Creating Lazarus Kits in Gedmatch

I created an account in Gedmatch.com early in my DNA genealogy research. In 2015 a 4th cousin match to my mother’s Ancestry DNA messaged me and asked that I create an account in Gedmatch. He did not detail the advantages of using Gedmatch but he periodically continued to ask. I could see that he and my mother shared 25cM of DNA. I didn’t know what a cM was or if a 25cM match was worth investigating. I finally did create an account and discovered that their match was on chromosome 11. I compared his DNA with my mother’s and saw the people who matched 1 or both kits. I was able to see his family tree, which was also in Ancestry.com. A unique tool in Gedmatch allowed me to see that some of the people that he and/or my mom matched, were not always matches to he and my mom. I then looked at some of these non-matches for my mother and found that some did match some of my mother’s other DNA cousins. Interesting right! That is the randomness of DNA inheritance.

In 2015 Ancestry had something called DNA circles to which everyone’s DNA was assigned. I never really got how the circle thing worked and pretty soon the circles were replaced with Parent 1, Parent 2 and Both Parents subgroups. I found this tool helpful. I’d figured out how a key DNA profile was connected to my mother’s DNA. She was in the Parent 1 subgroup and her 2nd great grandmother and my mother’s 3rd great grandmother were sisters. That person’s DNA was also in Gedmatch and my mother matched her on 8 chromosomes, 10 segments including 2 segments on the 23rd. So, the whole group thing worked for me. That is until I looked recently and saw that this person’s profile in Ancestry is now in the Unassigned group. What happened!!

Throughout my research using DNA tools, I have found that what begins as a trek through shared matches with profiles along my Parent 1 branches often mysteriously goes off track and lead to matches on my Parent 2 branches. So, how did this profile that I thought was concretely attached on my mother maternal Phillips line become Unassigned. Why was this key profile not placed in the ‘Both Parents’ subgroup?

I decided to try out the Gedmatch Lazarus Kit tool to try and replicate my mother’s parents DNA profiles. I used my mother, siblings and close family on my mom’s maternal and paternal side that were in Gedmatch. To create a robust Lazarus kit for each of her parents, I had to do 2-person kit comparisons to find enough DNA profile matches to meet the 1500cM threshold required by Gedmatch. When I compared my key Phillips’ matches DNA to my mother’s DNA in an attempt to fill out her mother’s Lazarus kit and other cousins’ DNA to fill out her father’s Lazarus kit, I saw significant people show up as matches for her maternal and paternal Lazarus kits. It finally sunk in. My key Phillips match was indeed a match somewhere back in time to both my mother’s father and her mother.

I’ve traced my mother’s Parent 1, maternal line branch back to Calvert County, Maryland through Charlotte Phillips. Charlotte’s husband was Joseph ‘Young’ Smith who was born in Kentucky. This 1 part of her Parent 1 bucket. Her oldest known ancestors along her Parent 2 branches were supposedly all born in Virginia and North Carolina. One of her ancestors on the Parent 2 line has a number of matches whose ancestors lived in Caroline County, Virginia. When I looked at a map, I found the distance between Calvert County, Maryland and Caroline County, Virginia to be about 55 miles.

55 miles!!

Map, Port Royal, Virginia to Solomons Island, Maryland

What do you do, when what you thought you had nailed down in your research, turns out to be just another pivot down another rabbit hole?

Well, I am attempting to get more close cousins on both sides of my mother’s tree to upload their DNA to Gedmatch in hopes that I can nail something else down. Hopefully, these Lazarus kits will help sort things out!

Best,

Eagerly Awaiting Once More

I posted a few days ago that I was eagerly awaiting records from NARA regarding Alexander Hill’s Civil War pension. As fate would have it, I awoke the very next morning to find an e-mail message with a link to a digital document containing the remaining twenty-eight pages of his pension record! I read through the pages hoping to see if the plantation where Alexander was enslaved was mentioned and if any mention was made of his siblings.

Two witnesses provided differing information on where Alexander was enslaved. Alexander’s wife Rose testified that he had been born in Virginia and was a slave of Chodelle Rousselle who lived somewhere “…up the Mississippi River.” Rousselle died and Alexander was sold to someone named ‘Whale‘ who “brought him to the southern part of Louisiana.” Alexander told her that he’d been in New Orleans 4 years before the war. She said that Alexander had brothers and sisters in Virginia whom he unsuccessfully attempted to locate.

