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Looking for John Clark(e) b abt 1821
Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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ArgyllGran | Report | 27 Apr 2022 15:16 |
Please keep in mind that while you already know what you've found in the past - we don't. |
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ErikaH | Report | 27 Apr 2022 15:16 |
No interest in DNA.......trying to find a 'father' for Harriet. |
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ArgyllGran | Report | 27 Apr 2022 15:20 |
"The marriage to John Hayes is a red herring, it seemed to be "right" way back in 2011, when I had only just started researching. " |
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Researching: |
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Julie | Report | 27 Apr 2022 15:29 |
I appreciate that some researchers have no interest in DNA, I didn't go down that route until a year ago. I am only seeking to highlight that there must be some family connection between the ancestors of my DNA matches and myself and that I haven't simply plucked this particular John Clark out at random, DNA has pointed me in his direction. |
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Julie | Report | 27 Apr 2022 15:31 |
Sorry ArgyllGran , that was a typing error on my part, probably had John on the brain and was trying to do too many things at the same time.. |
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nameslessone | Report | 27 Apr 2022 16:47 |
You are right, DNA doesn’t lie ( except for false positives) but other peoples trees may not be correct unless they have the documentary proof. |
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Julie | Report | 27 Apr 2022 17:20 |
namelessone, agreed, indeed one of the 2 trees I checked and expanded in this case was wrong. That's why I always produce my own version of a matches tree. The original tree failed to pick up on the fact that a man had married twice, both times to a Sarah Ann. They had the wrong mother because of this. If I hadn't spotted that I would never have made the actual family connection between the 2 matches. That said, sometimes the documentary evidence is wrong, as with another DNA match whose grandmother claimed to be a widow on marriage, when in fact she was a spinster with an illegitimate child. She used her actual birth name, but a partly made up name for her father. |
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Deborah | Report | 27 Apr 2022 17:42 |
I am sorry to but in here Julie, I am not a helper, but I do read the posts on here every day, it is a good source of learning. |
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Researching: |
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Julie | Report | 27 Apr 2022 19:01 |
Deborah, I don't feel I was challenging anyone, I was merely trying to clarify and focus. If my attempts to do this have been taken in any other way that was not what I intended. I have used this forum on many occasions and value those who help. |
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nameslessone | Report | 27 Apr 2022 19:26 |
Interesting that Ancestry believe you can go as low as 9ams. In the series of talks given locally by renowned experts the believed that anything under about 35cms or more than 4th cousins was unreliable. |
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Julie | Report | 27 Apr 2022 20:00 |
nameslessone, I'm no DNA expert, but I did join a DNA matching group, and several there grumble because Ancestry cut out shared matches lower than 20cMs a while back, saying they were very useful. They have a category that is headed close matches, which equates with 4th cousin or closer, which is their 2nd tier, 4th cousin goes down to 20cMs. I haven't worked on matches more distant than that, there's plenty to keep me busy on those. I've several thousand individual matches before I'd get as far down as any at 9cms! |
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Deborah | Report | 27 Apr 2022 20:11 |
Namelessone, I would agree with what you say about 35cM’s. Even 35 is not reliable enough. |
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Julie | Report | 27 Apr 2022 21:04 |
Deborah, there are a lot of conflicting claims out there regarding where the threshold on "accuracy" falls, many put forward quite coherent arguments to support their case, I don't know who to believe! However, where I have a higher cM level match, who shares a number of other lower cM matches with me, it seems logical to me to conclude that we are all related in some way. |
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nameslessone | Report | 27 Apr 2022 21:22 |
I hadn’t noticed that Ancestry had done some renaming/ regrouping. But beware of where they change from one group or another. I have several 2nd cousins, all descendants of the same great grandparents who are spread over several of the Ancestry groupings. |
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Julie | Report | 27 Apr 2022 21:43 |
namelessone, I quickly realised that the Ancestry relationship is only a high level prediction, there's a much longer list of possibilities behind that. Added to that, intermarriage and other complications can throw those out of the window. I have many cases where siblings married siblings, or people from one family are entwined in various ways with another. I'm so glad I went down the route of having both paternal and maternal lines on the same tree, the 2 sides overlap in several places and not because they were all in the same local area. |
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Deborah | Report | 27 Apr 2022 23:24 |
You say your original query has been lost in the process, you brought up the subject of DNA. |
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nameslessone | Report | 28 Apr 2022 08:35 |
Like Deborah I wonder how you think the fathers were brothers. One of my brothers a,so tested with Ancestry, the amount of cms shared with 1st and 2nd cousins can differ a lot. (I’m on my I pad so will add the number difference later) |
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Deborah | Report | 28 Apr 2022 08:51 |
Exactly namelessone. |
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nameslessone | Report | 28 Apr 2022 09:22 |
So |
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Julie | Report | 28 Apr 2022 09:39 |
Deborah, yes I brought up DNA because for me it is the reason for my wish to find more information about this particular John Clark, I felt it provided context. I got drawn in to further comment by what others said. As siblings inherit different parts of their parents DNA, so it is inevitable that their offspring will match at different levels to their cousins and aunts and uncles. However, it was explained to me, that where there are children who share a mother and their fathers are brothers, or indeed it's the same father and sisters as the mothers, rather than matching at the sort of levels expected for half-siblings or half-cousins, the levels may well be higher, akin to a three-quarter relationship. It was also explained that it may not be possible to pinpoint which brother within a family is the biological father of a child, but it still remains that DNA can identify the family itself. |