mccabe family tree
An extension to 67 markers would provide an answer. Kit's 153311 and 148651. Kit 147686. The push pins are color-coded by the type of matches, exact, 1-step, 2-step, etc. At 67 markers the DNA from Kit 95179 also matches 65/67 with kit 145047 (Group C-3). [Berkeley County shares a northwestern border with Washington County, Maryland, which borders (on the north) Franklin County, PA.] From this immigrant ancestor, Luke McManus, to the grandfather of the provider of kit 95179 are the following men: James Elliott McManus (b. According to one compilation (found at Family tree of the Mccabe Web Site on MyHeritage. Retrieved from, Hillsborough Victims (retreived 21st March 2021). Some of the first settlers of this family name were: 2000- 2023 Swyrich Corporation, all rights reserved. The person with the surname of Cabeen (Kit 56221) hypothesized that his Cabeen name may have been derived from the McCabe surname. For more information on this haplogroup google on "E1b1b1". The family history (not yet documented) suggests that this Cabe/McCabe family came to North Carolina from Maryland, the Valley of Virginia, or perhaps Pennsylvania. The MaCabes lost their estates after the battle of Aughrim in 1691. Belfast is the capital of Northern Ireland (U.K.), with the majority of the city in County Antrim, and the remainder in County Down (both counties within the historic province of Ulster). Spelling variations of this family name include: McAbbe, Caybe, McCaibe, MacAbe, Abee, McAbeee, McAbbee, Abbee, McCaybe, Cabe, Abeee, MacCabee, MacCabe, McCabe, Cabbe, McAbee, Caibe and many more. Family oral history suggests that his father (the immigrant) took on the surname of the man (Denny) who paid for the family's transportation to America and his birth surname was perhaps "McMurphy" or something similar. The provider of the DNA for Kit 147686 states that his earliest known McCabe ancestor (his g. g. grandfather) was John McCabe, born in England in 1832, married in 1852 and worked as a carpenter. During the middle of the 14th century, they were granted lands in Leitrim, Cavan, Monaghan and Meath. [Four of the ten men have exactly the same values for the first 12 markers as those men in Group A; these are kits numbered: N25228, N36342, 23747, and 37202.] This MPE probably occurred within the past three generations, and the event has established another and different McCabe DNA line. They with sons John and James came in the Hope, also two daughters and two other children. [Other sources state rather emphatically that the settlers from Philadelphia arrived on the Brigantine, Betsey on June 10, 1767, with John Hull as the Master, starting from Philadelphia on May 4th 1767.] Geni requires JavaScript! The McCabe Family DNA study was originally started in the spring of 2001 in an attempt to find the father of an 1840's McCabe orphan. In 1865 he again left home, this time for New Zealand, and landed in Auckland in May of the same year. The men in Group C-1 all have roots in Ops Township (community of Lindsay), Victoria County, Ontario, Canada. 12% of Mccabe men worked as a Laborer and 9% of Mccabe women worked as a Teacher. Please join us in collaborating on MCCABE family trees. At 37 markers he has a 37/37 match with kit 1106 in Group A and only a 35/37 match with the modal value of Group G which is held by both kits 139946 and 146567 discussed immediately above. HAPLOGROUP DETERMINATION for the above mentioned Cabe, McCabe, and Cain families: Results of a deep glade test for kits #139489 and 140524 indicate that these Cabe/McCabe/Cane families have a haplogroup of R1b1b2a1b5, suggesting an origin in northern Ireland. 1775). Francis McCabe is reported to have had two sons, Francis, Jr., and Simon McCabe, and one daughter, Elizabeth McCabe, all three of whom came to Ops before 1862. A possible explanation for the close matches of this Cain-named man with the Cabe/McCabe surnames, as suggested by the provider of the kit, is that a McCabe-named male may have moved to the Isle of Man and due to illiteracy or a desire to "fit in" changed his name to McCane, which was a much more common surname on the island and then the "Mc" was eventually lost. His son, Felix McCabe, was born on the farm in 1848. He married (1) CATHERINE U.. She was born Abt. In summary, there is no doubt that the provider of Kit 145047 descends from the McCabe immigrant to Nova Scotia in the following way: James McCabe (the immigrant), John McCabe, David McCabe, Daniel McCabe, Ernest McCabe (grandfather of the kit provider). With a genetic distance of two and knowing that these men do not share a common ancestor in the last three generations, FTDNA calculates that the probability of the kit provider sharing a common ancestor at 