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TODD DNA PROJECT

 

Introduction

Genealogy Resources

Donations and Bargains

Todd Heritage

Other Notable History

Request DNA Test Kit

DNA Testing Explained

Setting the Public Switch at FTDNA

YSearch & MitoSearch

What’s a Haplogroup?

Families Testing

Genetic Distances

DNA Results

Family Lineages

Family Trees

 

For questions or updates to this webpage please contact Cherie Ohlsson at cherie_ohlsson@yahoo.com.

 

The Todd Family DNA Project seeks to use DNA analysis to enable Todd families to determine if they share a common ancestor with other Todd families.   For ease of developing this page, I have chosen my family name “Todd” to describe the project.  Please be assured that this project is for all derivatives of the name (Todd, Tod, Todds, Todde, Tode, Toad, Tood, etc.)

 

 

The project will: 

 

  • Develop a table of genetic patterns of all Todd Families so that Todd researchers can determine whether their families have a common ancestor with other Todd families
  • Encourage Todd researchers to submit DNA samples.
  • Share the results with all participants in the project and make the results publicly available on the internet with appropriate considerations for privacy of participants

 

For example, one of the elements of the Todd Family DNA Project is to determine whether the New Jersey Todds (settled 1735), the Philadelphia Co Todds (settled 1737-1760) and the Augusta Co, VA Todds (settled 1750) are all related or not.  Another element is to see if the Maryland – born Todds who migrated to Kentucky and Ohio in the 1790s and 1800s are related to the Dorchester, Anne Arundel or Baltimore Todds who settled in Maryland in the 1600s.

 

Those who want to, once and for all, put to bed the family lore that you are related to Mary Todd Lincoln (or other famous / infamous people)…DNA testing is the way.

 

The project uses high technology DNA analysis to determine whether families share a common ancestor.  The male chromosome is passed down virtually unchanged from father to son.  So, two male Todd 7th cousins would have virtually the same male DNA pattern.  This scientific fact is useful in genealogy when one does not have documentary records to show a family connection despite circumstantial evidence that suggest a family connection.  If the DNA of the descendants of the branches one is trying to connect do not have the same DNA pattern, then one knows they are not closely related.  If the pattern does match, then there is a common ancestor at some point in the past lineage.  The technology can’t pinpoint how many generations back the ancestor is, but it can tell us if there is a common ancestor.

 

Participants joining the project are sent a lab kit in the mail.  The kit includes a “Q” tip or toothbrush type of instrument that one rubs along the inside of one’s cheek with for 30 to 60 seconds.  Then the swab is placed in an envelope and mailed to the lab.  That’s all it takes. 

 

Within 6 to 8 weeks, results are available for the sample submitted.  When enough samples are collected to make comparisons between branches of the family, a summary sheet will be supplied to each participant indicating which branches were shown to have a common ancestor.

 

 

 

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GENEALOGY RESOURCES

 

A fellow researcher sent the following page that contains a list of good resources for genealogists.  If you have a good website for that we should list here, let me know.  

 

MY FACTS PAGE - GENEALOGY RESOURCES

 

 

 

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DONATIONS & BARGAINS

 

To help the pay the costs of donations FTDNA has funds set up for each project.  If you would like to help defray the cost of tests for other people go to http://www.familytreedna.com/contribution.html.   Be sure to specify the donation is to be given to the “Todd” project.  Thank you for your generosity!

 

 

 

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TODD HERITAGE

 

 

The Scottish Todd families were allied with either the Gordon Clan or the MacTavish (or Thom(p)son) Clan…a family within a family.  The Irish definition of this affiliation is that the Todds are a “Sept” of the Clan.   A stags head is depicted on most coats of arms for Gordons and a boars head on the MacTavish coats of arms.  The Gordon’s were an affluent and distinguished family from Normandy.  For more details of the Gordon clan see http://www.electricscotland.com/webclans/dtog/gordon.html and for details of the MacTavishes see http://www.electricscotland.com/webclans/m/mactavi.html.  

 

According to http://www.mactamhais.liquidweb.com/history.htm, the name MacTavish stems from Taus Coir, (Tavis). a son born to Colin MacDuine of Lochow, (Colin Maol Maith-Good bald Colin) of the family MacDuine, and a daughter of Suibhne Rudah of Castle Sween (Lord and Toisech of Kintyre/Knapdale). Maol Maith had been married to a niece (by whom he had one son, Gillespick) of King Alexander I and upon her death, he married Suibhne's daughter (1105-1007 AD), having by her two sons, Taus or Tavis and Ivor.  In 1746 the MacTavishes (and presumably the Todds) fought with Bonnie Prince Charlie against the English and lost.  After that many MacTavishes began using the name Thom(p)son to avoid the genocide that ensued.  They fled to Ireland and the New World.

