Showing posts with label #DNA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #DNA. Show all posts

Thursday, July 3, 2025

DNA

 Has DNA helped me in my genealogy research?  Yes, it has.  I’ve touched upon this on a previous blog entry in January 2024 titled Origins.  Interesting how the companies have updated their estimates.


First, let’s look at the ethnicity.  Ancestry reflects that I have six regions.  These are as follows:

·      48% England & Northwestern Europe (reflected in the map as green)

·      40% Germanic Europe (reflected as blue)

·      5% Ireland (Orange)

·          3% Central & Eastern Europe (purple)

·          3 % Scotland  (brown)

·          1% Sardinia (teal)

The Central & Eastern Europe as well as Sardinia are regions I have not traced ancestry to.  Those must be my brick walls.

I have also uploaded my DNA data to other websites including MyHeritage, myFTDNA, and myLivingDNA.  You have to check all these sites periodically as they keep changing as more and more people test or upload their information.

 


MyHeritage has a different breakdown but still in Europe.

·      27.5% English

·      21.7 % Scottish & Welsh

·      21% Germanic

·      13.2% Dutch

·      5% East European

·      4% Danish

·      2.6% French

·      2% Breton

·      2% Irish

That really changed from earlier estimates.  East European must be the brick wall area as I haven’t traced families to those regions.

FTDNA has similar results with their myOrigins.

·     


71% England, Wales, and Scotland

·      20% Ireland

·      6% Greece & Balkans

·      <2% Central Europe

·      <1% Finland

Interesting results there too.  What’s real interesting is that Central Europe, which includes Germany is so low, when I have traced most of my Dad’s ancestry to Germany.


LivingDNA shows only Great Britain & Ireland – no Germanic or Central European.  So, here’s their breakdown:

·      29.3% East Anglia

·      26.4% Southeast England

·      9.9% South Central England

·      5.5% Northern Ireland & Southwest Scotland

·      5.4% Northumbria

·      4.6% Aberdeenshire

·      4.6% Northwest England

·      3.7% Cumbria

·      3.3% Ireland

·      3.1% South England

·      2.2% Central England

·      2.1% North Wales

This is great for breaking down the areas of England but I know I have Germanic ancestry.

Let’s create a chart to see the similarities and differences:

REGION

Ancestry

MyHeritage

FTDNA

LivingDNA

England & Northwestern Europe

48%

27.5%

71%

86.7%

Germanic Europe

40%

21%

Incl in Central Europe

Not incl

Ireland

5%

2%

20%

3.3%

Central & Eastern Europe

3%

27.8%

<2%

Not incl

Scotland

3%

21.7%

Incl in England

5.5%

Sardinia

1%

 

Not incl

Not incl

Finland

Not incl

 

<1%

Not Incl

Greece & Balkans

Not incl

 

6%

Not incl

Totals

100%

100%

100%

95.5%

 

I have traced my ancestry to Germany, England, Scotland, Ireland, and France.  So, where does that leave Central & Eastern Europe?  How is Europe divided up into different regions?  Well, that takes us to the World Atlas to get the definitions.

·      Northern Europe consists of Iceland, United Kingdom (England, Wales, Scotland & Northern Ireland), Ireland, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania.  This region is also known as Baltic, British Isles, and Scandinavia.

·      Eastern Europe includes Russia, Belarus, Bulgaria, Czechia, Hungary, Poland, Moldova, Romania, Slovakia & Ukraine,

·      Western Europe has Germany, Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Austria, Switzerland, France, Liechtenstein, and Monaco.

·      Southern Europe has Portugal, Spain, Italy, Albania, Andorra, Bosnia, Herzegovina, Croatia, Greece, Malta, Montenegro, North Macedonia, San Marino, Serbia, Slovenia, and Vatican City.  This region is also known as The Mediterranean.


The highlighted are the parts of Europe that I have traced ancestry to.


