The R1b1b2 haplogroup is believed by some to have existed before the last Ice Age and has been associated with the Aurignacian culture (32,000 - 21,000 BC). County Cavan is within the historic province of Ulster, but is now in the Republic of Ireland. (Retrieved 2010, November 5), Convict Records Voyages to Australia (Retrieved 17th December 2020). At 67 markers, Kit 159905 has a genetic distance of only two (two mutation steps), with the above mentioned kits 139946 and 146567. At 67 markers he matches both kits 139946 and 146567 (kits with the modal value of all markers of this Group G) at 64/67; i.e., a genetic distance of only 3, two markers of which are fast mutating markers (458 and CDYb). Spouse(s) Ann Mooney 1819 - Unknown. His DNA at 67 markers matches ONLY the Ewing surname, with a genetic distance of 3 to 6, which strongly indicates that his male line ancestry comes through the Ewing family. This is clearly a unique McCabe family, until other McCabes are tested that might include a match. 1859, Arkansas), Eddie Franklin Cabe (b. Two individuals with the surname of McMannes or McManus (or who do not have this surname, but can trace their immediate paternal line to this surname) have joined the McCabe Surname DNA Project (on the recommendation of the administrator) based on the close matching of these men with several men in this McCabe project. However, Amos Cabe is NOT specifically listed as a son of John Cabe in the will, producing skepticism among the John Cabe descendants as to whether or not Amos was a son of John Cabe, or perhaps he might have been a son of John Cabes wife from an earlier marriage and, consequently, was an unrecorded adoption into this Cabe family. The Y chromosome DNA (originally 12 marker tests) of two male line descendants (kits 826 and 827) of two sons of the "orphan" James J. McCabe (1843-1914) matched exactly the same 12 markers of two male-line descendants (kits 825 and 1106) of two sons of James B. McCabe who was born in 1807 in Ohio, died in 1892 in Kansas, and is a descendant of Owen McCabe's son, John. Kit 86111. 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). Concerning the haplogroup designation: Haplogroup G appears to have arisen in the Caucasus region during the Ice Age, about 30,000 years ago (Quote from Wikipedia discussion on Haplogroup G.) In 2009-2010 significant matches have been posted for both 37 and 67 markers for Kit 148064. Kit 151400 does not have any significant matches with the Owen McCabe family descendants (Group A), confirming that the two 1740's immigrants to America, Owen McCabe and James McCabe, were not related within historic times. 1840, IOM, d. 1938, California), and the g. grandfather of the kit provider, Harry Kermode Cain (1882-1950). An extension to 67 markers would provide an answer. The "Google Earth" map will appear with push pins showing your matches (if you have any). This family returned to America and this Joseph McCabe (g. grandfather of the kit provider) died in 1915 in Wissahickon, Pennsylvania. The kit provider has the surname of Young. Consequently, he has a genetic distance (GD) of only one (one-step mutation difference) with kit 151400 (marker 576, a fast mutator). [4]. Continuing on, the unique sequence of Y-DNA marker values for the McCabe project for DYS markers 13 to 25 is: DYS458 is 18, DYS459 is 9-10 (counted as 2 marker values), DYS455 is 12, DYS454 is 11, DYS447is 26, DYS437 is 15, DYS448 is 19, DYS449 is 29, DYS464 is 15-15-17-19 (counted as 4 marker values). An unexpected, yet fascinating result of this study was produced when the provider of kit 99404, who also descends from the Sussex County, Delaware immigrant, John McCabe, had his DNA haplogroup studied to the furthest extent currently possible. Where or how can the text of this specific obituary be found. This man has been placed in Group G primarily because of his haplogroup which exactly matches one other man in this group. The records for this man indicate his earliest known ancestor is John McCabe, b. about 1752 (perhaps in Virginia) and died after 1810, probably in Chowan Co, NC. Kit 168113. Within the genealogy, his arms are blazoned: vert a fesse wavy between three salmons naiant argent; crest a demi-griffon segreant; motto aut vincere aut mori. GROUP G, Cabe/McCabe/Cain/Searcy/Denny Family. People Projects Discussions Surnames Retrieved from, New Zealand Yesteryears Passenger Lists 1800 to 1900 (Retrieved 4th November 2011). 