Research has found that Todds of America came from Scotland (often via Ireland) and England.  It is not known if the English Todds are descendents of the Scottish Todds, Gordon or MacTavish.  Some of the English Todds hailed from northern England, often Yorkshire.  Many were seafarers and ship’s captains.  DNA testing has shown the Scottish Todds were of Nordic descent, while the English Todds were of European descent.  If we could find testees from the MacTavish Todds, the results would be most enlightening.  Would they result in another major group, or match up with Gordon or English Todds?

The “Mary Todd Lincoln” line has been traced to the Sir James, Laird of Dunbar line.  This is not a nobility line, it is a landholder title.  They were born in "ANGUS” also called Forfarshire county in eastern Scotland.  Presumably this means that this line was from the Gordon clan.

James and his sons, Robert and John (and possibly another son, James), were captured with other Covenanters by the English after the Battle of Bothwell Bridge in 1679.  James and Robert were captured and later killed when they were Loaded on a ship (the Crown of London) with about 250 others to be shipped to the West Indies and sold as slaves.  It sank in a storm off the Orkney Islands.  The ships captain had all the holds shut and padlocked while the ship was pounded against the reef.  A few prisoners survived the ship only to be killed by the ships crew.  Only a few of the prisoners escaped.

His son John escaped and resettled in Counties Antrim & Armagh in Northeastern Ireland.  John was known as “John the Fox (Tod)” for evading the English.   All of John’s children immigrated to America.    An excellent write-up of the Scotch-Irish migration can be found at the Rockbridge County, VA GenWeb site:  http://www.rootsweb.com/~varockbr/scotpres.htm.

 

A great description of the Scots-Irish migration to America can by found in "Born Fighting, How the Scots-Irish Shaped America" by James Webb:

    "The Scots-Irish Presbyterians began trickling out of Ulster soon after the 1704 Test Acts came into force [in Ireland].  In the next two decades a rather small assortment of families, typically traveling in "parcels of 600 to 800 people, ventured across the Atlantic to test America's promise as well as its receptivity to their religion and their cultural ways [...] In this first experimental wave of emigration the Ulster emigrants scattered their arrivals amount the major ports of Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Annapolis, and Charleston, South Carolina.
    But by the early 1720's, when the large-scale migrations from Norther Ireland began, the port of choice had become Philadelphia.  Over the next five decades the overwhelming majority of Scots-Irish settlers entered the American colonies through either Philadelphia or the nearby cities of Chester, Pennsylvania, and New Castle, Delaware, which were just south of Philadelphia along the Delaware River.  From these locations the Scots-Irish settlers first spread westward into the vicinity or Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and then later followed the mountain roads southward into Virginia, North and South Carolina, and points beyond.
    From the early 1720s to the beginning of the American Revolution in 1775, there were four great surges of Scots-Irish migration.  Each was brought about not only by events in Ireland, but also by a series of incidents and incentives in different American colonies that affected both the pace of their migration and the locations they chose for settlement.  The first large migration, from 1720 to about 1730, brought them heavily to Pennsylvania.  The second, concentrated in the years 1740 and 1741, drew them to the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia and brought with them many of those who had already settled in Pennsylvania.  The third, beginning in the mid-1750's, saw a heavy influx farther down the Appalachian and Allegheny Mountains into southwest Virginia and then into North and South Carolina.  This influx included many Scottish highlanders - although they generally arrived in Wilmington, North Carolina, rather than in Philadelphia and settled in the Piedmont rather than in the mountains - as well as Scottish and English borderers, these three groups having been uprooted by political events that followed the Battle of Culloden in 1746.  The final surge, in the years just before the beginning of the American Revolution in 1775 saw large numbers of new settlers from Northern Ireland move into the communities that had already been established, especially in the southwest Virginia and the Carolinas.
    Philadelphia became the Ulster Scots' most popular port of entry for two reasons.  The first was that the Pennsylvania colony had been created with an eye toward accommodating religious freedom and thus largely welcomed the Ulster dissenters, at least initially.  And the second - equally as important- was that the communities in New England and New York wanted nothing to do with them.
    The Ulster Presbyterians who migrated to New England in the early 1700s had believed that the Puritan communities would embrace them as fellow Calvinists, but "the Puritans liked neither Scots nor Irish[...] they were shortly informed that citizenship would not be granted in any Puritan colony except by membership in the established church, which was Congregational."  As a result, most of the Scots-Irish moved off to the frontiers [...]  Feelings against them grew so strong that in 1729 a mob arose to attempt to prevent the landing of one of the ships arriving from Ulster.  "Wherever the Scotch-Irish went into New England it was made abundantly clear to them that they were unwelcome."
    Early migrations to New York and New Jersey were even smaller than those that went to New England, with much the same consequences.  There was "nothing to attract them to New York.  Its land policy was not generous, its country regions along the Hudson were taken up in great estates, and no special effort had been made...to attract colonists from Northern Ireland...only three small colonies of Scotch-Irish settle in New York throughout the eighteenth century."

