Kit 151400. For the veterans among your Mccabe ancestors, military collections provide insights into where and when they served, and even physical descriptions. (3). At 37 markers his results show no significant matches with anybody in the entire FTDNA data base at this time, making his DNA results very unique. The second hypothesis was that the Mecabe (yes Mecabe, NOT McCabe) families (descendants of Elisha Mecabe, born 1799, Monmouth, New Jersey) are actually descended from a McCabe family. There are already 371 users and over 5,000 genealogy profiles with the McCabe surname on Geni. (Updated 7/04/09 for sharing of the more specific results for the haplogroup of this McCabe family.) 10. Retrieved from. The provider of Kit 97685 lives in Scotland but traces his ancestry back to County Cavan of Ireland. The men who provided the DNA for kits 139946 and 146567 have an exact 67/67 match, yet prior to this DNA study, no evidence had been found to connect these two Cabe families! Alexander arrived in Sydney Cove on 7/8/1793 on "Boddingtons".He married Catherine WALLACE in 1 Andrew George McCabe (born March 18, 1968) is an American attorney who served as the Deputy Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) from February 2016 to March 2018. The reader of this section may profit from printing this page and considering the comments below while viewing the tables of results from either the Y-DNA Results section or the mtDNA Results section. There does not appear to be any historical evidence that indicates a relationship of any of these men in Group D with the Owen McCabe family (Group A) since the 1740's in America, but complete information is not available for all participants. and you might be surprised at the answer. Further traditional genealogical investigations within American or Irish records are necessary to determine the exact relationship. Retreived from, HMAS Sydney II, Finding Sydney Foundation - Roll of Honour. This means that the other kit providers in Group B are also the same haplogroup and also indicates that their roots are in the area of northwestern Ireland, Ulster and lowland Scotland. Retrieved from, State Records of South Australia. McCabe Project WikiTree is a community of genealogists growing an increasingly-accurate collaborative family tree that's 100% free for everyone forever. This was about 30% of all the recorded Mccabe's in USA. The number of McCabes as of 2014 was as follows:[3], In the 1990 United States Census, McCabe was ranked 1,200th most common surname, and MacCabe was ranked 43,031st. Kit 159052. Kit 168113. The man (who lives in Cardiff, Wales, U.K.) who provided the DNA for this kit states that both his maternal and paternal ancestry is in Ireland. men share a common ancestor with the individuals in the Cabe family (Group G) and also with the descendants of the Nova Scotia immigrant, James McCabe (Group C-3). [1], McCabes are now found mostly in the United States, Ireland and the United Kingdom, Australia, South Africa, and New Zealand. They will be assigned to one of the above groups, or a new group, as soon as sufficient information is available to do so. Orphan's Father Study. VI GROUP D, R1b1b2, the unrelated R1b1b2 McCabe Families. ), but the pin in the exact center of the Republic of Ireland should be interpreted as the island of Ireland, not the current Republic of Ireland. A 1927 paper (by William Otis Sawtelle, Acadia: The Pre-Loyalist Migration and the Philadelphia Plantation, The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, vol. The persons in this group have no significant matches with other McCabes in this McCabe Surname DNA Project. Forebears, Convict Records Voyages to Australia (Retrieved 25th October 2020). The provider of this kit, whose family has lived in southern Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, for a long number of generations, did not know his McCabe ancestry past his 3rd g. grandfather McCabe. However, other oral history suggested that James Edward McCabe was born in Beaver Falls, PA, but no records have been found to confirm this location. Pat Mc Cabe 1881 - Unknown. The most recent common ancestor for this McCabe-named man and the Cabe-named men, however, must be in Ireland, as the earliest known McCabe in this McCabe line, Patrick McCabe, was born in Ireland (specific location unknown) about 1870, immigrated to America in 1876, was in Indiana in 1889 and later moved to Texas. Continuing on, the unique sequence of Y-DNA marker values for the McCabe project for DYS markers 26 to 37 markers is: DYS460 is11, Y-GATA-H4 is 11, YCAii is 19-23, DYS456 is 15, DYS607 is 15, DYS576 is 18, DYS570 is 17, CDY is 35-38, DYS442 is11, DYS438 is 12. ; Alexander Pettigrew McCabe; Asa McCabe; William