Rich. VanBrunt was a bookbinder in Charleston. His wife, Elizabeth Jane Fair also worked with him. They had their business on Bay St. Elizabeth was the first of the Fair children (Mary Ann, Sophia, Frances, Elizabeth and Joseph) to marry. The oldest (Mary Ann) did not marry until 1832 in Thomasville, GA to James Russell Greene. The first of the Fair girls to leave Charleston was my ancestor, Frances Fair. She married James Rinaldo Nicks of Thomasville, GA on November 1831 in Charleston. His mother, Eleanor Nicks had purchased about 200 acres of land on the north side of Lake Iamonia just east of the Strickland Arm. Within a few years they were joined by the entire Fair family including their mother, Elizabeth Harrison Fair Nicks who had remarried one Joseph DeWitt Nicks after the death of he first husband, Richard Fair. She had two daughters (Sarah Ann and Martha) by Joseph who was dead by the 1830s. Elizabeth Jane and Richard Van Brunt were the last of the related families to join the group all living on the north side of Lake Iamonia and inside the enumerated families for the 1840 U. S. Census. After 1840, the only two Fair girls remaining in Florida were Elizabeth Jane and Frances. The others, including Sophia who married Allen Burr of Jefferson Co., FL moved into GA and finally to Opelika (then in Russell Co., but now Lee Co., AL). Mary Ann Fair Greene;s dau. returned to FL and married Richard VB, the oldest son of Elizabeth Jane and Richard VB. The two half sisters (Sarah Ann and Martha) mar a Sauls and Mizell/Durr respectively. The brother, Joseph Harrison Fair mar. J. R. Greene's sister, Martha Mariah Greene in Leon Co. After 1850, Frances' family moved to Hernando Co. leaving Elizabeth Jane's family who were last in Leon Co. as the longest living Fair families to live in Leon Co.