He later says the Scots-Irish were lured to Pennsylvania as people to protect the pacifist Quakers against marauding Indians and into the Maryland borderland to as a frontier line against encroaching Maryland Catholics. 

 

 

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OTHER NOTABLE HISTORY

 

This section is purely for the reader’s pleasure and was a terrific suggestion from researcher Glen Todd, who donated our first item.  Learn about other Todd trivia.  We welcome any new items you think Todd researchers might be interested in reading. 

Trivia Item 1

From Glen Todd (glen@glentodd.net) who gleaned it from the History Channel:

A mailman named James G. Todd appears to have been the last victim of the legendary curse of the Hope Diamond.    It was he who delivered the package containing the diamond to the Smithsonian on Nov. 11, 1958, and after that there was a long series of disasters in his life, including his leg being crushed in a vehicle accident, injuries in a second car accident, the unexpected death of his wife, and his house burning down, all within a year of his delivery of the package.   

 

 

 

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ORDERING DNA SAMPLE KITS

 

The Todd Family DNA project seeks to include data from the various Todd DNA projects and incorporate their data.  Family Tree DNA’s (FTDNA) laboratory is recommended.  It is affiliated with Dr. Michael Hammer and the University of Arizona and tests the Y-chromosome for genetic matches between males. Results are placed in FTDNA's Y-DNA database and when 2 people show matching results, the lab will inform both parties (provided both signed the FTDNA Release Form).   Please visit the FTDNA website for more information and an explanation of Most Recent Common Ancestor (MRCA).

 

Other projects use other labs, but the results cannot be loaded into the FTDNA database.  However, if you send us the results we will match them with the members data in this project and we will add the results to our display. 

 

By ordering through FTDNA you receive project group rates, which are less expensive than standard rates.  The following Y-chromosome DNA tests are available.  Please see the FTDNA website for availability of other types of DNA testing.


The 12 marker test is best at ruling out relatedness with another participant, but
is of limited value in genealogy and is not recommended. The 25 marker test is more refined. And FTDNA is now offering the 37 marker test.  Whichever you choose now can always be upgraded later for an additional fee.

Other kits are available for testing Haplogroups.

 

By ordering the kit through our project you are agreeing to have your results incorporated with other tests and displayed on this site.


Click here, to order a DNA Sample Kit, or email one of the administrators for assistance.   Please note, that when you order your sample kit online you may string other email addresses in the email contact information.  Separate them by a semicolon.  For example:  InterestedParty1@xxx.com; InterestedParty2@xxx.com.

 

You may include anyone you wish, such as anyone who took part in paying for your test.

When you receive the test, you will find a release form.  Please complete it and return it with your sample.  This will make your results (numbers only, no personal information) accessible in online searches of the FTDNA database and will enable FTDNA to notify you of future matches.  However, it does not make your information available to other surname projects or Ysearch.

 

We strongly encourage all participants to make their results public in the FTDNA database and in YSearch.  (Information at this link was gratefully obtained from Phillip Hawkins on his excellent Hawkins surname project.

 

Lastly, if you would email your family tree to us, minus living people, we would really appreciate it, so we can add it to this site.  If you have your data on a website you may send the address for that.  Please let us know if you would be willing to be a coordinator for your specific Todd line.  If you do we post your name and email address as a contact for anyone wishing to get more information or to find other people in the tree.  The time commitment should be small.

