Thursday, June 23, 2016

Correcting the List of Children of James (Isaac) and Mary Henderson of Onslow Co NC

This seems to be "pick on the Pike County Archives and History Society" week. First, let me point out the obvious -- I've been spending a lot of time on their site, and I'm very, very grateful it's there. Not just the Hendersons, but many families owe the Society an ongoing debt of gratitude for maintaining the work done by late Pike County historian, Morris Myers.

Although Morris was not a Henderson by blood, he invested quite a bit of effort in collecting information on the family. I consider his work on the Arkansas lines of Hendersons to be basically very sound.

However, since his passing, DNA testing has combined with new discoveries and research and some of his work has become outdated. In other words, proven incorrect.

The information I ran across tonight attached to our ancestor "James Isaac Henderson II" is a perfect example. I want to caution researchers of this line that this page on the Pike County Historical Society's website contains a number of critical errors, which, were Morris still with us, he would hastily correct. Unfortunately, his work is in archival status and these errors are out there for God and the world to read, apparently until the end of time.

So let's just run over the biggies.

Let's begin with James (Isaac) Henderson's 1700 birth date. Off by about 10 years. Based on the marriage record of his grandparents (William Henderson and Sarah Bishop m. Aug 1685 in Somerset Co MD), and the known birth dates of at least one (and possibly two) of his uncles, we can estimate his father, James (the Mariner), was born around 1690. We can also make an informed estimate of the date of birth of his son, Argalus Henderson, of about 1627-1630. Realistically, James (Isaac) was probably born no earlier than about 1708 and probably no later than about 1712, so let's go for the middle and say 1710.

Next, he wasn't born in Scotland. We now have sufficient DNA and circumstantial paper evidence to confidently state that the James Hendersons Jr. and Sr. of early Onslow County NC were descendants of the Henderson family of Virginia and Maryland's early Eastern Shore. These Hendersons had been in Virginia since at least 1661, and possibly up to about a decade prior. We cannot yet prove that the family came from Scotland, but I am investigating clues which could possibly point us towards Perthshire.

Morris states that "James Isaac Henderson II" was the son of "James Isaac Henderson I." We have no idea whether father and son had identical names. They were simply called James Henderson Sr. and James Henderson Jr. in Onslow County records when both were in residence in the county. James (Isaac) Henderson is never called "James Isaac" in any record (please read this article) and we should not state as fact that father and son both had the same middle name (though they might have).

Next, he writes that James (Isaac) married Mary Rhodes. We think he did, but we can't prove he did. There's a lot of circumstantial evidence there, but that may be as close as we ever get. We have no marriage record or other "proof positive" documentation, at least not as of this writing.

Moving on...James (Isaac) did not obtain 220 acres from Nathaniel Averitt. It was James (the Mariner) who did that, although the actual grant/deed was lost, probably in the 1752 hurricane that destroyed the courthouse (and may have also destroyed the will of the elder James). We know it was James (the Mariner) who bought the land from Averitt because a late 18th-century Onslow County record references the elder James having left the property he bought from Averitt by will to the younger James (Isaac). This, incidentally, is the single instance where the younger James is referred to as "Isaac."

Morris is correct that James (Isaac) does not mention Mary (his wife), James, Joseph, John or William in his will. He is incorrect in calling the men James (Isaac)'s sons.

Here is the list of "Children of James Isaac Henderson II and Mary Rhodes:" as shown on the PCHAS page. I have bolded the incorrect children in red:

Joseph Henderson 
William Henderson d. before 1772
Lucy Henderson
Elizabeth "Betty" Henderson
Nancy "Nannie" Henderson
James Henderson d. before 1737
Bethany Henderson
Argaleus Hercules Henderson    b. circa 1727, d. between September 6, 1804 and August, 1806
John Henderson b. circa 1741, d. 1825

Let's tackle Joseph first. Absolutely no idea where he got this. He told me that folks sent him pedigrees, which he often took on faith if they seemed reasonable. Perhaps Joseph came from one of those, but I have done quite a bit of work on the Hendersons of Onslow and Chatham Counties and so far, I have never seen the name Joseph associated with Argalus' generation of the Henderson family in either area.

