Beginning March 2nd, 2020 the Mailing Lists functionality on RootsWeb will be discontinued. Users will no longer be able to send outgoing emails or accept incoming emails. Additionally, administration tools will no longer be available to list administrators and mailing lists will be put into an archival state.
Administrators may save the emails in their list prior to March 2nd. After that, mailing list archives will remain available and searchable on RootsWeb
Childers Abr. Sen[r] Henrico County, 1705
Childers Ab[r] Jun[r] Henrico County, 1705
Childers Philip Henrico County, 1705
Childers Philip Sen[r] Henrico County, 1705
Childers Tho Henrico County, 1705
http://www.freegendata.com/cgi-bin/1/jump.cgi?ID=375&afscrc=1
Alphabetical Rent Roll of Virginia 1704/05
JESSE JACKSON (possibly a Childress orphan) born 9 July 1825 in Madison
County, Tennessee and who died in 1879 in Delta County, TX
would be listed as a Caucasian in census records, in Caucasian
households and his descendants are Caucasian.
Regards
Gary
-----Original Message-----
From: Steve Stevens [mailto:steve.stevens@verizon.net]
Sent: Friday, April 22, 2005 4:48 PM
To: CHILDRESS-L(a)rootsweb.com
Subject: RE: [Childress-L] Is Jackson really a Childress?
I'm sorry, but please excuse my ignorance in asking this question. Are
we
talking white or black CHILDRESS and JACKSON? I'm not trying to be
funny
here, it just seems appropriate to ask. As long as I have been doing
genealogy, I have never or almost never seen it differentiated in most
posts. I sure would hate to be climbing the wrong tree.
Thanks.
Regards,
Steve Stevens
-----Original Message-----
From: Mark and Gary [mailto:london2005@Charter.net]
Sent: Friday, April 22, 2005 4:01 PM
To: CHILDRESS-L(a)rootsweb.com
Subject: [Childress-L] Is Jackson really a Childress?
Dear List,
Trellys Erwin at trellys(a)verizon.net is researching the lineage of a
John Jackson surnamed relative. The 37 marker test for John Jackson is
given below. The test result of John Jackson match with those of the
Childress Viking group. FamilyTreeDNA software (FTDNATip) predicts that
John Jackson and those in the Viking Childress group have a 99% plus
chance of being related in the past 600 years. John Jackson's DNA test
results match most closely with James Ronald Childress #13294 and Mark
Daniel Childress # 15078. John Jackson has a value of 38 at marker
CDY-b and as such is probably most closely related to those Viking
Childresses that descend out of Abraham Childress, the immigrant, b.
163O.
Trellys Erwin, the relative and researcher working on John Jackson's
test results, feels that the most likely scenario is that a Childress
orphan was adopted by the Jackson family...and that the best candidate
for that is JESSE JACKSON born 9 July 1825 in Madison County, Tennessee
(a map of TN counties is at
http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/maps/tennessee_map.html ) and who died
in 1879 in Delta County, TX and that this JESSE JACKSON is that adopted
Childress orphan.
If any of you have any thoughts or input on Jackson and Childress
surnames or on the Childress families who lived in any of the locations
below where an adoption event might have happened are welcome to share
your thoughts with Trellys Erwin.
Tellys Erwin has joined the Childress-DNA-L(a)rootsweb.com mail list....so
she will receive messages posted to this list. The test results of John
Jackson, her relative, have been added to the Master Spreadsheet of
Childress-Childers DNA test results. If anybody wants an updated Master
Spreadsheet, let me know and I will e-mail you one.
Tellys Erwin writes the following:
"I first find my great-grandfather Jesse Jackson (b. 9 Jul 1825) on the
1850 Madison County, TN census living with the David and Catherine
Benthal family as a boarder. David Benthal dies 3 Aug 1853 leaving
Catherine with 3 small children. Jesse marries Catherine 3 Aug 1854
(one year to the day from Daniel's death) in Madison Co., TN. David
Jackson b.1798 in NC is the administrator of Daniel Benthal's estate.
"David Jackson was in Stewart County, TN on the 1810 and 1820 Census.
"1830-1850 was in Madison County, TN. Jesse was born in 1825, TN.
Jesse goes on to Texas with David Jackson's family and settles in Ben
Franklin, Delta Co., TX. David Jackson treats Jesse as one of his own
sons. Jesse's children with Catherine Benthal even share in David
Jackson's estate at his death in 1872.