 

For more information, contact the project co-administrators; Cherie Ohlsson (cherie_ohlsson@yahoo.com) or Terry Todd (tlt@tltodd.com).

 

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Surname Project Public Data

 

Regarding the Private/public setting that participants may select: This switch, by default, is set to private. A participant may change this to public by going to his Personal Page, and clicking on Update Contact Information. Near the bottom of the new page you will see - “Private  Restrict match notifications to your surname project.” If there is a check in the box your data is being compared only to the TODD participants. If you uncheck the box, then you will be compared to all the “Public” participants in the Family Tree DNA data bank. If you change to public, you are going to see more matches. I caution that 12/12 matches to a surname other that TODD is probably of no significance in our highly populated R1b haplogroup, however, if you show a 23/25 match (or higher) with a different surname, you probably should correspond with that individual. There might be a case of one of the ancestors being adopted or the result of a non-wedlock birth.

 

The following, a message copied from GENEALOGY-DNA-L, highlights the preceding.

 

“Max [Family Tree DNA] said that 66% of records have this flag checked, so that a search for matches can only view 1/3 of the database. The flag is set to Private by default, and I can't help but wonder if people realize the significance of this setting. (Unchecking doesn't mean that your results become "public" in the sense that anyone can see your record. It means that your record will be included when the whole database is searched for matches.)” Ann Turner GENEALOGY-DNA-L Administrator.

 

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Ysearch & MitoSearch

 

Please upload your information to Ysearch, if you have not already done so (some TODD members have not done this).  Doing this will not compromise any security that you desire to protect.

 

Family Tree DNA participants:  Go to your Personal Page and simply click Upload, to automatically upload your Y-DNA results to Ysearch.  If you then upgrade your Y-DNA test, such as from 25 Markers to 37 Markers, the Upload selection will reappear on your Personal Page, as a reminder to upload the additional Markers.

 

Also Ysearch (http://www.ysearch.org/edit_start.asp) has been enhanced so that the location for your most distant male ancestor can be entered using latitude and longitude coordinates.  It is important to update your Ysearch record with this information.  For Europe, the latitude and longitude coordinates will give your ancestor a pin on the HaploMap.  Please take a moment now and add this information.  Follow the directions at Ysearch, which include a link to a site to look up the latitude and longitude coordinates.

 

Also, you may now upload your family file (.ged).

 

If you tested with Family Tree DNA, but have not yet established a record at Ysearch.org, go to your Personal Page, and click "Ysearch."

 

If you tested at another vendor, here is the link to first create a record for your result
at Ysearch.org: http://www.ysearch.org/add_start.asp.  Remember that the different labs have different formulas and results for some markers.  Conversion routines can be found at the following address in Y-Search
:  http://www.ysearch.org/conversion_page.asp.

 

 

If you have also taken a mitochondrial test you may update your data to MitoSearch which is similar to Ysearch.  The link will appear at the top of your personal page.  Mitochondrial markers are passed from mother to child, but are only passed along by the daughters.  Since mitochondrial tests are maternal markers they are not associated with a surname.

 

 

 

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DNA EXPLAINED

 

 

John Blair has an excellent explanation of the DNA process on his Blair Surname Project.  Basically there are 43 DNA Markers which are passed from father to son and remain the same generation to generation with an occasional mutation.  This is why only males can do this test.   All Y-DNA tests allow you to identify your ethnic and geographic origins (Haplogroup), both recent and far distant on your direct male descending line. Among others, you will be able to check your Native-American or African Ancestry as well as for the Cohanim Ancestry.  A description of Haplogroups follows this section.

 

A wonderful set of videos describing DNA testing and how it can help you in your genealogy research is provided on the Family Tree DNA website at http://www.familytreedna.com/videoaudio.html.  

 

FTDNA also has an explanation of the genetic distances (when the markers are different) and what it means at http://www.familytreedna.com/gdrules_12.html.   Basically out of 25 markers tested, if you mismatch on:

 

0 markers – you are related

1 marker – you are related

2 markers – you are probably related

3 markers – you are probably not related, but more tests need to be done

4. markers – you are not related but it is vaguely possible.

5 markers – you are not related but possibly shared an ancestor over 2000 years ago.

6 markers – you are not related but possibly shared an ancestor over 5000 years ago.

7 (or more) markers – you are not possibly related.

 

 

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WHATS A HAPLOGROUP?

