<![CDATA[HISTORIC PATHS - GENEALOGY - Blog]]>Sat, 23 Mar 2024 21:06:01 +1100Weebly<![CDATA[Making the most of Ancestry's 'Thru Lines' in DNA research]]>Tue, 26 Apr 2022 16:48:56 GMThttp://historicpaths.com/blog/making-the-most-of-ancestrys-thru-lines-in-dna-research
Picture
Public Domain
Many people receive a DNA TEST as a gift these days, and feel that they are on the fast track to discovering their family. They are, but not in the way they planned. Human error is one of the things that DNA testing in genealogy is supposed to help eradicate, but in some ways, it is making the spread of incorrect lineages and casual family connections run rife. What I am about to explain here is mainly in relation to Ancestry's 'Thru Lines' feature which is currently the worlds largest DNA genealogy database.
 
As we know with most things, data is only as accurate as the person entering it. When you’ve done your test and you excitedly log in to view your matches, you may find the majority of kits contain no links to know family trees, and yet others claim to have thousands of ancestors neatly packed away into their online trees. BEWARE!!!
 
Traditional genealogy is still required, and I would say, in fact vital, and DNA testing should help you to prove theories and confirm your research via common matches, but beware of claiming ancestors suggested to you without first checking the relationships, dates and places properly.
 
Online DNA kits are cross-linked to peoples supplied family trees. Keep in mind, that many of these trees can contain vast inaccuracies. For example if Person A has Louis Snodgrass as their three times great grandfather, and Person B who is researching the same line, has simply picked up the same information without confirming genealogical proof standard, the data base simply sees two people who share DNA, but the information for the supposed relative may be incorrect. When other people DNA matched on the same line then add their tests to the database, it is no surprise, that for example, ‘Thru lines’ software will suggest to them, that Louis Snodgrass is their ancestor also, and the mistakes become ingrained. 
 
People see the matching DNA, and assume that the link is correct, and whilst the DNA link is correct, the person identified may not be. This is why I suggest for people seeking an accurate family tree (which should be all of you), that you undertake traditional genealogical methods alongside DNA testing. Firstly build your own basic tree, and check and double check all facts before you wantonly begin adding people suggested to you from the database.
 
Ask yourself, do the dates and places match, can I find a marriage certificate for the claimed coupling, does the link meet genealogical proof standard, or is it dubious? Consider that genealogy is like reverse detective work. You may have a suspect, but can you place that suspect at the scene of the crime. Would your case be tight?
 
Many people who test their DNA and have not provided a traditional tree to link to their results, are often the same people heard to mutter, “I don’t understand my results, I have matches, but I don’t know what they mean”. Adding a family tree to your DNA kit allows you to identify how you relate to your matches, and also helps you to figure out which line of your family people descend from. You should consider at least trying to compile a small family tree to enrich your DNA experience. Three to four generations are required as a minimum amount of information, for anyone wishing to unlock the power of the ‘Thru lines’ feature on Ancestry.
 
Sometimes for whatever reason, adoption, estrangement and other birth events, people have no possibility of adding basic family trees. It is for these people, that it becomes important that the rest of us who do know our backgrounds try to at least provide some kind of tree to link to our DNA. Those trees can often help people searching for vital family connections to learn something about their genetic ancestry. As the Aunt of two adoptees, I can tell you, that is important work!
 
DNA is amazing technology and has the power to make our family trees accurate, but we must remember that it is a tool that still needs to be coupled with solid research methods if we are to create accurate pictures of our families past.

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<![CDATA[Thank a horse!]]>Fri, 15 Mar 2019 08:08:17 GMThttp://historicpaths.com/blog/thank-a-horse
Horse teams at work at Waranga Reservoir in northern Victoria 1924. From the collection of the State Library of Victoria.
​As you next fly down the road in your car, gliding over smooth wide roads, with your air conditioning on and your headlights burning bright, spare a thought for early Australian settlers, who knew none of the ease of travel that we enjoy today. For centuries before, and up until around 80 years ago, the humble horse was king.

A sure sign of prosperity in the early colony of Australia was to have a stable of well-bred horses, working horses, not racehorses. In the early days of Victoria’s colonial settlement, the front pages of the local newspapers were littered with adverts offering new breeding opportunities with the best new horse bloodlines to arrive in the colony.
 
Horses who had survived the sailing passage from the northern hemisphere became a bankable commodity, and through the breeding process, early settlers developed the ideal horse for Australian working conditions.
 
