Originally posted by PDHOTLEN
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New FMS match (U5b2b2)
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I found two entries with the same earliest known female ancestress with U5, 228A (assume U5b2b2). Location = Denmark (Odense, Amt, DK). She was born in 1776. There are 3 mutation differences, but 2 of them are 16519C and 309.1C, Then one more additional in HVR1. There is plenty of time to have split from mine back in Medieval times. So I'm thinking in terms of Jutes > Kent, England.
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Originally posted by PDHOTLEN View PostThen again, since my precise U5b2b2 haplotype is so rare, it could have followed my earlier scenario, but with different actors. Instead of a Hunt connection, another family line (unknown) did the same: Massachusetts > New Jersey (Huntingdon, etc) > PA on one hand, and Virginia on another. All that happened prior to the Revolutionary War. Well anyway, I'll keep that scenario on the back burner.
The SMGF (Sorenson) database is no longer available. But I recall several exact HVR1 matches with a Denmark origin. Kent had settlers from Jutland (Jutes). Hmm...Last edited by PDHOTLEN; 23 May 2015, 11:18 PM.
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Then again, since my precise U5b2b2 haplotype is so rare, it could have followed my earlier scenario, but with different actors. Instead of a Hunt connection, another family line (unknown) did the same: Massachusetts > New Jersey (Hunterdon, etc) > PA on one hand, and Virginia on another. All that happened prior to the Revolutionary War. Well anyway, I'll keep that scenario on the back burner.
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Originally posted by PDHOTLEN View Post228A, within U5b2b2, might be considered Scottish diaspora.Last edited by PDHOTLEN; 21 May 2015, 11:18 PM.
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Originally posted by PDHOTLEN View PostI once entertained the idea that my mysterious maternal line came from the Highlanders who settled in SE North Carolina. Since they tended to be Loyalists during the Revolutionary War, I gave that idea up. But now I'm again wondering about that possibility. In any event, I still think my U5b2b2 might have come with the Norse (to Scotland and the Western Isles, etc) back in the 900s or so. With the Highland Clearances and economic migration down to England after the Industrial Revolution, there may not be any 228A remaining up in Scotland (if that scenario is more or less correct).
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I once entertained the idea that my mysterious maternal line came from the Highlanders who settled in SE North Carolina. Since they tended to be Loyalists during the Revolutionary War, I gave that idea up. But now I'm again wondering about that possibility. In any event, I still think my U5b2b2 might have come with the Norse (to Scotland and the Western Isles, etc) back in the 900s or so. With the Highland Clearances and economic migration down to England after the Industrial Revolution, there may not be any 228A remaining up in Scotland (if that scenario is more or less correct).Last edited by PDHOTLEN; 16 May 2015, 11:56 PM.
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Originally posted by PDHOTLEN View PostThe surname Lee pops up now and then among surnames people give with their matches. Are any of them connected to General Robert E. Lee? (ha ha). I do have one rare U5b2b2 FMS match (genetic distance of 1) that just popped up in the last couple of days. But his Lee line comes from New England.
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The surname Lee pops up now and then among surnames people give with their matches. Are any of them connected to General Robert E. Lee? (ha ha). I do have one rare U5b2b2 FMS match (genetic distance of 1) that just popped up in the last couple of days. But his Lee line comes from New England.
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My HVR1+HVR2 is rather rare. I put together a tree in Massachusetts and area in earliest colonial times a few years ago. There were quite a few daughters in the resulting branches with my HVR1+HVR2. Some are well recorded as to birth, marriage and death. Others, however, only show birth. New England is quite good at keeping records. But if they moved out of the area as children, marriage and death would not be available. I saw one line that went down to Maryland and Tennessee. But that was a male line. Most others simply disappeared off the record. The surnames Davis and Evans, for example started out in MA. So I'm wondering if and whether my direct maternal line really came from New England. Well, it is a possibility to keep in mind.
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One problem in tracing my direct female line back into colonial times is her apparent deliberate break with he own family, leading not only to an alias first name, but also her maiden name. At least it superficially seems that way. Rather than coming from a low class family, she came from a snobby Anglo land-holding family (tobacco). Furthermore, they may have at first been Tories! I'm making this up, but it sure is a plausible scenario. So she burned her bridges behind her and never looked back. But clues are there as to who she really was, including her daughter that was in my maternal line. That daughter named her first child by her mother's real name (Rachel). If I waited around for verifiable data to somehow reveal itself, I'd never get anywhere with my tree.
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Originally posted by PDHOTLEN View PostIt might be possible that my rather rare HVR1+HVR2 haplotype (assume U5b2b2) were low class indentured servants from west England. One founding female started a clade in Massachussetts in the early-to-mid 1600s. She seems to have come from the Somerset/Bristol region of England. My own direct female line may have gone to Virginia, with daughters (1) Melungeonizing and (2) marrying with Gypsy descendants somehow. Number 1 eventually ending up in Oklahoma, while mine went via NC > KY > IN. Even if with Covington of eastern shore Maryland (from VA), that lineage has 2 or 3 Gypsy-related names in their tree. Another Gypsy-related surname that I see now and then as connected to FF matches is Hawkins. Maybe the renowned maker of the Hawkin's rifle descended from tinkers (metal workers) back in England?Last edited by PDHOTLEN; 4 January 2015, 01:15 AM.
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It might be possible that my rather rare HVR1+HVR2 haplotype (assume U5b2b2) were low class indentured servants from west England. One founding female started a clade in Massachussetts in the early-to-mid 1600s. She seems to have come from the Somerset/Bristol region of England. My own direct female line may have gone to Virginia, with daughters (1) Melungeonizing and (2) marrying with Gypsy descendants somehow. Number 1 eventually ending up in Oklahoma, while mine went via NC > KY > IN. Even if with Covington of eastern shore Maryland (from VA), that lineage has 2 or 3 Gypsy-related names in their tree. Another Gypsy-related surname that I see now and then as connected to FF matches is Hawkins. Maybe the renowned maker of the Hawkin's rifle descended from tinkers (metal workers) back in England?
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I'm now using HVR2 mutation 228A (both rCRS & RCRS) as my earliest direct maternal surname in the U5 & U5 (FMS) projects. That takes my direct maternal line back to a generic England. So far, I have not seen any with that mutation from Ireland or Scotland. Even if there are persons with that mutation (U5b) in Ireland, that would likely be Anglo-Irish. Hey, I'd be glad to be proven wrong. Anything is progress at this point. Ultimately, U5b2b2 with 228A could end up coming from France with Huguenots &/or Gypsies. Or it could have come from Scandinavians (Norse & Swedes). And so it goes...
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I was thinking that the map includes those who marked that they do not want to receive e-mails/see HVR1 matches.
And I never paid attention to the pins in North America, Australia or Yemen
W.
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