How DNA is (finally) helping me break down brick walls

When I first got my Ancestry DNA match results, the list of people I matched was pretty overwhelming. My two closest matches were estimated third cousins to me. Everyone else was estimated to be a fourth cousin or more distant. Unfortunately, I wasn’t part of any shared ancestor circles either, and am enough of a european mutt that Ancestry couldn’t even link me to a narrowed-down geographic region.

Based on others’ experiences I’d read about, I had this idea that I would be able to scroll through my matches and see a bunch of surnames in common with my tree. Nope! I’m not sure if I am just unlucky but the only common surnames I am able to find without major data analysis are surnames that are TOO common. Jacksons, Robinsons, Stephensons, Bakers, Martins, Smiths, Blacks, Greens, Browns, and Joneses–you get the idea. Even less common names like Thorpe or Saunders seem common enough that just seeing them in a match’s tree doesn’t necessarily mean that surname is your connection point.

So I began the laborious process of building out trees for folks that I shared the most DNA with, in hopes of finding some time/place commonalities.

Do you know how many people came to Ontario from upstate New York between 1790 and 1820?

Two deer neck-deep in snow

Anyway.

My first Elston breakthrough came unexpectedly the other day, mostly thanks to coincidence.

I had just created a list of people that match both my grandfather and one of his closest matches, writing down a list of email addresses and kit numbers. One of the people had a gedcom uploaded so I checked it out. There were some Lincolnshire people in it, so I opened up Google and started down that rabbit hole.

At some point I searched for the names of all of the people in the family one of my possible John Elstons was living with at the time of the 1841 UK census. I turned up an old post on rootsweb, asking if anyone had any information on this family. I looked at the user name, and it seemed familiar.

I had just written down an email address that started the same way. It was one of the other matches in the group I had just created.

Two emails later and I have my first real John Elston lead in England. My grandfather and I are related by DNA to someone who is descended from the family a John Elston was living with in 1841, when he was an adolescent. Further research showed me that Elizabeth Jackson, the wife, was born Elizabeth Elston.

Within a day I had penciled in a theoretical tree that placed three other matches from that group:

possibleJohnElstonDNAmatchmap

I don’t think DNA alone is enough to conclude anything–but tell me this isn’t a great way of finding new leads.

The mystery photo album

I found a photo album full of cabinet card photos of Elston family and friends from about 1880-1910–unfortunately only two were labeled with names. It is possible the album belonged to Nellie Elston, since one of the photos is signed to her from “Mary”.

I suspect most of the Huron County photos are Elstons. The Brant pictures are likely Martins and/or Plumsteads, and Aurora, Illinois, are Plumsteads. Detroit photos are probably Fannie Elston’s Hubbard family and/or friends.

Can you identify someone? Please note the photo number and get in touch!

Who was John Elston?

JohnElston_Wingham_189x
John Elston at the Wingham Fall Fair in approximately 1891.

Here is what we know so far: John Elston was born in England in about 1830, and immigrated to Canada in about 1851. In Canada, he first lived near Galt (now Cambridge), Ontario, where he married Mary Martin. By 1865, they had moved to Morris Township in Huron County, where John started a farm as they continued building their family. John died in Morris in 1912. We know he was involved with the Wingham fall fair, and was a good neighbour. We also know he could grow a mean fluffy neckbeard.

Things begin to get foggy when we look at John’s life before he came to Huron County. In most records his birth location is listed as Lincolnshire. There were lots of Elstons living in Lincolnshire at the time. His wife Mary and her family had also immigrated from Lincolnshire (Glanford Brigg and the south part of Yorkshire, just across the Humber). Whether John and Mary became acquainted with each other before, during, or after their big boat ride west is a mystery, as is the date and location of their marriage. I’ll be looking at their early life together in more depth in the near future.

Related:

This page is a work in progress.