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. He was orphaned during the Civil War and taken in by the Stapp/Stepp family. (Updated 10/08/10 for Kits 153311 & 148651.) T group - highlighted in orange - 1 group as of 2023 - These McCabe men are all in the I-M223 haplogroup. (Updated 11/23/09 for the addition of Kit 160306.) The Cabe-named man who provided the DNA for Kit 148064 traces his ancestry back to Amos Cabe of Burke and Lincoln Counties of North Carolina, the same area associated with the ancestry of men who provided kits 139489 and 139946. The provider of the DNA for this kit descends from this 1799 John Cabe in this order: Thomas Jefferson Cabe (b 1839, Tennessee), John William Cabe (b. This would be their homeland for centuries. Consequently, this James McCabe of Pictou, Nova Scotia, cannot be a brother of Owen McCabe of Cumberland and Perry Counties of Pennsylvania. . The surname McCabe was first found in on the Isle of Arran in Scotland. Comparing kits 99404 with 40344 at 67 markers produces a 61/67 marker match, with two of these markers being fast-mutating markers. 1980), Northern Irish actor, Eamonn McCabe (1948-2022), English photographer born in London, many of his portraits are held in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery, London, Frank Reilly McCabe (1927-2021), American gold medalist basketball player in the 1952 Summer Olympics, David Edward McCabe (1940-2021), British fashion photographer, noted for photographing Andy Warhol throughout 1964, Arva Moore Parks McCabe (1939-2020), American historian, author and preservationist in Miami, Florida, inducted into the Florida Women's Hall of Fame (1986), Andrew George McCabe (b. 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. [4], Bearers of the McCabe and MacCabe surnames are considered to have settled in Ireland from the Western Isles of Scotland sometime around 1350, employed as gallowglass (mercenary soldiers) to the O'Reillys and O'Rourkes which were the principal septs of Breffny. He married (2) ELLEN Abt. The connection between the Cabes and this man, however, must be in Ireland, as the earliest known ancestor of the man who provided kit #176320 was George McCabe (wife Frances, b. If you are a male with the surname of McCabe, Mecabe or Cabe and wish to join this surname DNA project (or if you are organizing a DNA test for a male with the surname of McCabe, Mecabe, or Cabe, or if your surname is NOT McCabe, or variations thereof, but you expect that your straight line male ancestry DOES include a McCabe male), then you should join this McCabe Y-DNA project. Initially this group contained only members with the surname of Cabe. RELATIONSHIPS. The significance here is that if any other man with nearly identical values at other markers, and also has the value of 7 repeats for DYS 459a, there is a MUCH greater probability of his having a common ancestor with these two McCabe men. VII, Group E, McCabe/Ball/Beatty(Beattie)/Propes Family. As more and more McCabes have their DNA tested, it IS possible that a closer match will be found. McCabe Genealogy, McCabe Family History Start your family tree now Is your surname McCabe? 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). Results from this James McCabe line would be very beneficial for this study to find out the ancestral haplotype for Owen McCabe. The results at 67 markers (for kit 148651) show that this man matches individuals in both Groups D and G. He matches 63/67 with the modal values (most common values) of group D with the following markers (all "slow mutators") producing the mismatches: DYS numbers 390, 389-2, 413a, and 557. The most Mccabe families were found in USA in 1880. Retrieved from. County Mayo shares borders with the following counties of the Republic of Ireland: Sligo, Roscommon, and Galway, all within the historic province of Connacht. John and William have numerous living descendants with the surname of McCabe and descendants of John and William have been DNA tested. At 25 markers and higher, the comparison of results between groups A and D show numerous differences. 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. Kit #54231. Both males and females can be tested, but Mitochondrial DNA is ALWAYS inherited ONLY from the mother. 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. 