The Douglas Register, Being A Detailed Register Of Births, Marriages And Deaths. . .as Kept By The Rev. William Douglas, From 1750 To 1797. [With:] An Index Of Goochland Wills And Notes On The French Huguenot Refugees Who Lived In Manakin-Town
The Douglas Register, Being A Detailed Register Of Births, Marriages And Deaths. . .as Kept By The Rev. William Douglas, From 1750 To 1797. [With:] An Index Of Goochland Wills And Notes On The French Huguenot Refugees Who Lived In Manakin-Town
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The Douglas Register, Being a Detailed Register of Births, Marriages and Deaths. . .as Kept by the Rev. William Douglas, from 1750 to 1797. [With:] An Index of Goochland Wills and Notes on the French Huguenot Refugees who Lived in Manakin-Town; By William Macfarlane Jones; 408 pp.; Paperback; Published: 1928; Reprinted: 2007; ISBN: 9780806301983; Item # CF3095D

The celebrated Douglas Register is an indispensable compilation of births, marriages, and deaths covering the period from about 1750 to 1797, with some miscellaneous records going back to 1705. The registers are for the parishes of St. James Northam (Dover Church) and King William, but they concern individuals who were residents of the Virginia counties of Fluvanna, Goochland, Louisa, Orange, and Spotsylvania. Entries under the headings of births, marriages, and deaths are arranged alphabetically, with marriages broken into separate lists for husbands and wives. Altogether the entries exceed several thousand in number. The book further consists of lists of Huguenot settlers at Manakin-Town (King William Parish) and an index of Goochland County wills, 1728-1840, containing about 1,000 names with references to dates and locations. (The early records of Goochland County are inseparable from the early records of Henrico and Powhatan counties, from which Goochland derived.)

"The register is of particular interest since the mother's name is shown in each birth entry. Since the records cover a period of almost fifty years and an area of considerable extent in central Virginia, the book is of wide usefulness."--The Virginia Genealogist (April-June 1967).