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On Wed, 12 Sep 2018 06:30:12 -0700 (PDT), True North
wrote: On Wednesday, 12 September 2018 08:32:43 UTC-3, Keyser Soze wrote: On 9/12/18 1:28 AM, Bill wrote: wrote: On Tue, 11 Sep 2018 20:02:20 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote: Nearly a dozen of my high school buddies live in the DC area. DC is one of those places where most of the people living there came from somewhere else. My father was from "dust bowl" Oklahoma but my mother's side was all from somewhere in Maryland, going back to colonial times. My grandfather's people go back to the Hessians from Baltimore and Anne Arundle and my grandmother's people all came from St Mary's or Calvert county somewhere, up to ~250 years back. I just dug up a bunch of stuff for my niece down at the marina in Ridge. My mom’s people were in New Haven in the 1650’s. Virtually all of my immigrant ancestors arrived in this country from Europe between 1890 and 1920. At least one of my wife's ancestors arrived here from England in the early 1600s to explore North America. I'm not much into "ancestry," as it were, but my wife is Oldest son sent me the Ancestry DNA kit for Father's Day. Got the results back in July. No big surprises but some small ones. Results 55 percent Great Britain 18 " Ireland/Scotland/Wales 9 " Iberian Peninsula Low confidence regions... 4 percent Europe East 4 " Europe West 1 " Asia South It shows migration patterns for the colonial time period with one side of my mother's family making a wrong turn left to America but they corrected that after the ungrateful rabble bit King George's hand that had fed and protected them. ;-) I have been curious what mine would say but my guess is England Ireland Germany and a trace of American Indian. The real wild cards are on my father's side of the family because there are so many holes in the records. The people west of the Mississippi in the mid to late 19th century were not big on paperwork. |