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. Kits 825 and 1106 come from McCabes who are third cousins of each other. The man who provided the DNA for this kit does not have the surname of McCabe. As of October2015, the following changes occurred with the McCabe website: With over 100 members, it has became possible to identify one sequence of marker values unique to men who have the McCabe ancestry! [7], According to a genealogy which purports to date from the 17th century, Alexander MacCabe (fl.1689) was a descendant of the last chieftains of the MacCabes. DNA studies have confirmed that they are very closely related, and strongly support the hypothesis that if one of them descends from Francis McCabe, Sr., both of them descend from Francis McCabe, Sr. "What are the 5,000 Most Common Last Names in the U.S.?". James McCabe emigrated from Ireland to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, probably in the early 1740s, as in 1746, his Philadelphia indenture was transferred from John Williams to James Cusick for three years and nine months. The surname belongs to a military galloglass family from the Scottish Hebrides apparently a branch of McLeod who were employed and settled in Cavan in the 14th century. The two McCabe-named men in Group E (who provided kits 130249 and 106868), according to paper documentation, share the common ancestor of John McCabe, born in 1810-1816 (age 34 in 1850 census, age 50 in 1860 census in Ross County, Ohio, and whose wife's name is Lucinda). Daniel and Eleanor have been found together in both the 1860 and 1870 censuses of Van Buren County, Michigan, immediately above the entries (in both censuses) for a David McCabe. Felix's son (grandfather of the provider of kit 148651), Bernard McCabe, was also born in the same location (baptism record from the Diocese of Kilmore, Fermanagh, Ireland), but died in 1952 in Clydebank, Old Kilpatrick, Dunbarton, Scotland. Comments on the ancestry of these individuals follow: The provider of Kit 145047 had no information or hypothesis whatsoever that he might descend from the Nova Scotia immigrant, James McCabe, until, at 37 markers, his DNA matched Kit 151400 at 36/37. The son of Bernard McCabe (died 1952), who was the father of the man who provided kit 148651, immigrated to New York City in 1949 from Scotland. The man who provided the DNA for this kit traces his ancestry to Patrick Cain or Cane who died in 1781 in the Isle of Man (IOM), located in the Irish Sea between the islands of Ireland and Great Britain. 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. Kit N16768. The man who provided the DNA for this study has a paper trail connection to the Owen McCabe family, through Owens son William (Group A in this project) and the next several generations are: John McCabe, William & Harriet McCabe, James E. McCabe, Harry R. McCabe, and grandfather of the kit provider, Harry E. McCabe. 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. I. The provider of Kit 160306 lives in England, and traces his paternal ancestry back to Patrick McCabe, born in County Monaghan, Ireland, in 1822. He is included in haplogroup R1b1b2 (as is many of the McCabes tested so far), but considering his results at the 12 marker level (with no closer than 5 one-step mutations from any others tested in this McCabe surname project), it is relatively certain that he has no McCabe family connection, within historical times, with other members of this McCabe Surname DNA study. McCabe Project WikiTree is a community of genealogists growing an increasingly-accurate collaborative family tree that's 100% free for everyone forever. as shown at the bottom of the page. Best Tree Collections for Discovering McCabe Ancestors Shortly after his arrival in Auckland the Thames goldfields . 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. All of the Cabe-named family members in this group have roots in North Carolina or Tennessee. Kits 826 and 827 come from McCabes who are first cousins, once removed. On the Classic chart, if the DYS marker is highlighted in red (on the top of the chart), it means that the DYS marker is a fast mutating marker. Kit 151400. [Note that Ops is now listed by Wikipedia as a former municipality in the center of former County of Victoria now the city of Kawartha Lakes and located in eastcentral Ontario.] Individuals within this group have been tested for the number of markers listed. Margaret Maggie Bannon (McCabe) Quakenbush, Gertrude Elizabeth Elizabeth (McCabe) Anderson. Counties of the Ulster province that border Tyrone are Donegal, Londonderry, Antrim (across a large lake), Armagh, Monaghan, and Fermanagh. 