About us
We have Y-DNA results from four who tested and matched perfect 67 out of 67 markers. There is one descendant from Valentine, one from Abraham, one from Isaac and one from Christian Christopher. There is one other who only tested 37 markers but is a perfect match in the first 37 markers to the above four.
There are four who matched 66 out of 67 markers, one descendant each from Abraham, Valentine, Isaac and from John Aaron.
There are five who matched 65 out of 67 markers. Two descendants of John Aaron are exact matches. Others include one from Isaac, one from Jacob and one still unknown. Of these last three, each have one mutated marker in a unique location. The results being that even though each only varied from the base standard set above by one or two, between these five the results varied from zero to four markers.
The surprising surname that appears a close match at 63 markers out of 67 is Baysinger. If there had been only one such occurrence it would have been marked off as a non marital event. However there are two separate cases. The early versions of this surname were Besinger and Boesiger. Both trace their lines back to the 1600s to different ancestors, one in France and one in Switzerland. The second one only tested 25 markers but those 25 match the one from France perfectly. It would appear that somewhere, not too much further back, that we had a common male ancestor.
We still have no one that has tested where the results show Native American ancestry.
There are four who matched 66 out of 67 markers, one descendant each from Abraham, Valentine, Isaac and from John Aaron.
There are five who matched 65 out of 67 markers. Two descendants of John Aaron are exact matches. Others include one from Isaac, one from Jacob and one still unknown. Of these last three, each have one mutated marker in a unique location. The results being that even though each only varied from the base standard set above by one or two, between these five the results varied from zero to four markers.
The surprising surname that appears a close match at 63 markers out of 67 is Baysinger. If there had been only one such occurrence it would have been marked off as a non marital event. However there are two separate cases. The early versions of this surname were Besinger and Boesiger. Both trace their lines back to the 1600s to different ancestors, one in France and one in Switzerland. The second one only tested 25 markers but those 25 match the one from France perfectly. It would appear that somewhere, not too much further back, that we had a common male ancestor.
We still have no one that has tested where the results show Native American ancestry.