It’s time for one of those bi-weekly (or so) Cheering-Up
Parties. Why is it, after so much work, I still feel as if I am making no
headway on my goals?
I want to find a way to link to my mystery cousin’s
matrilineal line, of which we are exact matches, according to our mitochondrial
DNA test results. And that means breaking through a mystery connection of my
own—my second great grandmother, the orphaned Mary Rainey Broyles. Along with
all that, these two pursuits will hopefully yield enough added surnames to my
database to help untangle the now seven hundred ninety five matches I have on
my autosomal DNA test at Family Tree DNA.
So, how did it go since the last time I checked on my
progress? I’ve managed to up my totals on my maternal line database from twenty
four hundred to just over twenty eight hundred—an increase of just over four
hundred. I’m lagging. Just a little.
In the meantime, I had been behind in those niceties of DNA
testing—the “please come compare family trees with me” plea—so I made up for it
by dispatching a flurry of emails to potential matches. I find I can more
effectively touch bases with all these “to do” items if I work them into a
system, so at the close of each week, I sort my FTDNA matches by date, look
over the latest additions and—if any
matches’ entries include a posted family tree—see if there are any connecting
surnames. Those that look like possibilities get an email from me—and I note it in my records. I’ve got to
have a system to keep track of all this.
In the last couple weeks, I found myself slipping into the
tendency to focus solely on those women dovetailing with my matrilineal line—that
line of ascent from me to my mother, to her mother and on, back through the
generations. Each generation’s node on this progression then became the point
of scrutiny: did that woman have any other daughters? Did those daughters then
have daughters of their own? What became of their female line? And back down
the line I’d go, hurtling back into the future with someone else’s family tree.
Despite finding that this tactic has added several new
surnames to my extended family tree—which will come in handy as I tackle my
autosomal DNA results—it hasn’t yet uncovered the link between my matrilineal
line and that of my mystery cousin. Of course, because of my brick wall second
great grandmother, pushing back before her generation is an exercise in presumed relationship. I could very
possibly be wrong in my presumptions. It’s all a matter of hypothesis testing,
at this point, even though I’ve pushed back four additional generations this
way, without any results. Whatever that matrilineal line turns out to be, it’s
gone a long way without a single mutation, evidently. I’m back in the 1700s,
currently, with no matches in sight from this presumed ancestor.
Of course, maybe my presumptions are all wrong. That, of
course, means I’ll have to start all over again—an exercise made to try the
patience of saints. And I’m not quite ready for that. So I keep plugging along,
racking up those numbers, hoping, “Just one more generation, just one more…”
You have come a long way with your research! I would have to keep track emails too, I do that with the Forgottens...getting older and sometimes I forget what I did or didn't do:)
ReplyDeleteAh...emails. I used to really like the system I had set up, using the old Outlook Express. For my gmail account, I'm not so happy with its organization capabilities, so I do find I need a backup system. But I promise myself it's not because I'm getting older ;)
DeleteYou are tenacious.. my Grandfather said there was a nice way to be mule-headed and stubborn...and it was to be tenacious...
ReplyDelete:)
I'll own up to that one, Iggy: mule-headed ;)
Delete...with kudos to your grandfather!