Monday, November 26, 2007

New DNA Results provide answers...and questions.

I'm happy to report that more DNA test results have come back for our Corder Family DNA Project, and these results contained no nasty surprises. At 25 markers, the DNA test was just 1-off on marker 449 (a "fast mutator") which confirmed the paper research of both lines involved. Although the DNA cannot pinpoint the precise relationship between the two men, it does prove that they share a common ancestor within a reasonably recent window of time (no more than 7-20 generations). This is no surprise to them. Their own paper research has lead them to a reasonable conclusion about their MRCA (Most Recent Common Ancestor) and so I think that everyone is well satisfied with the growing baseline DNA signature we're getting on record for the William Corder b. 1703 of Fauquier County VA group.

The new testers have lots of questions so I really need to focus on getting our Corder DNA Project web site up and running. I wanted it to be polished and perfect for launch, but now I'm beginning to think that something may be better than nothing, regardless of the state of completion.

I spent some time last night working on another group of Corders who left Fauquier County VA in the mid 1700's and migrated into Granville/Caswell County NC before dispersing over the southeast and then points west. I am hoping that DNA testing will connect this group to one of the others at some point. I am always very suprised at how quickly the time passes when I am working on these old lines. The next time I looked up, it was half past midnight and it felt like I had only just scratched the surface.

Our Brooks DNA chat is very active and as usual, LaMarr Brooks provides much of our information and research from her astonishingly detailed (and very tidy) notes.

LaMarr has learned that as far as anyone knows, none of the central NC Brookses have done the DNA test, so we are still open at this point to the possiblity that there may be a relationship between our NC/SC/TN group and the larger group of Brookses from central NC. The problem with researching the Brooks family is that it seems like chasing your tail. The surname is not exactly unusual, and when combined with the aggravation of unrelated groups bestowing very similar or common first names down through the ages, there now exists a fearsome tangle. More than one of us on the chat has confessed to finally giving up in frustration and working on another family line. Hopefully the DNA will provide a breakthrough. It has already conclusively linked two pockets of TN and SC groups together no later than the late 1700's.

Thursday, November 15, 2007

A Red Letter Day for Genealogy

Well, when it rains, it pours. Two new and intersting contacts made today. Mary Ellis, County Coordinator for Alamance NCGenWeb, contacted me out of the blue with the good news that she and I are related on both the Henderson and the Murray lines. The Murray connection is relatively recent, the Henderson connection further back and through a female line, which is always nice since the females are so under-represented in genealogy. Curiously though, Mary's genealogy provided me with a date that came in handy later in the evening when I found another Henderson researcher of a most unexpected nature.

I was piddling around out on Facebook (one of the exceedingly rare times that I have actually spent any time doing that) and I came across a group called "Henderson Clan" which I tried to join, only to find that it was a closed group a single family of Hendersons who descend from James Henderson b. 1815 in Onslow County, NC . (Search on the group in Facebook and you'll see why I found the connection so startling and interesting.) After a wee bit of explanation, administrator Lisa Henderson let me join the group and we are working together to see if we can see a logical place where her line fits in with either of our Onslow County Henderson groups. One of the dates supplied to me earlier in the afternoon by Mary seemed eerily helpful. We'll see what pans out as I review the stacks of notes I have on the Henderson clan, but I was glad to meet Lisa and learn about her line.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

The More, the Merrier - a new Brooks!

It's always a pleasant surprise to find a new "cousin" researching one of our collateral lines, and happily, one found me last night. I had posted a notice on the Brooks Family Forum (on genealogy.com) for researchers of William Brooks (b. 1781 NC) to contact me, and so Carol B. R. did, and off we went. Carol is descended from a son of William (as am I), and will add one more piece to the big Brooks puzzle we're working together. Carol joined our private Brooks discussion group last night and I'm sure she'll find plenty of interest to keep her busy, as the group had posted 320 messages (as of last night) since starting up in January of this year.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

All Quiet on the Western Front

It's one of those rare days when I have a few minutes in the morning to work on my research. No doubt all hell will break loose shortly and interrupt my reverie as clients call with requests and endless repetitive chores (like cooking and bathing) rear their ugly little heads.

Yesterday morning Tom's mom was with us and we drove down to the Low Water Bridge which crosses the Shenandoah right off of Happy Creek Road in Warren County. We were on our way to breakfast in Front Royal, but going down "the back way" to town across the river is always a treat for me since it takes us right by Edward Corder's Turkey Tract, the land Corder leased from Lord Fairfax in 1748. The bulk of the original 200 acres was for sale last year and I feared greatly for it since development is pushing its way north up Highway 522 (shiny new shopping centers cluster around the exit at I-66). Apparently a neighbor bought the piece and has fenced it beautifully. There are now horses grazing in the rolling meadows, and all is well and pleasant-looking. There are another 68 acres for sale on the west side of the railroad track, only part of which, I think, falls within the original boundaries of the Turkey Tract. Only time will tell what will become of it. Land here in this area is frightfully expensive.

I posted quite a bit on the G1 Henderson discussion group yesterday evening, so they're probably tired of hearing from me as I muse about whether or not my nearly twenty-year-old work on the Henderson family could stand up to closer scrutiny now that DNA results (and lots of online resources) are rolling in. I think it may be time for me to conduct a comprehensive audit and review of all of my Henderson material and begin to systematically work through it, posting it to the Artemas H. Henderson Memorial Library, and to the private G1 Discussion group. Maybe I'll catch something I missed before.

Ah, there goes the phone. And so it begins.

Friday, November 2, 2007

Man, I should know better than to get started on this stuff.

I have such a backlog of genealogical emails and documents to work through that my desktop, my email application, and even my house looks like that of the proverbial Mad Scientist. I try every day to address at least one thing, be it an email, a GEDCOM someone sent me, a new snail mail letter, or something I found and copied from the internet and then stuck in my "to do" box. The problem with this daily approach is that once I start, I can't stop!

This week I have started a new listserve for the G1 Henderson family. G1 is a designation given to Hendersons who are known to be from the Onslow and Chesapeake groups. We were all awkwardly sharing bits and pieces of information and misinformation and so I decided a listserve would be much more efficient. But setting it up has come with the attendant consumption of time on the front end. Hopefully it will pretty much run itself once everyone is onboard and chatting.

I'm also continuing to puzzle out the whole Corder-Baker relationship. We know the Corders and Bakers are related from their DNA testing, but how? Since there was obviously a non-paternal event in one of the families, the speculation needs to be done privately, and more testing would help. I think I may be on to something since the Wayne County KY Corder's DNA test came in and matched our Elijah Corder line, however. As they say, that changes everything. More on that later as new developments come in.

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Welcome to the Genealogy Blog!

I've been wanting to add a Blog to my genealogy web site for some time now so that I can update my large network of fellow researchers on what I'm currently adding to my database. Since I only publish my files to the internet about once every two years (it's a huge undertaking since there are thousands of files to be formatted and transferred), I need a way to keep people updated on what's coming for the next upload.

I also want the Genealogy Blog to serve as a forum for me to write personal observations or comments which may not fit in, strictly speaking, anywhere else on the site.

I hope you enjoy the Blog and I encourage everyone who visits to post comments or feedback both on the blog and on my genealogy web site located at www.laurahenderson.com/genealogy