An investigative trajectory of the Bryan line is quite comparable to Clinton's Whitewater-Vince Foster assemblage:
The Story of Bryan's Station
The Story of Bryan's Station as Told in the Historical Address Delivered at Bryan's Station ...
'...."Elkhorn"....John Floyd, James Douglas, Hancock Taylor, three deputy surveyors of Fincastle County, Virginia, of which Kentucky was then a part, William Bryan, a hunter from that section of North Carolina now known as Rowan County, and John Ellis, a Virginia veteran of the French and Indian War....and with them was William Grant who, like the leader, had married a sister of Daniel Boone....In 1779, that remarkable and mischievous land law of Virginia was enacted which turned such a tide of immigration into Kentucky....98,000 acres....'
The Story of Bryan's Station
The Story of Bryan's Station as Told in the Historical Address Delivered at Bryan's Station ...
'...."Elkhorn"....John Floyd, James Douglas, Hancock Taylor, three deputy surveyors of Fincastle County, Virginia, of which Kentucky was then a part, William Bryan, a hunter from that section of North Carolina now known as Rowan County, and John Ellis, a Virginia veteran of the French and Indian War....and with them was William Grant who, like the leader, had married a sister of Daniel Boone....In 1779, that remarkable and mischievous land law of Virginia was enacted which turned such a tide of immigration into Kentucky....98,000 acres....'