[Ger-Poland-Volhynia] DNA Testing
Vince Tilroe
vtilroe at gmail.com
Wed Aug 27 15:38:22 PDT 2014
Those with Volhynian ancestry who have tested or are testing through
FTDNA, can join the Polish DNA project at
https://www.familytreedna.com/public/polish/ or the Ukraine DNA project
at https://www.familytreedna.com/public/ukraine/
The administrators of either project should be consulted prior to joining.
Incidentally, DNA testing of various family members confirmed my own
Volhynian/Polish genealogical paper trail, which both shed light on and
disproved a long-standing century-old family myth: that the mother of my
2nd great-grandmother Ernestine Kotscherofski (Hanke) was actually named
Anna Luiza Weiss, and not Christina as had been passed down. As it
turned out, Anna Luiza Weiss had remarried Andreas Zippel after
Ernestine's father Daniel Hanke had passed away. Previously we knew
little to nothing of this - only that Andreas Zippel was somehow
connected to the family.
Once discovering the identity of Anna Luiza Weiss, I found another
genealogist who was also researching her, whose ancestor was apparently
a close cousin. DNA testing of this genealogist's father and my
great-uncle, Martin Kotscherofski's grandson, confirmed their
genealogical relation. Mere months later, my great-uncle passed away.
It was only by confirming the family connection by DNA that I finally
had the lead to find out when and where my 2nd great-grandfather Martin
Kotscherofski (then spelt "Mart. Koczorowsky") had immigrated to the new
world - as a labourer accompanying Anna and Andr. Zippel and on the SS
Eider arriving at the port of New York on 7 June 1889. The lot of them
eventually arrived in Winnipeg for staging west through Medicine Hat,
Red Deer, and finally Stony Plain. I still haven't discovered how and
when Ernestine and her three young sons Johann, Andreas, and Eduard
arrived in Canada, but it must have been within the next two or three years.
If you have a genealogical hypothesis, DNA testing of appropriate family
members through companies such as Family Tree DNA and 23andMe acts as
viable evidence for or against your hypothesis.
Vince T.
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