History of Bourbon, Scott, Harrison and Nicholas Counties, Kentucky, ed. by William Henry Perrin, O. L. Baskin & Co., Chicago, 1882. p. 711. [Harrison County] [Rutland Precinct] GREENBERRY KINMAN, farmer, P. O. Hinton; his grandfather, William Kinman, came from Pennsylvania about 1800, and settled on the South fork of Raven, where he had two small distillers for peach and apply brandy; he took great delight in hunting and a relic of one of his expeditions is still preserved by his grandson in the shape of an elk horn. David Kinman, the father of our subject, was but nine years old when his father came from Pennsylvania; he engaged chiefly in farming and transporting merchandise from the Ohio River to the interior of Kentucky; he died June 1855, aged sixty-three years. Greenberry, when only seven years of age, went with his father and several others to the town of Augusta and brought back salt on horseback; this was before a wagon road had been cut to that place from Cynthiana. On Sept. 4, 1843, he married Eliza, daughter of Edmund and Betsey (Hedger) Faulconer, by whom he had no children; on June 13, 1871, he married Elizabeth, daughter of Richard and Phoebe (Hedger) McKenney, of Harrison County. Himself and wife are members of the Methodist Church at Boyer's Chapel; in politics Mr. Kinman was formerly a Whig, but since the disruption of the Know-nothing party he has cast his lot with the Democrats. Kinman Hedger Faulconer McKenney = PA http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/harrison/kinman.g.txt