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This article was sent to the DNA administrators and the McCrea admin
sent it to one of my other groups. I have to think
Kevin was on that list. If you read it carefully, you'll find that
testing doesn't start until the middle of March. It also says
they're doing it in phases so they won't be overwhelmed. Maybe we
aren't scheduled until phase 243 :-) I say write him.
jt
>
> Jan,
>
> Have You Passed This Information To Our D.N.A. Expert { Kevin Campbell } ???
>
> Do You Know Of Anyone That This Helped To Find Their Ancestors ????
>
> *** So Many Of Us Would Really Like To Know So Much More About This NEW FIND !!!!!!!!!!!!!! So Anything That You Could Find Out About It < I For 1 Am All Ears !!!!!!!!
>
>
> Thank You For Sharing This With Us !!!!
>
>
> Sincerely,
>
> Sam Campbell
>
>
>
>
> --- On Mon, 3/8/10, Jan Thomas <textique(a)aol.com> wrote:
>
>
> From: Jan Thomas <textique(a)aol.com>
> Subject: [Campbell] DNA - another alternative
> To: CAMPBELL-L(a)rootsweb.com
> Date: Monday, March 8, 2010, 12:26 PM
>
>
> This was passed through another list several weeks ago. FYI: Jan
> Campbell, Cummings, Starnes, Westmoreland County, PA
>
> I am the "administrators" for my small branch of the McCreas in Family
> Tree DNA. As an administrator, I just received the following message.
>
>
> *"This is the most exciting genetic genealogy breakthrough since the
> company launched its Y-DNA test, which uncovered relatives in the direct
> paternal line"*, says Bennett Greenspan, founder and President of Family
> Tree DNA.
> Family Tree DNA is pleased to inform you of the pre-launch of our newest
> test: the autosomal-based Family Finder test. This pre-launch will
> progress in phases so that we do not exceed our lab's capacity, and to
> ensure delivering results in a timely basis. A limited number of our
> customers are being offered the Family Finder Test during the
> prelaunch. We anticipate Family Finder will be offered for general
> release in the middle of March at the breakthrough price of *$249*.
> While the Y-DNA matches men with a specific paternal line, and the mtDNA
> finds potential relatives only along the maternal line, Family Finder
> can look for close relationships along all ancestral lines.
> You may now match to male and female cousins from any of your family
> lines within five generations. The science behind it uses linked blocks
> of DNA across the 22 autosomal chromosomes and matches them between two
> people. Based on this concept, our bioinformatics team has worked
> extensively to develop the calculations that would tell you the
> closeness of the relationship.
> *The possibilities to find matches abound:*
> Bullet Aunts & Uncles, Parents and Grandparents
> Bullet Half siblings and 1st cousins
> Bullet 2nd, 3rd, and 4th cousins
> Bullet Possibly 5th cousins and beyond!
>
> *When you take the Family Finder test, your results are compared against
> our Family Finder database. You will be able to:*
> Bullet sort your matches by degree of relationship
> Bullet view their names and e-mail address for immediate communication
> Bullet download your raw data
>
>
>
>
This was passed through another list several weeks ago. FYI: Jan
Campbell, Cummings, Starnes, Westmoreland County, PA
I am the "administrators" for my small branch of the McCreas in Family
Tree DNA. As an administrator, I just received the following message.
*"This is the most exciting genetic genealogy breakthrough since the
company launched its Y-DNA test, which uncovered relatives in the direct
paternal line"*, says Bennett Greenspan, founder and President of Family
Tree DNA.
Family Tree DNA is pleased to inform you of the pre-launch of our newest
test: the autosomal-based Family Finder test. This pre-launch will
progress in phases so that we do not exceed our lab's capacity, and to
ensure delivering results in a timely basis. A limited number of our
customers are being offered the Family Finder Test during the
prelaunch. We anticipate Family Finder will be offered for general
release in the middle of March at the breakthrough price of *$249*.
While the Y-DNA matches men with a specific paternal line, and the mtDNA
finds potential relatives only along the maternal line, Family Finder
can look for close relationships along all ancestral lines.