Next is James.  Notice the notation that James died before 1737. This is very likely confusion caused by the fact that James Sr. (the Mariner) returned to Somerset County MD in about 1737. That created the impression that of one of the two Jameses of Onslow had died. In actual fact, James Jr. (Isaac) continued on in the county until his death between August of 1776 and April of 1780, and we know that James Sr. (the Mariner) was still living in Somerset Co MD as late as 1750. I do not know whether Senior made his will in Somerset Co MD or Onslow Co NC, but I suspect Onslow. We know as I explained earlier that there was a will, and that will left Henderson's Landing on the New River (the former Averitt property) to James Jr. (Isaac), but will has ever been found. If my speculation that it was lost in the hurricane is correct, we can infer that James Sr. (the Mariner) probably died between 1750, when he was last "seen" alive in Somerset County MD, and September of 1752, at which time his will would have had to be on file at the courthouse if it were to be destroyed by the storm. So cross "James Henderson d. before 1737" off the list of children of James (Isaac) and Mary Henderson.

Richard (the Quaker) Henderson of Chatham Co NC also had a son named James, but he was about 30 years younger than Argalus Henderson, and too young to have been a child of James (Isaac) and Mary.

Next, let's address John Henderson. Notice that he died in 1825. This is without a doubt a reference to John (of the Misfortunes) Henderson who made his will in 1823 in Chatham County NC. The will was probated in 1825. I strongly suspect that this John Henderson was an immigrant from Scotland, and I just wrote an article explaining why.

Having dispatched with the John who died in 1825, however, I need to point out that there was another John Henderson contemporaneously in Chatham County with Argalus until about 1790. He too was one of the many sons of Richard (the Quaker) Henderson (originally of Hanover County VA) who moved to the Cane Creek area of Chatham County about 1751-1752. Some or all of Richard's family moved to the Bush River Meeting in Newberry Co SC in the late 1780's. According to lists of his children that I have found online, Richard did have a son named John and also a son named William, which probably also accounts for the next alleged "brother" of Argalus...

Moving on to William. As I just mentioned, it is most probable that the William Henderson we find in the records of Chatham County in the latter half of the 18th century was one of several sons of Richard (the Quaker) Henderson. Richard also had adult grandsons named William who could have showed up in the records during the late 18th century.

In 1768 a number of Hendersons, including a William, were among the signers of Regulator Advertisement No. 9. I believe that all the Henderson signers except for our Argalus belonged to the family of Richard (the Quaker). A William is listed on the 1790 Federal Census in Chatham Co (formerly Orange) with two females of unspecified ages, and a male under 16. That is very likely a grandson of Richard (the Quaker).

However, I am keeping a wary eye out for the name William Henderson because it may be of particular interest in our larger narrative. There was an adult William Henderson living in Craven County (north of Onslow) from 1738-1749, but he is too old to be a child of James (Isaac) and Mary. In 1751 a William Henderson made a single appearance in Onslow County to stand security for the will of Samuel Moore (note that a Lucretia Moor[e] witnessed James [Isaac]'s 1770 will), however, there is nothing to indicate any connection between that William and our James (Isaac) other than the common connection to the Moore surname, which was prolific in eastern NC in the 1700's.

One reason I am particularly interested in connections with William Hendersons is that James (the Mariner) was the son of William (the Sawyer) Henderson of Somerset Co MD, and had an older brother, William (the Cordwinder) Henderson Jr., who died young. William (the Cordwinder) Henderson may have had a namesake son, also William, who was closely associated with the Thomas McClammy family who moved to Onslow Co NC in the first half of the 18th century. James --probably James (Isaac), but possibly the Mariner -- was the administrator of the estate of Thomas McClammy in 1744. I have often wondered if the William Henderson in Craven County might not have been William Henderson III of Somerset Co MD, son of William (the Cordwinder) Henderson, associate of the McClammys, and possibly a first cousin to James (Isaac), but I have never found anything to convince me one way or the other.

So there you have it. That is the most correct list of the children of James (Isaac) Henderson and his wife, Mary, of Onslow Co NC that I can assemble based on known documentation. There is no evidence to suggest that any of the four men in red on the list above were brothers to Argalus, and there is evidence to suggest that they weren't.

Saturday, June 18, 2016

Art Thou Our John Henderson of 1823 Chatham County? No Indeed, Thou Art Not.

This evening I ran across a surprising will for a John Henderson in the records of Chatham County NC. I had seen this will years ago, so the will in and of itself wasn't surprising, but what did surprise me was the website's claim that the will was written by the brother of our Argalus (Hercules) Henderson.

Wait, what? What brother!?

A transcription of the will was posted by the Pike County Archives and History Society, who continue to host An Arkansas Connection, the work of the late Morris Myers.(*1) Morris's website contains a great deal of information on the line of Abner Newton Henderson, a grandson of Argalus (Hercules) Henderson and a prominent citizen of Pike County.

