Image from The Lost State of Franklin |
As we research the John Nichols family born about 1708, Virginia, the Wiley J. Morris family born 1807, presumably in Rutherford, NC, the Thomas Morris and the 1770 Williams Eaves families of Tryon in the State of Franklin, the a3Genealogy Research Teams once again discovered that the records needed did not exist.
This has been a three part project as we ferret out relevant
records for the time frame.
Step 1: Learn the formation of counties, dates of
statehood, and the locations of settlements for your county and state of
interest
Step 2: Find the records that may exist. Timelines are useful in helping us identify
the “correct ancestors” and their whereabouts. I mean, really? How many John Nichols were there in early 1700 Virginia. Might
I say, we have not yet exhausted them, I’m sure. So where do you begin?
Step 3: Does DNA support your findings for these common-named ancestors?
Step 1
For each state we have created a similar map as below. However,
know we use such a map for each of the contiguous states. This allows us to
note “sightings” of our person of interest, counties of interest and documents
found. Let it be known that some of the blank counties in the chart are noted
because the chart must encompass the counties impacted by formations of new counties
This is capturing the migratory path of our person of interest who settled in Halifax
County, VA in 1752.
Virginia Formation Map for Nichols |
Step 2
So, what records existed in VA during this 1634 - 1746 time period? For our internal projects, the following chart is much more comprehensive by county not state.
The same process is followed with North and South Carolina
for our Morris and Eaves colonial projects. This project includes the State of Franklin (1785-1788). Use link to learn more. Know that due to common names within
family units and communities, many negative hours of research hours have
accumulated. But, the alternative is placing
the wrong Thomas Morris, or the wrong John Nichols in the family trees.
As touted within the genealogy community, DNA is a great
tool to support the papertrail; or, the papertrail should support the DNA test
results.
The Eaves project was born out of a y-DNA contradiction. Our Eaves client proves to be of a Morris bloodline and a relatively close cousin of the descendants of Wiley J. Morris. A family bible solidly identifies Wiley J Morris, born 1807, and it is supported by the DNA results.
We are keeping a close eye on the Nichols y-DNA tests
results and Nichols/Nicholls project on FamilyTreeDNA in hopes to find a
smoking gun. In the meantime, there are
many more paper records to scour to positively identify the parents of John Nichols,
1708.
Be Historically Correct
Kathleen Brandt
a3genealogy.com
Accurate Accessible Answers
a3genealogy@gmail.com
Hi, Kathleen, hope you’re well. Wanted to share that I am also looking for and researching NICHOLS, focusing on my enslaved and formerly enslaved, Black American Nichols ancestors. They were in border states, but somehow trace back to somewhere in Virginia. Let’s be in touch soon.
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