You may now match to male and female cousins from any of your family
lines within five generations. The science behind it uses linked blocks
of DNA across the 22 autosomal chromosomes and matches them between two
people. Based on this concept, our bioinformatics team has worked
extensively to develop the calculations that would tell you the
closeness of the relationship.
*The possibilities to find matches abound:*
Bullet Aunts & Uncles, Parents and Grandparents
Bullet Half siblings and 1st cousins
Bullet 2nd, 3rd, and 4th cousins
Bullet Possibly 5th cousins and beyond!
*When you take the Family Finder test, your results are compared against
our Family Finder database. You will be able to:*
Bullet sort your matches by degree of relationship
Bullet view their names and e-mail address for immediate communication
Bullet download your raw data
Hello Dee,
Unfortunately I'm not familiar with Atlantic Modal so you should contact
Kevin Campbell, manager of the Campbell DNA project, via the website I sent
you. However, I looked up AMH on Wikipedia and it says that AMH is
primarily in Iberia (Spain and Portugal) but a few are up the Atlantic coast
to Ireland. What we can say is that you did not descend from either the
Scottish or the Irish Clan Campbell. How you got the name Campbell is a
matter of speculation and perhaps Kevin can offer advice.
But don't worry if you didn't descend from the core of the Scottish Clan
Campbell. I didn't either, I descended from the Irish Clan Campbell which
was originally the Clan Cathmhoal but which changed the spelling of its name
to Campbell although it's not genetically related to the Scottish Clan
Campbell. Nevertheless I consider myself to be a Campbell because my
ancestors have had this name for at least 300 years.
George
----- Original Message -----
From: "Dee Owens" <dgowens(a)comcast.net>
To: <campbell(a)rootsweb.com>
Sent: Sunday, March 07, 2010 5:52 PM
Subject: Re: [Campbell] Campbell DNA Project
> Hi George,
> Thanks. I didn't understand the color significance. My ancestor is
> part of the Atlantic Modal (AMH). It says the color is tan but it looks
> yellow to me.
>
> Dee Owens
I have heard that just a hair sample or a swab of the mouth with a Q-tip
will be enough you might think about this when trying to get a sample. Baby
book my mother kept off the wall things in one of them but we can trace our
line back to 1683 on the Frommherz male line. Have heard though that they
came up with the Holy Roman Empire expansion into Germany and France from
the Island of Corsica in the Mediterranean. Thinking about doing this just
to see where we might have come from to get there too.
Dan
----- Original Message -----
From: "G. Campbell" <aon.966083795.campbell(a)aon.at>
To: <CAMPBELL-L(a)rootsweb.com>
Sent: Sunday, March 07, 2010 10:38 PM
Subject: [Campbell] no males for DNA
> Several have asked what to do if there are no male Campbell relatives
> willing to take DNA. Unfortunately it must be a male. The reason is that
> the Y-DNA is only passed on through the male line. Since until recently
> the
> family name was also passed on through the male line, this means that only
> the Y-DNA can be used to trace relationships in a name project, in this
> case
> the Campbell name project.
>
> If the Campbell male relative is just not willing, then offer to pay for
> him. Maybe that will shame him into doing it. It's painless, but costs
> from $100 to $200 depending on the number of markers you want. I would
> suggest at least 25 markers.
>
> If you don't have a Campbell male relative then you'll have to do normal
> genealogical research until you find one.
>
> Both women and men can do the mt-DNA test which traces your female line,
> but
> since this isn't usually connected to a specific name it's less useful for
> genealogy.
>
> For more information check the Campbell DNA project.
>
> George Campbell
>
> _______________________________________
>
> Remember to search the archives use this address
> http://listsearches.rootsweb.com/?list=CAMPBELL
>
> Browse the archives at
> http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/index/CAMPBELL/
>
> Contact the List Manager
> mailto:campbell-admin@rootsweb.com
>
>
> -------------------------------
> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to
> CAMPBELL-request(a)rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the
> quotes in the subject and the body of the message
How do I trace my Campbell DNA when there are there are no living males
willing to submit to testing?
Kathleen
YEP, IF there are no living Males?? But this says that<There are NO Living
Males <WILLING>
I a Message from a Staton Family member From Washington State, Stateing
that there is A <D N A> Test for Females, <???>
CUZ A T
How do I trace my Campbell DNA when there are there are no living males
willing to submit to testing?