The authors of the post offer no explanation of why they concluded the will belonged to a brother of Argalus (Hercules) Henderson, saying only that it had been transcribed from a document obtained from the North Carolina State Archives. They did include a footnote containing the caveat that there could be errors on their site, so I'm going to chalk the identification of this will up to precisely such an error.

Here is the text of the will:

State of North Carolina } and County of Chatham

I John Henderson of the State and County aforementioned, being in perfect Health and sound Mind, Calling to Remembrance, the Mortality of human Nature, and that it is Appointed by the Wise Disposer of all things, for all Men once to Die, do make and publish this my last Will, and Testament, Although my Property has been much Curtailed by Misfortunes, and the many Delapedations (sic) that has been made on it, I have devided (sic) what remains into Ten parts to Viz I give and bequeath, to my Deceased Daughter, Sarah Donaldson's Children two Tenths of all My Property, real, and Personal, wheresoever to be found, And my Three unmarried Daughters Charlotte, Jane, and Margaret Aytone, Two Tenths each, Always excepting out of the above division, James Bonman, who was, left by my Son's will to me, Charlotte, Jane, and Margaret, And as I have received Credit with Mr. McMollan On James Bonman's Acct for more than my part of his Value would Amount to, consequently, James Bonman Properly belongs to my Daughters, Charlotte, Jane, and Margaret Aytone. I also Bequeath to my Daughter Mary's Children, one Tenth part of all I possess, And the other tenth, to my Daughter Joannahs Children, And do hereby appoint my Two Grand Sons, Robert, and James Donaldson my Sole Executtors (sic), to this my last Will and Testament, Hereby revoking all prior wills Heretofore by me made, in Witness whereof I have hereunto signed my Name, and Affixed My Seal This 29th December in the year of our Lord Eighteen Hundred & Twenty three.


Signed John Henderson (seal)

Witness: Wm. Broadfoot, Wiley B. Straugham

Proved May Session 1825

This last will and testament of John Henderson was exhibited in open court and proved by the oath of Wiley B Straughan one of the subscribing witnesses thereto and was ordered to be recorded and was recorded in Book B Lager 9 - The executors(?) within Named were duly qualified -- (signed) Tho. Raglan Stele

Now, I did have this John Henderson family in my database at one time, based solely on the relationships detailed in the will, but they were marked as unidentified/unplaced.

I feel very confident that this John Henderson who died in Chatham County bet 1823-1825 was not a relative of Argalus (at least not a close one, and by "close" I mean within a minimum of a couple of centuries). He seems too young to be a brother (Argalus was b ca 1727), and we can account for and exclude the son and grandsons of Argalus (Hercules) named John.(*2)

There were members of the Granville County Hendersons(*3) in and out of old Orange and Chatham Counties, but none of the names mentioned in the will really seem to fit with them either, although I will admit I know comparatively little about their family, so I can't rule them out.

Interestingly, a Margaret Aytone was born in Fife in 1735 to William and Catherine Aytone. The use of such a distinctive name made me wonder if this John Henderson was an unrelated Henderson immigrant who had connections with the Aytone family of Scotland.  Further investigation of this theory at FamilySearch.org revealed the 1783 baptism of a Margaret Aytone Henderson to a John and Cera (Sarah) Paris Henderson of St. Cuthbert's Edinburgh. This couple also baptized daughter Johanna in 1785 in Dunfermline, Fife. These dates and names seem a reasonable fit with people mentioned in the 1823 Chatham County NC will, but I could not find conclusive baptismal records for Sarah, Charlotte, Jane, Mary etc.(*4)

So let us go back to the will. The story didn't end in 1825...

In the Fall 1830 term of Chatham County Court, Robert Donaldson,(*5) by this time a resident of New York, sued the Devisees of his grandfather, the late John Henderson:

Robert Donaldson vs. The Devisees of the late John Henderson
Bill to subject the real estate of Testator to the payment of debt due the complainant

In this case, it appearing to the satisfaction of the Court that the  defendants, JAMES DONALDSON, ISABELLA DONALDSON, JO ANNA DONALDSON, ELIZA BROADFOOT, wife of WILLIAM BROADFOOT, JOHN McMILLAN, and MARGARET WEST, wife of FREDERICK WEST, are not residents of this State. It is therefore ordered by the Court that publication be made for three months in the North Carolina Journal notifying the said non-residents to be and appear at our next Court 

of Equity for the County of Chatham on the third Monday in March. Then and there to plead, answer or demur to this petition filed. Otherwise, judgment will be taken pro confesso and the matter heard ex parte as to them. -- THOS. THOMPSON, C. & M. E.

