A source-disciplined record of the Caudill family. Proven facts are cited; family tradition is clearly labelled as such; open questions are presented as hypotheses with their evidence — never as settled fact.
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Where Did the Caudills Really Come From?
Almost every Caudill tree opens in Argyllshire, Scotland, around 1680 — a wonderful story, and an unproven one. Setting the documents side by side, the line is firmly recorded beginning in Virginia in 1731, and the evidence actually leans against a Scottish immigrant. Each claim graded Proven → Negative, with the family legend kept but clearly labelled.
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The Oldest Caudill Records: East Lothian, 1374 & 1488
The earliest the name can be carried on paper: a 1488 charter of John Caudill, burgess of Haddington — selling a forty-shilling annual-rent from his tenement by the market cross — and a 1374 assize naming William de Caudel, Lord of Stevynston. Both from the Yester Writs of East Lothian. What they prove about the name, and why they don't yet prove a line.
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The Caudill Origin: Theories Visualized
The whole origin question on one page: a branching diagram of the Norman name into England and Scotland, every competing theory as a click-to-expand card (settled, open, refuted, or lore — each tier-graded A–D), and 900 years on a single timeline. Facts and inferences kept strictly apart, with the unproven gap drawn in plainly.
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A Caudill Line in Nine Generations
One documented father-to-son Caudill line across nine generations (c.1610–1922), ending with the noted Kentucky author Harry M. Caudill. The point isn't just the names — it's the honesty of each link: census-solid through the Appalachian core, derivative at the colonial neck, and frankly legendary at the deep British end.
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Wilbur C. Caudill: One Enlistment Record, 1942
A nineteen-year-old Florida mechanic volunteers for the Army Air Corps at Camp Blanding, 22 October 1942. What his enlistment record proves — branch, serial number, trade — and how the family account of a turret gunner, a crash, and a Purple Heart still waits on the discharge paper and his service file to be confirmed.
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Caudill Records: Where to Look
A research map for anyone tracing the Caudill line: which courthouse holds each era (Virginia → North Carolina → Kentucky), the major published compilations (treated as leads, not proof), the original record sets by locality, and the under-used Baptist church minute books. Compilations are leads; originals are proof.
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How This Family History Is Researched
The method behind every story here, stated plainly: facts about records rather than claims about people, an A–D evidence-tier system, findings graded from "just a note" to "a real problem," and the discipline of saying "unknown" where the record is silent. A confident wrong answer is worse than "I don't know."
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Where the Caudills Lived — A Map (Experimental)
An interactive map plotting every place the Caudill name is documented — from the Caundle hills of Dorset and the burgesses of East Lothian to a cluster of Gloucestershire parishes, and on to Virginia, Kentucky and Florida. Toggle between "deep roots" and "family" views. Some points are leads, not proven links; the functionality is what's on display.
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Where the Caudill Name Comes From
A surname attracts confident-sounding nonsense. Setting the "family crest" sites and origin legends aside, the documented history of the Caudill name is itself remarkable: a Norman name from the village of Caundle in Dorset — older than the Conquest, recorded in Domesday — that branched into both England and Scotland. Where the name comes from, and where the record honestly runs out.
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From Virginia to Letcher County: The Caudill Migration
The documented spine of the Caudill journey: a colonial Virginia progenitor on record by 1731, down to the Revolutionary War veteran James Caudill (b.1753) who settled Letcher County, Kentucky around 1811. Where the proof is firm, where the trail thins — and why the deep "out of Africa" prehistory is a different kind of truth, kept separate.
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The Caudill Migration Map (Experimental)
An experimental interactive map that animates the family's story across 65,000 years — drag a handle to watch the line move through time and space. Some data points are unverified leads, not a proven pedigree; the interactive functionality is what's on display here. A novel way to see a family history.
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The Parentage of John A. Caudill: A Proof in Progress
A worked example of genealogical reasoning in miniature: a father recorded as five years old at his son's birth. Three Stephen Caudills, one recycled given name, and a sourced proposal — corroborated three ways, but still "probably, pending the originals" rather than "case closed."
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