Kathleen
CUZ, Try to Convince your ancient KIN that they are living in the 21st
centry. CUZ A T
How do I trace my Campbell DNA when there are there are no living males willing to submit to testing?
Kathleen
> From: aon.966083795.campbell(a)aon.at
> To: CAMPBELL-L(a)rootsweb.com
> Date: Sat, 6 Mar 2010 07:43:17 +0100
> Subject: [Campbell] Thomas Campbell, NH in 1700s
>
>
>
>
>
> I'm submitting my Campbells again who stayed north until about the mid 1800s. Thomas Campbell was probably born around 1705 in Ireland. His future wife, Jane Davidson, was born in Ireland but we don't know when. However, she immigrated with her parents and siblings in 1728 to America.
>
> Thomas Campbell married Jane Davidson in Billerica, MA, 1733 and moved to Londonderry, NH, where they had the children Mary (1738-1828), John, Nathaniel (1741-1820), and Hugh Argyle (1744-1810). They had more children who didn't survive to reproduce.
>
> 1) Mary married John Tufts, moved to Maine and there had the children: Jane, William, Thomas, Jonathan, Susanna, and Annis.
> 2) John unknown. He has eluded us completely, although he is said to have had a large family.
> 3) Nathaniel married Agnes McCurdy and between Londonderry, NH, and NY state had the children: Jesse, Elizabeth, James, David, Thomas, Alexander, John, Abner, and Robert.
> 4) Hugh Argyle married Mary Smith and between Londonderry/Bedford, NH, and NY state had the children: Jane, Benjamin, Caty, Elizabeth, Mary, Margaret, Hugh, Robert, Thomas, Adam, and David.
>
> I descended from Hugh Argyle Campbell through his son Benjamin Smith Campbell (1773-1852).
>
> The families and descendants of Nathaniel and Hugh moved from NH to NY, then Ohio, then Indiana, and then after the mid 1800s spread out over the USA and parts of Europe. I conservatively estimate that Thomas and Jane Campbell had at least 30,000 descendants of whom at least 20,000 must still be living. Currently we have over 1300. We have considerable information about many of the descendants. Some of the more common family names are: Tufts, Fancher, Brown, Johnston, Fish, Perkins, Moore, Kitterman, Burns, and Moses.
>
> If your Campbell ancestors lived in NH during the 1700s, eastern NY (especially Cherry Valley area) during the end of 1700s and beginning of 1800s, Westfied/Portland, NY later, the Sandusky/Bellevue area of Ohio around the mid 1800s, and Valparaiso area of IN in the later 1800s, then we may have a connection.
>
> Also I'd like to recommend that every male Campbell on this list join the Campbell DNA project, but be sure to take at least the 25-marker test. I did and the results are extremely interesting. It turns out that I most likely belong to the so-called Irish Campbells, who descended from the Irish Clan Cathmhoal and are not related to the Scottish Clan Campbell. When during the 16th and 17th centuries the English kings moved protestant Scots into Ireland to suppress the catholic Irish, the Clan Cathmhoal (pronounced "Cammel" similar to Campbell) assumed the spelling Campbell. So if your ancestors emigrated from Ireland, it's very possible that they were not of Scottish descent.
>
> George Campbell
> _______________________________________
>
> Remember to search the archives use this address
> http://listsearches.rootsweb.com/?list=CAMPBELL
>
> Browse the archives at
> http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/index/CAMPBELL/
>
> Contact the List Manager
> mailto:campbell-admin@rootsweb.com
>
>
> -------------------------------
> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to CAMPBELL-request(a)rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
_________________________________________________________________
IM on the go with Messenger on your phone
http://go.microsoft.com/?linkid=9712960
Cuz A T i think that just covers the womans side not males is that correct? Like me my mothers mother and so on.
thnaks
--- On Sun, 3/7/10, Atpowelljr(a)aol.com <Atpowelljr(a)aol.com> wrote:
From: Atpowelljr(a)aol.com <Atpowelljr(a)aol.com>
Subject: [Campbell] JUST Wondering
To: campbell(a)rootsweb.com
Date: Sunday, March 7, 2010, 12:59 PM
How do I trace my Campbell DNA when there are there are no living males
willing to submit to testing?