So there you go. This John Henderson's family didn't even live in North Carolina. At least not by 1830. So where did they come from?

A John Henderson Broadfoot was born near Fayetteville in1823 to a William Broadfoot (b 1783 Scotland), so if I was going to make a WAG, I'd say his mother was probably the Eliza Broadfoot mentioned in the 1830 record (although no mention of her was made in the 1823 will). We know from this article that Robert Donaldson was also a "native" of Fayetteville, but there were also Hendersons and Broadfoots (Broadfeet?) in Venango County PA in the early 1820's (John Henderson and David Henderson, constables, William Broadfoot, overseer). I really don't know where this John Henderson family came from prior to having been in Fayetteville for a time, but my money would be on Scotland, either Edinburgh or Fife.

Henderson's mention of his property having "been much Curtailed by Misfortunes, and...many Delapidations" is intriguing. I'm sure if I kept digging, I could track this family down, but it's getting late and I've been sidetracked from the other genealogical fish I was attempting to fry tonight.

Since it seems pretty clear to me that this family is unrelated to our Chatham County group, I'm gonna put a fork in 'em, cause as far as I'm concerned, the idea that this John Henderson was a brother to Argalus is done...to a crisp. However, researchers of the Chatham County NC Hendersons should be aware that there was a second adult John Henderson in the county in the early 1800's. It may be difficult to conclusively distinguish his records from those of John, son of Argalus. Be on the lookout for clues that point towards the man we'll call "John (of the Misfortunes) Henderson" and if you find any records that clearly reference him or his family, let's add them to the comments below this blog article so that other Chatham County researchers are aware of the two and don't get tangled up in them.


*1 Morris did a tremendous amount of work on the Henderson family, although he was only related through an 1831 Alford marriage. Since his death we have made many new and important discoveries, but I consider his work on the Abner Newton Henderson family of Arkansas very reliable. The PCHS also hosts a complete transcription Morris made of my aunt Thelma Henderson Schoolfield's typewritten notes about the Hendersons of Chatham County (from her courthouse research done from the 1940's to the 1980's). Please read his comments to me in 2003 about the sources and reliability of his work

*2 Son: John Henderson (b 1767 d ca 1838) married Frances LNU and had James, Sarah, Elizabeth, Mary, John Jr. Thomas, Pleasant, Dicey, Eliza and Martha. Grandsons: A) John H. Henderson (b ca 1794 s/o Ezekiel and Elizabeth Brashier Henderson) m Sarah Brashier, d Greenville SC; B) John Henderson (b 1802 s/o Isaac and Anaritta LNU Henderson) m Candace and/or Mary "Polly" Brewer, d Todd Co KY aft 1870; C) John Henderson (b bef 1790 NC presumed s/o Hezekiah Henderson) m Mary Susan Spurlin d 1819 Todd Co KY; D) John Henderson Jr. (b 1800 Orange Co NC s/o John and Frances LNU Henderson m Unknown, d ca 1849 Floyd Co GA.

*3 As far as I know, the Granville County Hendersons are not related to the Hendersons of Chatham and Onslow Counties, or the Hendersons of the Eastern Shore. I believe they may have ties to the Tidewater Virginia Hendersons, who were contemporaries of our early Eastern Shore Hendersons. I am hoping that we will eventually get some DNA testers from their line added to the Clan Henderson DNA project to settle the matter.

*4 John only mentions one (deceased) son, who apparently had no heirs. I feel pretty sure that this Henderson family daughtered out with his son's death, and therefore there is little or no hope of finding a living male Henderson descendant to DNA test.

*5 Robert and his brother James were appointed executors of John's will. Both were sons of Sarah Henderson Donaldson, who predeceased her father. Robert Donaldson was born in Fayetteville, NC, but he moved to New York where he worked as a banker and became a patron of the arts. His mother, Sarah Henderson Donaldson, is listed in the Arkansas Connection records as person #6000 Sarah T. Henderson, a daughter of John Henderson (son of Argalus). Morris did mention that he did not think Sarah T. Henderson fit logically as a daughter of this John. I believe that as a result of this cursory investigation, we can safely assume that this Henderson family was of recent Scottish origin and probably unrelated to the rest of the Chatham County Henderson. Sarah Henderson Donaldson can be removed from any databases where she might have been entered on account of her appearance on Morris's site.

Friday, June 10, 2016

Kennedy DNA Matches Keep Rolling In, But Still No Magic Bullet

Y-DNA matches continue to trickle in for our three male Kennedy testers but we still don't have the magic bullet that will crack the mystery of of where our David Kennedy came from, whether in Ireland or America.