How has DNA helped besides the ethnicity breakdowns?  It was able to break some of my German brick walls for the Kludt, Ahrendt, Reisner, and Haueisen surnames.  Actually, I’m still working on the Reisner & Haueisen families.  I looked at shared matches and locating the Most Recent Common Ancestor (MRCA) and narrowing it to my paternal side.  However, I need to be careful as the Kludt & Reisner’s had siblings marrying each other.  This information has been covered in the blog entry entitled “Brick Walls in Family Research”.

Sunday, June 9, 2024

2024 Week 18 - Love & Marriage

             I’ve been using DNA to help remove some brick walls in my ancestry.  But did you know that siblings cause issues in DNA research?  Yep, and I get it on both sides.

       Paternal ancestry, I have siblings marrying siblings.  I’ve talked about my Great Grandfather William Edward Kludt several times.  He was the oldest living child of John (Heinrich Johann Ludwig) Kludt and was born 2 October 1862 in West Bend, Washington County, Wisconsin.  In the late 1870’s the family moved to West Union, Fayette County, Iowa.  This is where he met his wife, Susan Katherine Reisner. They were married on 14 February 1889 in West Union.  Susan was born 3 Sept 1863 in Clermont, Fayette County, Iowa to Henry Reisner and Maria Margaret Haueisen as the fifth child.

       William’s sister, Augusta Maria Kludt, born 11 January 1865 in West Bend, Washington County, Wisconsin, also married a Reisner – one of Susan’s older brothers, George August Reisner, born 15 May 1859 in Stoughton, Dane County, Wisconsin.  They were married 24 May 1883 in West Union.  So, for DNA research, the cousins are considered double-cousins and can have twice as much DNA.  And I was trying to determine who were William & Augusta’s maternal grandparents.

       Luckily, William’s brother, Henry Carl, did NOT marry a Reisner.  He married Alma Nelson in 1907 in Fayette County, Iowa.

       Susan had eight other siblings that married into various families living in Fayette County, Iowa.  These families include Reichel, Neumann, Weidermann, Winkleman, Steuer, and Lehmer.

       Now, for my maternal side it’s not siblings marrying siblings, but descending from two siblings.  Aaron Lowe (born c1772 in Virginia) and Sarah Frazier (born c1774 in Virginia) were married 3 October 1801 in Patrick County, Virginia.  They had ten children.  I descend from two of their daughters, Ellen & Mary.

·      Ellen Lowe was born 4 May 1803 in Patrick County, Virginia.  She married Moses Stanley on 29 October 1822 in Patrick County, Virginia.  He was born 2 May 1800.  They had 12 children. 

o  Their son, William F Stanley, born in 1826 married Sarah Ann Scott on 1 Dec 1853 in Pike County, Kentucky.  They had lots of children.

§  Their daughter, Ruth E Stanley, born 12 Apr 1865 in Pike County, Kentucky, married Elbert Bevins on 22 Apr 1886 in Pike County, Kentucky.  They had 10 children.

·      Their daughter, Rosa Zettie Bevins, born 31 March 1887 in Meta, Pike County, Kentucky, married George Wilby Keesee on 15 Jun 1907 in Meta.

·      Mary Lowe, born 15 September 1818 in Patrick County, Virginia, married Booker T Keesee (Sr) on 4 October 1840 in Pike County, Kentucky. Booker was born 2 March 1819 in Logan County, Virginia to Richard Keesee & Judith Morris.  Mary & Booker had 12 children.

o  Their youngest, Booker T Keesee (Jr) was born 9 August 1864 at Road Fork, Pond Creek, in Pike County, Kentucky.  Booker married Caroline Evie Maynard, daughter of George Washington Maynard & Sarah Caines, on 19 Jun 1884 in Pike County, Kentucky.  They had six children.

§  Their oldest son (second born child) was George Wilby Keesee, born 9 June 1887 in Piso, Pike County Kentucky.  As mentioned above, he married Zettie Bevins.