Every aspect of the successful establishment of the state that became Victoria was made so much easier by horsepower, from everyday transport to farm work and land clearing. No doubt there was lots of work in those days for blacksmiths and saddlers in keeping the horses in shoes, harnesses, saddles and yokes.
Bourke Street on the morning of the horse sales 1879.
David Syme & Co. Out of copyright. from the collection of the State Library of Victoria.
Ken and Les Yeaman riding to school at Echuca West, Victoria,
​around 1926.
© All rights reserved. From the collection of Roger Kenith Yeaman.
Children too, grew into expert horse handlers after a lifetime spent tending and riding horses, often as the only viable way to get to school. Imagine the shocked faces if one was to do the school run these days with your finest filly!
 
The same way we now race cars, at local community fairs across Victoria, local men drove their teams of horses or bullocks in competition to see who could claim the crown of the district’s finest team. Being proclaimed a winner brought with it, not just the prestige of fine horsemanship, but undoubtedly offers of work from local farmers and local construction projects. Most early farm clearing across the state was undertaken with teams of horses and bullocks doing the heaviest of work. There was also all manner of products to deliver to markets in Melbourne from inland farms.
 
By the 1850s there was a boom in carting work conveying thousands of people and their goods to and from the goldfields across Victoria. It was in this pursuit, that my own Yeaman ancestors are thought to have worked for a time.  Running a carting business would have offered a secure income compared to the backbreaking and sometimes fruitless pursuit of mining.
 
Horses were also everywhere to be seen in the city, and in 1869 there were even horse drawn trams in the Melbourne streets.[i] Horses carried water, blocks of stone to build the city buildings, and pulled shovels. By the 1870s, the roads of northern Victoria were frequented by whole families moving all their goods with the help of those trusty horses, as they made the journey further inland during the times of land selection. Drays carried household goods, building materials and people, and all the while horses were both witness and participants in every aspect of daily life.
 
Those early roads were rock hard and dusty in summer, and could easily turn treacherous and impassable in rain. Another of my ancestors William Heppell lost his life after becoming bogged in a rainstorm, as he strained his heart trying to free his dray from the mud, near Echuca in Victoria. 
A typical early colonial buggy with two horses, in northern Victoria. Driver unknown, Out of copyright.
A variety of buggies, gigs, carts and drays, some imported, and some built locally, provided the means to transport people and goods across large distances.  Buggies, like the one shown in this picture had four wheels and were usually pulled by one to two horses. Spring carts had just two wheels, and drays were usually low sided in order to allow all manner of goods to be carried upon them, including wheat bags, wool bales and other goods. Before the arrival of the train, the nation was built using just horse-drawn transport, and later, the paddlesteamer trade.
 
Outside most public buildings and stores of the 19th and early 20th century, water troughs provided sustenance to the army of horses that fuelled society’s every whim. When the First World War began, Australian troops were accompanied by around 130,000, mainly ‘Waler’ horses, who were distinct to the country.[2]
Those horses fought and died alongside our soldiers.
 
Whether it was delivering your goods to market, large scale engineering works, plowing of fields, making of roads, or simply visiting family, in those early times there was a horse ever present.

Now a century later, we once again stand on the edge of yet another transport revolution with electric vehicles and driverless cars.  One can love their car, and maybe even give it a name, but our personal connection to our form of transport in the modern age holds little of the historic bond between man and the horse. The horse may have faded from public consciousness for all but a select group of people, but we should all remember, that the world we live in today, still owes so much to this beautiful and noble animal.
 
 
SOURCES:
[1] State Library of Victoria, Blog by Paul, Victoria’s early Horse Trams, https://blogs.slv.vic.gov.au/such-was-life/victorias-early-horse-trams/
[2] https://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-04-25/australian-wwi-war-horse-breed-waler-still-being-bred/5412402
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<![CDATA[Finally the book is done...]]>Wed, 22 Aug 2018 01:46:22 GMThttp://historicpaths.com/blog/finally-the-book-is-done​Well, finally it's done! After so many years of talking with members of the Yeaman family about my work in progress, my long awaited book has finally touched down. I want to say a huge thanks to everyone involved (and there are so many of you). A project this big does not come to fruition without all the little steps along the way, and it is the sum of all the great family stories and photographs held on to, and treasured by so many of you. It's also the story of many things we didn't know about our family, the little pieces that got lost to history along the way. In the many years that this book was being researched and put together, I have often asked myself..why..why do I feel the need to do this? What makes people want to know more about their ancestors lives? Well for me, it has always been the love of learning and history, and that, as we learn more about our ancestors, we cannot help but feel the connection to them. We begin to understand their struggles and triumphs and it helps us to see them as real people, not just headstones, or dates on a page. I've come to the conclusion, that genealogy is about love. Love lives in keeping the stories alive, because it is the folklore of our lives. It ensures that the memories of the ones we love, stay close to us and will continue to live to future generations. I hope from time to time, to use this blog to share some of the other never ending amazing stories that my genealogical adventures bring to life!]]>