Hi Jerald,
The Carmack DNA project involves the Y-DNA test. This test is only for
Carmack males. Thus you could not take the test and match any Carmack's.
The Y-DNA is only passed from the father to a son, not to daughters. If you
took the test then you would only match with Brown's.
Regarding Ann Black, she cannot be Jesse Ann's mother since she would have
been 3-4 years old when Jesse Ann was born. Ann and Jesse C. Carmack did
have a son named Jesse but he is not the same as Jesse Ann. He was born
about 1815 and Jesse Ann was born 1797.
Happy Holiday's!
dale
-----Original Message-----
From: JBrown8821(a)aol.com [mailto:JBrown8821@aol.com]
Sent: Friday, December 24, 2004 12:57 PM
To: CARMACK-L(a)rootsweb.com
Subject: [CARMACK] CARMACK DNA Testing
Dale - My grandmother was Mary Tennessee Carmack Brown. She was born
September 10, 1845, in Overton County, TN and died August 3, 1924, in
Hilham,
Overton Co., TN. John Carmack and Polly Elam are listed as parents on her
Death
Certificate.
If I have a DNA test will it help you in any way identifying your Jesse
Ann?
You stated that you have confirmed that Ann Black was not the mother of
your
Jesse Ann. I don't believe she was either but how did you confirm it?
Wishing all Carmack Cousins a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!
Jerald Brown
==== CARMACK Mailing List ====
My family coat of arms ties at the back... is that normal?
==============================
Search the US Census Collection. Over 140 million records added in the last
12 months. Largest online collection in the world. Learn more:
http://www.ancestry.com/s13965/rd.ashx