I have lived in Scarborough, Toronto, Pickering, Gray County, and Collingwood in Ontario.
I have lived in Calgary, Alberta.
I have lived in Victoria and on Salt Spring Island in British Columbia.
I have lived in Santa Barbara, Isla Vista, Goleta, and San Carlos in California.
About Me
My traditional Irish name: Muireadhaigh Ua Maol Dhómhnaigh
Author/Editor
Among my roles in life is author/editor. The majority of my work has been on behalf of corporate interests, and I have never been a writer of fiction. One of the projects on which I served as an author/editor was The Discipline of Organizing.[1]
As part of my duties with the Acadian Project, I have worked on Acadian DNA sources.
Hypertext and the World Wide Web
I have been a proponent of hypertext since 1985. I had worked with several early hypertext systems prior to 1993, which is when I learned about the Mosaic browser. During the early days of the World Wide Web, I was involved in the development of HTML and XML as technical standards, as a member of IETF and W3C Working Groups. I became a member of the International World Wide Web Conference Committee in 1997, and played a role in several WWW conferences between 1994 and 2001.
During that time, I was fortunate enough to have met, chatted and dined with some of the pioneers of the Web and Hypertext:
I am profile manager for a larg-ish number of profiles on WikiTree, many of whom have a direct or indirect relation to me, and many others for whom I have adopted the profile to ensure that someone takes responsibility for genealogically or historically important people. If I have created or adopted a profile for whom you believe you have a stronger claim by virtue of project authority or being closer kinfolk, please let me know, directly on the profile in question; I will be notified and we can then discuss.
Genetic Genealogy
I took up genetic genealogy as a hobby around 2018. Several descendants of my grandparents have DNA at Ancestry and some at FTDNA; my own mtDNA kit represents my maternal grandmother's line and my yDNA kit represents my paternal grandfather's line; a cousin's yDNA kit represents my maternal grandfather's line. Cousins near and far have connected their yDNA kits to represent the Maloney line back as far as it goes. Many cousins have connected their mtDNA to represent their native bloodline: Hg=C1c. And, of course, there are Ancestry, MyHeritage, and GEDmatch.
Generous Genealogist Awarded by Peter Roberts who wrote: "Thank you for making use of WikiTree’s DNA features as they were designed."
See the Research Notes for further information about my family heritage and see also DNA Confirmations under Sources for atDNA, xDNA, and yDNA confirmations.
To aid WikiTree in the administration of my account should I be incapacitated, or in the event of my death, I hereby give permission for all private profiles I'm managing to be transferred to Peter Maloney and/or Janice Knight whether or not he/she is currently on the Trusted Lists. I want my profile to be preserved, including connection of my DNA kits at Ancestry, MyHeritage, GEDmatch, mitoYDNA, and YFull.
Murray Maloney Biography is an auto-biography which is intended to be copied into his profile after his death.
Research Notes
Maternal Lines
My maternal heritage is Macedonian. My maternal grandparents' homes were in in the old Ottoman Empire village of Trsje southeast of Lerin and bordering on Kastoria, in Aegean Macedonia ; known today as Trivounon, near Florina, in northern Greece.[2][3]
Click on Surname to view EKA - Earliest Known Ancestor
I rely heavily upon the book "T'rsye: Its History... Its Legacy" by Vasil Stoikov, plus analysis of DNA matches on the various platforms. I also share some of my findings with the "Trsye Benevolent Society" group on Facebook.
Murray Maloney has Slavic Roots.
Because my earliest known Macedonian ancestors were born about 1800, and all records from that period are forever lost, I can't hope to fathom their older ancestry genealogically. So, I do my own genetic genealogy research. My maternal grandmother's DNA heritage includes a mix of Illyria, Panonia, Lombardy, Albania, Greece, Turkey, and Georgia. My maternal grandfather's DNA heritage includes Bulgaria, Romania, Ukrania, and Russia.
My paternal heritage includes Irish, Scottish, English, French, German, Mi'kmaq, American, and early New England colonists originating from England and Scotland. Their North American homelands included Acadia, Quebec and New England; specifically Gaspe, New Brunswick, Maine, New Hampshire, and Boston.
Click on Surname to view EKA - Earliest Known Ancestor
My father's patrilineal Maloney line extends back to my 3rd great-grandfather, William Moloney, who was an Irish lad who was pressed into duty as an English foot soldier in the American Revolutionary War. After the war, he migrated to Percé, Gaspé, Quebec. He married Marie Josephe Becker in 1787 at Carleton, Bonaventure, Quebec.
