I don't know if I could raise any interest or not. It's doubtful. Of Ben's
4 sons, two are deceased and the other 2 are in nursing homes. Of those 4
sons, two had one son each. And then each of those had one son. So, with
only 6 living male decendants, Callison males in my family are pretty
scarce. But, I'll try. I agree, it would be very interesting to see the
results of DNA. Tell me again the cost?
Susanne
----- Original Message -----
From: <GNEOLOG(a)aol.com>
To: <CALLISON-L(a)rootsweb.com>
Sent: Thursday, March 16, 2006 12:48 PM
Subject: Re: [CALLISON] interesting website
Susanne, I will definitely have to check this out especially since
both my
dad and my father in law served on ships during WW II. Thanks for sending
this
one. By the way, are any of your CALLISON surnamed male cousins,
uncles,
nephews remotely interested in participating in our Callison DNA project.
It would
be neat to see if we can match mutations for the various lines. It is
looking
like my Thomas line has two markers that are different between lines
down
from
brothers born about 1720 which MIGHT be helpful in determining
William
versus
John Callison male lines. I can hardly wait for our ONE Callison DNA
sample to
be finished but won't really be a whole lot of help until others
add their
data to it. A sample of one is pretty useless for comparison. <smile> Take
care
all. Marilyn
==== CALLISON Mailing List ====
"Please do not send virus warnings to the mail list. The
best way to prevent getting a virus is to not open any
attachments."
==============================
New! Family Tree Maker 2005. Build your tree and search for your ancestors
at the
same time. Share your tree with family and friends. Learn more:
http://landing.ancestry.com/familytreemaker/2005/tour.aspx?sourceid=14599...