67 markers is 84.5% at 8 generations back. Kit 119756, of course, matches the DNA of kit 49932, but at 37 markers, FTDNA reports that this kit has no matches whatsoever in their database. X GROUP H, McMannes (etc.) This sequence of marker values applied to about 50 of the men in the McCabe project who have had their Y-DNA tested at the 67 marker level. The name is sometimes used (incorrectly) as a synonym for Northern Ireland." However, other oral history suggested that James Edward McCabe was born in Beaver Falls, PA, but no records have been found to confirm this location. Kit 127552. As more and more McCabes have their DNA tested, it IS possible that a closer match will be found. Charles and Catherine McCabe's son, Alexander Mitchell McCabe, born in Columbia, South Carolina, moved to Knox County, Tennessee, and is the grandfather of the man who provided the DNA for this kit. Residents of Scotland, Australia, and USA. Results at 67 markers showed a genetic distance of 6 with kit 9587 which initially raised a question about whether or not the individuals who provided the DNA for Kits 9587 and 151400 were very closely related, as Kit 151400 has a genetic distance of ONLY 4 with two individuals in the Cabe family study (Group G). Kit 106868 (McCabe) has been tested and it DOES have this unique configuration. For discussion of the mtDNA Results of this McCabe project, go to the bottom of this page. Participating in a group DNA project produces savings as compared to ordering as an individual without participation in a group project. Eventually Y-DNA proved the father to be James B. McCabe and his ancestor was Owen McCabe, an immigrant about 1837 from County Tyrone in Ireland. At 25 and 37 markers he has no significant matches with anybody at FTDYA, making his haplotype very unique. Based on the results posted by September 2009, these two men have the Modal (most common) values for all 67 markers for Group G. His ancestry from his earliest Cabe ancestor is as follows: William Cabe (b. ca 1792 Wayne County, Tennessee, wife Nancy Staggs); John S. Cabe (1819-1890, Tennessee and Arkansas, wife Louise Biffle); Jacob Biffle Cabe (1854-1881, wife Louiza Henson); Thomas Franklin Cabe (1880-1962, wife Emily Schooler); Thomas Carl Cabe (1910-1983, wife Vida Clements), grandfather of the kit provider. The resulting assignment was to haplogroup R1b1b2a1b5b, which is defined by the M22 SNP (Single Nucleotide Polymorphism), and indicative of the Northwest Irish Modal Haplotype. Children Show all. At 67 markers this strong relationship does not continue. M groups - highlighted in green - 7 groups - The McCabe men in groups M-2, M-3, and M-4 all match one or more of the men in the M-1 group (McCabe men who currently live in Ireland in 2022). Fermanagh County is located in the historic province of Ulster. Henrys son, James McCabe, emigrated in 1834 to near Bothwell, Ontario, Canada and was the g. g. grandfather of the provider of Kit 127552, the first man tested in this group. Click. Hugh McCabe family tree Family tree Explore more family trees. Kit 97685. Mary Jane Lenniore 1861 - Unknown. Individuals within this group have been tested for the number of markers listed. Retreived from, HMAS Sydney II, Finding Sydney Foundation - Roll of Honour. An early hypothesis was that this James McCabe (Nova Scotia) and Owen McCabe [Cumberland County (later Perry County), Pennsylvania, Group A in this study] were very likely brothers, since they were apparently both from the north of Ireland, and both arrived in Philadelphia in the 1740s. Continuation of kit 156857's study through 67 markers would provide more definitive information. (McCabe?) 7. The Cabe-named men discussed above, definitely, without doubt, share a common ancestry with the McCabe-named man who provided the DNA for Kit #176320, as this man matches 66/67 markers (genetic distance of only one) with Kits 139946 and 146567. County Monaghan is in the historic province of Ulster, but now is in the Republic of Ireland. Paper trail documentation shows that providers of kits 9587 and 159052 are fourth cousins of each other, each descended from different sons (Alexander and Thomas) of the immigrants son, JAMES. The results for 67 markers indicate that they match 65/67, and thus have a difference of only two mutation steps, one marker being a fast-mutating marker. Kits 825, 826, 827, 1106, 54231 Owen married Julia McCabe. This MCCABE index was pre-built so it loads quickly. Irish (especially Monaghan and Cavan): Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Cba 'son of Cba' a nickname or personal name of obscure origin. They also do NOT have any close matching with other men with the surname of McMannes (of various spellings) who have been tested at 67 