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In the Jefferson-Hemings case, researchers compared the Y-chromosome DNA of male line descendants of Thomas Jefferson's uncle, Field Jefferson, with male line descendants of Eston Hemings, Thomas Woodson, and Jefferson's nephews, Peter Carr and Samuel Carr.
Since the Y-chromosome DNA undergoes little to no change from one generation to the next, it is very useful for establishing paternity. In the Jefferson-Hemings case, the Y-chromosome DNA of Eston Hemings' great-great-grandson, John Weeks Jefferson, matched that of Field Jefferson's descendants, eliminating both of the Carr Brothers as the fathers of Eston Hemings. The results also indicated that the living male-line Thomas Woodson descendants did not match the Jefferson men.
No living, confirmed male-line descendant of Madison Hemings was found for testing.
The DNA results provided additional evidence for the claim that Thomas Jefferson fathered the children of Sally Hemings.
Here is a more recent story involving the Jefferson-Hemings affair and autosomal DNA: http://www.yourgeneticgenealogist.com/search/label/Hemings
Notice in the linked story that autosomal DNA merely pointed toward a wrinkle in one's ancestry and that the genealogical paper trail confirmed descent from Madison Hemings.
Beverly,
My racial mixture was 87% European, 8% Native, and 5% African. This is on my mother's straight maternal line. It did not surprise me since most of the connections I made in Virginia were Mulatto, or Free Black. However, the paternal test taken by my brother did surprise us. His test was taken through Howard University and we thought there would be an African connection, but it was Native American. Our surprise is that there is no admixture it is just 100% Native. My paternal ancestors are a mixture of African and Native who were slaves in South Carolina. Family Tree DNA provides a site where DNA Cousins can connect and I have met DNA Cousins who are mostly from Europe or the Southern United States. There is so much more work to do!
Hi Bev,
I have had autosmal testing done by Family Tree DNA (FTDNA) & 23andme. It doesn't prove 'direct ancestry' back to a particular individual. It does prove genetic lineal heritage. The Hemmings/Jefferson testing proved that 1. Madison Hemmings had the same Y-DNA Haplotype as TJ proving the Hemmings male descendants were from the same "group" as the male Jeffersons. 2. The genetic markers compared between the direct line Jefferson male descendants and the direct line Hemmings male descendants had enough 'matching segments" to determine that they were with a 98+% degree of certainty descended from a "common male ancestor" within 3-4 generations. The DNA tesing DID NOT prove paternity. I believe it was the 'other' evidence surrounding time & place that in addition to the DNA testing allowed for the conclusion of TJ being the father of the Hemmings children. I don't recall whether autosomal DNA testing was done between the Hemmings and Jefferson descendants.
Thanks Anita, I too had the maternal DNA which traced to eastern Europe, slavic etc. The genealogical work however shows a mixture of African, Native American--Seminole and Cherokee-- and caucasian . I know some DNA can show the ethnic markers, my issue is that I wonder how the autosomal DNA traced spefically to one individual, especially since there are no DNA sampling for that person.
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