Stevens!
I have a John Stephens born in Monmouth, NJ, in 1735.
Oh, and I like Roots Magic, for genealogy programs. I need to dig into my notes and continue my project of compiling all my info with an eye towards publishing.
'Shindig'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Stevens!
I have a John Stephens born in Monmouth, NJ, in 1735.
Oh, and I like Roots Magic, for genealogy programs. I need to dig into my notes and continue my project of compiling all my info with an eye towards publishing.
Yay new kitty, Anne!
I know Cody's uncle has mapped out a good bit of their family tree, but I've never really tried to map out my own. Between my mother being adopted and my father's side of the family fleeing Europe, it all seemed a bit hopeless.
My roommate has an ancestry.com subscription and let me use it. It was totally addictive, and I stayed up until like, 2AM, and have not been back on since, lest I get caught up in it more.
Huh. DNA might be a way to go. It's impersonal enough I wouldn't have to worry about living birth family, right? I'm a little curious about my lineage, as long as I don't have to (shudder) interact.
I also did 23andme, which was fun and interesting. Possibly not worth the $99, but it will tell you about relatives who have used the site, but you don't have to. (ETA: and most of the people it came up with for me were like "This person is probably your fifth cousin!")
My dad did one of those DNA tests. It came back with a list of people who matched certain percentages of his Y chromosome. With most of them, it said that the probable common ancestor was something like 10 generations back. He exchanged some emails with the people on the list, and one of them had put together a map showing where this Y chromosome had appeared and when, and tried to map the family's migration. There was one match that said it was probably within five generations, but I could trace our family tree back six generations on that branch and it didn't match. The other guy's ancestors at that time had been living in a town about 50 miles away from where our ancestors were living then, so it's possible that someone's father wasn't actually the person it was assumed to be, or that the link was just a few more generations back.
On my mom's side of the family, if I want to know who my fourth and fifth cousins are, I can just call them up and ask. Owning a shared property that goes back 6 generations is handy that way. But my dad's side is probably historically more interesting - my paternal grandmother's family has roots in Tennessee and relatives fighting on both sides of the Civil War.
I am looking forward to new kitty pics, Anne.
Danskos purchased. Glad I went and tried a few on because the style I really liked didn't feel right and I bought a style that I hadn't considered. Got a pair of Beatrix. Comfy!!!
Two of my sister's friends (who are twins) had been working on their genealogy for a while, and then had their DNA tested. It came back as significant parts African, and various places in Europe, and a little Native American, all of which they'd expected. What they didn't expect was that it also said they were a fairly significant percentage Ashkenazic Jewish -- they'd never seen any mention of anyone Jewish in their research. So they asked some of their older relatives about it, and found a few people who said, "Oh, everyone knew that your grandmother was having an affair with the Jewish man who owned the pharmacy around the corner. He was your father's real father."
I had dinner this summer with someone who is either my 4th cousin once removed or my 5th cousin (it depends on who his mother is - I know who officially is but I have my doubts). He happens to summer in the same town my grandparents retired to, and happens to be a retired UGA professor, though he never met my grandparents or me before. I found him and emailed him because he has a companion miniature portrait to one my father has - a husband and wife pair who are our mutual ancestors.
"Oh, everyone knew that your grandmother was having an affair with the Jewish man who owned the pharmacy around the corner. He was your father's real father."
(it depends on who his mother is - I know who officially is but I have my doubts)
All that kind of family shit is so fascinating.