"Since my Uncle John, grandchild of Jesse, has a 37 marker match with a
distance of 1 with two Childress men, Mark Daniel and James Ronald
Childress and does NOT match any of the Jackson markers . . .not any
Jackson men . . .then the Jacksons must have taken Jesse in as a baby
or even a young child, orphaned by a Childress family. As you could
see from looking at his FTDNA results there were only Childress matches.
"These are the results for John Jackson b.29 Jun 1916 Rush Springs,
Grady Co, OK
s/o Sam Houston Jackson b.Jun 1867 Ben Franklin, Delta Co, TX d. 3 Feb
1921 Rush Springs, Grady, Co, OK
s/o Jesse Jackson b. 9 Jul 1825 Madison Co, TN d. 20 Mar 1879 Delta Co,
TX
"Jesse was treated as a son by David Jackson b. 1798 Anson Co, NC but he
was not a Jackson.
Locus
1 393 - 13
2 390 - 22
3 19 * 14
4 391 -10
5 385a -14
6 385b -15
7 426 - 11
8 388 - 14
9 439 -11
10 389-1 -12
11 392 -12
12 389-2 -28
13 458 -16
14 459a - 8
15 459b - 9
16 455 - 8
17 454 - 11
18 447 - 23
19 437 - 16
20 448 - 20
21 449 - 28
22 464a **- 12
23 464b ** -12
24 464c ** - 14
25 464d ** -16
26 460 - 9
27 GATA H4 - 10
28 YCA II a - 19
29 YCA II b - 21
30 456 - 15
31 607 - 14
32 576 - 16
33 570 - 20
34 CDY a - 35
35 CDY b - 38
36 442 - 12
37 438 - 10
*Also known as DYS 394"
Thank you
Gary Childress
Childress-Childers DNA Project Manager
==== CHILDRESS Mailing List ====
Contact List Owners Mark or Gary Childress at
NEW E-MAIL ADDRESS
London2005(a)Charter.net
--
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG Anti-Virus.
Version: 7.0.308 / Virus Database: 266.10.2 - Release Date: 4/21/2005
--
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Anti-Virus.
Version: 7.0.308 / Virus Database: 266.10.2 - Release Date: 4/21/2005
==== CHILDRESS Mailing List ====
Contact List Owners Mark or Gary Childress at
NEW E-MAIL ADDRESS
London2005(a)Charter.net
I'm sorry, but please excuse my ignorance in asking this question. Are we
talking white or black CHILDRESS and JACKSON? I'm not trying to be funny
here, it just seems appropriate to ask. As long as I have been doing
genealogy, I have never or almost never seen it differentiated in most
posts. I sure would hate to be climbing the wrong tree.
Thanks.
Regards,
Steve Stevens
-----Original Message-----
From: Mark and Gary [mailto:london2005@Charter.net]
Sent: Friday, April 22, 2005 4:01 PM
To: CHILDRESS-L(a)rootsweb.com
Subject: [Childress-L] Is Jackson really a Childress?
Dear List,
Trellys Erwin at trellys(a)verizon.net is researching the lineage of a
John Jackson surnamed relative. The 37 marker test for John Jackson is
given below. The test result of John Jackson match with those of the
Childress Viking group. FamilyTreeDNA software (FTDNATip) predicts that
John Jackson and those in the Viking Childress group have a 99% plus
chance of being related in the past 600 years. John Jackson's DNA test
results match most closely with James Ronald Childress #13294 and Mark
Daniel Childress # 15078. John Jackson has a value of 38 at marker
CDY-b and as such is probably most closely related to those Viking
Childresses that descend out of Abraham Childress, the immigrant, b.
163O.
Trellys Erwin, the relative and researcher working on John Jackson's
test results, feels that the most likely scenario is that a Childress
orphan was adopted by the Jackson family...and that the best candidate
for that is JESSE JACKSON born 9 July 1825 in Madison County, Tennessee
(a map of TN counties is at
http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/maps/tennessee_map.html ) and who died
in 1879 in Delta County, TX and that this JESSE JACKSON is that adopted
Childress orphan.
If any of you have any thoughts or input on Jackson and Childress
surnames or on the Childress families who lived in any of the locations
below where an adoption event might have happened are welcome to share
your thoughts with Trellys Erwin.
