Hi everyone, I have been on the list since early last decade. Here is my update. The ancestral couple of relevance to Fermanagh (and Tyrone) are John Cowan and his wife, Margaret Lammey (spelling used in Australia). Their marriage record shows at the time of marriage in the1830s that John lived in the Fermanagh townland of Magheracross and Margaret lived in one of the townlands in Tyrone with ‘Tattymoyle’ in the name (i.e. Lower, Middle and Upper). John’s Y-DNA is R-CTS6838 (revised from R-L21 early in 2018). The ancestral line appears to be associated with the recent history of the Scottish clan, Gregor, based on the distant match with Sir Malcolm MacGregor, the current clan chief. Otherwise, the Y-DNA experience has been disappointing with a small number of very distant surname matches (i.e. about five out of 4000 plus matches). I have a fully triangulated autosomal DNA match with a woman in Canada who is probably still subscribed to this list and whose most distant ancestor is also a John Cowan who lived near my ancestor in Tyrone. Some of this John’s children married into families in Fermanagh including Elliot. If anyone is interested, my Gedmatch number is T564441. John and Margaret immigrated to South Australia in 1852 with five children. Also of relevance is the spouse of their eldest son, Thomas (1839-1890), Mary Jane Armstrong (1840-1890), who was probably born in the townland of Ross in Fermanagh to Thompson Armstrong (c1806 -1880) and Helen (probably Ellen) HAMILTON (?- before 1856). Thomas and Mary Jane (as the family call her) met at a Methodist conference in Adelaide in the late 1850s and married in 1861. In 2010 and 2011, I was able to build an extended family tree for Mary Jane thanks to help from subscribers on Fer-Gold including Viola Wiggins. Mary Jane’s siblings, some with Fermanagh-born spouses, also immigrated with four going to South Australia and one to the colony of Victoria. Regards David Cowan Adelaide, South Australia