My paternal grandmother, Winnifred Anne (McKinney) Maloney was born in Canada, but her entire lineage originates in Ireland. Her earliest known ancestors are from 1775-1800. Their trails have grown cold, but I do have some intriguing Nordic DNA that I attribute to the McKinneys.
An 8th great-grandfather, William Alexander Gowen, was a Scottish soldier captured by troops of Cromwell in the Battle of Dunbar, 3 Sept 1650. He was listed on a manifest of prisoners arriving on the Unity. He was sent to the Great Works sawmill in Berwick, Maine. He married Elizabeth, daughter of Nicholas Frost and sister of Charles Frost. Their son Nicholas would marry Abigail, daughter of Benoni Hodson.
A 6th great-grandfather, John Milliken was probably born in Scotland, but possibly born at Boston after his Scottish parents crossed the pond . He began in Boston and made their way to Scarborough, he joined with an Alger/Wilmot line, and his son Nicholas joined with a Norman/Mulberry line, and his son Lemuel joined with Phebe of the Gowen and Lord line. The Milliken family is notable for founding communities in Maine, for their commerce and industry, and their conflicting roles in the Battle of Baggaduce, during the Revolutionary War.
My 6th great-grandfather, William McIntyre, was an Ulster Scot immigrant, who had arranged with Samuel Waldo, on 18 April 1735, to settle on St. George's River at Warren, Maine. He was grandfather of Rev. John Urquhart's wife, Mary Jane McIntyre
My 4th great-grandfather, Reverend John Urquhart, migrated from Scotland to Maine, before the American Revolution; he married Mary Jane McIntyre, they subsequently migrated to first Prince Edward Island and then to New Brunswick. He was the first settled Presbyterian minister on the St George's, at Warren, and at Union River in Maine, and on the Miramichi River and at Tabusintac in New Brunswick. He is a registered United Empire Loyalist.
John Buckley was my 3rd great-grandfather. His line is a dead-end. We think that he may be English (most recently from England), but he may alternately be connected to the English immigrant Bulkeley family in Marshfield, Massachusetts. There's not enough genealogical or genetic evidence to draw a firm conclusion.
My 3rd great-grandparents, William Lewis Urquhart and Margaret Milliken were born during the American Revolution. They married in 1799 at Hancock, Maine, where their son, Louis William Urquhart was born. They later relocated to the Loyalist settlement of Tabustintac, New Brunswick. They are my American ancestors.
English Immigrants into Colonial New England
Murray Maloney has English ancestors.
Margaret Milliken's Colonial New England Ancestor line(s) trace back to the early 1600s on the untamed frontier in Maine and New Hampshire, through the Wars with 'les Canadiens et les Indiens' , and through the Revolution. The ancestors mentioned here all migrated from England. Many were Puritans. Some were or became Quakers. At Dover and Kittery and Scarborough.
Margaret Milliken had a eighteen (18) Puritan Great Migration ancestors. Their names are mainstays of early New England genealogy.
One of my 9th great-grandfathers and two of my 8th great-grandfathers (brothers) are among the Puritan villains in the story of the Quaker women who were driven out of Dover, New Hampshire, in 1662.
Later arrivals — These English ancestors arrived in New England after 1640, or we just aren't sure exactly. Nonetheless, each of them have their own stories.
Through these ancestors, four American Presidents are my cousins:
My 5th great-grandfather, Johann Becker, immigrated to Canada about 1750 or so. He married Marie Anne David at Notre Dame in Quebec City on 1 September 1766; their daughter, Marie Josephe, married William Moloney.
These Frenchmen took native Mi'kmaq or Metis women as spouses. With the exception of Guillaume Capela, whose French records have been found, their European histories are entirely unknown; we don't know how, when, or why they came to be at the Baie de Chaleurs in those times. We are told that Guillaume Capela and François David were fishermen who married unnamed native women.
My earliest known French immigrant ancestor, my 7th great-grandfather Guillaume Capela, was born in France in 1672 and was already battle scarred and hospitalized in Quebec City by 1690; his son-in-law, my 6th great-grandfather Olivier Michel, left records from the 1730s of family matters at Quebec City and business and legal matters involving les Seigneurs de Restigouche, Miramichi, et Nepisiguit.
