Would it be fair to say that residents of Cumberland County, Virginia, and other counties well west of the fall line, in the 50 or so years following the Revolution, would be more independent-minded, more free-spirited, less bound to the 100-year-old traditions of the more easterly counties? I am trying not to use the word "liberal" as it is used today, because I don't know what "liberal" meant in 1800. But that is what I'm getting at. I am researching an inter-racial family where the father/owner and the mother/slave and the offspring lived publicly as a family. As well as I can tell from the records, they seem to have been at least tolerated. They appear to have functioned well in the community. Although Cumberland County was far from the frontier in 1800-1825, had it been settled by frontier-seekers who simply didn't care that much about traditions? Is there a book that deals with this subject? To subscribe, change options, or unsubscribe, please see the instructions at http://listlva.lib.va.us/archives/va-hist.html