For some reason, lost in the distant past, ASU has a very good collection of material on the Moravians. Here are some of the sources I found: Thorp, Daniel P. THE MORAVIAN COMMUNITY IN COLONIAL NORTH CAROLINA: PLURALISM ON THE SOUTHERN FRONTIER (Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1989). Fries, Adelaide Lisetta. THE ROAD TO SALEM (Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 1972). (The story of Anna Catharina, 1726-1816.) ----------------. RECORDS OF THE MORAVIANS IN NORTH CAROLINA (Raleigh, NC: State Department of Archives and History, 1922-1970). A set of collected documents by years. Eller, Ernest McNeill. "THE HOUSES OF PEACE": BEING A HISTORICAL, LEGENDARY, AND CONTEMPORARY ACCOUNT OF THE MORAVIANS AND THEIR SETTLEMENT OF SALEM IN NORTH CAROLINA (New York: F.H.Revell, 1937). Schwarze, Rev. Edward. HISTORY OF THE MORAVIAN MISSIONS AMONG SOUTHERN INDIAN TRIBES OF THE UNITED STATES (Bethlehem, PA: Times Publishing Company, 1923). Ogden, John Cosens. AN EXCURSION INTO BETHLEHEM AND NAZARETH, IN PENNSYLVANIA, IN THE YEAR 1799: WITH A SUCCINCT HISTORY OF THE SOCIETY OF UNITED BRETHREN, COMMONLY CALLED MORAVIANS (1800). (Worcester, MA: American Antiquarian Society 1955-1983, 23x15cm Microfilm (Early American Imprints, First series; no. 38149). Thomas, Brian W. "Inclusion and Exclusion in the Moravian Settlement in North Carolina, 1770-1790," HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY v.28(3):15+, 1994. Anita Cohen-Williams; Reference Services; Hayden Library Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287-1006 PHONE: (602) 965-4579 FAX: (602) 965-9169 [log in to unmask] Owner: HISTARCH, SPANBORD, SUB-ARCH