 

FTDNA Y-DNA tests allow you to identify your ethnic and geographic origins (Haplogroups), both recent and far distant. Among other features, this test will also be able to indicate your Native-American Ancestry and which of the 5 major groups that settled in the Americans you are most likely to be descended from.  It can also describe African Ancestry as well as other ethnic origins. 

 

Y-DNA Haplogroup Descriptions:

 

The following Haplogroup Descriptions are from the FamilyTreeDNA.com website which was the testing company used to determine the nearest Haplogroup assigment based on the individual's haplotype results from the Y-DNA test. These verbatim Haplogroup Descriptions and/or excerpts are copyrighted by FamilyTreeDNA.com and all rights to these descriptions are claimed by FamilyTreeDNA.com. These descriptions have been printed here with the permission of FamilyTreeDNA.com. These descriptions cannot be used elsewhere without the written permission of FamilyTreeDNA.com.

 

Please note that people in different Haplogroups cannot be related within many thousands of years, and that each male test result provides a prediction of the Haplogroup currently about 90% of the time. If your Y-DNA matches suggest that you belong, for example, to Haplogroup R1b, you may confirm that by ordering a Y-DNA SNP test for the R1b clade.

 

In general the following rule of thumb may be used: R1b = Western Europe, R1a = Eastern Europe, I = Nordic, J2 = Semitic, E3b = Semitic, Q3 = Native American.

Haplogroup B is one of the oldest Y-chromosome lineages in humans.

 

Haplogroup B is found exclusively in Africa. This lineage was the first to disperse around Africa. There is current archaeological evidence supporting a major population expansion in Africa approximately 90-130 thousand years ago. It has been proposed that this event may have spread Haplogroup B throughout Africa. Haplogroup B appears at low frequency all around Africa, but is at its highest frequency in Pygmy populations.

 

Haplogroup C is found throughout mainland Asia, the south Pacific, and at low frequency in Native American populations. Haplogroup C originated in southern Asia and spread in all directions. This lineage colonized New Guinea, Australia, and north Asia, and currently is found with its highest diversity in populations of India.

 

Haplogroup C3 is believed to have originated in southeast or central Asia. This lineage then spread into northern Asia, and then into the Americas.

 

Haplogroup D2 most likely derived from the D lineage in Japan. It is completely restricted to Japan, and is a very diverse lineage within the aboriginal Japanese and in the Japanese population around Okinawa.

 

Haplogroup E3a is an Africa lineage. It is currently hypothesized that this haplogroup dispersed south from northern Africa within the last 3,000 years, by the Bantu agricultural expansion. E3a is also the most common lineage among African Americans.

Haplogroup E3b is believed to have evolved in the Middle East. It expanded into the Mediterranean during the Pleistocene Neolithic expansion. It is currently distributed around the Mediterranean, southern Europe, and in north and east Africa.

 

Haplogroup G may have originated in India or Pakistan, and has dispersed into central Asia, Europe, and the Middle East. The G2 branch of this lineage (containing the P15 mutation) is found most often in Europe and the Middle East.

 

Haplogroup H is nearly completely restricted to India, Sri Lanka, and Pakistan.

 

Haplogroups I, I1, and I1a are nearly completely restricted to northwestern Europe. These would most likely have been common within Viking populations. One lineage of this group extends down into central Europe.

 

Haplogroup I1b was derived within Viking/Scandinavian populations in northwest Europe and has since spread down into southern Europe where it is present at low frequencies.

 

Haplogroup J is found at highest frequencies in Middle Eastern and north African populations where it most likely evolved. This marker has been carried by Middle Eastern traders into Europe, central Asia, India, and Pakistan.

 

Haplogroup J2 originated in the northern portion of the Fertile Crescent where it later spread throughout central Asia, the Mediterranean, and south into India. As with other populations with Mediterranean ancestry this lineage is found within Jewish populations. The Cohen modal lineage is found in Haplogroup J2.

 

Haplogroup Q is the lineage that links Asia and the Americas. This lineage is found in North and Central Asian populations as well as native Americans. This lineage is believed to have originated in Central Asia and migrated through the Altai/Baikal region of northern Eurasia into the Americas.

 

Haplogroup Q3 is the only lineage strictly associated with native American populations. This haplogroup is defined by the presence of the M3 mutation (also known as SY103). This mutation occurred on the Q lineage 8-12 thousand years ago as the migration into the Americas was underway. There is some debate as to on which side of the Bering Strait this mutation occurred, but it definitely happened in the ancestors of the Native American peoples.

