Latest Big Y test results have come in for the Richelieu - Leger surname! Thank you to the Leger man who stepped up to participate in advanced Y DNA testing as part of the Acadian Amerindian Ancestry DNA project. Currently there are no matches for this particular Big Y DNA test result and it is unique within the Family Tree DNA database. As more Richelieu - Leger men have the Big Y DNA test, we may find that the haplogroup changes. For now we are showing the distinguishing Richelieu - Leger Big Y DNA Marker as I-BY70584. This line descends from Michel Leger (b. 1729 in Quebec) and Angelique Pinet (b. 1739 in Louisbourg). The widow Angelique Pinet settled on a property in Louisiana in 1787 with her three sons and her name, and distinction as a widow of Michel Leger, may be found on the Wall of Names in St. Martinville. Angelique Pinet descends from Anne Marie (married to the unknown Pinet and then to Rene Rimbault) through Anne Marie's son, Philippe Pinet, who was married to Catherine Hebert. Matrilineal descendants of Anne Marie, traced from mother to mother, belong to haplogroup A2f1a which is Amerindian in origin. The Richelieu - Leger surname line is genetically and genealogically separate from the La Rosette - Leger line (J-M267). View the position of the I-BY70584 branch within the haplogroup I subclade on the Y DNA haplotree. France is noted as the country origin of this particular haplogroup, based upon genealogical research. This line traces back to Etienne (Estienne) Leger b. ca 1630 in France. https://www.familytreedna.com/public/y-dna-haplotree/I;name=I-BY70584. There is one downstream branch with one member reporting origins from England. The Acadian Amerindian Ancestry DNA Project Wall of Big Y DNA Markers Advanced “Big Y” DNA testing offers members of the Acadian Amerindian Ancestry DNA project insights into their surname lines and origins like none other. Big Y DNA testing has proven to be an excellent partner for those engaged with surname studies as Big Y DNA tests pinpoint specific genetic markers, called SNPs, that are unique to individual surnames. That marker is passed from father to father to father, from an earliest-known paternal ancestor to living male descendants who carry an Acadian surname. As with the project, we are inclusive of “allied” surnames as we know that post-exile, many of our Acadian ancestors intermarried with others and their DNA has since become an integral part of our genetic legacy. Because not all descendants of Acadian and allied ancestors have had the Big Y DNA tests, and right now, our Big Y DNA test results are intermixed with other project information, our list is in no way complete, and as we find more of the Big Y DNA results in our project, and new results come in, we will continue add to the list. We hope that the “Acadian Amerindian Ancestry Project Wall of Big Y DNA Markers” will help others in completing their genealogies and as always, inspire more to have Big Y DNA tests. We want to have all of our historic Acadian and allied surnames “on the map.” Please contact project administrators if you have any questions about how to order a Big Y DNA test.
Reference: https://www.familytreedna.com/public/y-dna-haplotree/I;name=I-BY70584
Reference: https://gw.geneanet.org/katheriot?lang=en&p=frederick%20joseph&n=theriot&oc=1 To learn more about the Acadian Amerindian Ancestry DNA Project, visit: https://www.familytreedna.com/groups/acadian-amerindian/about/background "A Surprise mtDNA Match Uncovers a Lost Acadian Ancestry Line to Antoinette Landry" … by Marie Rundquist with Deborah Cotorceanu and Marie-Louise Braud Gerac February 2020 (aka, as Marie-Louise put it, "Bona grabbed the wrong Marie Thibodeau.") Photos courtesy Deborah Cotorceanu and Marie-Louise Braud Gerac. ...Marie-Louise was shocked! Based on what she knew about her family tree, Marie-Louise fully anticipated that her closest mtDNA matches would have traced their matrilineal ancestry back to Catherine Vigneau, but instead her mtDNA matches had listed Antoinette Landry as their earliest ancestor..." For the rest of the story, visit: https://familyheritageresearchcommunity.org/antoinette-landry-dna
Travel by Ancestry -- to the Acadian and Cajun roots recovery and rescue with 2 new Google groups!2/4/2020
"Due to upcoming changes to the Rootsweb website, we have determined that the best way to keep our research groups viable is to create two new public Google Groups that will consolidate 77 Acadian and Cajun, 10 uniquely Louisiana, many French surname, and 30 Louisiana Parish sites. For more background on why this change is necessary, and to obtain instructions on how to "join" our new Groups, please see our full announcement at either https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/ouracadianroots or https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/ourlouisianaroots." -- Paul L. LeBlanc About Our Acadian Amerindian Ancestry DNA Project DNA testing is adding substantially to the body of research available for all Acadian families, and because of the efforts of individual testers, we are now able to trace Acadian lineages, successfully and confidently, back to their earliest roots -- in the 17th and 18th centuries! Our Acadian AmerIndian Ancestry DNA project at Family Tree DNA includes Y chromosome DNA (Y DNA) results for male Acadian ancestors and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) results for female Acadian ancestors. The project welcomes all Acadian descendants, and descendants of allied families who married into Acadian lines, as well as AmerIndian descendants associated with the eastern Canadian First Nations people.