McCabe; Anthony Fultz . Click. These five men do NOT match any other individuals in the FTDNA database with their own surnames but DO match the proposed modal haplotype (at 12 markers) for the McCabe line, suggesting that these five men may have McCabe ancestry on their paternal line. He was orphaned during the Civil War and taken in by the Stapp/Stepp family. McCabe Family Site - MyHeritage Basic family site Welcome My name is Fiona McCabe and I started this site. As of October2015, the following changes occurred with the McCabe website: With over 100 members, it has became possible to identify one sequence of marker values unique to men who have the McCabe ancestry! The average life expectancy for Mccabe in 1943 was 51, and 77 in 2004. Belfast is the capital of Northern Ireland (U.K.), with the majority of the city in County Antrim, and the remainder in County Down (both counties within the historic province of Ulster). In 1865 he again left home, this time for New Zealand, and landed in Auckland in May of the same year. The next closest matches (with the Cabe surname) of kit 159905 are with kit 139489 with a genetic distance of three, and kit 146733 with a genetic distance of five. Knowing that the kit provider does not share a common ancestor with these two other men at least within the last four generations, FTDNA calculates that this kit provider has a 68% chance of sharing ancestors in the last 4 - 6 generations with these other two men. Enlarge the map (by using the "enlarging/reducing" bar at the left) to more clearly see the specific location of your matches. The closest that these two men can be related (by paper trail evidence) is if these ancestors, John Cabe/McCabe and Barnaby Cabe, were brothers, producing the relationship of these two men as fifth cousins, once-removed. Results to 67 markers for kit 153311 match completely with the results of Kit 148651. Emigration to New Zealand followed in the footsteps of the European explorers, such as Captain Cook (1769-70): first came sealers, whalers, missionaries, and traders. As more and more McCabes have their DNA tested, it IS possible that a closer match will be found. Disproving the hypothesis that three McCabe brothers came together to the USA, specifically PA(Groups A, B, & C-3). ", the same as their mother. They were known as mercenaries to the O'Reillys and the O'Rourkes, but then became their own Sept in Breffny and their Chief was the 'Constable of the two Breffnys.'. He was apparently orphaned at a very young age. He DOES match 33/37 with two other participants in this McCabe DNA project, kits 23747 and 37202, neither of which has extended their study to 67 markers. 1850 in Glasgow, Lanarks. BUT, at 12 markers he does NOT match any men with the surname of McCabe in the FTDNA database. The significance here is that, again, if another man's results (which have a very close match with all others markers being compared) show the same pattern of three alleles with these same values and in the same order, the two are much more closely related than if the second man does NOT have the three alleles at DYS 385. If you are a male with the surname of McCabe, Mecabe or Cabe and wish to join this surname DNA project (or if you are organizing a DNA test for a male with the surname of McCabe, Mecabe, or Cabe, or if your surname is NOT McCabe, or variations thereof, but you expect that your straight line male ancestry DOES include a McCabe male), then you should join this McCabe Y-DNA project. On the map, "Y Haplogroups of the World", which represents the situation about 1500 A.D., the E1b haplogroup (still listed as E3B on this map, as of October 2008) is highest in Morocco (ca 75%) with other large percentages in Maori (ca 25%), Sudan (ca 25%) and Ethiopia (ca 50%). This James McCabe was apparently Catholic. 1. SUMMARY COMMENTS on Group C-3. The surname McCabe was first found in on the Isle of Arran in Scotland. Enniskillen is the main town of Fermanagh County, the westernmost county of present day Northern Ireland. His g. grandfather (also named Felix) moved to Mullagh in County Cavan, from which town, his grandfather (also named Felix), immigrated to Scotland in 1926. The push pins are color-coded by the type of matches, exact, 1-step, 2-step, etc. November 20, 1782. Kit 160306. Kit 825 has only one one-step mutation (marker 481); kit 1106 has two one-step mutations (markers 464d & 576, both fast-mutating markers) from the proposed ancestral haplotype. Mottoes first began to be shown with arms in the 14th and 15th centuries, but were not in general use until the 17th century. There he died in the 1805-1815 period, either in southern Allegheny County or northern Washington County. Proving that the Mecabe name must have been