Tellys Erwin has joined the Childress-DNA-L(a)rootsweb.com mail list....so
she will receive messages posted to this list. The test results of John
Jackson, her relative, have been added to the Master Spreadsheet of
Childress-Childers DNA test results. If anybody wants an updated Master
Spreadsheet, let me know and I will e-mail you one.
Tellys Erwin writes the following:
"I first find my great-grandfather Jesse Jackson (b. 9 Jul 1825) on the
1850 Madison County, TN census living with the David and Catherine
Benthal family as a boarder. David Benthal dies 3 Aug 1853 leaving
Catherine with 3 small children. Jesse marries Catherine 3 Aug 1854
(one year to the day from Daniel's death) in Madison Co., TN. David
Jackson b.1798 in NC is the administrator of Daniel Benthal's estate.
"David Jackson was in Stewart County, TN on the 1810 and 1820 Census.
"1830-1850 was in Madison County, TN. Jesse was born in 1825, TN.
Jesse goes on to Texas with David Jackson's family and settles in Ben
Franklin, Delta Co., TX. David Jackson treats Jesse as one of his own
sons. Jesse's children with Catherine Benthal even share in David
Jackson's estate at his death in 1872.
"Since my Uncle John, grandchild of Jesse, has a 37 marker match with a
distance of 1 with two Childress men, Mark Daniel and James Ronald
Childress and does NOT match any of the Jackson markers . . .not any
Jackson men . . .then the Jacksons must have taken Jesse in as a baby
or even a young child, orphaned by a Childress family. As you could
see from looking at his FTDNA results there were only Childress matches.
"These are the results for John Jackson b.29 Jun 1916 Rush Springs,
Grady Co, OK
s/o Sam Houston Jackson b.Jun 1867 Ben Franklin, Delta Co, TX d. 3 Feb
1921 Rush Springs, Grady, Co, OK
s/o Jesse Jackson b. 9 Jul 1825 Madison Co, TN d. 20 Mar 1879 Delta Co,
TX
"Jesse was treated as a son by David Jackson b. 1798 Anson Co, NC but he
was not a Jackson.
Locus
1 393 - 13
2 390 - 22
3 19 * 14
4 391 -10
5 385a -14
6 385b -15
7 426 - 11
8 388 - 14
9 439 -11
10 389-1 -12
11 392 -12
12 389-2 -28
13 458 -16
14 459a - 8
15 459b - 9
16 455 - 8
17 454 - 11
18 447 - 23
19 437 - 16
20 448 - 20
21 449 - 28
22 464a **- 12
23 464b ** -12
24 464c ** - 14
25 464d ** -16
26 460 - 9
27 GATA H4 - 10
28 YCA II a - 19
29 YCA II b - 21
30 456 - 15
31 607 - 14
32 576 - 16
33 570 - 20
34 CDY a - 35
35 CDY b - 38
36 442 - 12
37 438 - 10
*Also known as DYS 394"
Thank you
Gary Childress
Childress-Childers DNA Project Manager
==== CHILDRESS Mailing List ====
Contact List Owners Mark or Gary Childress at
NEW E-MAIL ADDRESS
London2005(a)Charter.net
--
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG Anti-Virus.
Version: 7.0.308 / Virus Database: 266.10.2 - Release Date: 4/21/2005
--
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Anti-Virus.
Version: 7.0.308 / Virus Database: 266.10.2 - Release Date: 4/21/2005
Follow the DNA and you are less likely to "climb the wrong tree." There
is no racial purity in DNA....we are all mixtures.....and there are
likely to be Black and White lineages of Childress or Jacksons that are
related...and if they are related by DNA, it is the "right tree".
Haplogrop letter "I" is a geographically European haplogroup that traces
back geographically to the Mid-east and then geographically into Africa.
The Y-chromosome that is being tested in the Childress-Childers DNA
Project is passed from male to male to male for thousands of
years.....That Y-chromosome has been geographically in Europe or the
Mid-east for the past 10,000 years. If the Haplogroup I male were
"White" in appearance and had children with an African "Black" woman,
the child could have the physical appearance of the mother, dark skin
pigmentaion for example, but the DNA Y-chromosome would remain Haplgroup
I, the male lineage. If that child were born a male in the pre-Civil War
south, the child could live his life as a "Black" slave, and be a
Haplogroup I. The "Black" and "White" descendants today would share the
same ancestors and are related and are the "right tree" even though
their physical appearance shows vast variety in their "racial"
apperance.... that scenario was much publicized with the descendants of
Thomas Jefferson.