Our line of Kennedys belong to Haplogroup DF21, a large haplogroup very common to Irish males. Even at 67 markers, we have numerous non-surname matches, so it is difficult at this point to focus in on any single match as a lead. At this point, we have no other high marker level matches with anyone named Kennedy.

We've had a couple of false alarms as other Kennedys (a surprisingly common surname) have reached out inquire whether we might be DNA matches to their male lines (so far we aren't), and our autosomal DNA testing has identified a potential lead among a group of Canadys from coastal NC, but that possible connection will need to be thoroughly researched before any conclusions can be drawn.

Although we have not yet done SNP testing on any of our male testers, I feel reasonably certain we will refine into the L1337 sublcade of DF21, and possibly even into one of the A93X subclades of L1337 (with X currently represented by 3, 4 and 5). So far, testers within this group trace their lineages back to western Ireland, which should come as no surprise to us.

Our next step may be an upgrade to define our terminal SNP and see if we do in fact fall into one of these predicted subclades. As more testers match us, and identify their families' points of origin in Ireland, we may be able to focus in on a single area that could provide clues to our own.

Pinpoints show known testers of subclade A935.

Thursday, June 9, 2016

Were our Henderson Ancestors Among the Jacobite Convicts Who Arrived Aboard the Friendship in 1716?


The short answer to that is, "No."

If you want the long answer, including an explanation of how this story ever got started in the first place, read on.

It has recently come to my attention that there are still some researchers of our Onslow County NC Henderson family line who have not had the opportunity to correct a piece of misinformation that began circulating on Electric Scotland about a decade ago.

In a biographical sketch of Chatham County NC Henderson progenitor Argalus (Hercules) Henderson, son of James (Isaac) Henderson Jr. of Onslow County NC and grandson of Mariner James Henderson Sr. of Somerset County MD, it was stated that:

"James Isaac Henderson Sr. and his son James Isaac Henderson Jr. [could be traced] from their arrival from Scotland on the convict ship called S. S.Friendship in 1716 and their indentured servitude at Annapolis, Maryland until their freedom about 1732 when they arrived in Orange County, North Carolina and started a new life. Despite the hardships of losing land and holdings in Scotland by English and sold into slavery in the Colonies, James Sr. and Son endeavored to persevere in continuing the Henderson name here in U. S. and as a result there are many hundreds of thousands of direct descendants of James Isaac Henderson Sr. here in U. S..."

First, I realize I'm getting off on a tangent here, but I'd like to point out that we have no evidence that there was ever a "James 'Isaac' Henderson Senior." We don't know what Senior's full name was. At this point, every record I have ever encountered that mentioned either man, whether in Maryland or North Carolina -- and I have encountered many -- either called them simply "James Henderson," "James Henderson Senior" or "James Henderson Junior," with one exception. On one occasion in one North Carolina record, James Henderson Junior is called "Isaac Henderson."  Not "James 'Isaac' Henderson" -- just "Isaac Henderson." I have written an entire blog article to clarify the use of the name "James 'Isaac' Henderson" -- which I normally use just to distinguish the younger Henderson from the elder when I'm writing about either. (I normally distinguish Senior as "Mariner James Henderson," -- because that's what he was.) If you are among those who have the name "James Isaac Henderson Senior" in your database, please read the blog article and make the necessary corrections to your data.

And not to pick nits, but "many hundreds of thousands of descendants?" Well, I guess it's technically possible, but...that's a lot of descendants. To be fair, Genghis Khan has about 16 million living descendants. Of course he also had about a hundred wives and lived in the 1100's so they've had more time to multiply. I won't argue that there aren't a lot of us Eastern Shore Henderson descendants. There are. Just sayin'...

And one more thing. Neither James Henderson arrived in Orange County NC in 1732. Neither James ever lived in Orange County. Onslow County NC was formed in 1732 and Mariner James Henderson Senior was apparently already there at its formation and appears in the very earliest records. His grandson, Argalus, would move inland to Orange County later in the 18th century.

But I digress.

So back to the topic of the article -- the assertion that our Henderson ancestors of Orange/Chatham and Onslow Counties, NC, arrived as convicts aboard the Friendship. This is something that I've actually addressed online before, but I hope that by devoting a blog article to it, it will be picked up in Google searches and more widely read so that folks can correct their information.

