out of the pagination in the 1820 census of Knox Co., OH, for an idea of how bad it can get. Todd County was not divided into townships, so at least the problem is not as complex as Knox County. The reason it's important to sort out the pagination is that individuals may be indexed in the wrong town (or township, where the county is so divided) and that proximity (or lack of it) on the list may be misleadingly. So, in the listing below, I have put the pages back in their original order, which is obviously not the order on the microfilm, but which is the order of the images online at Ancestry.com. Note that the pages carry a scramble of (at least) two sets of page numbers, one stamped (S#) and one penciled (P#). All of the stamped numbers and most of the penciled numbers have been crossed out. Indexers have used the set of penciled numbers, even though some are crossed out. The set of stamped numbers is at least in the original order, so if any set of numbers is the "correct" number, it is the stamped ones. The two most critical pages for proving the pages were out of order is the fact that the page with the header (the column labels) is the last page on the microfilm and that the tally is on the first Todd County page microfilmed. Each image is a two-page spread, bound on the long edge, thus with an upper and lower half. Line numbers are added by me and begin anew for both the upper and the lower half of the page. In the end, I can't be certain the pages between the obvious first and last pages (the one with the header and the one with the tally, respectively) are in sequence. One can only be truly confident of geographical proximity within each half page (upper or lower). So, why did I bother putting them back in order? Well, at least this way, they might be in the original order. 4. Regarding Trigg County (Roll 29): pages have been bound and rebound, numbered and renumbered, I'm uncertain whether the original sequence is intact, which means the "divisions" may not be reliable. 5. This page from Trigg County is missing at Ancestry.com, but present at Genealogy.com. Part of the page (showing males slaves) is too underexposed to read. |
Search Notes:
1. Back when I first started doing the family genealogy, I extracted these records based on surnames I had seen in the family group sheets prepared by my late aunt and others, as I made one pass through the pages online at Ancestry. Were I to do this, now, there are many names I wouldn't bother to extract, but hind-sight is 20-20. |
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