Skip to main content

DNA Test Info: Lissalaneous

Ancestry DNA Results:



April 2022



























FAQ:

Why is your maiden name listed as Flattery but your DNA says Phillips: Well hello there. My grandmother gave birth to my father and raised him as single parent. When she married many years later, her husband, my step grandfather, adopted my father & gave him his last name, the name I was raised under & what I used legally and now in genealogy world. The DNA test shows my paternal grandfather was a Phillips from a Phillips/Doherty relationship. We do not know the circumstances of the grandparents relationship nor whether the father ever knew about the pregnancy. Both my grandmother & the biological grandfather are now deceased. We welcome all relatives with no judgement, no requirement of reciprocity, and respect your requests to stay private.

Popular posts from this blog

Photo ID: My Dad visited Atlanta 68 Years ago

When we announced our move to the Atlanta area for work in 2016, my dad said "Oh, I've been there once, when I was a little kid, I think I had cousins there."  Fast forward four years and my parent's downsizing means all the family albums have come to me.  In going through photos from his childhood, we found these gems: My grandmother Miriam with her niece & my dad Check out the Chuck Taylors. These pictures are from 1953 at the top of Stone Mountain . I can totally see them walking up the side of the smooth rock, one mile trail, in chucks which have zero traction, with the kids leading the way. The mountain is 825 feet above the ground and 1686 above sea level. The one time I went up to the top (in the Skyride bc my parents cannot hike anymore) it was cold and foggy, with no visibility. On a clear day you can see something like 60 miles. The natural areas of the park around the rock are beautiful. The "entertainment park" is meh and the relief is an abo...

Week 28 #52ancestors Transportation

Excuse the format, this one will be a bit of a brain dump as I've not had a free moment lately to write a proper post. 52 weeks prompt this week is: Transportation. On my dad's side, his mother's mother's father James Albert Adams was a wagoner in the US Army from 1870-1888. From records I've found he was driving officers around and helping deliver telegraph line building equipment. This is a fun rabbit hole posted by  Greg Krenzelok - Director - Historian of the  U.S. Army Veterinary Corps Historical Preservation Group  (facebook link) "The Duties of the U.S. Army Waggoner"  (rootsweb link) Also on my dad's side, his great grandfather on mom's father's side drove a wagon in his later years in Allston, MA & was actually run of the road by a car, the horse got spooked & flipped the wagon. If you've ever driven in Allston this resonates.  Dad's stepdad Chester Flattery drove trucks in the Korean war and when he came home worked fo...

*Updated 10.22.22* 1937 Ossipee Center School play, Ossipee, New Hampshire

Black and white photo of a group of 3 rows of children of various ages in colonial costumes holding the Betsy Ross designed and sewn flag of 13 alternating stripes of red and white and circle of 13 white stars on the upper left solid blue field. Photo edge is marked "1937" in pen. On the back of this photo my great grandmother Jessie McIntosh Sturtevant wrote out their names as follows: 1937 Ossipee Center School play When Betsy Ross made Old Glory First row L-R Roland Wilkins Edwin French Jr Norman Remick Jr Harvey Emerson Raymond Perry Lenela Moody Madeline Goldsmith Dorothy Sturtevant* Esther Perry Barbara Emerson Second row L-R Violet Moody Flora Sturtevant* Theresa Goldsmith Vileta Moody Jean Sawyer John F. Harmon Joseph Nevers Harley Moody Back row L-R   Elmer Berry - Violin Miss Todd - Piano Helen Sturtevant* George Knapp - Mandolin Robert Sawyer Jr Hayes Sawyer Jr * Denotes grandmother and great aunts of this blogger. In 1937 Helen was 13, Flora was 10, an...