There was in fact a Jacobite convict named Robert Henderson who arrived among a cargo of eighty "Rebells Transported in the Shipp the Friendship" in August of 1716. These Jacobites had been taken prisoner at Preston in Lancashire during the rising of 1715-1716 and loaded aboard the Friendship in Belfast for transportation to Annapolis (a colonial port with a thriving trade in convict indentures). The unfortunate Robert -- the only Henderson aboard -- was sold to Edward Penn, a wealthy planter of Anne Arundel County.

There was also a James Hendry aboard (sometimes transcribed as Hendrick). But there was no "James Isaac Henderson" (nor a "James Henderson" of any variety) aboard that ship.

So why did anyone ever think there was?

A careful reading of the transcribed (not original) records on ImmigrantShips.net quickly reveals that the name "James Henderson" is given as the purchaser of the bonds of prisoners David Steward and Henry Lumsdale or Lumsden (the latter of whose descendants think he may have been taken to Virginia). Although there was a separate entry for each purchase, I have no more reason to believe that there were two James Hendersons buying prisoners that day than I have to believe that there were four Daniel Sherwoods, three Aaron Rawlings's, or five William Bladens (see transcript).

So is it safe to assume that there was probably just a single James Henderson buying indentures on that August day? Probably not. The Henderson buying convict bonds in Annapolis was more likely to have been Jacob Henderson, but until I can examine the primary source document, I can't be sure.

John Thomas Scharf's History of Maryland: 1600-1675 records the buyer of Steward and Lumsdale's indentures as Jacob Henderson, not James (page 387).* Sometimes the names James and Jacob were used interchangeably, so without the original list to examine, I cannot be sure. Even were it written "James," we cannot rule out the possibility that the purchaser was actually Jacob. (In the way that supporters of King James were called Jacobites.) I have checked Ancestry.com to see if the the original records are among their scanned documents, but could not find them.

However, if the purchaser was actually Jacob Henderson, as I suspect,** then mystery solved, because we know very well who Jacob Henderson of early 18th-century Annapolis was. He was an Irishman and an Anglican rector, first in Delaware, and later in the Annapolis area. In 1713 he married the wealthy widow of Henry Ridgely, instantly elevating himself to the landowning class in Anne Arundel County. He was a contemporary and social equal of a number of other men buying bonds in Annapolis that day, including Benjamin Tasker (who would become mayor of Annapolis and a proprietary governor), William Bladen (attorney general), Mordecai Moore (a physician), and prosperous planters Aaron Rawlings and Daniel Sherwood.

But if a James Henderson (and not Jacob) was the actual purchaser of Steward and Lumsdales bonds -- and I seriously doubt it -- then could he have had any connection to our Hendersons of the Eastern Shore?

Hard to even speculate, and I hate to do so since I'm relatively certain the records are referring to Jacob. However...

James Henderson Sr., our line's direct ancestor and the progenitor of the Eastern Shore Hendersons (across the bay) was long dead by 1716. I get the impression his youngest son, James Jr. of Somerset County, was usually skint, and probably didn't have the funds -- or need -- for indentured men. (But that's just speculation on my part.) It might have been Old James's grandson, James Henderson of Pitt's Creek Hundred, son of John Sr.

Or not.

Maybe it was our line's Mariner James Henderson Sr., the first to move to Onslow County NC from Maryland. But he was probably youngish to have the funds to lay out for two indentured men in 1716 (about 20-25 years old), and he made his living as a mariner, so he's not likely to have needed laborers, although it's conceivable he might have been at the sale acting on behalf of the owner of the whatever ship he was sailing for at the time...or perhaps for his sawyer father, William Henderson. I can't rule him out, but he just doesn't seem a likely candidate to me.

So if this record has any connections to our Hendersons of the Eastern Shore -- and again, I doubt it -- then it would have to have been one of those three living adult Jameses. I don't recognize any of the other purchasers as men of Somerset County, so it doesn't appear to me that a contingent of monied Somerset Countians had sailed across the bay for a spot of shopping in the labor markets.

If Henry Lumsdale was taken back to Virginia by his purchaser, I would tend to suspect that any purchasing James Henderson might belong to the Virginia Tidewater Hendersons (another very old line, but one whose research has many gaps due to courthouse destruction during two wars).

So we are left with some ambiguity about the identity of the Henderson buying convict bonds in Annapolis in 1716. But what we are not left with is any doubt whatsoever that the James Hendersons (Junior and Senior) who were living in Onslow County NC in the 1730's were not Jacobite convicts transported to Annapolis aboard the Friendship in 1716.

