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Note: sers/stripes87/8/data/983 Excerpt taken from book "Lincoln County Heritage 1997" Christian Mauney was Granted 200 acres in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, on April 28, 1763. Christian Mauney received a tract on Beaverdam Creek on September 8. 1770. In 1774 the Carolina Assembly purchased a tract of land from Christian Mauney and set it aside as the county seat of Tyron County. Diring the Revolution war, in 1779, Tryon county was legislated out of exististance and its territories were divided between two new counties, one which was Lincoln. The county seat which remained on the Mauney place until 1783, was moved to Linconton, the present county seat. The tryon Declarance of Freedom of August 14, 1775 was proclaimed at the old Mauney place and resides in the Raleigh archives.This individual was found on GenCircles at: http://www.gencircles.com/users/stripes87/8/data/983 Excerpt taken from book "Lincoln County Heritage 1997" Christian Mauney was Granted 200 acres in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, on April 28, 1763. Christian Mauney received a tract on Beaverdam Creek on September 8. 1770. In 1774 the Carolina Assembly purchased a tract of land from Christian Mauney and set it aside as the county seat of Tyron County. Diring the Revolution war, in 1779, Tryon county was legislated out of exististance and its territories were divided between two new counties, one which was Lincoln. The county seat which remained on the Mauney place until 1783, was moved to Linconton, the present county seat. The tryon Declarance of Freedom of August 14, 1775 was proclaimed at the old Mauney place and resides in the Raleigh archives.This individual was found on GenCircles at: http://www.gencircles.com/users/stripes87/8/data/983 Excerpt taken from book "Lincoln County Heritage 1997" Christian Mauney was Granted 200 acres in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, on April 28, 1763. Christian Mauney received a tract on Beaverdam Creek on September 8. 1770. In 1774 the Carolina Assembly purchased a tract of land from Christian Mauney and set it aside as the county seat of Tyron County. Diring the Revolution war, in 1779, Tryon county was legislated out of exististance and its territories were divided between two new counties, one which was Lincoln. The county seat which remained on the Mauney place until 1783, was moved to Linconton, the present county seat. The tryon Declarance of Freedom of August 14, 1775 was proclaimed at the old Mauney place and resides in the Raleigh archives.
Note: This individual was found on GenCircles at: http://www.gencircles.com/u
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