Last weekend, FamilyTreeDNA offered their introductory Y-DNA test (37 markers) for 20% off the regular price of $169. I purchased one for my father. This test is for the direct male line only- no DNA information from any other ancestor. (The University of Utah has a fantastic video about this type of inheritance.)
I recommend the Y-DNA test for a man who is adopted and looking for his biological family. (Both men and women seeking their unknown biological families should submit an autosomal DNA test.)
The test kit requires two takings of a specimen via cheek swabbing. (Of note is that the return envelope is not postage pre-paid. This is the first DNA test where I have encountered this issue and is important to realize if you are mailing a kit directly from FamilyTreeDNA to the person providing the specimen. The person will have to obtain postage before mailing, which may be a barrier for some.)
My father's Y-DNA was previously tested at Ancestry.com. (The Y-DNA and mtDNA tests were the first tests offered by Ancestry. Now you may also purchase an atDNA (autosomal) test from Ancestry for $99.) Today's results at Ancestry provide a list of fourteen people who "match" my father on the paternal line. The problem is that there are enough variations in the 46 markers to push the estimated Most Recent Common Ancestor back anywhere from 24 to 35 generations ago. This is too long a time frame for my modest Lutter family tree.
I am hoping that the database at FamilyTreeDNA provides more people who match my father. Such people may or may not exist, nevermind have their DNA tested at FamilyTreeDNA. But it's worth a try.
I cannot go back very far on the direct paternal line. I am stuck at Hermann Lutter, born around 1860 in "Germany;" immigrated in the 1880s to Newark, New Jersey, United States. Hermann had a brother, Otto Lutter or Luther, who also appeared in New Jersey in the 1880s. On their marriage records, both brothers listed Wilhelm Lutter (Luther) as their father, though the name of their mother varied. Otto's line seems to have died out.
Stay tuned for the results and interpretation.
Growing family trees from leaves and branches. Finding lost relatives. Solving family mysteries. Concentrating in New Jersey and New York.
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Sunday, May 4, 2014
Friday, April 25, 2014
Hidden Photograph
I was browsing my mother's papers and came across her diploma for 8th grade graduation in 1965 from Our Lady Help of Christians School in East Orange, Essex County, New Jersey. I took the diploma out of the cover to scan it and out popped the class picture! The tip here is to look behind framed papers and photographs for additional treasures.
Whoever thought to have all the children sign the back of the picture did a great service to those of us viewing this picture almost fifty years later. The names as best as I can read them are:
Whoever thought to have all the children sign the back of the picture did a great service to those of us viewing this picture almost fifty years later. The names as best as I can read them are:
William Ilg
Janet Kinahan
Jairo Jimenez
Kathy Russell
Michael King
Marianne Prokop
Repsi Sneed
Helen Lopez
Raymond Bonanno
Denise Bradley
Gregory Flemming
Louuis Hoyos
Maria Bryan
Paul Sullivan
Cheryl Jagoo
James Cullen
Kathy Mager
Kathy Drust
Robert Bartley
Christine Bailey
Michael Wiedaseck
Thomas Frunzi
David McKnight
Mary Ella Gally
Dennis Kamowski
William Jenkins
Judy Haas
Bruce Lane
Loretta Maloney
Judy Hoy
Patti Schaible
Michael Alexander
Mabel Wong
Richard Throckmorton
Ethel Brown
Henry Santurste
Ana Maria Fernandez
Barry McGrath
Andrea Godlowa
William Barasco
Saturday, March 29, 2014
Find A Grave mobile app
I used the new Find A Grave mobile app! This is an eagerly awaited, highly useful tool. The website and app are both free.
I have not posted much on cemeteries lately because of the perpetual blanket of snow on the ground. Most of the snow has melted now.
You can use the app to locate a cemetery using the map feature. You can also add new graves and add information to existing entries, including GPS coordinates.
| Pick a location and see all the cemeteries nearby |
| Find A Grave mobile app Click on a tombstone on the map to see the name of the cemetery, number of memorials, and number of pending photo requests |
I visited Mount Hebron Cemetery in Montclair, New Jersey. I found a new occupant and used the app to see if a memorial had been added. It had not. So I went ahead and created a new memorial right there in the cemetery using the app.
I added the name, birth and death dates, and a photo- at which point the phone became stuck on the upload.
Then it started to rain.
I snapped a picture of the surrounding area, which is a good idea to make it easier to locate the grave for anyone's future visit.
At home, on a wi-fi signal, I tried uploading the photo again and received a Successful message.
This is the web version of the new memorial. GPS coordinates are automatically included! You can add GPS coordinates for an existing memorial using the app, but make sure you are standing at the gravesite when doing so. There is a built-in protection so that you cannot add GPS coordinates if you are not near the cemetery.
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