 

Haplogroup R1a is believed to have originated in the Eurasian Steppes north of the Black and Caspian Seas. This lineage is believed to have originated in a population of the Kurgan culture, known for the domestication of the horse (approximately 3000 B.C.E.). These people were also believed to be the first speakers of the Indo-European language group. This lineage is currently found in central and western Asia, India, and in Slavic populations of Eastern Europe.

 

Haplogroup R1b is the most common Haplogroup in European populations. It is believed to have expanded throughout Europe as humans re-colonized after the last glacial maximum 10-12 thousand years ago. This lineage is also the haplogroup containing the Atlantic modal haplotype (HG1).

 

 

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WHERE WE ARE TODAY

 

We are currently working with the following families and seeking their permission to include their data in our website:

 

New Jersey Todds

 

1.    Andrew Todd d. 1781 Somerset County, NJ

2.    William Todd b. 1787, d. 1855 Somerset County, NJ

 

South Carolina Todds

 

  1. Archibald Todd b. c1695 Scotland

 

Massachusetts/Maine Todds

 

1.   William Todd/Todde (probably born England whose descendents migrated to Mass. And Maine.

2.   John Todd b.1621 Bradford, West Riding, Yorkshire, Eng  - d. Rowley, Essex, MA &1643 Susanna Hunt 1621-1710 (Desc. of William Todde of England above)

3.   Nathaniel Todd b. b. 15 Apr. 1718, at Newbury, Mass; d. 1782, at Kittery, Maine; (Desc. Of John of Mass and William Todde of England above).

 

Maryland Todds

 

1.    Michael Todd d 1731, Dorchester County, MD

2.    Thomas Todd  d. 1699, Anne Arundel County, MD

3.    Thomas  Todd d 1677 Baltimore

4.    Benjamin Todd b. 1749, d. 1823, married 1781 Baltimore MD d 1823 Logan County, KY

5.    John Todd  1746-1809 – MD - Bourbon County KY

6.    John Todd  b 1791 Baltimore MD

 

 

PA-VA-KY Todds

 

1.    Robert Todd  1697-1775 of PA (Great-great-grandfather of May Todd Lincoln)

2.    William  Todd b ca 1700 of PA and Augusta County, VA

3.    John Todd  1750-1813 of PA-Shelby Co,  KY

4.    John Todd  1746-1839 of VA-KY-Lincoln County, TN

5.    Andrew Todd d 1791 Louisa County, VA

6.    Andrew Todd  b 1750 VA, d 1801Tazewell County, VA & Elizabeth Sipes VA-IN (Lawrence County and Monroe County, Indiana Todds)

7.    John Todd c1754-1819 Nottingham, PA

8.    James H. Todd d.1799 North Augusta County VA

9.    John Todd d. 1775 (Quaker Todds of Chester County, PA)

10. John Todd b. 1712 Chester County, PA

11.  Hugh Todd b. c1686, d. 1772 Lancaster County, PA

12.  Unknown Todd, father of Asa Hambleton (c1780 NC – 1855 NC) by relationship with Keziah Hambleton (c1750 NC – 1802 NC).  Keziah’s father William Hambleton  Moved to Wake County NC after1750. 

13. William Tod b. Eling, England, son Joseph Todd (1645-1699) emigrated to PA

14.  John B. Todd b. 1804 Kentucky

 

 

ENGLAND Todds

 

1....WILLIAM TODD born about 1793 Berwick, England/Scotland* m. ISABELLA

(*Berwick is on the border between and has changed hands between England and Scotland a number of times.  It is about 25 miles from Dunbar where the Mary Todd Lincoln ancestors lived.  Northumberland is about  20 miles south of Berwick.)

 

 

Richard McMurtry has a fabulous website with a tremendous amount of Todd information. All Todd Descendents owe Richard a debt of gratitude for this information that all started with his trying to find the letters written in the 1890’s by a Simeon Semour Todd telling about the McMurtry-Todd connections in Virginia.  You will find his website it at: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~mcmurtriecfr/richard/todd/toddentrance.htm

 

You can also link back to Terry Todd’s project information pages at http://www.tltodd.com/~tlt/genealogy/.

 

 

 

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GENETIC DISTANCES

 

A was chart supplied by Richard McMurtry to show the genetic differences between participants.

 

CLICK HERE to see that chart.

 

 

 

 

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