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. The person with the surname of Cabeen (Kit 56221) hypothesized that his Cabeen name may have been derived from the McCabe surname. It is most likely that the family connections are in the historic province of Ulster, in the northern portion of the island of Ireland. Kit 137198. The man who provided the DNA sample for this kit has an oral history, as well as some paper documentation, of descent from Owen McCabe (1740's immigrant to America from County Tyrone, Ireland, Group A in this project). These two counties are on the northeastern coast of the island of Ireland, and adjacent to the following counties: Londonderry, Tyrone, and Armagh. 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). At the 12 marker level, this man has numerous matches with other participants in this McCabe surname project, but at 25 markers, FTDNA does not consider his results to be a significant match with any McCabe name in their database. At one time it was in the County of Dublin. [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.] [Amos Cabe and Zachariah Cabe, who are mentioned below, are listed with the McCabe name in the 1820 census of Haywood County, NC.] USE LINKPENDIUM'S FAMILY DISCOVERER TO SEARCH 2,804,127 FREE GENEALOGY SOURCES! You can send your sympathy in the guestbook provided and share it with the family. They had 3 children: Joan McCabe and 2 other children. 1910), Wilbur Clark Mecabe I (b. In 1840 there were 92 Mccabe families living in New York. Owen lived in 1935, at address, Illinois. Residents of Scotland, Australia, and USA. The average life expectancy for Mccabe in 1943 was 51, and 77 in 2004. On the map, "Y Haplogroups of the World", which represents the situation about 1500 A.D., the E1b haplogroup (still listed as E3B on this map, as of October 2008) is highest in Morocco (ca 75%) with other large percentages in Maori (ca 25%), Sudan (ca 25%) and Ethiopia (ca 50%). Kits 139946 and 146567. County Tyrone is in the historic province of Ulster and in current Northern Ireland of the United Kingdom. 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. Mr. John Herbert McCabe who was convicted in London, Margaret McCabe, who arrived in Glenelg Roads aboard the ship "Pestonjee Bomanjee" in 1838, Mr. Michael McCabe, British Convict who was convicted in Jamaica for 14 years, transported aboard the "Canton" on 20th September 1839, arriving in Tasmania (. Westport is in the large county of Mayo on the Atlantic coast of the Republic of Ireland, and in the historic province of Connacht. Jeremiah O'Neal will be assuming the duties of Administrator. 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. Lots of families have this name in Inverclyde. His DNA at 12 markers matches the Western Atlantic Modal Haplotype (WAMH), the most common Y-DNA signature of Europes most common Haplogroup, R1b, and as such, he has hundreds of matches at the 12 marker level, but none with the McCabe surname. S-5 Surname matches with huge numbers of Brady men. According to MacLysaght in the mid 20th century, statistics then showed that the surname was more numerous in the Breffny area than anywhere else. The more specific haplogroup of R1b1b2a1b5 suggests an origin of this Owen McCabe family in northern Ireland. Irish (especially Monaghan and Cavan): Anglicized form of Gaelic, Do not sell or share my personal information. We use cookies to enhance your personalized experience for ads, analytics, and more. The slight difference in haplogroup determination also eliminates any possibility of any close relationship. It is important to remember that there is no single McCabe family tree, as last names were assigned to people for various reasons. Thus, the project design was changed to include this new haplogroup labeled as the T group. Kit 97685. Language links are at the top of the page across from the title. 1858, WI or MI, d. 1903, Nevada, wife Mary Ann Russell); Roy Edward McCabe (1890 1931, wife Esther Lavonia Pierce). At 67 markers this strong relationship does not continue. To further delineate the closest relatives in this McCabe Surname DNA Study, an extension to 37 markers is essential and 67 markers would be best. These Ball-named men trace their ancestry back to two different Ball-named individuals (James William Ball, 1797 and Samuel Ball, born 1811) in Loudoun County, Virginia. Eleanor was enumerated (as widowed) in the 1910 census of Seattle, Washington, in the family of her son, Ernest McCabe (grandfather of the kit provider), who is listed as born in Michigan.
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