Kathleen
YEP, IF there are no living Males?? But this says that<There are NO Living
Males <WILLING>
I a Message from a Staton Family member From Washington State, Stateing
that there is A <D N A> Test for Females, <???>
CUZ A T
_______________________________________
Remember to search the archives use this address
http://listsearches.rootsweb.com/?list=CAMPBELL
Browse the archives at
http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/index/CAMPBELL/
Contact the List Manager
mailto:campbell-admin@rootsweb.com
-------------------------------
To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to CAMPBELL-request(a)rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Hey cuz that may not be the case, As in mine, there are no male Campbells left on my John Marion Campbell side.
Peggy Braly Parish
--- On Sun, 3/7/10, Atpowelljr(a)aol.com <Atpowelljr(a)aol.com> wrote:
From: Atpowelljr(a)aol.com <Atpowelljr(a)aol.com>
Subject: [Campbell] JUST HAD TOO
To: campbell(a)rootsweb.com
Date: Sunday, March 7, 2010, 12:19 PM
How do I trace my Campbell DNA when there are there are no living males
willing to submit to testing?
Kathleen
CUZ, Try to Convince your ancient KIN that they are living in the 21st
centry. CUZ A T
_______________________________________
Remember to search the archives use this address
http://listsearches.rootsweb.com/?list=CAMPBELL
Browse the archives at
http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/index/CAMPBELL/
Contact the List Manager
mailto:campbell-admin@rootsweb.com
-------------------------------
To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to CAMPBELL-request(a)rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
not yet, but "Gillespic" is Gillesbuig, and is translated as
Archibald.
hope this helps someone.
------------------------------
Message: 2
Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2010 12:08:56 -0500
From: "Campbell, Thomas"
Subject: [Campbell] ring a bell to anyone?
To:
Message-ID:
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
CUIMHNICH AIR NA DAOINE O' N D' THAINIG THU" - REMEMBER THE MEN FROM
WHOM YOU SPRANG -
1. Dugald "Cam Beul" O'Duibne (aka: Diarmid O'Duibhne) married
Fingal MacGiallamoire
2. Sir Gillespic Cambel 1 (c1263-c1280) married "Heretrix of
Lochow" Efferic
3. Sir Cailean Mor Cambel, of Lochawe 2 (aka: Mac Cailein Mor
) (? - 1296 in Ath Dearg "Battle of Red Ford", String of Lorne,
Scotland
married Janet Sinclair
4. Sir Neil Cambel 3 (c1258-1315) in Lochow, Argyllshire,
Scotland married Alyse Crawford
5. Sir Colin Cambel of Lochawe & Ardskeodnish 4 (aka: Cailein Oig
"Young Colin") (c1280-aft 1343) in Lochow, Argyllshire, Scotland
married
Helena Mor, of Menteith
6. Gillespic Archibald Campbell of Lockawe 5 (c1310-bef. 1394) m.
Isabella Lamont
7. Duncan Cambel of Skeodnasch 5b (exact relationship to Gillespic
is unknown)
8. Archibald Campbell of Inverawe (circa 1470) m.?
9. Dougall Campbell of Inverawe (living in 1485 & '93 k. 1513) m.
? 693
10. Archibald Campbell of Inverawe (suc. 1513 d. circa 1574) m.
Margaret Campbell (Dunstaffnage family) 694
11. Dougall Campbell of Inverawe (suc. circa. 1574 d. circa. 1583)
m.
(2) Christian Carswell (dau. of Bishop of Argyll) 695
12. Archibald Campbell of Inverawe (b. 1583, suc. his uncle John
'dubh' circa. 1604 d. 1645-6) m. Jean Campbell 696
13. Lt. Col. Dougall Campbell of Inverawe (b. circa 1605 d. 1665) m.
(1) Agnes, dau. of Sir Robt. C. of Glenorchy 697
[Information Missing 1665-1805]
14. Solomon Campbell, probably born in Ireland
15. John N. Campbell, born 1805 Ireland, died Townsend, MA. Oldest
Proven Campbell Family Ancestor: John N. Campbell was born in
Ireland in
1805 or 1796. He immigrated to Crofthead Neilston, Renfrewshire,
Scotland between 1837, and 1841. His wife was Margaret Laurie. His
parents, per death cert., were Solomon Campbell and Martha unk.
