↑Kingman, Bradford, History of North Bridgewater , Plymouth County, Massachussets, from its first settlement to the present time, with family registers. (Boston, MA: Self published, 1866). (pdf) p. 567, #236.
↑ Briggs, Ephraim and Rebekah Waterman. We and Our Kinsfolk: Briggs, Their Descendants and Ancestors, with a Few Collateral Branches. Mary Balch Briggs; Beacon Press, 1887. Page 30.
Is Ambrose your ancestor? Please don't go away! Login to collaborate or comment, or contact
the profile manager, or ask our community of genealogists a question.
Sponsored Search by Ancestry.com
DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships.
Paternal line Y-chromosome DNA test-takers:
John Kingman :
Family Tree DNA Y-DNA Test 700 markers, haplogroup R-BY3966, FTDNA kit #N145956, MitoYDNA ID T10429[compare] +
Y-Chromosome Test 15000 markers, haplogroup R-CTS12058
Peter Kingman :
Y-Chromosome Test 37 markers, haplogroup R-P312
It is likely that these
autosomal DNA
test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with Ambrose:
~1.56%John Kingman :
AncestryDNA, GEDmatch T782948[compare], yourDNAportal JOHf4050974, Ancestry member jakingman
+
Family Tree DNA Family Finder, GEDmatch T782948[compare], yourDNAportal JOHf4050974, FTDNA kit #N145956
Featured German connections:
Ambrose is
18 degrees from Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, 22 degrees from Dietrich Bonhoeffer, 24 degrees from Lucas Cranach, 20 degrees from Stefanie Graf, 22 degrees from Wilhelm Grimm, 24 degrees from Fanny Hensel, 26 degrees from Theodor Heuss, 17 degrees from Alexander Mack, 33 degrees from Carl Miele, 18 degrees from Nathan Rothschild, 22 degrees from Hermann Friedrich Albert von Ihering and 22 degrees from Ferdinand von Zeppelin
on our single family tree.
Login to see how you relate to 33 million family members.