derived from the McCabe surname (Group B). Further, the provider of kit 1106 has a very strong paper trail of descent from Owen McCabe (Group A), but at 37 markers he also differs from the Group A modal values at 37 markers at two fast-mutating markers, and there is no evidence of any descendant of Owen McCabe being in Tennessee in the late 1850's. This group contains individuals who, concluded from the results shown, descend from Owen McCabe who emigrated from County Tyrone, Ireland, in the 1740's, to Philadelphia, settled in Cumberland County, Pennsylvania in the 1750's (in that portion that became Perry County in 1820), and later moved to southwestern Pennsylvania. NOTE 2: Click on the DNA FAQ linkat the top of this page to answer many questions. XII GROUP J, R1b1 McCabes NOT MATCHING ANY OTHER MEMBERS IN THIS PROJECT. NOTE 3: Two "movable bars" ("scrolling bars") on the Y-DNA RESULTS webpage (right side and at the bottom) assist in moving the contents up and down, left and right. http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~geneticgenealogy/yfreq.htm) Maurice McCabe passed away at age 53 years old on October 6, 1975, and was buried at Houston National Cemetery Section E Site 106 10410 Veterans Memorial Drive, in Houston, Texas. 2008 - 2023 INTERESTING.COM, INC. 13 Feb 1835, d. 30 Apr. Counties of the Republic of Ireland that border Fermanagh are Donegal, Leitrim, Cavan and Monaghan.] Source: Dictionary of American Family Names 2nd edition, 2022. The question tested in this study was Are all McCabe families in this area descended from a common ancestor? The first man tested (kit 49932) had traced his earliest known McCabe ancestor to Francis McCabe, born in Magheracloone Parish, County Monaghan, Ireland, in 1782. The name is sometimes used (incorrectly) as a synonym for Northern Ireland." An early hypothesis was that this James McCabe (Nova Scotia) and Owen McCabe [Cumberland County (later Perry County), Pennsylvania, Group A in this study] were very likely brothers, since they were apparently both from the north of Ireland, and both arrived in Philadelphia in the 1740s. Showing that a specific McCabe-named male who had his McCabe name changed to the YOUNG surname at a very young age, is most likely descended from the Young family, not the McCabe family (Group J, Kit 129216). Kit 176320. At 25 markers, he has only two matches (with a genetic distance of 2), one with the surname of McDonald and the other with the surname of Farr, but no matches with any McCabe-named men at this time. Choose the number of markers you wish to compare by clicking on the specific number in the upper left-hand corner of the map. S groups - highlighted in blue - 5 groups - These McCabe men do not match the M or C groups, instead they match other surnames depending on the S group they are in. Counties of the Ulster province that border Tyrone are Donegal, Londonderry, Antrim (across a large lake), Armagh, Monaghan, and Fermanagh. XI GROUP I, Cabeen Family. M Genealogy > MCCABE [To view the map, Adobe Flash Player Version 9 or higher is necessary to be on your computer which can be downloaded from the map site.] FTDNA has calculated that the man who provided the DNA for Kit 146133 has a 72% probability of sharing a common ancestor with the two other men (Kits 146733 and 168113) within four generations and an 88% probability of sharing a common ancestor within six generations. Consequently, there is very little doubt, given the randomness of mutations and the rates of mutations as well as the fairly well-documented paper trails, that these four men are related to each other as described in the relationships discussion immediately above. (Updated 10/08/10 for Kits 153311 & 148651.) County Tyrone is in the historic province of Ulster and in current Northern Ireland of the United Kingdom. Finding the father of an 1840's McCabe orphan (Group A, kits 825, 826, 827 & 1106). The DNA samples from Kits 95179 and 137198 have a 65/67 match, with their mismatches in markers 455 (a normal rate mutating marker) and 464d (fast mutator), although they have not yet found an ancestor in common. At 67 markers, the McCabe man who provided the DNA for kit # 106868 has a 66/67 match with a Ball-named man (also closer than his match with his third cousin, once removed), and a 65/67 match with the second Ball-named man. This VERY STRONG MATCH definitely confirms the paper records that the Cabe name most definitely was derived from the McCabe name. Kit 151400 does not have any significant matches with the Owen McCabe family descendants (Group A), confirming that the two 1740's immigrants to America, Owen McCabe and James McCabe, were not related within historic times. By 1838, the British New Zealand Company had begun