John and Margaret's children :
1) Martha C. born Ireland 1828;
2) William born Ireland 1830;
3) Margaret born Ireland 1832;
4) Thomas L. born in Ireland 1831;
5) James N. born Ireland 1834;
6) Solomon J. born Ireland 1837;
7) Jane born Crofthead Scotland 1841.
A partial family immigrated to Lowell, Massachusetts 7 June 1852 on
the
ship Corra Linn. John was naturalized while resident of Acton, MA.
and
found in Lowell, MA. State census for 1855. Also found in Mason, NH
census 1860 and 1870. John and Margaret both died while living with
daughter Martha C. Manning in Townsend, MA.
15. John N. Campbell, born 1805 Ireland, died
Townsend, MA.
16. James N. Campbell, born 2 -2 -1834 Ireland,
died Mansfield, MA
17. Charles M. Campbell, born 1877 Cumberland,
RI, died Middleboro, MA.
18
Thank you,
Tom Campbell
Locksmith
VA Medical center
1601 Kirkwood Hwy.
Wilmington,DE 19805
302-633-4730
302-685-4519 (cell)
302-633- 4575 (fax)
thomas.campbell(a)va.gov [4]
Links:
------
[1] mailto:Thomas.Cambell@va.gov
[2] mailto:CAMPBELL@rootsweb.com
[3]
mailto:DC238BC05A6A6E4CAC124F9267D67497069FDAAD@VHAV04MSGA3.v04.med.va.gov
[4] mailto:thomas.campbell@va.gov
Seeking information on family of my 3 x great-grandmother, Christina
CAMPBELL daughter of Duncan CAMPBELL purported to be from Arichonan.
Christina bc 1825 married Donald McCALLUM at North Knapdale in 1846 and
came to South Australia 1852.
Her father was an elder in the local church - presumably North Knapdale.
There is possibly a connection with a BONE family who were in Australia from
at least the mid 1880's. Mr Bone visited his cousin Christina sometime in
the late 1880's - 1901 soon after arriving from Scotland and an 'Auntie
Bone' who was a dressmaker, came from Sydney NSW to make Christina's
grand-daughter's wedding dress in 1910.
Thank you
Pat Button
I am in the Campbell DNA project and had 37 markers done (my brother).
How can I tell by looking at the results if my Campbells are from
Scotland or Ireland? Is there a site/page that will explain this?
Thanks,
Dee Owens
I'm submitting my Campbells again who stayed north until about the mid 1800s. Thomas Campbell was probably born around 1705 in Ireland. His future wife, Jane Davidson, was born in Ireland but we don't know when. However, she immigrated with her parents and siblings in 1728 to America.
Thomas Campbell married Jane Davidson in Billerica, MA, 1733 and moved to Londonderry, NH, where they had the children Mary (1738-1828), John, Nathaniel (1741-1820), and Hugh Argyle (1744-1810). They had more children who didn't survive to reproduce.
1) Mary married John Tufts, moved to Maine and there had the children: Jane, William, Thomas, Jonathan, Susanna, and Annis.
2) John unknown. He has eluded us completely, although he is said to have had a large family.
3) Nathaniel married Agnes McCurdy and between Londonderry, NH, and NY state had the children: Jesse, Elizabeth, James, David, Thomas, Alexander, John, Abner, and Robert.
4) Hugh Argyle married Mary Smith and between Londonderry/Bedford, NH, and NY state had the children: Jane, Benjamin, Caty, Elizabeth, Mary, Margaret, Hugh, Robert, Thomas, Adam, and David.
I descended from Hugh Argyle Campbell through his son Benjamin Smith Campbell (1773-1852).
The families and descendants of Nathaniel and Hugh moved from NH to NY, then Ohio, then Indiana, and then after the mid 1800s spread out over the USA and parts of Europe. I conservatively estimate that Thomas and Jane Campbell had at least 30,000 descendants of whom at least 20,000 must still be living. Currently we have over 1300. We have considerable information about many of the descendants. Some of the more common family names are: Tufts, Fancher, Brown, Johnston, Fish, Perkins, Moore, Kitterman, Burns, and Moses.