We know nothing of the European histories of the Frenchmen Jean Baudot and his son-in-law Jean Chicoine dit Cotton; their pasts are inscrutable. My 6th great-grandfather, Jean Boudot had a son and two daughters with an indigenous woman; 5th great-grandfather Jean Chicoine married Marie Boudot, and their granddaughter would marry my 2nd great-grandfather Bill Maloney.
Little is known about my 6th great-grandfather François David, except for his children's names and the strong suggestion that he had a unnamed native wife. His granddaughter Marie Anne David will marry Johann Jacob Becker dit Blondin at Notre Dame in Quebec City on 1 September 1766; their daughter, Marie Josephe, married William Moloney.
Native Roots Research
I am active on WikiTree, mitoYDNA, YFull, FTDNA, Ancestry, et al. Studying my connection with at least two native families, whose E.K.A.s were born before 1700, and a third line which has not yet been positively identified with DNA. I, myself, do not have native matrilineal descendant; instead, I rely upon the mtDNA kits of two cousins at FTDNA, mitoYDNA, and YFull to study matches with descendants of the Caplan sisters, and to compare their Hg=C1c10a with other Hg=C1c historical, archaeological, and scientific samples, including Abenaki, Beothuk, Cherokee, Chickasaw, and Mi'kmaq. I administer the C1c group at YFull.
My 7th great-grandmother was an Unknown Mi'kmaq woman who married Guillaume Capela (aka Caplan); they had issue. Her matrilineal descendants, have provided us with twenty-seven (27) modern mtDNA test results reporting Hg=C1c at FTDNA, two (2) of those kits are also reporting subclade Hg=C1c10a on YFull's updated haplotree. A descendant of Catherine Duval also reports an identical Hg=C1c10a match with the Caplan descendants, on YFull, as we had expected.
My 6th great-grandmother was an unknown indigenous woman who married an unknown Frenchman named Boudot; they had issue. Marie Boudot and her sister Louise are the E.K.A.s of four (4) modern mtDNA test results reporting Hg=D1 at FTDNA.
I am studying the genealogy of several test kits identifying as Cherokee and Chickasaw who are also reporting Hg=C1c at FTDNA.
Some of these kits originate in the Mississippi Delta region, so I am trying to analyze migrations paths. There were two phases of C1c migration from Acadia: first, circa 1700, contemporaneous with d'Iberville to the Mississippi Delta; and then again later, during Le Grand Derangement, circa 1750-60s, like Anne Marie LeBlanc (1732-1812), for example, whose matrilineal blood line links Pentagöuet, an early capital of Acadia (modern Castine, Maine) and modern New Orleans, Louisiana, which was founded by d'Iberville's brother deBienville.
My New England kin were sometimes on opposite sides of a battle with my French Canadian and native kin, in the border lands, between New England and New France. Some were killed. Captives were taken, and sometimes traded, for profit and for concessions.
Ann Heard (abt.1681-1750) of Dover, N.H. was my 1st cousin 9x removed. She was captured by Abenaki Indians during the Raid on York (24 January 1692), and taken to Montreal to begin a new life as Marie Anne Prévost. She was baptized, married twice, had many children, and lived out her days in the Montreal suburb of Pointe-Claire. (Among her many descendants are entertainer Dan Akroyd, Quebec Prémier François Legault, and hockey star Mario Lemieux.)
Sources
↑The Discipline of Organizing (4th ed.)/ edited by Robert J. Glushko.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. Information organization.
2. Information resources management.
3. Metadata.
I. Glushko, Robert J., editor of compilation.
Z666.5.D57 2013
025—dc23
(Principal Authors: Robert J. Glushko, Jess Hemerly, Murray Maloney, Kimra McPherson, Robyn Perry, Vivien Petras, Ryan Shaw, and Erik Wilde)
I would welcome any requests to join in a DNA triangulation, whether through autosomal DNA matches at Ancestry et al., or through yDNA or mtDNA matches with me and/or the cousin kits that I manage.
Paternal and maternal relationships are confirmed by an AncestryDNA test match between Murray Maloney and Peter Maloney. Their most-recent common ancestors are Lawrence Owen Maloney. and Lena (Phillips) Maloney. Predicted relationship from AncestryDNA: Brother, based on sharing 2786 cM across 45 segments, longest segment: 156 cM, 50-57% shared DNA. Confidence: Extremely High.
Maternal relationship is confirmed by a Family Tree DNA autosomal DNA match of 93.33 cM segment on the X chromosome between brothers Murray Maloney and Peter Maloney. Their most-recent common ancestor is Lena Phillips, the mother of both Murray Maloney and Peter Maloney. Confidence: Extremely High.
