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Juliette, You might take a look at the web site, http://home.mchsi.com/~r165/lineages.html. It would be great to have a representative from the Georgia Rabun's. We have several new results since my last message and they are starting to cluster. We don't have any of the Georgia Rabun's yet, but several RABONs from South Carolina, North Carolina and Virginia. It is beginning to look like some of these clusters could be descendants of Richard Raibone. I think John is one of the better documented sons of Richard Raibone. There is a little bit on Richard Jr. and his sister Sarah. There seems to be a gap until we start to see several probable descendants turning up across the Carolinas and Georgia in the mid 1700s. There seems to be an almost totally undocumented generation that I hope DNA analysis can begin to span. I am of the William Rayburn line that appeared in Kentucky about 1775. He was born in Virginia. My DNA results are radically different than the South Carolina lines, which lead to our opinion that there is no connection. I have not been able to track Richard Rabone's son, William, so for a long while I was trying to prove that my William was this lost William. I now believe that is not the case. If I can be of any help or if you have any questions after reviewing the Web Site, please contact me. Roger - raybornr@usa.net Notify Administrator about this message?
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