Follow the DNA,
Gary Childress
Childress-Childers DNA Manager
-----Original Message-----
From: Steve Stevens [mailto:steve.stevens@verizon.net]
Sent: Friday, April 22, 2005 4:48 PM
To: CHILDRESS-L(a)rootsweb.com
Subject: RE: [Childress-L] Is Jackson really a Childress?
I'm sorry, but please excuse my ignorance in asking this question. Are
we talking white or black CHILDRESS and JACKSON? I'm not trying to be
funny here, it just seems appropriate to ask. As long as I have been
doing genealogy, I have never or almost never seen it differentiated in
most posts. I sure would hate to be climbing the wrong tree.
Thanks.
Regards,
Steve Stevens
-----Original Message-----
From: Mark and Gary [mailto:london2005@Charter.net]
Sent: Friday, April 22, 2005 4:01 PM
To: CHILDRESS-L(a)rootsweb.com
Subject: [Childress-L] Is Jackson really a Childress?
Dear List,
Trellys Erwin at trellys(a)verizon.net is researching the lineage of a
John Jackson surnamed relative. The 37 marker test for John Jackson is
given below. The test result of John Jackson match with those of the
Childress Viking group. FamilyTreeDNA software (FTDNATip) predicts that
John Jackson and those in the Viking Childress group have a 99% plus
chance of being related in the past 600 years. John Jackson's DNA test
results match most closely with James Ronald Childress #13294 and Mark
Daniel Childress # 15078. John Jackson has a value of 38 at marker
CDY-b and as such is probably most closely related to those Viking
Childresses that descend out of Abraham Childress, the immigrant, b.
163O.
Trellys Erwin, the relative and researcher working on John Jackson's
test results, feels that the most likely scenario is that a Childress
orphan was adopted by the Jackson family...and that the best candidate
for that is JESSE JACKSON born 9 July 1825 in Madison County, Tennessee
(a map of TN counties is at
http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/maps/tennessee_map.html ) and who died
in 1879 in Delta County, TX and that this JESSE JACKSON is that adopted
Childress orphan.
If any of you have any thoughts or input on Jackson and Childress
surnames or on the Childress families who lived in any of the locations
below where an adoption event might have happened are welcome to share
your thoughts with Trellys Erwin.
Tellys Erwin has joined the Childress-DNA-L(a)rootsweb.com mail list....so
she will receive messages posted to this list. The test results of John
Jackson, her relative, have been added to the Master Spreadsheet of
Childress-Childers DNA test results. If anybody wants an updated Master
Spreadsheet, let me know and I will e-mail you one.
Tellys Erwin writes the following:
"I first find my great-grandfather Jesse Jackson (b. 9 Jul 1825) on the
1850 Madison County, TN census living with the David and Catherine
Benthal family as a boarder. David Benthal dies 3 Aug 1853 leaving
Catherine with 3 small children. Jesse marries Catherine 3 Aug 1854 (one
year to the day from Daniel's death) in Madison Co., TN. David Jackson
b.1798 in NC is the administrator of Daniel Benthal's estate.
"David Jackson was in Stewart County, TN on the 1810 and 1820 Census.
"1830-1850 was in Madison County, TN. Jesse was born in 1825, TN. Jesse
goes on to Texas with David Jackson's family and settles in Ben
Franklin, Delta Co., TX. David Jackson treats Jesse as one of his own
sons. Jesse's children with Catherine Benthal even share in David
Jackson's estate at his death in 1872.
"Since my Uncle John, grandchild of Jesse, has a 37 marker match with a
distance of 1 with two Childress men, Mark Daniel and James Ronald
Childress and does NOT match any of the Jackson markers . . .not any
Jackson men . . .then the Jacksons must have taken Jesse in as a baby or
even a young child, orphaned by a Childress family. As you could see
from looking at his FTDNA results there were only Childress matches.