Full-sibling relationship with Peter Maloney confirmed by AncestryDNA test match test matches cited above.
Paternal and maternal relationships are confirmed by an AncestryDNA test match between Murray Maloney and Peter Maloney and their niece KM. Their most-recent common ancestors are Lawrence Owen Maloney. and Lena (Phillips) Maloney. Predicted relationship from AncestryDNA: Niece, based on sharing 1730 cM across 41 segments and 2096 cM across 43 segments, respectively. Confidence: Extremely High.
Paternal relationship is confirmed through Y-chromosome DNA test results on Family Tree DNA. Murray Maloney, FTDNA kit # IN41520, and his 1st cousin, PM, FTDNA kit # IN43035, match at a Genetic Distance of 2 on 111 markers, thereby confirming their direct paternal lines back to their most-recent common ancestor who is Edward "Sydney" Maloney, the grandfather of both Murray Maloney and P.M.
Paternal relationship is confirmed through Y-chromosome DNA test results on Family Tree DNA. Murray Maloney, FTDNA kit # IN41520, and his 3C1r cousin, Nick Maloney, FTDNA kit # IN89047, match at a Genetic Distance of 3 on 111 markers, thereby confirming their direct paternal lines back to their most-recent common ancestor who is William "Bill" Maloney, the 2nd great-grandfather of Murray Maloney and 3rd g-gf of N.E.M.
Paternal relationship is confirmed through Y-chromosome DNA test results on Family Tree DNA. Murray Maloney, FTDNA kit # IN41520, and his 4th cousin, Eddie Maloney, FTDNA kit # IN68671, match at a Genetic Distance of 7 on 111 markers, thereby confirming their direct paternal lines back to their most-recent common ancestor who is William Moloney, the 3rd great-grandfather of both Murray Maloney and Eddie Maloney.
Descendant of an unknown patrilineal Maloney ancestor before 1730.
Paternal relationship is suggested by Y-chromosome DNA test results on Family Tree DNA. Murray Maloney, FTDNA kit # IN41520 and two anonymous descendants of William Maloney (1750-1826) of Fishing Creek, North Carolina who have reported a match with a Genetic Distance of 7 on 67 markers. Thereby suggesting an unknown common ancestor, without indicating how many generations back.
Paternal grandparents, 1st cousins: Syd Maloney & Winnie McKinney
Paternal relationship confirmed by autosomal DNA match on Family Tree DNA. Murray Maloney, FTDNA kit # IN41520, matches his 1st cousin, Dr.P.L.M., FTDNA kit # IN43035, with 1029 cM, longest segment 72cM. MRCAs are Edward "Sydney" Maloney and Winnifred McKinney. This relationship is also confirmed by yDNA (see above).
Paternal relationship confirmed by autosomal DNA match on AncestryDNA. Murray Maloney matches his 1C1r, Janice Knight with 802 cM across 23 segments, longest segment 144cM. Matching DNA: 11%. Predicted 1st-2nd Cousin. Actual 1C1r. MRCAs are Edward "Sydney" Maloney and Winnifred McKinney.
Paternal relationship confirmed. DNA match at AncestryDNA between Murray Maloney and his 2nd cousin 1x removed, M.D. with 126 cM across 10 segments. Most recent common ancestors (MRCAs) are Edward "Ned" Maloney" and Mary-Ellen Urquhart, Murray's great-grandparents and Mark's 2nd great-grandparents.
FP 2nd GGPs, 3rd cousins: Bill Maloney & Isabelle Buckley
FP 2nd GGPs, 3rd cousins: Lewis Urquhart & Mary Lordon
Paternal relationship confirmed by autosomal DNA match on Family Tree DNA. Murray Maloney matches his female 2C1r and 3rd cousins: J.McN. with 92cM and 37cM longest segment; and, C.McN. with 45cM and 34cM longest segment, and M.McN-K with 21cM and 11cM longest segment. J.McN. is the mother of C.McN and M.McN-K; she is daughter of John Alfred Urquhart. MRCAs are Lewis William Urquhart and Mary Lordon.