We have enough evidence (including Y-DNA) at this point to confidently state that Mariner James Henderson Senior who moved to early coastal NC was from the Henderson family of Maryland and Virginia's Eastern Shore. We are reasonably confident he was the son of William "the Sawyer" Henderson and his wife, Sarah Bishop (probably a daughter of Lt. Henry Bishop's second marriage to Ann, the widow Bowen). Recent autosomal DNA matches in our family line have supported the Bishop connection.

William "the Sawyer" Henderson was the second son of immigrant James Henderson Sr., who is first found in Northampton County VA records in 1661along with suspected kinsman Gilbert Henderson. Although we cannot yet connect this Henderson family back to Scotland (any online tree claiming to do so should be considered suspect unless they provide iron-clad documentation), we know that by 1716 this Henderson family had been in the New World for over half a century.

*Carl Boyer's Ship passenger lists: the South, 1538-1825, Volume 3 also lists the buyer as Jacob Henderson.
** So far, Jacob Henderson is the only Henderson I have found in the Annapolis area during the first two decades of the 18th century.


Sunday, January 10, 2016

Ongoing DNA Testing of Kennedy Family Volunteers Reveals Millennia-old Irish Origins

As funding and opportunity present themselves, we are continuing to upgrade our Kennedy family volunteers' DNA tests in an effort to pin down the origins of our common ancestor, David Kennedy of Russell County, VA (b ? - d 1800).

Late last year, we ran an R1b-M343 Backbone test to begin narrowing down our line's haplogroup to see if our ancient origins might shed any light on our more recent ones.

The backbone test identifies a tester's haplogroup by analyzing the SNPs ("snips"), Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms in our DNA. SNPs are  the unique mutations on the Y-chromosome that have happened over thousands of years. They are passed down from father to son, so the larger the percentage of the population who shares a mutation, the longer ago it happened. Conversely, the smaller the percentage of the population who who shares a mutation, the more recently it happened (and therefore the less time it's had to be passed down). By looking to see whether a group of testers has a specific mutation known to be older or newer, it is possible to group them more accurately within a historical or genealogical timeframe.

If you think of humanity as an inverted tree, it began to fork from a common trunk very far back in time. From those early forks came distinctly shaped smaller limbs, and from those limbs came still smaller unique branches and finally the twigs which are nearest the top of our human tree (or the bottom, in genealogical charting terms). Most western Europeans come from the very early R-M207 fork of the tree close to the trunk. R-M207 is estimated to have arisen during the Upper Paleolithic era sometime between 19,000-34,000 years ago. As time went by, mutations caused new branches to begin growing off of the main R-M207 fork, all the way up (or down) to the little twigs that have come into existence only a few thousand or even hundred years ago.

Our backbone test yielded a haplogroup designation for our Kennedy family of DF21. There is disagreement about precisely when the DF21 Haplogroup branched off the tree, although a recent archaeological discovery and subsequent testing indicates it probably originated close to 4,600-4,700 years ago.

At the present, there isn't a lot of information to share about our ancient DF21 ancestor. The overview on the  DF21 and Subclades Project on Family Tree DNA is heavy on genetic minutiae like individual marker values and specific mutations, and light on implications and conclusions about our origins or ethnicity. There are several websites dedicated to subclades (the smaller limbs and twigs that have grown from DF21), but I don't believe any would apply specifically to our line of Kennedys, since they focus on parallel branches and individual family groups.

One development of some interest is the aforementioned news in December from Dublin that a team of geneticists and archaeologists had recently completed sequencing the genomes of four ancient inhabitants of Ireland. One of those samples came from a skeleton called Rathlin Man 1 who shared our DF21 ancestor.

Rathlin Man 1 was discovered in a Bronze Age cist on Rathlin Island off the coast of County Antrim in present-day Northern Ireland. Rathlin Island is the northernmost point in Ireland and only 11 miles from Scotland's Mull of Kintyre. This man's bones were carbon-dated to 2025-1885 BC, and he carried a few unique mutations which would have taken 600-700 years to develop, so his discovery allows us to make an educated guess that our common DF21 ancestor likely lived 4,600-4,700 years ago.

While this is interesting, without significant additional contextual history for this man and his surrounding Bronze Age neighbors, it is hard for us to draw any useful cultural conclusions other than confirmation that our DF21 relatives can be found in northeastern Ireland as early as 2025 BC (which isn't to say they were confined to that area, or even confined to Ireland). An article in The Guardian provides fascinating details about what was learned from the genomic sequencing performed on the Rathlin men and a 5,000 year old farmer woman found near Belfast.