buying land from the Maori tribes, and selling it to settlers, and, after the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840, many British families set out on the arduous six month journey from Britain to Aotearoa to start a new life. This suggested descent is entirely possible based on the randomness of mutations (and the lack thereof) as evidenced with kits 139946 and 146567 (shown immediately above) in which fifth cousins, once-removed, have exact matches at 67 markers. The value of marker DYS 459a for both of these men is 7, whereas all others in this McCabe study have a value of 9. No other McCabes in the McCabe surname study have these same haplotype results at these five markers. On this McCabe project he matches with kit #82164 (Group G)with a genetic distance of three at 37 markers. [4] Patrick Woulfe considered that the surname was possibly derived from a nickname, meaning "a cap", or "hood". 1859, Arkansas), Eddie Franklin Cabe (b. For more information on this haplogroup google on "E1b1b1". (Retrieved 2014, June 17) . (Updated 9/14/10) The man who provided the DNA for Kit 139489 is descended from John Cabe/McCabe (1810 will) in this order: Samuel Cabe, James S. Cabe, Samuel W. Cabe, James L. Cabe (grandfather of the kit provider), which produces a fifth cousin relationship with the provider of kit 139946, yet they differ at one mutation step for each of three markers, two of which are fast-mutating markers. This specific haplogroup, R1b1b2a1b5, is a subdivision of haplogroup R1b1b2 The majority of men of European extraction are in the R1b1b2 haplogroup. Both males and females can be tested, but Mitochondrial DNA is ALWAYS inherited ONLY from the mother. He married in March 1915, at the age of 27, in Kiefer (Allegany County), Maryland. Forebears. 1. In 1940, Laborer and Teacher were the top reported jobs for men and women in the USA named Mccabe. Kit 86111. Please enable JavaScript in your browser's settings to use this part of Geni. For discussion of the mtDNA Results of this McCabe project, go to the bottom of this page. DISCUSSION OF SPECIFIC PROJECT RESULTS ORGANIZED AROUND THE TWELVE GROUPS ON THE RESULTS TABLE. Results to 67 markers were posted for kit 151400 in July 2009, the provider of which descends from John McCabe, son of the Nova Scotia immigrant, James McCabe, down through to the grandfather of the man tested: James, Asa, Ralph, and Harry. Note that this haplogroup designation may not support a Nordic or Viking ancestry for these McCabe families as has been suggested for the McCabe families in general. McCabe and MacCabe are Anglicisations of the Gaelic Mac Cba, a patronymic name meaning "son of Cba". Surname meaning for McCabe. Participating in a group DNA project produces savings as compared to ordering as an individual without participation in a group project. With a genetic distance of two and knowing that these men do not share a common ancestor in the last three generations, FTDNA calculates that the probability of the kit provider sharing a common ancestor at 67 markers is 84.5% at 8 generations back. Concerning the haplogroup designation: Haplogroup G appears to have arisen in the Caucasus region during the Ice Age, about 30,000 years ago (Quote from Wikipedia discussion on Haplogroup G.) In 2009-2010 significant matches have been posted for both 37 and 67 markers for Kit 148064. Without even considering specific marker matches or non-matches, the haplogroup designation for this man as G2a leaves no doubt that there is no genetic relationship between the earlier-tested Cabes and the Amos Cabe descendant, within historic times (since surnames were initiated). [Note that Ops is now listed by Wikipedia as a former municipality in the center of former County of Victoria now the city of Kawartha Lakes and located in eastcentral Ontario.] This site was created using MyHeritage. The "Haplo" column refers to the mtDNA haplogroups, which are entirely different from the Y-DNA haplogroups and provide information on the geographical origins of the straight maternal line of the provider of the DNA sample. USE LINKPENDIUM'S FAMILY DISCOVERER TO SEARCH 2,804,127 FREE GENEALOGY SOURCES! Kit 148064. The results to 67 markers for the man who provided the DNA for Kit 168113 were posted in February 2010. The family of James and Anne Pettigrew McCabe arrived at the Philadelphia Plantation in Pictou, Nova Scotia, in 1767, as one of six families who were the first immigrants from Philadelphia to Pictou. However, both mismatches with kits 139946 and 146567 are in fast mutating markers, numbers CDYa and 567. The R1b1b2 haplogroup is believed by some to have existed before the last Ice Age and has been associated with the Aurignacian culture (32,000 - 21,000 BC). Individuals can be tested either for the HVR1 section or BOTH HVR1 and HVR2 sections (not just the HVR2 section) at FTDNA. In summary, there is no doubt that the provider of Kit 145047 descends from the McCabe immigrant to Nova Scotia in the following way: James McCabe (the immigrant), John McCabe, David McCabe, Daniel McCabe, Ernest McCabe (grandfather of the kit provider). At 37 markers, this man matches (with a genetic distance of 2) individuals in Group A (Owen McCabe family, kits 825, 826, 827 and 1106) and matches (at a genetic distance of 2) with the modal value of Group G, the Cabe-surname study (both mismatches are in fast-mutating markers). This MCCABE index was pre-built so it loads quickly. 