FP 3rd GGPs, 4th cousins: William Maloney & Johanna Becker
FP 3rd GGPs, 4th cousins: John Buckley & Isabelle Chicoine
FP 3rd GGPs, 4th cousins: Martin Laflamme & Isabelle Chicoine
Pending
FP 3rd GGPs, 4th cousins: William Urquhart & Margaret Milliken
Paternal relationship is confirmed by a triangulated group on MyHeritageDNA who share a 9.2 cM segment on chromosome 5, consisting of Murray Maloney and Carl W.W. Stymiest, his 4th cousin, and Spencer T King Jr., his 3rd cousin 1x removed. (Carl and Spencer are 3rd cousins 1x removed.) These matches have been independently verified by via the MyHeritage Chromosome Browser. Their most-recent common ancestors are William Urquhart and Margaret Milliken, the 3x great grandparents of both Murray Maloney and Carl W.W. Stymiest and 2x great grandparents of Spencer Taft King Jr. (son of Lora Lind Urquhart). (N.B. Carl Stymiest is cwws at MyHeritage.)
Chr 14 DNA Triangulation
Paternal relationships is confirmed by a triangulated group on MyHeritageDNA who share a 15.4 cM segment on chromosome 14, consisting of Murray Maloney and D.D. , his 4th cousin, and D.B. , his 4th cousin 1x removed. (D.D. and D.B. are 4th cousins 1x removed.) These matches have been independently verified by via the MyHeritage Chromosome Browser. Their most-recent common ancestors are William Urquhart and Margaret Milliken, the 3x great grandparents of both Murray Maloney and D.D. (granddaughter of Lora Lind Urquhart) and 4x great grandparents of D.B. (grandson of Daniel Webster Prince).
FP 4th GGPs, 5th cousins: Lemuel Milliken & Phoebe Lord
Paternal relationship is confirmed by a triangulated group on MyHeritageDNA who share a 15.5 cM segment on chromosome 5, consisting of Murray Maloney and his 5th cousin, VMMM (great-granddaughter of Delia Frances Milliken) and his 3rd cousin 1x removed, Spencer T King Jr. (son of Lora Lind Urquhart). (VMMM and STKjr are 4th cousins 1x removed.) These matches have been verified by Murray Maloney via the MyHeritage Chromosome Browser. Their most-recent common ancestors are Lemuel Milliken and Phebe Lord, the 4x great grandparents of both Murray Maloney and VMMM and 3x great grandparents of Spencer T King Jr..
FP 4th GGPs, 5th cousins: John Urquhart & Mary McIntyre
Paternal relationship confirmed by autosomal DNA match on Ancestry. Murray Maloney matches his 2nd cousin Mary Catherine McKinney with 133 cM across 9 segments. Predicted 3rd-4th Cousin. Actual 2C. MRCAs are Timothy McKinney & Catherine Hurley.
Paternal relationship confirmed through autosomal DNA match on My Heritage. Between Murray Maloney and an anonymous McKinney cousin with 193.6 cM. Predicted: 2C1R or 1C2R. Actual:2C1R. MRCAs are Timothy McKinney and Catherine Hurley.
FM 2nd GGPs, 3rd cousins: Wm McKinney & Honora Flynn
FM 2nd GGPs 3rd cousins: John Hurley & Helen Hayes
FM 3rd GGPs, 4th cousins: Wm Hayes & Catherine Dealy
Paternal relationship suggested by a set of autosomal DNA matches on Ancestry. Murray Maloney matches the following 4th cousins P.(H)W., N.H., W.H., T.H., and 4C1r C.H. The MRCAs are William Hayes and Catherine Dealy, the 3rd great-grandparents of Murray Maloney. Cm/seg info to follow.
Matrlineal mtDNA relationships: Lena (mother), Dina (Baba), Dotsa (Prebaba)
Possible mtDNA testers extant, and have been informed.
Maternal relationships have not yet been confirmed using mtDNA test results on Family Tree DNA. Murray Maloney, FTDNA kit # IN41520, indicates Haplogroup H-G13708A.
Maternal relationships have not yet been confirmed using mtDNA test results re-posted on yFull. Murray Maloney, yFull kit # YF19408, indicates Haplogroup Hb*. Scientific and archaic matches indicate an affinity for Iran, Italy, and Denmark.
Maternal grandparents, 1st cousins: Petre Fileff & Dina Kouleov-Yankoulov
Maternal relationship is confirmed by an autosomal AncestryDNA test match between Murray Maloney and EP, his 1st cousin . Their most-recent common ancestors are Petre Filef and Dina Kouleov Yankoulov, the grandparents of both Murray Maloney and EP. Predicted relationship from AncestryDNA: 1st Cousin, based on sharing 896 cM across 32 segments.