markers (except for one additional McManus-type spelling whose results are not included here but is a cousin of one of the men included here). ", the same as their mother. Knowing that the kit provider does not share a common ancestor with these two other men at least within the last four generations, FTDNA calculates that this kit provider has a 68% chance of sharing ancestors in the last 4 - 6 generations with these other two men. 2. Parents. However, the DNA from kit 135391 has a number of near matches with other men in this DNA project. Surname meaning for McCabe. Are these significant matches? The provider of Kit 97685 lives in Scotland but traces his ancestry back to County Cavan of Ireland. At 67 markers he matches 63/67 with kit 139946 (Group G) and 135391 (Group C-1). They had 3 children: Joan McCabe and 2 other children. There are minor differences in the groups A through M-4, and these differences will be explained in the Results section. The man who provided the DNA for this kit traces his McCabe ancestry to John McCabe, born 1820 in County Armagh, Ireland, and who died in 1898 in Pinebrook, NJ, and whose wife was Catherine Sheridan. XII GROUP J, R1b1 McCabes NOT MATCHING ANY OTHER MEMBERS IN THIS PROJECT. Further, the provider of kit 1106 has a very strong paper trail of descent from Owen McCabe (Group A), but at 37 markers he also differs from the Group A modal values at 37 markers at two fast-mutating markers, and there is no evidence of any descendant of Owen McCabe being in Tennessee in the late 1850's. Further, these three are more closely related to each other than to the other members of this group as shown by their results at 67 markers. This was about 30% of all the recorded Mccabe's in USA. The sequence of Y-DNA marker values unique to men who have McCabe ancestry is listed in the following paragraphs. There he died in the 1805-1815 period, either in southern Allegheny County or northern Washington County. S groups - highlighted in blue - 5 groups - These McCabe men do not match the M or C groups, instead they match other surnames depending on the S group they are in. Consequently, he has a genetic distance (GD) of only one (one-step mutation difference) with kit 151400 (marker 576, a fast mutator). Kit 86111. Another McCabe has joined this DNA project and claims descent from the 1760's immigrant to Nova Scotia, James McCabe through the immigrant's son James and down to the grandfather of the man tested (thus showing a closer paper trail connection to kit 9587 than the other two McCabes in this group): Thomas McCabe, James McCabe, and Anthony S McCabe. The definitive publication on this family is the 1983 book by Margie Cabe Keener and Elsie Cabe Wheatcroft, The Genealogy of 1500 Descendants of Amos, Samuel, Stephen and Zachariah Cabe (McCabe). By 1838, the British New Zealand Company had begun buying land from the Maori tribes, and selling it to settlers, and, after the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840, many British families set out on the arduous six month journey from Britain to Aotearoa to start a new life. Showing that a specific McCabe family line has ancestry with members of the Propes, Ball, and Beatty (Beattie) families (Group E). Retrieved from, New Zealand Yesteryears Passenger Lists 1800 to 1900 (Retrieved 4th November 2011). The value of marker DYS 459a for both of these men is 7, whereas all others in this McCabe study have a value of 9. These men were divided into groups A through M-4 (located on the Classic and Colorized Charts), and also, men in group Q initially followed this sequence of marker values although they need to extend their testing to the 67 marker level. There is a possibility that there is another sequence of Y-DNA markers unique to men who have McCabe ancestry. NOTE 4: The Y-DNA MOST DISTANT KNOWN ANCESTOR DISTRIBUTION MAP was added by FTDNA in May 2009, but originally only available on participant's personal pages. The surnames McCabe (Irish: Mac Cba)[2] and MacCabe(/mkeb/ muh-KAYB) are Irish and Scottish surnames. The descent from David L. Cabe down to the kit providers grandfather is as follows: Noah Richard Cabe (1860-1927, wife Fontheroy Heathman) and Leonard E. Cabe (1883-1959, wife Mary E. Bishop), grandfather of the kit provider. The descent down to the g. grandfather of the person tested is as follows: James Harrison McCabe (b. MacCabe landowners are more associated with County Monaghan and County Cavan, but the principal families of the name lost all their estates after the Battle of Aughrim in 1691. View Census Data for Mccabe | Data not to scale. They match each other but clearly not the men in the C, M, and S groups - all who are of the R-M269 haplogroup. This John Cabe/McCabe was enumerated on the 