| Back |
Kit 13844 - Jonathan Mason (1804 MD-1872 OH USA) - Emmett E.
Mason, Y111, FF
Haplogroup: R1a1a1, aka R-M417
(M417+ M198+ PK5-
P98- M64.2- M56- M458- M434- M157.1- L176.1- L175- L12-
Current tree chart: http://isogg.org/tree/ISOGG_HapgrpR.html
Ysearch S3V54
See
also 157555 66/67 match
mtDNA haplogroup
K1a4a1
HVR1:
224C, 311C, 519C;
HVR2: 73G, 195C, 263G, 315.1C, 497T
Full Genetic
Sequence has been tested/reported; 3 matches as of 5/15/2011 but no genealogy
connections known
Note: Margaret Neal (b. 1789 NJ USA)
oldest known female ancestor
Mitosearch XNAFC
?? Mason1
(b. abt 1780 MD?) details unknown. A
current assumption is that John Mason
(of 1820 Fairfield Co. Ohio Census) and/or Sarah
Mason (of 1830 Fairfield Co. Ohio
Census) is/are parent(s). Several Mason brothers, including my
ancestor, and appear in Violet township, Fairfield Co. Ohio. These
y-dna results should also fit male descendants of Henry Mason2,
Michael Mason2,
Thomas Mason2,
Jesse Mason2,
John A. Mason2,
and David Mason2 of
Fairfield Co. OH area. And "possibility" the older
Henry Mason1 and his son Nelson Mason2 of Maryland & Fairfield Co.
OH
Jonathan Mason2
(b. 1804 probably Maryland) moved to Fairfield
Co. OH, then in 1830s, Jonathan Mason moved from Fairfield Co. Ohio
to Goshen Twp. Hardin Co. Ohio where he died in 1872. The 1883
History of Hardin Co. OH
indicated Jonathan Mason "came from
Virginia"; however, most census entries indicate a Maryland
birthplace for him and his brothers. Several of his sons moved
west to Nebraska:
Loyd L.
Mason3 and
Leroy S. Mason3 to
Nemaha Co. and Charles D. Mason3
and Thomas J. Mason3
to Richardson Co. Nebraska.
Findley
E. Mason4 (b.
1867 Hardin Co. OH, d. 1936 Nemaha Co. NE) moved with parents to
Nemaha Co. NE.
Peter C. Mason5
(b. 1890 Nemaha Co. NE, d. 1967)
Roger C.
Mason6 (1919-1995)
--Mark
C. Mason7
(1948-1994)
Emmett
E. Mason6 (1932
~)
R1a1 conjecture reference by Underhill 2003, in the Wayback Machine archive link
DYS19=15 and
YCAIIa,b=19,21 specific to "Western European" &
"Central Asian Norse" R1a1;
DYS19=16 and YCAIIa,b=19,23
specific to Eastern European R1a1.
Ethno Ancestry YSTR test
Dr. Wilson sent
David Faux the following reply in relation to a query concerning to
the matter of "performance characteristics" of the YSTR10
unique markers:
"There are fast, slow and middling markers
among these ten. 549 and 522 are the fastest and so will help to
distinguish closely related lineages. 575, 638, 494 and 556 are
slower markers, which may be useful in identifying novel sub-clusters
if a non-modal value is observed. All ten will help to determine
whether a match is due to a common ancestor in the time frame of
surnames." 11/22/2006.
Further study references:
Mason, Charles
county MD, Early Families of Southern Maryland, Vol. 8 WB211
Mason,
Prince county MD, Early Families of Southern Maryland, Vol. 8
WB211
Mason, Virginia VA Virginia Genealogies CC2630
The several "John Mason" men in the 1810 Maryland Census
assumed England > Maryland Colony > VA? > Fairfield Co. OH ca. 1815> Hardin Co. OH ca. 1836> Nemaha Co. Nebraska about 1872.
Emmett Mason -- Masontree@aol.com
|
Back
| Copyright ©
2002-2011 Mason DNA Worldwide Project