Maternal relationship is confirmed by an autosomal AncestryDNA test match between Murray Maloney and SR, his 1st cousin . Their most-recent common ancestors are Petre Filef and Dina Kouleov Yankoulov, the grandparents of both Murray Maloney and SR. Predicted relationship from AncestryDNA: 1st Cousin, based on sharing 968 cM across 35 segments.
Maternal relationship is confirmed by an autosomal AncestryDNA test match between Murray Maloney and DP, his 1st cousin . Their most-recent common ancestors are Petre Filef and Dina Kouleov Yankoulov, the grandparents of both Murray Maloney and DP. Predicted relationship from AncestryDNA: 1st Cousin, based on sharing 939 cM across 39 segments.
Mother's paternal-side atDNA matches
MP = Mother's paternal
MP great grandparents, 2nd cousins: Filip Lamev-File & Lena Tegova
Maternal relationship is confirmed by an autosomal AncestryDNA test match between Murray Maloney and his 2nd cousin, B.F. Their most-recent common ancestors are Filip Lamev-File & Lena Tegova. Murray and B.F. share 2% of their DNA, with 131 cM across 7 segments; longest segment being 28 cM.
Maternal relationship is confirmed by an autosomal AncestryDNA test match between Murray Maloney and his 2nd cousin, P.N., who goes by a pseudonym on Ancestry. Their most-recent common ancestors are the unknown parents of Lena Tegova and her brother Tome Tegov.
Maternal relationship confirmed by an autosomal AncestryDNA test match between Murray Maloney and a male 3C1R with 28cm across 1 segment, initial P.N. goes by an alias on Ancestry. Predicted 4th-6th cousin. Most-recent common ancestor (MRCA) is Unknown Tegov, imputed parent of siblings Lena Tegov and Tome Tegov.
Maternal relationship confirmed by an autosomal AncestryDNA test match between Murray Maloney and a male 3C with 12cm across 1 segment, initial J.K. P.N. appears on the shared match list with J.K. Most-recent common ancestor (MRCA) is Unknown Tegov, imputed parent of siblings Lena Tegov and Tome Tegov.
Mother's maternal-side atDNA matches
MM = Mother's maternal
MM GGPs 2nd cousins: Stoytche Kouleov-Yankoulov & Dotsa
Maternal relationship is confirmed by an autosomal AncestryDNA test match between Murray Maloney and his female 2C1r, D(G)P with 109 cM across 5 segments. Most-recent common ancestors (MRCA) are Stoytche Kouleov-Yankoulov and Dotsa.
Maternal relationship is confirmed by an autosomal AncestryDNA test match between Murray Maloney and his male 2C2r, C.A.P-G with 29 cM across 3 segments. Most-recent common ancestors (MRCA) are Stoytche Kouleov-Yankoulov and Dotsa.
I descend from Stoytche's daughter Dina; D(G)P descends from Stoytche's daughter Velika; and C.A.P-G descends from Stoytche's son Tanas.
D(G)P and C.A.P-G share 59cM across 5 segments.
Only the Trusted List can access the following:
Murray's formal name
full middle name (C.)
e-mail address
exact birthdate
birth location
private siblings' names
private children's names (2)
spouse's name and marriage information
For access to Murray Maloney's full information you must be on Murray's Trusted List. Please login.
DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships by comparing test results with Murray or other carriers of his ancestors' Y-chromosome or mitochondrial DNA.
Y-chromosome DNA test-takers in his direct paternal line on WikiTree:
Murray Maloney:
Family Tree DNA Y-DNA Test 111 markers, haplogroup R-M269, FTDNA kit #IN41520, MitoYDNA ID T15751[compare]
Mitochondrial DNA test-takers in the direct maternal line:
Murray Maloney:
Family Tree DNA mtDNA Test Full Sequence, haplogroup H-G13708A, FTDNA kit #IN41520, MitoYDNA ID A11807[compare]
It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with Murray:
100.00% 100.00%
Murray Maloney:
AncestryDNA, GEDmatch EG854149C1[compare], Ancestry member muzmo_17
+
Family Tree DNA Family Finder, GEDmatch EG854149C1[compare], FTDNA kit #IN41520
+
Autosomal DNA Test, GEDmatch EG854149C1[compare]
Update: Another search led to a Becker with a Hecker mother and a search for Heckers in that area did turn up a few. Is it possible that Johann was a Hecker and not a Becker? Less likely a Pecker.
I am finding other Beckers born in that area during that time but so far no Johann Jacob Becker.
edited by Steven Greenwood