If your Campbell ancestors lived in NH during the 1700s, eastern NY (especially Cherry Valley area) during the end of 1700s and beginning of 1800s, Westfied/Portland, NY later, the Sandusky/Bellevue area of Ohio around the mid 1800s, and Valparaiso area of IN in the later 1800s, then we may have a connection.
Also I'd like to recommend that every male Campbell on this list join the Campbell DNA project, but be sure to take at least the 25-marker test. I did and the results are extremely interesting. It turns out that I most likely belong to the so-called Irish Campbells, who descended from the Irish Clan Cathmhoal and are not related to the Scottish Clan Campbell. When during the 16th and 17th centuries the English kings moved protestant Scots into Ireland to suppress the catholic Irish, the Clan Cathmhoal (pronounced "Cammel" similar to Campbell) assumed the spelling Campbell. So if your ancestors emigrated from Ireland, it's very possible that they were not of Scottish descent.
George Campbell
DATE: 01/06/2005 SUBMITTER: _Donald Campbell _ (mailto:mfimdjc@yahoo.com)
SURNAMES: CAMPBELL
Need county of birth or fathers name of William M. CAMPBELL born in Va. 14
Feb. 1818. Married Sarah Jane PROSE in 1843 in Gallia Ohio. Died in Gallia
1882. All my research thru this William M. is proven. Spinning my wheels
CUIMHNICH AIR NA DAOINE O' N D' THAINIG THU" - REMEMBER THE MEN FROM
WHOM YOU SPRANG -
1. Dugald "Cam Beul" O'Duibne (aka: Diarmid O'Duibhne) married
Fingal MacGiallamoire
2. Sir Gillespic Cambel 1 (c1263-c1280) married "Heretrix of
Lochow" Efferic
3. Sir Cailean Mor Cambel, of Lochawe 2 (aka: Mac Cailein Mor
) (? - 1296 in Ath Dearg "Battle of Red Ford", String of Lorne, Scotland
married Janet Sinclair
4. Sir Neil Cambel 3 (c1258-1315) in Lochow, Argyllshire,
Scotland married Alyse Crawford
5. Sir Colin Cambel of Lochawe & Ardskeodnish 4 (aka: Cailein Oig
"Young Colin") (c1280-aft 1343) in Lochow, Argyllshire, Scotland married
Helena Mor, of Menteith
6. Gillespic Archibald Campbell of Lockawe 5 (c1310-bef. 1394) m.
Isabella Lamont
7. Duncan Cambel of Skeodnasch 5b (exact relationship to Gillespic
is unknown)
8. Archibald Campbell of Inverawe (circa 1470) m.?
9. Dougall Campbell of Inverawe (living in 1485 & '93 k. 1513) m.
? 693
10. Archibald Campbell of Inverawe (suc. 1513 d. circa 1574) m.
Margaret Campbell (Dunstaffnage family) 694
11. Dougall Campbell of Inverawe (suc. circa. 1574 d. circa. 1583) m.
(2) Christian Carswell (dau. of Bishop of Argyll) 695
12. Archibald Campbell of Inverawe (b. 1583, suc. his uncle John
'dubh' circa. 1604 d. 1645-6) m. Jean Campbell 696
13. Lt. Col. Dougall Campbell of Inverawe (b. circa 1605 d. 1665) m.
(1) Agnes, dau. of Sir Robt. C. of Glenorchy 697
[Information Missing 1665-1805]
14. Solomon Campbell, probably born in Ireland
15. John N. Campbell, born 1805 Ireland, died Townsend, MA. Oldest
Proven Campbell Family Ancestor: John N. Campbell was born in Ireland in
1805 or 1796. He immigrated to Crofthead Neilston, Renfrewshire,
Scotland between 1837, and 1841. His wife was Margaret Laurie. His
parents, per death cert., were Solomon Campbell and Martha unk.
John and Margaret's children :
1) Martha C. born Ireland 1828;
2) William born Ireland 1830;
3) Margaret born Ireland 1832;
4) Thomas L. born in Ireland 1831;
5) James N. born Ireland 1834;
6) Solomon J. born Ireland 1837;
7) Jane born Crofthead Scotland 1841.