1856 in Co. Cavan, Ireland. The provider of Kit 160306 lives in England, and traces his paternal ancestry back to Patrick McCabe, born in County Monaghan, Ireland, in 1822. Thomass son, Benjamin Franklin McCabe (g. grandfather of the participant) was born March 9, 1855 in Kansas, but this family soon moved to the Chicago area. This is an AMAZING CONCLUSION since the provider of kit 145047 had no hypothesis whatsoever, that he descended from James McCabe, the 1760s immigrant to Nova Scotia! "Most Common Last Names in Australia." The historic province of Ulster is NOT equivalent to Northern Ireland. 1 1. Kit # 147989. This man (provider of kit 127552) descends from the immigrant James McCabe through his son Thomas McCabe. Considering just these 35 markers, the Cabe results included a match of 34/35 markers with the Owen McCabe family (Group A in this FTDNA study, whose Irish roots are in Ulster). A Cain/Cabe surname connection HAS been found in Orange County, North Carolina, with three records (as reported by Margie Cabe Keener: (1), "At the November 1824 Term of Court, administration of the estate of Joseph Latta, dec'd, with the will annexed, was granted to Thomas Gaddis, who entered into bond with Jonathan P. Sneed and William Cain (either Sr. or Jr.), securities, in the sum of $5000. The man who provided the DNA for this study has a paper trail connection to the Owen McCabe family, through Owens son William (Group A in this project) and the next several generations are: John McCabe, William & Harriet McCabe, James E. McCabe, Harry R. McCabe, and grandfather of the kit provider, Harry E. McCabe. Explore McCabe genealogy and family history in the World's Largest Family Tree. (Extensively updated 5/06/09) These two men had hypothesized that they both descend from the immigrant, Francis McCabe. The provider of Kit #145047 can be considered as having the DEDUCED ANCESTRAL HAPLOTYPE of this Nova Scotia James McCabe family, at all 67 markers, ASSUMING that he has a common ancestry (probably in the northern part of the island of Ireland) with many of the Cabe family members in Group G (genetic distance of three with three members of Group G at 67 markers), when considering markers CDYa and 557. The earliest record for John Cabe/McCabe is in 1778 in that part of Burke County that was taken into Lincoln County, NC in 1787. 1841, Pennsylvania) born in 1816 in Ireland, as were his parents (names not known). Charles and Catherine McCabe's son, Alexander Mitchell McCabe, born in Columbia, South Carolina, moved to Knox County, Tennessee, and is the grandfather of the man who provided the DNA for this kit. There is a possibility that there is another sequence of Y-DNA markers unique to men who have McCabe ancestry. Family tree of the Mccabe Web Site on MyHeritage. Extension of this study to 67 markers is highly advisable. There are 42,000 military records available for the last name Mccabe. IMPORTANT PRIVACY NOTICE & DISCLAIMER: YOU HAVE A RESPONSIBILITY TO USE CAUTION WHEN DISTRIBUTING PRIVATE INFORMATION. At 67 markers, kit 106868, amazingly, has a 67/67 match with a man with the surname of Propes (closer than with his documented third cousin, once removed). You can send your sympathy in the guestbook provided and share it with the family. McCabes are now found mostly in the United States, Ireland and the United Kingdom, Australia, South Africa, and New Zealand. of the distribution of various allelic values for specific markers, 95% of men who are in the haplogroup R1b have a value of 9 repeats, whereas less than 0.5% have a value of 7 repeats. Most members of the McCabe project are of the R-M269 haplogroup whereas Hugh's growing group is of the I-M223 haplogroup. It is most likely that the family connections are in the historic province of Ulster, in the northern portion of the island of Ireland. Early Origins of the McCabe family The surname McCabe was first found in on the Isle of Arran in Scotland. There are minor differences in the groups A through M-4, and these differences will be explained