Showing posts with label mtdna. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mtdna. Show all posts

Friday, July 12, 2024

A Line of Women

 I'm still plugging away at my family tree. And I've been thinking about Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) a lot. (I know, you're rolling your eyes and thinking, "Of course you are, Holly." LOL)

Ancestry.com says, "Mitochondrial DNA makes up only 0.1% of the overall human genome and is passed down exclusively from mother to child." 

For me, it went...

Holly 
Pat
Marion
Sarah
Mary
Sarah
Elizabeth
Eliza 
Jane

Jane is my 6th great-grandmother. She's where that branch's trail muddles a bit. She was born in the late 1700's.  Despite the fact I can't go further back (yet), from Jane that mtDNA traces back to Mitochondrial Eve. She lived more than 100,000+ years ago. So even though I feel I've taken my family tree back quite a ways, that chain of women is so much more expansive. 100,000 years would be well over 4,000 generations. I can trace nine in my mtDNA line...but there are so many more. Woman, after woman, after woman...  As a woman with three daughters, I love that I gave them all that long lineage.

My grandmother was adopted. I found her original birth certificate and was able to  use that to trace her bio mom. Sarah was a nurse. She never married and lived with one of her sisters for her adult life, until that sister passed.  I'm a little haunted knowing that she was still alive while my grandmother was an adult...while I was in my teens. Did she think about the baby she'd called Marjorie Ruth every day? She was a morning's drive away, but we never met. She never knew my grandmother, my mom or me. She never got to see her legacy.

Each step I take on my tree leads to another piece of the puzzle of me. But the mtDNA line is one that reminds reminds me of the power of women. Women carry that tiny .1% of 4,000+ women in us. We give give life to the next generation and bless our daughters with that same line of mtDNA. There's such a power in that.  Knowing the strength of all those women who came before us, and the generations of women who will come after we have to remember our power as we work for our daughters' future.


One of the things that stands out to me as I work on my family tree is how some of the women get lost to history. Women like Jane. She took her husband's last name and her family name and line are lost to history...so far.  I've hit those hurdles many times in my tree. I'll keep looking, but I find some solace in knowing that the women in those lost lines maintain their past in their mtDNA. Is there any wonder I've been thinking about it so much lately? 

I'll continue looking for Jane's story...and telling my stories. Stories of women who have power and strength. Women who know their worth.  And I'll work to build a future for my daughters...and son. LOL

HollySpeaking of trying something new...

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Thursday, April 20, 2023

Secrets

 


All families have secrets. Stories someone holds onto because they're just too painful to share. 

My grandmother had such a secret. When she passed, I found a letter from an attorney that enclosed her original birth certificate. Her bio mother's name was listed as Sarah K.. My grandmother's bio father's last name was listed as Miller. I knew she'd adored, Mills, the father who raised her. When he passed, her mother, Myrtle had lived with her. My mom adored her grandmother. I still have Myrtle's rocker in the living room. I knew it as my grandmother's rocker, but in reality it was her mom's. But the parents she loved and took cared for weren't her biological parents is what the birth certificate indicated. I can't imagine how finding that had rocked her world.

I talked to a friend of the family who said the rumor was my grandmother's adoptive father was also her biological father.  I suspect my grandmother heard that and that's why she went looking. The last name listed on the birth certificate could be a wordplay on his name. Miller-Mills.

 I found two Sarahs with the right last name, one in central PA and one in Ohio who were about the right age and both had been to Pittsburgh, where the birth certificate was issued. My grandfather was a railroad engineer and his route took him into Pittsburgh.

I had clues and little tidbits. I dug off and on for years. 

All that digging led me to DNA verification that the central PA Sarah was my bio great-grandmother. Census data and a few news clippings helped me piece together Sarah's story. I know she left central PA and went to Pittsburgh. Maybe she was there to go to nursing school or maybe she was already a nurse and working there (I'm still looking into that). I know that she ended up being a visiting nurse back in central PA. I even found a picture of her (She's the one in the front on the right). Sarah was twenty-one when my grandmother was born. Mills, the father who raised my grandmother was indeed my bio grandfather and he was in his forties when she was born.  

I've found records that Mills and his wife Myrtle lost a one day old son eighteen years before Mills brought my grandmother home to Myrtle. What kind of strength does it take to raise the child born of your husband's affair? I can't imagine. I do know Myrtle loved her and loved my mom. The fact that I'm looking into DNA relatives doesn't negate that love...Myrtle will always be my family. 

 When my grandmother got that birth certificate from the attorney, Sarah was still alive. She'd worked as a nurse and had retired from her visiting nurse job. She had lived in central PA with another single sister until that sister died. A second sister lived in Ohio with her family. Sarah's brother moved to New York. Once her roomie sister was gone, she was alone.  To the best of my knowledge, my grandmother never met her or contacted her. I might not have known Sarah, but I was alive when my grandmother got that birth certificate and I wish we'd met. 