All descendants of Acadian and related allied and First Nations family lines are welcome to join our Acadian Amerindian Ancestry DNA project including those who have taken the Family Finder test at Family Tree DNA or transferred their autosomal test resuts to Family Tree DNA from other testing companies. We encourage any male who carries an Acadian surname and descends from an Acadian family, or allied family who married into an Acadian line, to take the Y DNA test, in addition to the Family Finder autosomal DNA test, and all people who descend directly matrilineally (from your mother to her mother to her mother on up the tree) to an Acadian or a First Nations ancestor who married into an Acadian family to have an mtDNA test and join the project. One of the greatest tragedies of the Acadian expulsion that began in 1755 is the irrevocable loss of family. We, as family researchers, have problems in finding legitimate records for that period as in many instances our family records were destroyed. One of the greatest benefits of Y and mtDNA DNA testing with our Acadian Amerindian Ancestry DNA project is that we are able to "see through" the gaps in our family lines tracing back to the time of the Acadian expulsion, and find lost links that connect us back to our earliest ancestors. By having the Y DNA and mtDNA test results of Acadian descendants in-hand, along with available genealogy information, we are able to trace our most precious lineages from father to father, mother to mother, all the way back to the first Acadian settlement in Port Royal, Nova Scotia. Through advanced Y DNA testing, we've been able to pinpoint specific genetic markers that differentiate descendants of specific Acadian surname lines from all others. That our genes did not "forget" who we are and where we came from is perhaps one of the most significant research findings of our Acadian Amerindian Ancestry DNA project, and with our Y, mtDNA, and autosomal DNA test results, we are re-connecting and finding our way "home" in the truest sense of the word. Our astounding abilities to reconnect, by way of matching DNA test results, may be the best "just desserts" ever to be served upon those whose grand scheme was to split us asunder and thereby cause us to fail. Our genetic, cultural, historical, and genealogical "staying power" is why we have people from Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Gaspe, Montreal, Ontario, Quebec and westward, Louisiana, Maine, New York, New Hampshire, Michigan, Maryland, Virginia, Texas, California, France, and everywhere else participating in "our" Acadian Amerindian Ancestry DNA project. The "Acadian Amerindian Ancestry DNA project" is therefore open to all of our "legacy" cousins, who carry our celebrated Acadian and Amerindian project surnames and lines, our "allied families," (including Romeros, Oubres, Smiths, and all others) who married into Acadian families and have become a part of the greater Acadian / Cajun family tree, the "collateral cousins," who are related to Acadians and are still trying to figure out how, and those special cousins who, as Cousin Paul has stated so eloquently, "were raised at an Acadian / Cajun hearth" -- by the fireplace or in the kitchen of a loving (and very wise!) Acadian / Cajun mother or grandmother who never used the words "biological," "half," "step," "foster," or "adopted" when she talked about all of her children and grandchildren. You can view the Acadian Amerindian Ancestry DNA project information here: https://www.familytreedna.com/groups/acadian-amerindian/about/background You can see the Acadian Amerindian Ancestry DNA project's Y DNA participants here to determine if your male ancestral line is represented: https://www.familytreedna.com/public/AcadianAmerIndian?iframe=yresults You can see the Acadian Amerindian Ancestry DNA project's mitochondrial participants here to determine if our female ancestral line is represented: https://www.familytreedna.com/public/AcadianAmerIndian?iframe=mtresults For questions about joining the Acadian Amerindian Ancestry DNA project, contact the project administrators:
Help research the Acadian - Cajun David (pronounced dah-veed) family line. The earliest- known progenitor of this line, Jean Pierre David dit Saint Michael, who was born in the Parish of Saint Nazaire, France, was exiled from the Fortress of Louisbourg in Nova Scotia, Canada, by the British in 1758 and died en route to La Rochelle. The bloodline of ancestor Master Blacksmith Jean Pierre David, carried in the Y Chromosome DNA of his sons and paternal line descendants, now living in the United States, may very well be the most promising key to the David family's lost legacy -- in France!
Genealogy researchers in France: The Acadian Amerindian Ancestry Family Tree DNA Project and Jean Pierre David dit Saint Michel descendant, Earl David, encourage MALE participants who have the "David" surname and suspect that they are related to our earliest known ancestor, Jean Pierre David dit Saint Michel (originally of France) to verify their genealogy and order a Y chromosome DNA test through the David dit Saint Michel Family Tree DNA project. (Click here to place your order). Please contact the administrator if you have questions about ordering your test. Re-live ancestry! Travel back in time to over 300 years ago for the live story of Jean Pierre David dit Saint Michel his family and descendants by visiting Earl David’s website, Davids of New France, at http://www.DavidsofNewFrance.com. Please contact Earl David directly for questions about the David family line of France. For the full article about our research of "David DNA" and the lineage of Jean David dit Saint Michel, Master Blacksmith at the Fortress of Louisbourg, in Nova Scotia, Canada, read: https://familyheritageresearchcommunity.org/david-dna |
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