in the Results section. Sister of John McCabe; James McCabe; Nancy Agnes McCabe; Thomas McCabe; George McCabe and 5 others. Francis McCabe is reported to have had two sons, Francis, Jr., and Simon McCabe, and one daughter, Elizabeth McCabe, all three of whom came to Ops before 1862. His son, Felix McCabe, was born on the farm in 1848. [Bothwell is in southwestern Ontario within the new Municipality of Chatham-Kent; prior to 1998 in the County of Kent and also borders Lake Erie.] The comments far below are explanations of the tables of results as shown by clicking on the Y-DNA Results or the mtDNA Results also at the top ofthis page. Niall established a dynasty of powerful chieftains that dominated the island for six centuries. 1856 in Dundee , Angus . +Ann b: 1857 in Glasgow, Lanark. Highlander from Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island was travelling aboard the railway ferry "SS Caribou" when it was struck by a German submarine torpedo on 14th October 1942, the most significant sinking in Canadian waters at that time, he survived the sinking. Kit's 153311 and 148651. Then HAVE FUN in finding matches on the map by placing your pointer on the push pins. GROUP B, the R1b1b2a1b5b MECABE/McCABE FAMILY STUDY. At one time it was in the County of Dublin. [Tyrone County is immediately to the north of Fermanagh County and is the only county of Northern Ireland which shares a border with Fermanagh County. Further investigation showed that his grandfather was probably James B. McCabe of northwestern Illinois and that his g. grandfather was also from Illinois. grandfathers name was James McCabe; his g g grandfather was Felix McCabe, born in 1847, an only child. Prices are occasionally reduced for a short time interval each year. Kit 127552. This man with the surname of Denny joined the McCabe/Cabe surname project 8/5/09 based on the observation that he had no DNA matches with any form of the surname of Denny or Dennis. [3] Ancestor is John McCabe b. This is a great system that allows anyone like you and me to create a private site for their family, build their family tree and share family photos. Showing that four of the McCabe DNA project participants are descendants of Niall of the Nine Hostages. The significance of these other close matches (at 67 markers) is yet to be determined.] Among the 44 participants (as of early August 2009) 20 had an exact match, 12/12 with these values, and 7 men have a match at 11/12! (Group created 4/22/09; updated 4/26/09) More information is included under the topic Early McCabe Notables in all our PDF Extended History products and printed products wherever possible. The DNA of the provider of the kit matches 35/37 markers with one of the Cabe members (Group G, Kit 139946) and 33/37 markers with six other McCabe project participants, but the common ancestor between him and other participants is most likely to be in Ireland. The man who provided the DNA sample for kit 135391 traces his ancestry back to Owen McCabe who immigrated in the 1830s from County Monaghan to Ops Township. Studies in the Allegheny County Court House in Pittsburgh suggested that he is most likely a descendant of Owen's youngest son, William McCabe. The most Mccabe families were found in USA in 1880. GROUP C-1, McCABES FROM COUNTY MONAGHAN, IRELAND, TO VICTORIA COUNTY, ONTARIO, CANADA (Updated 4/26/09) However, the match with the Francis surname may not be an indication of relationship with the Francis surname, because the specific Francis male has a male line cousin (Francis surname) who has does not have a G2 haplogroup. James Mccabe 1844 - Unknown. Kit 40344: The paternal ancestral line for the man who provided the DNA sample for Kit 43024 is as follows: Elisha Mecabe (b. One of these two Ball-named men has also been tested for this configuration and he also has this same ccgg configuration. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Michael Mccabe. Language links are at the top of the page across from the title. Mr. John Herbert McCabe who was convicted in London, Margaret McCabe, who arrived in Glenelg Roads aboard the ship "Pestonjee Bomanjee" in 1838, Mr. Michael McCabe, British Convict who was convicted in Jamaica for 14 years, transported aboard the "Canton" on 20th September 1839, arriving in Tasmania (. The two McCabe-named men in Group E (who provided kits 130249 and 106868), according to paper documentation, share the common ancestor of John McCabe, born in 1810-1816 (age 34 in 1850 census, age 50 in 1860 census in Ross County, Ohio, and whose wife's name is Lucinda). Results to the 37 marker level show only two one-step mutations between the providers of kit 40344 (Mecabe line) and kit 9586.
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