1790 census (John McCabe) in Lincoln County, NC and presumably this same John Cabe/McCabe has an 1810 will in Haywood County (far western portion of NC). Retrieved from. He DOES match 33/37 with two other participants in this McCabe DNA project, kits 23747 and 37202, neither of which has extended their study to 67 markers. Kits 127552 and 147989. d: Bef. Some members of this Cabe family had been tested previously with another DNA testing company (Genebase), and amazingly, the results showed a strong relationship to some of the McCabes in this FTDNA testing, but only 35 markers were the same markers between the two companies. The unique sequence of Y-DNA marker values for the McCabe project for the first 12 DYS markers is: DYS393 is 13, DYS390 is 25, DYS19 is 14, DYS391 is 11, DYS385 is 11-14 (counted as 2 marker values), DYS426is 12, DYS388 is 12, DYS439 is 11, DYS3891 is 13, DYS392 is 13, DYS389ii is 31. At 37 markers he matches 36/37 for a man with the surname of Fisher, but whose study ended at 37 markers. as shown at the bottom of the page. THESE three men probably have a more recent common ancestor with each other than with other Cabe-named men in this project. Kit 160306. At 12 markers, he, amazingly, matches 11/12 the DNA provided by Kit 129216 (also in Group J), with the one mismatch being marker DYS 439, a fast-mutating marker. Like a window into their day-to-day life, Mccabe census records can tell you where and how your ancestors worked, their level of education, veteran status, and more. The nickname or personal name Cba is of uncertain origin. This VERY STRONG MATCH definitely confirms the paper records that the Cabe name most definitely was derived from the McCabe name. 3. This provider of this kit has the Western Atlantic Modal Haplotype and as such has over 1000 matches at 12 markers, the current number of markers for which he has been tested. A funeral service will be held on Monday, May 1st 2023 at 12:00 PM at the same location. Showing that a specific McCabe-named male who had his McCabe name changed to the YOUNG surname at a very young age, is most likely descended from the Young family, not the McCabe family (Group J, Kit 129216). These results indicate that Amos Cabe most likely initiated a new Cabe family DNA line. The family of James and Anne Pettigrew McCabe arrived at the Philadelphia Plantation in Pictou, Nova Scotia, in 1767, as one of six families who were the first immigrants from Philadelphia to Pictou. They were known as mercenaries to the O'Reillys and the O'Rourkes, but then became their own Sept in Breffny and their Chief was the 'Constable of the two Breffnys.'. In the August 1818 Court term of Orange Co., NC., William Cabe was appointed guardian to Lydia Cabe and Margaret Cabe, orphans of John Cabe, dec'd, and William CAIN, Jr., signed as surety for William Cabe's bond. Considering just these 35 markers, the Cabe results included a match of 34/35 markers with the Owen McCabe family (Group A in this FTDNA study, whose Irish roots are in Ulster). At 67 markers, kit 106868, amazingly, has a 67/67 match with a man with the surname of Propes (closer than with his documented third cousin, once removed). James Mccabe 1844 - Unknown. Marble's book (referenced above, p. 21) states that this David McCabe was a son of John McCabe, son of the immigrant, James McCabe, and that in 1818, this David McCabe left West River, [Nova Scotia] and went to Skaneateles, N.Y. [Skaneateles is in Onondaga County, and about 20 miles southeast of Butler, NY, where Daniel and Eleanor were married.] The provider of Kit #145047 can be considered as having the DEDUCED ANCESTRAL HAPLOTYPE of this Nova Scotia James McCabe family, at all 67 markers, ASSUMING that he has a common ancestry (probably in the northern part of the island of Ireland) with many of the Cabe family members in Group G (genetic distance of three with three members of Group G at 67 markers), when considering markers CDYa and 557. He was apparently orphaned at a very young age. This is an AMAZING CONCLUSION since the provider of kit 145047 had no hypothesis whatsoever, that he descended from James McCabe, the 1760s immigrant to Nova Scotia! Kit 151400. For the Y-DNA results, the kit # is used to link the results with a specific individual known to the Group Administrator. A Cain/Cabe surname connection HAS been found in Orange County, North Carolina, with three records (as reported by Margie Cabe Keener: (1), "At the November 1824 Term of Court, administration of the estate of Joseph Latta, dec'd, with the will annexed, was granted to Thomas Gaddis, who entered into bond with Jonathan P. Sneed and William Cain (either Sr. or Jr.), securities, in the sum of $5000.
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