Maybe it's the fact I'm a writer. Maybe it's the fact I'm a dreamer. Maybe there's some mitochondrial connection, but so many of these names in my family tree have become so real to me. I'd like to think that Sarah would be happy to know that she's now part of the family. That we were always out there and she was never truly alone. 

I love finding new threads in my family tree and unraveling them. I've found other secret babies. One was adopted by someone else in her family. One looks as if he was adopted and raised by a stepfather, but kept his bio dad's last name.

I found a relative who got drunk and froze to death. I've found one who helped found Brown University. I had a relative who was was an aide to George Washington. I've found sharecroppers. Lords and Ladies, Scottish clans. I have one relative who make a Paul Revere-esque ride through the Virginia mountains tell his neighbors that the British were coming (the Minions and I always give him a shout out and keep playing at writing him his own Paul Revere sort of poem). It's so easy to get carried away by the stories. 

It is frequently harder to track down the females in my tree. I'd really love to know more about them other than they were someone's wife and mother. So often they went by their husband's name on census forms. Mrs. So and So. Or her first name and his last name, making it hard to track down her birth records. I think that's one of the reasons I love that my mitochondrial DNA came from my mom. She got hers from her mom. My grandmother got hers from...Sarah. And so on and so on through the branches of my tree. Even the women I haven't established as anyone more than Mrs. So and So, are there in my mtDNA. I was my mother's only girl, and I love knowing that line of mtDNA will live on through my daughters and their daughter and...

Right now I'm reading a book on Maryland and my family's help in founding it. The book hoarder in me loves looking for these old tomes that tell my family's stories.

Speaking of stories, Something Borrowed is still for sale for a few more weeks. Something Perfect is part of the Second Chance Anthology. And the third book in Around the Square, Sweet Success, is out soon and available for preoder!

That's it for now!

Holly

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Friday, December 16, 2022

mtDNA and a long line of women...

 

Yes, another post about my family tree...well, sort of. I'm combining that with a bit of geeky science stuff. (And for those who know of me deep affection for Schrodinger's Cat and Pi Day, well, this post won't surprise you. LOL)

As I plunge into my past, I can't help notice how often one of my grandmother's names is lost to history. My grandfather's name is there...in a census, on a property deed or in a will. His wife's name? It's a bit more hit or miss. She might be simply listed as Mrs. John Smith. 

It's so frustrating. I've dug through so many death certificates, looking for a maternal name.
That led me to mulling over the idea of Mitochondrial DNA or mtDNA.

I might like geeky science stuff, but I'm not a scientist, so my explanation is very layperson. You get your mitochondria from your mother. (Okay, I read a piece that some paternal mtDNA can sneak in, but let's just go with maternal.) So as I look at my family tree, at those named and unnamed women on the female branches of my tree, I realize that I share the same mitochondria as them. I'm bumping into an issue with my 3rd great-grandmother. I can't pinpoint her first name, much less her last name. She's listed in a deed transfer as John and wife.

And wife.

Now I want to be clear, I am thrilled to be Himself's wife. And I'd like to think he's thrilled to be my husband. But I've never been one to use the title Mrs. Himself. I'm mainly Ms. Holly, when I use an honorific at all. Mainly I'm just Holly or Hall. Sometimes even Hey You. 

This matter of family, or names is something I've mulled a lot in the past. I was born with one man's last name. I adopted another man's last name. I married and happily took Himself's last name. And I when I started writing, I wrote under an altogether new last name. 

Through all those names, I've been Holly. It's a name my mother gave me in hopes that it would never lead to a nickname...which of course explains they I've spent most of my life as Hall. (Poor Mom.

Anyway, you can trace your mtDNA all the way to Africa and see how your tribe of foremothers migrated. All my children carry my mtDNA, but only my daughters will pass it on. Their children will have it, but only a granddaughter will pass it on. I love that image of a long line of women. One after another. Mother to daughter down the line. And then, someday, when I'm gone, that mtDNA I inherited from my mother will still be out there, moving down the line. I love that piece of immortality. It makes me feel a little better about the unnamed women in my family tree...a piece of them is still here.

On a total aside, in a very geeky tangent, I was talking about the nuclear fusion experiment with the Minions today. I really am so excited about this giant step. But how to talk about fusion vs fission with kids. Hmm. My layperson explanation worked well. Imagine smashing rocks apart. Pieces would fly everywhere. The little pieces? Those are radiation and they're bad for you. But if you take a couple rocks and glue them together...there are no little bits (radiation). That idea of clean, unlimited energy is so exciting, even though it's decades away!

Yeah, I know. I romance novelist talking mtDNA and nuclear fission...just another day in my life. LOL

Holly

That idea of finding family runs through all my books, but especially in my Hometown Hearts series. You can find the whole series here, and one of them, Something Perfect, is part of a new anthology, Surprises Come in all Sizes. The whole collection is only $.99. It's a great way to try it out along with some marvelous stories by other bestselling, award winning authors! I'm so thrilled to be in an anthology with them!