Although we have not yet attempted to narrow down our Kennedy lines's haplogroup any further, I strongly suspect that should we do so, we would get a downstream result of L1337. We share unique mutations in our STR (Short Tandem Repeat) values with other Y-67 testers who have been identified as L1336 and L1337. These two designations are smaller "family branches" off of the limb S5488, which grows straight off of DF21. The website PetersPioneers.com does a nice job of providing understandable information and diagrams about all of this if you'd like to learn more.

Based on our assumption that our Kennedys will be L1337's, I had a look at the current public results chart for the DF21 Haplogroup project to see where other L1336 and L1337 testers come from. If you look at the chart you will see the L1336/1337 testers about halfway down in Groups J1a, J1b J1c and J1d. I predict we will fall within J1c, but can't confirm that without testing. Bear in mind that we don't know when we shared a common ancestor with the other testers represented in Groups J1a-J1d, but it was probably much more recently than 4,700 years ago. Realistically, it may have been as recently as a few hundred to a thousand years ago. I wish I could be more precise, and as more testing is done, we may become so, but for now, it's an unknown.

Many testers do not provide information regarding their most distant known ancestor, but some do. Using what was available, I began mapping the known points of origin of genetically similar L1336 and L1337 testers on a Google Map. A number of the men who provided data can only trace their ancestors into Ireland as far back as the 18th or 19th centuries, so while the places they identify are typically reliable, there is plenty of opportunity for their ancestors to have spread out across Ireland from any ancient single point of origin over the intervening millennia. Ireland is small, and ancient people were surprisingly mobile.

My hope, is that as time goes by and we acquire more close genetic matches from our STR and SNP testing efforts, we will see a distinct cluster of matches emerging on the map. That may give us some sense of where we should be looking for our David Kennedy's roots in Ireland. One thing that I can say with a degree of certainty is that many of the names that share distinctive SNP values with our Kennedys are considered Irish in origin. I think it's safe to say that our Kennedys are likely of recent Irish origin (vs Scots, English or Scandinavian). And speaking as a genealogist, "recent" is a relative term (Ha-haha! I crack myself up -- a "relative" term? "Genealogy?")

Although we do have L1336/37's as far away as Wales on our map, the highest frequency of matches so far comes from County Clare, between Galway Bay and Limerick. This sample, however, is far too small to allow us to draw any conclusions. While this area is the historical seat of the O'Kennedy family, if we had been part of that family group, I would have expected at least a few Y-DNA matches with others of the Kennedy surname (of which we currently have none).

So that's the current state of things.

To summarize, SNP testing has confirmed that we fall into the DF21 Haplogroup, which probably originated 4,600-4,700 years ago and has recently been proven to have been in northeastern Ireland by at least 1885BC. Further testing would likely result in a designation of L1337 for our Kennedys, and based on a very small sample of known origins of other L1336 & L1337 testers, there appear to be several whose recent origins are in County Clare between Galway and Limerick.




ISO Rodney Coyne or Alan Rowntree Regarding Henderson Family Near Coupar Angus

I recently came across an archived query from 1998 on the now-defunct Rootsweb Message Boards that interested me greatly. Unsurprisingly, since seventeen years have passed, my email to the original poster bounced.

The original message can be viewed here, but I am pasting in the content in case anyone recognizes Mr. Coyne of South Africa, the Henderson family in Scotland about whom he writes, or Mr. Rowntree, the single respondent to his query (whose email was also unavailable).

On 23 January 1998, Mr. Rodney Coyne of Pietermaritzburg, South Africa wrote:

My wife is a Henderson - her family have lived for generations on the farm Balbrogie near the village of Coupar Angus - she still has cousins living there. An aunt has most of the family history, but says that there is a gap between Andrew and his son Alexander ca,1600 and William Henderson who married Margaret Payot ca.1700. The family were involved in the `Gowrie Plot' but I have no details of this at present. Towns associated with the family are Cargill, Bendochy, and Collace. Farms connected with the family are Lawton (spelled`Latoun' ca 1600) and Balbrogie. If anyone would like to exchange information on this branch of the Hendersons could they please contact me .

On 3 March 2010, Mr. Alan Rowntree responded:

I believe your William Henderson was the son of John Henderson in Nether Balmyll (Balmyle) and Balbrogie. John died in 1676. John was the son of James Henderson (or Petrie)who died in 1637 and married Isobell Blair. John Henderson had a brother (another) William who died in 1658. (That is my descent) I cannot go back further than James/Isobell.

If you know the poster, the respondent, or have any information about this Henderson family described living near Coupar Angus, please email me directly.