As I announced in my
last blog, Henry the Immigrant, The First
Tapscotts of Virginia, 2nd edition is finished and I fully
expect to have it printed before Christmas. I will keep you posted. It will be
hardbound, lots of pictures, close to 500 pages with 121 in color. The book
contains a list of the first six generations originating from Ann Edney covering
both Tapscotts and Georges with spouses (a little over 1200 people total), an
index, and 2512 endnotes. Unfortunately, I suspect the production cost will be
substantial, about $45 per book. I am printing enough to distribute free to my
close relatives and as gifts for a few people who helped a lot. There will be
sufficient to sell at cost to those wanting copies.
I am now working on a
book about the descendants of Henry Tapscott, son of William the Preacher. Henry,
who claimed to have been born in Virginia, lived in North Carolina, then
Kentucky, then Indiana, and finally ended up in Clark County Illinois. Henry Tapscott of Kentucky and his wife, Susan Bass,
had a large number of descendants (I am one of them), most of the early ones
living in the Wabash Valley—Marshall, Illinois, Terre Haute, Indiana, etc. Right
now I count 565 direct descendants and 321 known spouses, but the number will greatly increase. I am tentatively titling the book The Tapscotts of the Wabash Valley.
Because the book about
the Wabash Valley Tapscotts will come down to the present time, many descendants
are living (a problem I did not face with Henry
the Immigrant, but did face with a book I wrote on my wife’s family, Bier und Brot, the Wehners of Southeast
Missouri). Because some people are concerned about confidentiality, I usually mention
living people giving only their names but omitting birth dates, marriage dates,
locations, occupations, etc. However, I make an exception for people who
specifically approve inclusion of their specifics. If you are a descendant of
Henry the Traveler and would like the “detailed” story of your family to be
included, please give me information on your history, particularly your recent
history, which is often difficult to uncover. I want to warn you, however, that
I may reduce the amount of material submitted to keep the book to a reasonable
size, and I will edit and rewrite as needed. Also, if you have photographs,
etc. please let me know. My profile on this site contains a way to contact me.
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To directly contact the author, email retapscott@comcast.net