Home DNA AncestorDNA Results from 23andMe! – 100 Year Old Family Mystery – Part Two
DNA Results from 23andMe! – 100 Year Old Family Mystery – Part Two

DNA Results from 23andMe! – 100 Year Old Family Mystery – Part Two



PART ONE: https://goo.gl/qAC1sq
PART TWO: https://goo.gl/obJ2fS
PART THREE: https://goo.gl/Yxbkwr
PART FOUR: https://goo.gl/9VvHKM

Welcome to my new series where I explore a family adoption mystery! My great-grandfather was adopted in 1914. We know who his birth mother is, but his birth father is unknown. His birth mother gave us one tiny clue as to who the father could be, and after decades of searching, I surprisingly found a solid candidate!

Join me as I try to solve a 100 year old family mystery!

Our family tree on Ancestry: https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/tree/4645393/family?fpid=-1571426572
Family history website: https://niamhwitch.wixsite.com/scottdhaboltfamily

MUSIC:
Candlepower by Chris Zabriskie is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Source: http://chriszabriskie.com/divider/
Artist: http://chriszabriskie.com/

source

12 thoughts on “DNA Results from 23andMe! – 100 Year Old Family Mystery – Part Two

  1. Hello, It was very impressive how accurate your predictions were for your ancestry composition!! I wish I knew all 16 of my 2nd great grand parents! I hope you make a part 3 video showing your parents results with yours and how you inherited your ancestry from them.

  2. Hello, It was very impressive how accurate your predictions were for your ancestry composition!! I wish I know all 16 of my 2nd great grand parents! i hope you make a part 3 video showing your parents results with yours and how you inherited your ancestry from them.

  3. Great DNA story, Love the mystery and I am impressed with your website as well. I have subscribed. I have recently discovered that I am 1/8 Irish through my unknown maternal grandfather – the rest of me is scottish, english and scandinavian!!

  4. Fantastic.I like the way you estimated the percentages through the surnames.Also the majority of british and irish usually have between 2 and 12 percent iberian dna dating back from the last ice age.

  5. Ta ha says:

    Very predictable

  6. Nancy Reds says:

    Nice video 🙂 I have tested several test and the most complete in ancestry to me is 24Genetics https://24genetics.it/ with more than 400 regions. You can do it from 23andme raw data also

  7. ok your celt is irish , does not mean you do not have welsh too, thats common and scotish but there were english celts too , i apparently have all four , i like that , makes me more english than 3/4 of supposed english and i am only half my father thought he was turkish turns out he is actually iranian jew more than turkish , lol the history of the jews hey, but my mother gave me native american one of her lines originated in usa , one brazil , one porta rico , one in canada one in usa , AZ, she also gave me a small amount of africa, her ancestor was a slave here in england , or so dna indicates , it was a fairly shocking discovery , neither family knew the truth of their descent , sad really racism makes people lie to their kids to hide the truth , yeah i got a lot of royal lines most brits do , if you go far back enough but one of my moms lines are harvey and they are directly related to princess diana , so will and harry are my 17th cousins , directly , btw my grand mother was your height, my daughter is just 5 foot , i am 5.5 though

  8. Rhiannon the witch queen of wales , do you know the story ? i have a fare bit of celt so , yeah i know the story , i would say that the iberian is celt so its fitting you named her that , i love the name

  9. Scottish are celts and celts came from iberia, , your welcome , lol

  10. robertson is more used in scotland and wales than english and is actually viking origin

  11. JOT says:

    Hey I found you lol, oh that Iberian coulda came as a results of the Spanish Inquisition, where in Spain if you weren’t catholic, you’d either have to convert, leave, or be killed
    One person might’ve went to England for refuge hundreds of years ago and that could possibly explain where it came from

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *