How to Use your DNA Results

Meeker Siblings Frank and Maybelle

My most recent work is on my personal Meeker line. My great great great grandfather, Horace Meeker, has been a bit of an enigma for me. He first pops up in 1847, where I found he had a letter waiting for him at the post office in Waterloo, New York. This is where he lives in 1850, with his new wife and her family. They then moved to Michigan, and by the 1860 census she was remarried.

I eventually found more information on him – in the 1860 Mortality Census and in some land and tax records (see my previous post on using the card catalog for more information). But where he came from remains a mystery.

I’m starting to crack that mystery though, using my DNA matches from Ancestry DNA. I have several matches with Meekers in their tree. Almost all of them led back to three families: an Edwin Meeker (b. 1825) mentioned in the card catalog post, a Samuel Oscar Meeker family that was in St. Louis, MO in the 1860s, and a famous Meeker couple named Timothy Meeker and Desire Cory, who lived in New Jersey in the 1700s.

I started by making trees from these three families as well as my Horace Meeker, with branches leading to each of my genetic cousins. From there, I noticed a few patterns. First, I share more DNA segments with the Edwin and Samuel branches than the other Timothy Meeker branches save a few descendants of his son Amos. There are also several shared matches between various sons of Timothy Meeker and descendants of Edwin and Samuel Oscar. One of these includes a grandson of Timothy named Luther, who lived in the neighboring county to my Horace Meeker around the same time.

While I’m still in the process of trying to connect Edwin, Samuel Oscar, and Horace to the Timothy Meeker/Desire Cory family, it is a promising lead that has reinvigorated a stagnant search of mine.

Do you have a brick wall of your own that has been helped with a DNA test? Or, if you’d like some help with your brick wall, contact me for a free quote!

Today’s Tip: Use the Catalog!

One of my favorite sites since beginning my genealogy work has been FamilySearch. Not only are the records free to access, but they often have some hidden gems! In particular, I’ve really benefited from the property records for the state of New York in my work. In fact, I really wished there was something similar for Michigan, where most of my research is located.

And recently, I discovered that there was. I just was not paying close enough attention! When accessing the FamilySearch catalog for Ottawa County, I can browse through land deed records.

Not only were these great in finding when certain ancestors of mine first moved to the state, but I got a new clue on my elusive Meeker line when I found that my great great great grandmother, Sophrona, had sold her land just around the time her husband Horace Meeker died. The buyer? Someone named Edwin Meeker from nearby Jackson County. I even found some potential DNA match support for Edwin. While I have not made the connection yet, it is a tantalizing clue.

meeker_landrecord

So, when you run out of indexed records, try the catalog! While it is time-consuming to wade through records page by page, you may just find a useful hint lurking in that microfilm.

Don’t have time to wade through long rolls of microfilm, or just having trouble tracking down that vital clue you need? Let me tackle that! Check out our About section for a detailed list of services, or Contact us for a free quote for your project.