"These are the results for John Jackson b.29 Jun 1916 Rush Springs,
Grady Co, OK s/o Sam Houston Jackson b.Jun 1867 Ben Franklin, Delta Co,
TX d. 3 Feb 1921 Rush Springs, Grady, Co, OK s/o Jesse Jackson b. 9 Jul
1825 Madison Co, TN d. 20 Mar 1879 Delta Co, TX
"Jesse was treated as a son by David Jackson b. 1798 Anson Co, NC but he
was not a Jackson. Locus 1 393 - 13 2 390 - 22 3 19 * 14 4 391 -10 5
385a -14 6 385b -15 7 426 - 11 8 388 - 14 9 439 -11 10 389-1 -12 11 392
-12 12 389-2 -28 13 458 -16 14 459a - 8 15 459b - 9 16 455 - 8 17 454 -
11 18 447 - 23 19 437 - 16 20 448 - 20 21 449 - 28 22 464a **- 12 23
464b ** -12 24 464c ** - 14 25 464d ** -16 26 460 - 9 27 GATA H4 - 10 28
YCA II a - 19 29 YCA II b - 21 30 456 - 15 31 607 - 14 32 576 - 16 33
570 - 20 34 CDY a - 35 35 CDY b - 38 36 442 - 12 37 438 - 10 *Also known
as DYS 394"
Thank you
Gary Childress
Childress-Childers DNA Project Manager
==== CHILDRESS Mailing List ====
Contact List Owners Mark or Gary Childress at
NEW E-MAIL ADDRESS
London2005(a)Charter.net
--
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG Anti-Virus.
Version: 7.0.308 / Virus Database: 266.10.2 - Release Date: 4/21/2005
--
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Anti-Virus.
Version: 7.0.308 / Virus Database: 266.10.2 - Release Date: 4/21/2005
==== CHILDRESS Mailing List ====
Contact List Owners Mark or Gary Childress at
NEW E-MAIL ADDRESS
London2005(a)Charter.net
Hello Trellys,
My brother Mark, co-list owner, will be posting his research on Abraham
the immigrant later this year. That posting will appear on the
"Childress" not the "Childress-DNA" list...so if you want I can
subscribe you to that list also...let me know...we manage both lists.
Here is an overview.
The Viking Childress group are about 2/3 of the DNA results....I call
them Viking because their DNA haplogroup "I" is not indigenous to the
British Isles and this haplogroup could be part of those who invaded
Britain....either Vikings, or Saxons or Normans...take your pick......
There is no test for Vikings however... but I use the moniker to
separate them from the group of Childress I call "Celtic Childress"
whose haplogroup R1b is indigenous to the British Isles.
Records for the Viking Childress start showing up in Virginia in the mid
1600's and there appear to be 3 names, perhaps brothers, that
recur....Abraham, Philemon, and Thomas.
Abraham has children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren named
Abraham...the name surfaces in every generation for a couple of hundred
years. The name Abraham is recycled frequently and you must have the
dates of birth to distinguish between them.
Abraham the immigrant, born circa 1630, is an English tobacco planter
that was brought to Virginia(the James River valley, Henrico County) as
part of an English promotion to get more Whites in Virginia (there was a
concern the Blacks outnumbered Whites...9 to 1, I think...and there was
fear of slave rebellions). Englishmen were offered free land in
Virginia, 50 acres, if they would resettle in America. This was called
"headrights".... It was possible for those who were granted 50 acres, to
sell their land before coming to Virginia and use the money to pay for
passage to Virginia....That's what Abraham, Philemon and Thomas did,
sell their land for passage money....and a record of that headrights
sale is where we first find their names in the deeds.
By the time of Jesse Jackson's birth in 1825, the Viking Childress have
been in America for about 175 years and their offspring are everywhere.
A mutation in the Philemon line creates, we think, a 37 value marker at
CDY-b or perhaps the mutation was on Abraham's DNA which we think was a
38 value at CDY-b. The net result is that we have divided the Viking
Childresses into 3 groups...those that have markers 37 or 38 and those
who haven't yet tested for that marker.
A number of Viking Childress researchers haven't gotten their lineages
established beyond 1800, though some have gotten back to the
Revolutionary War. But you are not apt to know how you tie into Abraham
for some time...if ever....there is a lot of work to be done... Welcome
aboard.
You can search Rootsweb Archives a
http://searches2.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/listsearch.pl .... by typing in
the list name..."Childress" or "Childress-DNA" .....another search
engine will appear and you can then be more specific...such as searching
for "Jackson" or "Abraham" or "Madison County" to see what postings are
in the archives.
Regards
Gary Childress
DNA Project manager
-----Original Message-----
From: Trellys [mailto:trellys@verizon.net]
Sent: Friday, April 22, 2005 2:40 PM
To: London2005(a)charter.net
Subject: Abraham Childress b. 1630
Gary . . .where might I read something on Abraham Childress, the
immigrant b. 1630? I checked the Childers~Childress Family Association
pages and found nothiing to link me to him.