A partial family immigrated to Lowell, Massachusetts 7 June 1852 on the
ship Corra Linn. John was naturalized while resident of Acton, MA. and
found in Lowell, MA. State census for 1855. Also found in Mason, NH
census 1860 and 1870. John and Margaret both died while living with
daughter Martha C. Manning in Townsend, MA.
15. John N. Campbell, born 1805 Ireland, died
Townsend, MA.
16. James N. Campbell, born 2 -2 -1834 Ireland,
died Mansfield, MA
17. Charles M. Campbell, born 1877 Cumberland,
RI, died Middleboro, MA.
18
Thank you,
Tom Campbell
Locksmith
VA Medical center
1601 Kirkwood Hwy.
Wilmington,DE 19805
302-633-4730
302-685-4519 (cell)
302-633- 4575 (fax)
thomas.campbell(a)va.gov
Henry Campbell asked if the DNA can lead you back to a single Campbell.
The answer is NO. What I did is tag along with a Campbell whom I have a
fairly close match DNA wise, went back to where the DNA people say that
we share a 99.97% chance of sharing a common ancestor, I tacked on
another hundred years to that for safety, and came up with a common
ancestor. I traced my line(on paper) to Ireland 1775 ,within 200 years
of that common ancestor . So now I believe I have my entire line minus
the two hundred years missing from Ireland.
The fairly close DNA match I had was luckily, Diarmid and Bruce
Campbell. Both whom have traced their lines back into history very
nicely.
I am totally opened to critisizum if how I approached this is incorrect.
Thanks for any input anyone may have.
I would recommend that any Campbell participate in this DNA project.
Well worth the money!
Happy hunting!
Thank you,
Tom Campbell
Locksmith
VA Medical center
1601 Kirkwood Hwy.
Wilmington,DE 19805
302-633-4730
302-685-4519 (cell)
302-633- 4575 (fax)
thomas.campbell(a)va.gov
I was wondering if any one had information on a chieftain line that went
to drumbroden area of Ireland 1600's or so. I know via DNA test 28877
that I come from this line, have traced my people (John N Campbell born
1805 married Margaret Laurie Ireland, father of John was Solomon
Campbell, mother Martha.) back to Ireland to 1840, then to crofthead
Scotland till 1853, and then on to Mason NH. Any info would be helpful,
thanks
Thank you,
Tom Campbell
Locksmith
VA Medical center
1601 Kirkwood Hwy.
Wilmington,DE 19805
302-633-4730
302-685-4519 (cell)
302-633- 4575 (fax)
thomas.campbell(a)va.gov
thomas
are those DNA tests that exacting that they can narrow it down to a certain person? harry campbell in auburn ny
--- On Thu, 3/4/10, Campbell, Thomas <Thomas.Cambell(a)va.gov> wrote:
From: Campbell, Thomas <Thomas.Cambell(a)va.gov>
Subject: [Campbell] Campbell
To: CAMPBELL(a)rootsweb.com
Date: Thursday, March 4, 2010, 10:23 AM
I was wondering if any one had information on a chieftain line that went
to drumbroden area of Ireland 1600's or so. I know via DNA test 28877
that I come from this line, have traced my people (John N Campbell born
1805 married Margaret Laurie Ireland, father of John was Solomon
Campbell, mother Martha.) back to Ireland to 1840, then to crofthead
Scotland till 1853, and then on to Mason NH. Any info would be helpful,
thanks
Thank you,
Tom Campbell
Locksmith
VA Medical center
1601 Kirkwood Hwy.
Wilmington,DE 19805
302-633-4730
302-685-4519 (cell)
302-633- 4575 (fax)
thomas.campbell(a)va.gov
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I have no connection to this sale and I wish I could afford to buy it.
Just thought y'all would want to
know this is up for auction. I think it is gorgeous!
Tiny url: *http://tiny.cc/bgkCA*
or
http://cgi.ebay.com/Blaeu-ATLAS-NOVUS-Scotland-Ireland-First-ed-1654_W0QQ...
Z180476116467QQcategoryZ2201QQcmdZViewItem
Jan
Campbell, Maryland > Westmoreland County, PA