Steve, Thank you. I will forward this email to my brother and maybe he will volunteer to be tested. It is rumored that our family fled New York shortly after the American Revolution and made their way to Canada where they stayed until the early 20th Century. It is possible we are of English descent but I have also heard/read the possibility that we are of German descent. Kathie (daughter of John Huntley Hayden, son of George Anderson Hayden, son of Henry Hayden, son of William Hayden, son of James Lewis Hayden, son of Lewis Hayden) -- What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us. "Ralph Waldo Emerson' -------------- Original message -------------- From: "shayden" <shayden@columbus.rr.com> > Kathie, > > I am Steve Hayden and I am the volunteer administrator of the Hayden DNA > Project. The DNA that is tested in the Project is a very small piece of the > Y-chromosome. Since only males have a Y-chromosome, it is passed from father > to son and is, hence, useful in tracing male lines. So, test candidates for > the Hayden Family DNA Project need to be males with the surname of Hayden or > one of the alternate spellings such Heydon, Hyden or Haden. The Project has > a web site at http://rhhandson.com/hayden_dna.html. There is also a link ant > Edward Hayden's excellent site at http://www.hayden.org/. > > It is great to see the burst of activity on this list. Tony Burgess > correctly identifies several reasons why it can be difficult to connect to > Hayden lines even with DNA results. There are just a lot of Hayden lines out > there! One of the main objectives of the DNA Project is to connect to our > English cousins. A fund has been established thanks to a Hayden researcher > to help finance testing of English Haydens. Now we just need some > volunteers! > > Those Haydens who are of the line of John of MA are fortunate to have a > rare, distinctive Y-chromosome pattern. So, it is relatively easy to see if > you are connected to that line using DNA data. The patterns in the other > lines are not so distinctive and, by and large, most lines appear to be of > Norman origin. George, who in an earlier post expressed his frustration at > any lack of connection, appears to be of Viking origin. As the Project > grows, the chance of George and other, to date, unconnected lines will > connect also increases. > > Steve Hayden > > -----Original Message----- > From: hayden-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:hayden-bounces@rootsweb.com] On > Behalf Of k.prizzio@comcast.net > Sent: Tuesday, February 27, 2007 8:51 AM > To: hayden@rootsweb.com; hayden@rootsweb.com > Subject: Re: [HAYDEN] Thomas de Heydon to Dr. Clement Hayden > > Greetings, > > Put me on that "list" of Hayden non-connections. > > I have been able to research my family back to Cherry Valley, NY. His name > was James Lewis Hayden and his birth has been recorded as 25 May 1749. His > father's name was Lewis. James married Christina Haes(?) in 1772 and they > had 11 children: George, Margaret, Elizabeth, Jacob, Catherine, James, > Alexander, Ann, William, Maria and Frederick. > > Also, please let me know how I can have my DNA tested. > > Thank you, > > Kathie > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > HAYDEN-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in > the subject and the body of the message