Thank you . . .Trellys
Dear List,
Trellys Erwin at trellys(a)verizon.net is researching the lineage of a
John Jackson surnamed relative. The 37 marker test for John Jackson is
given below. The test result of John Jackson match with those of the
Childress Viking group. FamilyTreeDNA software (FTDNATip) predicts that
John Jackson and those in the Viking Childress group have a 99% plus
chance of being related in the past 600 years. John Jackson's DNA test
results match most closely with James Ronald Childress #13294 and Mark
Daniel Childress # 15078. John Jackson has a value of 38 at marker
CDY-b and as such is probably most closely related to those Viking
Childresses that descend out of Abraham Childress, the immigrant, b.
163O.
Trellys Erwin, the relative and researcher working on John Jackson's
test results, feels that the most likely scenario is that a Childress
orphan was adopted by the Jackson family...and that the best candidate
for that is JESSE JACKSON born 9 July 1825 in Madison County, Tennessee
(a map of TN counties is at
http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/maps/tennessee_map.html ) and who died
in 1879 in Delta County, TX and that this JESSE JACKSON is that adopted
Childress orphan.
If any of you have any thoughts or input on Jackson and Childress
surnames or on the Childress families who lived in any of the locations
below where an adoption event might have happened are welcome to share
your thoughts with Trellys Erwin.
Tellys Erwin has joined the Childress-DNA-L(a)rootsweb.com mail list....so
she will receive messages posted to this list. The test results of John
Jackson, her relative, have been added to the Master Spreadsheet of
Childress-Childers DNA test results. If anybody wants an updated Master
Spreadsheet, let me know and I will e-mail you one.
Tellys Erwin writes the following:
"I first find my great-grandfather Jesse Jackson (b. 9 Jul 1825) on the
1850 Madison County, TN census living with the David and Catherine
Benthal family as a boarder. David Benthal dies 3 Aug 1853 leaving
Catherine with 3 small children. Jesse marries Catherine 3 Aug 1854
(one year to the day from Daniel's death) in Madison Co., TN. David
Jackson b.1798 in NC is the administrator of Daniel Benthal's estate.
"David Jackson was in Stewart County, TN on the 1810 and 1820 Census.
"1830-1850 was in Madison County, TN. Jesse was born in 1825, TN.
Jesse goes on to Texas with David Jackson's family and settles in Ben
Franklin, Delta Co., TX. David Jackson treats Jesse as one of his own
sons. Jesse's children with Catherine Benthal even share in David
Jackson's estate at his death in 1872.
"Since my Uncle John, grandchild of Jesse, has a 37 marker match with a
distance of 1 with two Childress men, Mark Daniel and James Ronald
Childress and does NOT match any of the Jackson markers . . .not any
Jackson men . . .then the Jacksons must have taken Jesse in as a baby
or even a young child, orphaned by a Childress family. As you could
see from looking at his FTDNA results there were only Childress matches.
"These are the results for John Jackson b.29 Jun 1916 Rush Springs,
Grady Co, OK
s/o Sam Houston Jackson b.Jun 1867 Ben Franklin, Delta Co, TX d. 3 Feb
1921 Rush Springs, Grady, Co, OK
s/o Jesse Jackson b. 9 Jul 1825 Madison Co, TN d. 20 Mar 1879 Delta Co,
TX
"Jesse was treated as a son by David Jackson b. 1798 Anson Co, NC but he
was not a Jackson.
Locus
1 393 - 13
2 390 - 22
3 19 * 14
4 391 -10
5 385a -14
6 385b -15
7 426 - 11
8 388 - 14
9 439 -11
10 389-1 -12
11 392 -12
12 389-2 -28
13 458 -16
14 459a - 8
15 459b - 9
16 455 - 8
17 454 - 11
18 447 - 23
19 437 - 16
20 448 - 20
21 449 - 28
22 464a **- 12
23 464b ** -12
24 464c ** - 14
25 464d ** -16
26 460 - 9
27 GATA H4 - 10
28 YCA II a - 19
29 YCA II b - 21
30 456 - 15
31 607 - 14
32 576 - 16
33 570 - 20
34 CDY a - 35
35 CDY b - 38
36 442 - 12
37 438 - 10
*Also known as DYS 394"
Thank you
Gary Childress
Childress-Childers DNA Project Manager