Monday, November 12, 2018

Motivation Monday


Incorporating DNA Testing with Traditional Research

As I have stated in previous articles my paternal Lee family has been elusive and left fragments of a paper trail. I envy those lucky family historians who have stories passed down by their ancestors through the generations; or have family photos of their ancestors; I would even take a family Bible with dates and places noted in it, and anecdotes that were written by an ancestor and passed down. That would be a wonderful keepsake to have but that is only a dream since no such family treasure exits from my ancestors.  There is a valuable tool that is available in my lifetime that my ancestors didn’t have and that is DNA testing. DNA testing in cooperation with traditional genealogy is being used to prove or disprove a genealogical hypothesis. DNA testing is used to connect with biological related families and verify those family lines.

You may have your own personal reasons for using DNA testing with genealogical research. I have been using DNA test results with my genealogical research since the first DNA test, the YDNA test, was introduced as a tool for genealogists. The main reason that I began using DNA testing was to prove or disprove a family story. Later as autosomal DNA was available, I jumped on board for the autosomal DNA test and also tested family members, cousins, and half cousins. There was a difficult paternal puzzle and I had gone as a far as I could in researching my paternal line. Therefore, it was time to utilize the tool of DNA testing to try and solve this puzzle.  My brother YDNA tested to prove or disprove our biological grandfather, my father’s father. There was also long-standing puzzle on my paternal Lee line, my grandmother’s line so it was time to autosomal test family members and paternal cousins and find a male Lee volunteer to YDNA test. If I could find new cousins on the Lee paternal line, then I could possibly solve the long-standing puzzle. The task at hand is researching the direct line and the collaterals back to my third great grandparents Jordan Lee and wife Lydia. My plan is to identify the parents of Jordan Lee.

Jordan Lee’s parents haven’t been identified but I am using DNA in cooperation with my research to confirm family lines and connect with biological living cousins. DNA testing is not a replacement for traditional genealogical research but is used with your research to prove and disprove your assumptions about your ancestors. DNA is also used to estimate your deep ancestry from many generations’ past. Records are being digitized and added online at a rapid pace, so it is a matter of time and the parents of Jordan Lee will be identified using the two tools, and they will have their place in my family tree.

Another important reason that I use DNA testing in cooperation with my traditional genealogical research is to utilize the best practices of research using all available tools and to make sure that my research is as accurate as possible for each of my ancestors.
If you have been considering DNA testing, then develop a plan and determine your goals for the best results. Having a plan will keep you focused and goal oriented. When I first used DNA testing, I began with one family line – the Eley surname. That kept me focused on that one family line. I have researched the Eley family back to 1860 Drew County Arkansas and could not find Robert Lawrence Eley on records after that year. YDNA testing helped me in solving this difficult problem.

DNA testing is growing at a rapid pace and tools are being developed to use with the test results. Who knows what the future holds for genetic genealogists. But in the mean time it is a tool that I will continue to use and encourage others to use incorporation with their research.

https://www.loc.gov/item/2011630721/
Library of Congress
Source
Highsmith, Carol M, photographer. Rural countryside in Louisiana. Louisiana United States, None. [Between 1980 and 2006] Photograph. https://www.loc.gov/item/2011630721/.

Saturday, November 10, 2018

Saturday Sibling


Jordan Lee, Junior

Jordan Lee, Junior is a recently found second great grand uncle. I found a marriage bond for the marriage between Jordan Lee, Junior and Caroline Goodwin. Several online family trees had Caroline Goodwin as the second wife of Jordan Lee Senior, but there was no evidence to prove that Jordan had a second wife. The marriage bond was posted and Jordan Lee Junior and John H. Strange posted the two-hundred-dollar bond. John H. Strange is the son-in-law of Jordan and Lydia. Margaret their youngest known daughter married John H. Strange.  After analyzing the three records for Jordan Lee Junior, the 1850 Beat 15, Randolph County, Alabama Census, and linking John H. Strange to the Lee family I concluded that Jordan Junior was the son of Jordan and Lydia Lee.





The newly discovered marriage records were recently added online. The Lee family has been researched for fifteen years and I haven’t seen those records online previously. DNA is also a great tool in verifying family connections. I have DNA tested several family members and cousins and manage their accounts. One of my paternal Lee second cousin whose DNA account I manage has a DNA Circle with a descendant of Jordan Lee Junior in it with a robust family tree. That was a great find!

Jordan Lee, Junior died about 1864 in Tennessee. Was he killed in the War Between the States? He would have been the age to serve in the military. Sot the search continues. The image is for his widow Caroline Lee and Jordan is listed on the certificate. Caroline and Jordan's daughter Lucy's husband was the informant for the death information. 


Jordan and Lydia (Hodge) Lee probably have other children that I have not discovered in my research. There is a large gap between the births of Burrell and Jordan Junior, and Margaret and Zachariah. Therefore, the research is ongoing for the Jordan Lee family.