Jacques Darensbourg testified that he’d known Alexander for fifteen years before the start of the Civil War. Both he and Alexander had served in the 74th regiment. He could not say with any certainty if Alexander was born in Virginia. He stated that Alexander had been a slave of Felix Garcia who lived about 8 miles from Boutte in St Charles Parish. Darensbourg further testified that Alexander had not been married while a slave and that he knew of Alexander’s marriage to Rose in 1866. He said that Alexander had not lived in New Orleans before the war, but that they both enlisted in New Orleans.

So, I received the information that I had been eagerly awaiting. I found the names of 3 possible people on whose plantation Alexander may have lived. Alexander was reported to have brother and sisters who lived in Virginia. Neither Rose or Darensbourg mentioned that Alexander had a brother living in St Charles Parish.

So, it seems that my great-great grandfather Robert Hill was most likely not Alexander’s brother. Both men were born in Virginia and both lived in Boutte Station, St. Charles Parish, LA in 1870. Both reported Civil War service on the 1890 Veterans Schedule. Alexander kept his discharge papers and filed for and received a military pension. When he died in 1905, his wife Rose applied to keep his pension. Her application provided a great deal of information about her family and their movements and some information on Alexander. Robert Hill lost his discharge papers and was unable to receive a pension. I last found Robert on the 1900 US Census in the household with his daughter Celestine Crowder. I have not yet found Celestine and family on the 1910 census. I did find Celestine Crowder and family in St Mary Parish on the 1920 census working on the Alice B plantation. I found a 1939 death record for a 101-year-old Robert Hill. But have never found any record of Robert Hill living after the 1900 census. I assume that the 1939 death certificate is actually for Robert Hill Jr.

Although it seems that Alexander and Robert may not have been brothers, both were living in Boutte Station in 1870 and both had the last name of Hill. Perhaps the name ‘Hill’ is what connects the 2 men. I am now searching probate records and New Orleans ship manifests for Alexander and Robert listed together. I recently found an index listing for New Orleans notaries at https://www.orleanscivilclerk.com/notaryalpha.htm. I also found a possible manifest of an Alexander and a Robert coming to New Orleans on the same ship. I am attempting to request the detail pages regarding the manifest.

And so I am once again eagerly awaiting!

Best,

Eagerly awaiting…

I found information in 2021 that documented my enslaved ancestors with the last names Gibson, Morgan, Guy and Jenkins. All of these people were enslaved on the plantations of 2 related families: the Weeks and Palfreys. Since then, I have been searching for similar documents regarding my St. Charles Parish ancestors Robert Hill and his wife Charlotte Alexander. Robert was born about 1821 in Virginia. He was counted in the 1890 veteran’s census. According to the census, he had lost his military discharge papers and so was not able to provide information on which company or regiment he served. A few pages before Robert’s name was a listing for Alexander Hill. Alexander Hill had retained his discharge papers and in fact lived long enough to apply for and receive a pension for his Civil War service. 

Alexander served in the US Colored Infantry, Company A, Regiment 74 from September 6, 1862 to October 11, 1865. I applied for Alexander’s Civil War pension application with hopes of finding out if Alexander and Robert Hill were related. Often included in pension records is information about the siblings, or wife and/or children of the applicant. In other pension records, I have found the name of the plantation where the applicant lived. 

I requested Alexander’s file electronically July 3, for a base price without knowing how many pages it would contain. I then received an e-mail message on December 26 alerting me that the requested pages were available for download. I received 100 pages of Alexander’s pension file. Included were the names of his children and his wife, his medical records, information regarding his marriage to Rose Matthews in 1866 and deed information about land purchased in 1879. Alexander had applied for and received a pension of $20/month. He had died March 1905. Unfortunately, most of the information that I received centered around Alexander’s widow Rose, who survived him and applied to continue receiving his pension and for help with his burial. There wasn’t any information regarding his life as a slave or any mention of siblings, parents or his place of birth. 

Two weeks after I downloaded the file from NARA, I received a letter from the national archives letting me know that there were an additional 28 pages from Alexander’s pension file that I could request. I don’t know why I wasn’t informed that an additional page were available in December when I was emailed the download link. Evidently, NARA sends you up to 100 pages per request for a price. If additional pages exist in the file, they then write to you and let you know of the availability to request those additional pages. And so, I requested the additional pages. Of course I did!!

And so, I am back in the queue, waiting for someone at NARA to repull Alexander’s file, copy the pages and send me another download link. In other words, I am eagerly awaiting …

Best,

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started