Yazoo
| 9.10.1773 | Staten Island | Captain William McLeod sells 109 acres to Alexander McDonald. |
| 5.22.1775 | New York City | The Provincial Congress announces that William McLeod, a British officer, is not permitted to embark for Boston. |
| 11.3.1776 | United States | William McLeod, prisoner of the 59th regiment, receives allowances and provisions per Congress. |
| 1779 | South Carolina | Captain William McLeod is captured by forces under Francis Marion during irregular warfare. |
| 9.30.1779 | East Florida | William McLeod is commissioned as Captain of the Florida Battalion. |
| Sep. 1780 | St. Augustine | Wm. McLeod’s land is used as a marker on a property deed. |
| 4.4.1781 | Wilmington NC | Lieutenant McLeod is tasked with overseeing artillery resources following the Battle of Guilliford Courthouse. |
| 4.10.1781 | United States | William McLeod is paroled. |
| 5.26.1781 | Charleston | William McLeod marries Miss Mary Alexander in British occupied Charleston. |
| 5.3.1782 | United States | The Duke of Richmond asks Benjamin Franklin to resolve the discharge of Captain McLeod. |
| April 1783 | East Florida | William McLeod of St. Augustine appoints an attorney to address unresolved debts with various Charleston merchants. |
| 3.1.1784 | East Florida | John Imrie, a planter from East Florida, enters into a bond agreement with William McLeod. |
| 2.7.1785 | Savannah | Thomas Green and others sign an act for the creation of Bourbon County. |
| 7.10.1786 | Charleston | William McLeod of Charleston appoints a London based law firm to manage financial transactions on his behalf. |
| 7.9.1788 | Franklin GA | Micajah Williamson and his wife Sally convey 6640 acres to John Swepson for one thousand pounds sterling, as documented in an indenture. The land boundaries and details refer to a grant initially signed by the Governor on July 25, 1787. |
| 8.16.1788 | Charleston | William McLeod, a subject of Great Britian, takes the oath of allegiance to South Carolina. |
| 1789 | Georgia | A company in Carolina purchases 10 million acres for $66,669 in Georgia along the Yazoo and Mississippi Rivers. |
| 3.11.1789 | Nassau | King George III grants Wm. McLeod a tract of 100 acres in the Bahamas, with specific conditions for land improvement and maintenance. |
| 8.27.1789 | Charleston | William Clay Snipes and Thomas Washington borrow $5000 from William McLeod. |
| Dec. 1789 | Philadelphia | Alexander Moultrie and William Clay Snipes, acting as heirs and representatives of the deceased Isaac Huger, petition the Georgia Legislature for purchase rights. |
| 1790 | Charleston | William McLeod vs. William Clay Snipes |
| 8.13.1790 | Georgia | Alexander Moultrie, Isaac Huger, William Clay Snipes and Thomas Washington pay the Georgia government $66,964 for 5 million acres on the MS River per resolution of the General Assembly 12.21.1789. |
| 11.12.1790 | Charleston | William Clay Snipes enters a financial arrangement with William McLeod. |
| 3.31.1792 | United States | James O’Fallon publicly states that Wm. Clay Snipes, Alexander Moultrie, Thos. Washington and Isaac Huger were original interest holders in an Indian land claim later administered through a land company. The House of McCleod in Charleston provided supplies. |
| April 1792 | Antwerp | Robert Morris proposes to Anthony Wouters of Antwerp the sale of shares in uncultivated land in New York known as the Genesee lands. |
| 4.21.1792 | United States | James O’Fallon publicly condemns the South Carolina Land Company for unscrupulous business practices. |
| 12.5.1792 | Charleston | The South Carolina court of Admirality orders Marshal Isaac Huger to summon all parties with potential claims of the abandoned schooner Precilla. |
| 1793 | Georgia | Alexander Moultrie, William Clay Snipes and Isaac Huger purchase land with proprietary interests in the South Carolina Yazoo Company. |
| 4.13.1793 | Charleston | Isaac Huger, CC Pinckney and William Moultrie are listed as officers in the South Carolina chapter of the Society of Cincinnati. |
| 8.26.1793 | Charleston | Isaac Huger declines George Washington’s appointment for the office of the General Marshall for the District of South Carolina. |
| 9.23.1793 | Augusta GA | Constant Freeman reports to Henry Knox that GA militia men threaten Seagrove’s life if he interferes with Telfair’s offensive designs against the Creeks. |
| 3.27.1794 | New York City | James Greenleaf, Robert Morris and John Nicholson establish the Columbian Society for land sales and construction planning. |
| 7.28.1794 | Philadelphia | James Greenleaf, John Nicholson and Robert Morris arrange bills of exchange with Sylvanus Bourne. |
| 7.29.1794 | United States | Edmond Randolph writes Dutch diplomat John Quincey Adams outlining his priority to secure an $800,000 loan for the ransom of American citizens in Algiers. Key diplomatic personnel are James Greenleaf are Sylvanus Bourne. |
| 9.3.1794 | United States | A set of Bills drawn by James Greenleaf is endorsed by John Nicholson and Robert Morris on Sylvanus Bourne to Thomas Pinckney. |
| 1.7.1795 | Holland | A map is produced to investors displaying the partitioning of Yazoo lands among MS, GA and SC Land Companies. |
| 3.5.1795 | Effingham GA | Robert Morris, John Nicholson, James Greenleaf and John Barclay convey 107,000 acres to Robert Pell. |
| 10.30.1795 | Philadelphia | William McLeod settles notes with John Holland. |
| 5.28.1796 | United States | Isaac Huger sends a letter of introduction for his nephew to Horatio Gates. |
| 7.2.1796 | White TN | A Knoxville land speculator conveys a 44,000 acre tract of land in Tennessee to a New York land speculator, which was then partitioned with multiple investors, among them Timothy Green. |
| 1798 | United States | Timothy Green has correspondence in regard to the Holland Land Company. |
| 2.17.1798 | New Orleans | Daniel Clark writes William McLeod. |
| Feb. 1799 | Holland | The Holland Land Company releases investor dividends for large purchases in Cumberland NC and Franklin GA. |
| 4.12.1799 | Manhattan | Aaron Burr and others seek funding for the Manhattan Water Company. |
| 8.22.1800 | United States | Catherine Duer corresponds with James Greenleaf. |
| 10.1.1814 | New Orleans | Mary Green, executrix of Timothy Green, files suit against Thomas Lilly and Logan Percy for $3094. |