I have an unproven line of ancestry where I supposedly descend from Elisabeth & Joan Plantagenet  (daughters of King Edward & Eleanor of Castile).

·      Elisabeth is the ancestor of Anne Boleyn (not the one married to King Henry!) who married John Shelton.  The Shelton family married into the Hurt family who married into the Bevins family (the parents of the above mentioned Elbert Bevins).

·      Joan also ties into the same family.  However, she ties in on Anne’s maternal grandmother.  Whereas, Elisabeth was through the maternal grandfather.

It will be interesting to validate the above information.    

Friday, January 5, 2024

2024 Week 2 - Origins

          Where is the family from?  Wow!  What a question!  I knew my Dad’s family was from Germany & Wales and Mom considered herself a “Heinz 57” (German, English, Scotch-Irish, and French).

         Research did prove the German on my Dad’s side and I have found the English, Scottish, & Irish as well as the French on my Mom’s.  DNA ethnicity has proven some of this and indicated new.  I took the test through Ancestry.  Have downloaded the raw data and uploaded it to other sites.  Here are the results from the various sites.

         FTDNA shows the following:

·       71% England, Wales, & Scotland

·       20% Ireland

·       6% Greece & Balkans

LivingDNA:

·       100% Great Britain & Ireland

o   29% East Anglia

o   26% Southeast England

o   10% South Central England

o   6% Northern Ireland & Southwest Scotland

o   5% Northumbria

o   5% Aberdeenshire

o   5% Northwest England

o   4% Cumbria

o   3% Ireland

o   3% South England

o   2% Central England

o   2% North Wales

·       Viking index is 40% (Eastern Europe)

MyHeritage:

·       59% Irish, Scottish & Welsh

·       26% English

·       9% Balkan

·       4% Scandinavian

·       2% Greek & South Italian

AncestryDNA:

·       51% Germanic Europe

·       23% Scotland

·       20% England & Northwestern Europe

·       3% Sweden & Denmark

·       2% Ireland

·       1% Baltics (Estonia, Latvia & Lithuania)

Maternal –

·       18% Germanic Europe

·       23% Scotland

·       7% England & Northwestern Europe

·       2% Ireland

Paternal –

·       33% Germanic Europe

·       13% England & Northwestern Europe

·       3% Sweden & Denmark

·       1% Baltics

So, it will be interesting to see where the highlighted ethnicities come into play in my family tree.

         We always thought Dad to be 75% German and 25% Welsh, so these results are interesting.  I have traced some of his ancestry to Mecklenburg-Schwerin (KLUDT & AHRENDT) and Bavaria (REISSNER & HAUEISEN) with the families immigrating to the United States around 1850.  This makes up 50% of his German Ancestry (all on his dad’s side of the family).  His mother’s side has surnames like Swinehart, Davis, Secor & Morgan.  The Swinehart’s did come from Hannover between 1776 and 1811.  The rest of the surnames have not been researched and appear to be early settlers in the USA.

         Mom’s family is a different story.  They all appear to be early settlers with many of the ancestors living in Virginia.  I know that some originated from England (STOVALL, PORTER, WALKER, ALLEINE, HATCHER, BELCHER), Ireland (DENNIS, BEVINS, NOBLET), Scotland (FRAZIER/FRAZER, FOSTER, SIMPSON, WALKER, MCNIGHT, RUTHERFORD), Germany (SHOCKEY/SCHACKE/JAGGI) and France (NOBLET, FUGATE).  These are just some of the surnames.  Some of the families went from England to Scotland to Ireland before coming to the United States (or The Colonies).

         I’m slowly re-working my family tree, reviewing research  notes and seeing if I have the documents to prove the information.  I’m currently working on my paternal grandfather’s side of the family (KLUDT, REISSNER, AHRENDT, & HAUEISEN).