My dad lives in my bathroom mirror.
Mine too. The weird thing is he didn't show up there until my mid-fifties.
My dad lives in my bathroom mirror.
I live on the far South end of his original ranch boundry. He's buried in Weatherford Texas. A Mason.Have a family member that put together the old family tree.
Back to the 1700's on my Father's side and the 1600's on my
Mother's side.
Found out this guy is a 5th cousin.....Mother's side.
Oliver Loving - Wikipedia
Have a family member that put together the old family tree.
Back to the 1700's on my Father's side and the 1600's on my
Mother's side.
Found out this guy is a 5th cousin.....Mother's side.
Oliver Loving - Wikipedia
My dad lives in my bathroom mirror.
Sounds like a convoluted way of saying that your a Mutt! Which basically describes virtually all Americans after their first generation of living in the United States! My ancestry at least coming from my father side came to the USA around 1810! My mother on the other hand is Austrian being a WW2 war bride! I don't have a clue of what if any mixed blooding exist on my father side before the 1890's, nor do I really care…
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Just abit of Texas history I was unaware of.....
Mutt
Ancestry.com sent me a picture of my nearest living relative:
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And you know with absolute certainty that nowhere in your Texas ancestry that your anything else but a 100% true blue Texican! My understanding is that Galveston was founded by Cabeza de Vala in 1528, and wasn't a Texican…
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Which is worse, finding out your family tree looks like a tumbleweed, or a limbless bole?
I'm still suspicious of DNA testing to determine ancestry. When you get tested, the results are compared to a database, and the information in that database may be incomplete or poorly gathered, which in either case makes it much less accurate, and sometimes useless.
Case in point, my daughter found a rescued dog, got it from a pound in Miami. He's turned into the most beautiful and smart dog I think I've ever seen, has the look and behavior of a smooth-coat Border Collie, but obviously has something else in the mix, maybe terrier of some sort. She sent off for a DNA test to determine the breed mix, and it came back showing him to be 68% Chow. No thick red coat, no tail that curls over his back, no black tongue, and he weighs about 1/2 what a full-grown Chow would weigh and is a much lighter framed dog. Take a look at the pics below and tell me if you see any Chow in him. I look more like a Chow than this dog.
My 95-year-old mother has been a family genealogist for 70 years, and has traced several of our family lines back to the late 1600's, and one of them to the 1500's. She did it all through court records, land deeds, family Bibles, newspaper records, word-of-mouth histories and genealogical links from others who do the same type research. I don't trust the "23-and-me" approach, because I don't know how complete or accurate the database is that gets used.
They say that the fastest way to find all folks kin to you is to announce that you just won the lottery.
It would interesting to see where we are with this in 100 years after we start modifying our genes.