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FARMALLChick Posted - Mar 28 2016 : 3:22:54 PM
Does anyone else do genealogy? Did the Ancestry DNA kit (received as a Christmas gift). I just got my results back. 43% Irish, Some German, French, Italian, Greek, Iberian peninsula and north African. Very interesting. Most of it knew, but some I did not. Will be interesting to see where research takes me now.

"Courage is being scared to death and saddling up anyway" -John Wayne
www.farmallchick.blogspot.com www.farmallchickphotos.blogspot.com
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knittingmom Posted - May 27 2016 : 09:31:23 AM
I love genealogy as well. My background is Ukrainian and French. I know my mother's ancestors came to Canada over 300 years ago.



"There is no foot so small that it cannot leave an imprint on this world"

"The things that matter most are not really things after all"
Bonnie Ellis Posted - Apr 23 2016 : 2:34:08 PM
What great information Lorena.

grandmother and orphan farmgirl
queenmushroom Posted - Apr 23 2016 : 08:14:56 AM
Can't afford a DNA kit, but would love to know. I knew one of my maternal grandmother's ancestors was hanged during the salem witch trials. Through her lineage, she traces back to ancestors who hob nob with the likes of King Henry VIII. The North's to be exact. I also found out that she is also the ancestor of Chester Arthur, one of our lesser known presidents. Her name was Susannah Martin.

Patience is worth a bushel of brains...from a chinese fortune cookie
Bonnie Ellis Posted - Apr 03 2016 : 7:26:58 PM
I believe that the DNA they do is accurate on Ancestry.com. It costs $99.

grandmother and orphan farmgirl
guineahen Posted - Apr 03 2016 : 05:33:59 AM
I've been wanting to do the DNA test too- so it is pretty accurate?
FARMALLChick Posted - Mar 29 2016 : 11:18:54 AM
What neat histories. My family came from Ireland to Great Britain on my maternal grandmother's side (her name was actually Irelan) and from Switzerland on my maternal grandfather's (Speicher)side. I know my paternal grandmother's family was Irish (Driscoll)and my paternal grandfather's side was German (Christman). Not sure where the rest of it fits in.

Several years ago, my mother and I did some research and found that we are direct descendants of Thomas J. Stone, signer of the Declaration of Independence. We are listed in the DAR now. My mother's cousin won't give us back the family bible so I can't get anymore information from that. I am hoping that as soon as I am working again, I can resubscribe to Ancestry.com. I am doing as much free stuff as I can right now.

I love watching Finding Your Roots on PBS and Genealogy Roadshow when they are on. My DH's cousin and I would watch together via txt message. It was our Tuesday night date. lol He's in his 70's. We would text each other through the whole show. Ol'boy cracks me up!! love him!!

"Courage is being scared to death and saddling up anyway" -John Wayne
www.farmallchick.blogspot.com www.farmallchickphotos.blogspot.com
sherone_13 Posted - Mar 29 2016 : 08:59:33 AM
I have been doing genealogy for years. We recently found the neatest site called relativefinder.org. I found out I am related to Louis L'amour! How cool is that? We have a family history mystery in our family. We cannot find a birth certificate for my paternal Great Grandfather because it burned during the Indian Wars in Oklahoma. That line has been halted there for years and we have no way to connect it to other lines. So if anyone out there has a James Dotson from Salazar County, Oklahoma in your line. I really want to talk to you. This would be somewhere around Tahlequah in the early 1900's.

Sherone

Farmgirl Sister #93
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ceridwen Posted - Mar 29 2016 : 08:00:51 AM
Lora, I am doing some genealogy. I actually earned my expert level merit badge. I love doing it. It's so easy to get lost in it and the next thing you know it's 2 am. I use Ancesty.com for my research. I haven't renewed my membership because I don't have a lot of time on my hands at the moment. I do enjoy it. I would love to do a dna test!

Marilyn, fascinating! I love your story! How wonderful that you have made connections. Thank you for sharing!

Carole
Farmgirl Sister 3610 - Nov 7/2011
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Bonnie Ellis Posted - Mar 28 2016 : 11:29:14 PM
Marilyn, that is fascinating. I was adopted. Met my natural mom when I was 56. I did ancestry.com too. I am German, scots, Norwegian and Cherokee. I have a lot of information to go through. Have found some relatives but not all.

grandmother and orphan farmgirl
edlund33 Posted - Mar 28 2016 : 4:47:10 PM
I love working on genealogy when I have time but with aging parents and a business to run I don't get as much time as I'd like to. I haven't done the DNA testing but am saving up money so I can. I've been working primarily on my paternal grandfather's lines in Sweden. On his mother's side I managed to get in contact with a relative who had spent his entire adult life researching the family genealogy. He passed away just a few months after we made contact but he mailed me a huge envelope full of his records since his kids were not interested. I am slowing translating, verifying and entering the information in family tree maker so I can someday share it with others which was his unfulfilled dream. On my great grandfather's side of the family I have three semi-professional genealogists so they have been so helpful not only in sharing the family history but also cultural and local information about the farm and area where he grew up. I discovered that he had an older sister who stayed in Sweden that we had never heard about, so it turns there are many living relatives who are just a few generations removed. They knew there was family here in the USA but since the brothers all changed their last names at Castle Garden and all but two passed away within a year or two of immigration they quickly lost track. Needless to say they were as delighted to hear from me as I was to find them so it's been a fantastic experience for us. I have genealogical information back to the early 1700's and even some back into the 1600's. It's a fascinating journey but I can't imagine having done it in the pre-computer days!

Cheers! ~ Marilyn

Farm Girl No. 1100

http://blueskyanddaisies.blogspot.com

Do not go where the path may lead, go instead where there is no path and leave a trail. - Ralph Waldo Emerson
NikisMom Posted - Mar 28 2016 : 3:47:13 PM
I do and also did the DNA test. After hearing for so long that I was not Irish, only Canadian French (my Nana was very angry at my Papa's mother - from Ireland). I found out I was more Irish than French. 37% Irish, the rest in upper Europe (German, Scotland, etc). I have found some "cousins" through the database.

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