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March 2011

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Subject:
From:
Tim Spradling <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Research and writing about Virginia genealogy and family history." <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 14 Mar 2011 19:26:26 EDT
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The days of haunting the Archives are not over for me (plus it's a lot  of 
fun). A DNA match only shows you have an ancestor in common with someone  
else. The further back you go looking for a match, the more likely it is you  
have more than one ancestor in common. For instance you might be trying to  
match your SMITH ancestor with another person's SMITH ancestor that  was 
born ~ 1700. You don't realize it but you also have a JOHNSON ancestor in  
common too. You get a DNA match and therefore assume that your  SMITH ancestor 
is the same as the other persons, when it could be the  JOHNSON ancestor. I'm 
even related to myself as I have two cases  already where I have the same 
pair of Grandparents, once on my Maternal side and  once on my Paternal side. 
 
 
 
 
In a message dated 3/14/2011 2:43:09 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
[log in to unmask] writes:

I must  second Bill's advice about DNA testing. I had my nephew DNA 
tested. After  being in a Hall program family and lots of 12 and 37 
marker matches with  no recent connections, a new family entry solved my 
30 or more years  search. Although I was 90% sure my ancestor originated 
in Gloucester Co.,  Va., the new entry proved it and connected me to the 
original immigrant  from England. I still have gaps in the line, but I 
now know about Thomas  Hall and that completes my search. Now I just idly 
look at lists, not  seriously. The days of haunting the library are over.

On 3/14/2011  12:06 PM, Bill Davidson wrote:
> While it is only part of the solution,  I wish that more people would 
> have a man....with the surname of  interest....take the DNA test.  DNA 
> has already shown that some  "approved" DAR lineages are "flat wrong," 
> and many such other "myths"  have also been "busted" by this 
> technology.  It is not an "end  all/be all answer," but to not take 
> advantage of it, where such a  male with the correct surname can be 
> found, is a huge omission in  most cases.  It amazes me that people 
> will spend thousand of  hours (and who knows how much money?) 
> researching in courthouses and  libraries (and Ancestry.com) for years 
> and years, but they won't  spend a few minutes and $150 for a 37 marker 
> DNA  test.
>
> My own DNA test confirmed that my Davidson family in  Cumberland Co.,  
> VA was part of the same Davidson family as the  one in Buckingham Co., 
> VA....and that helped me to "trace" the  overall family back to James 
> City Co., VA by at least the  1680s.  I also learned that I have a 
> "Viking heritage" versus  the more common "Celtic heritage" for my 
> surname.  I never could  find anything in "conventional documentation" 
> that proved a  "connection" between the families in those two counties 
> in  VA.
>
> My mother's family had even more interesting  results.  Her male cousin 
> with the surname of "Brown" took the  DNA test, and we found that he 
> was actually a "blood Smith" versus a  "blood Brown."  Since my 
> maternal gg-grandfather was named Smith  W. Brown, I guess that we 
> should not have been too surprised by that  result....but nothing other 
> than the DNA test would have ever shown  this.  My "biological maternal 
> Smith family" has been in VA  since at least the 1650s, and I am proud 
> to be a member of that  family (and I am happy to finally know the 
> truth....that only DNA  testing could have provided).
>
> In closing, when I get  frustrated with all of the bad data that is 
> "out there," I remind  myself that it is "just genealogy."  Compared to 
> what is going  on in the world these days (like in Japan), trying to 
> prove who my  gggggggg-grandfather was seems far less critical.
>
> Bill  Davidson
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