Allison/Ellison Family DNA Project



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Project Overview

Our Allison/Ellison DNA project was "unofficially" begun in April 2001 at Family Tree DNA (FTDNA). In February 2002 the Allison/Ellison Y-chromosome DNA Family Reconstruction Project was officially organized as a surname DNA project at FTDNA. See Family Tree DNA's website for further detail on Surname Projects and genealogical DNA testing in general. Y-Chromosome DNA is passed from father to son down through the generations just as surnames are passed from father to son. Only men inherit the Y-chromosome, therefore only men can be participants in a Y-chromosome DNA Family Reconstruction Project. The Y-Chromosome DNA samples can only be provided by males who have surnames with variant spellings of ALLISON / ELLISON. Any male with the surnames of ALLISON, ELLISON, ELLISTON (or variant spellings) can click here to submit his name, address, etc. as a new member of the Allison/Ellison DNA Project and to order a DNA sample kit to be mailed to him: DNA is collected by scraping the inside of the cheek with a small soft brush. It is a simple, painless procedure and does not involve any drawing of blood. If you would like to see photographs detailing the process please visit www.davedorsey.com/dna.html

The two original Allison participants (# 617 in Group B & # 618 in Group L in the DNA chart below) wanted to find out whether there was a genetic connection between the Joseph Allison and Lawrence Ellison/Allison lines. Joseph Allison (origin unknown), was living on Long Island, NY by 1720 and moved to Orange Co., NY ca 1725 and Lawrence Ellison, who was born in Yorkshire, England, and migrated to New England ca 1632 and then to Long Island in New York. Lawrence Ellison's descendants moved to Orange/Rockland Co., NY in the 1700s and were using the Allison spelling by then. Several researchers of the Joseph Allison and Lawrence Ellison/Allison lines have searched for documentation to prove or disprove a connection between the two families, but traditional genealogical research has failed to find a paper trail that proves that they were related. Participant # 617 had traced his ancestry back to Joseph Allison and # 618 had traced his ancestry back to Lawrence Ellison. They each sent their DNA sample to FTDNA in April 2001 and the test results showed them to have very different DNA scores. Although disappointed by the DNA test results, they concluded that the two Allison/Ellison lines had coincidentally lived on Long Island and in Orange Co., NY at the same time in the 1700s and were not related.

Fortunately, seven other Allison and Ellison men who trace their ancestry back to Orange County, NY became interested in DNA testing. Thanks to their decisions to order DNA tests, our Allison/Ellison DNA project is now providing evidence of the genetic connection between descendants of Joseph Allison and Lawrence Ellison. As a result of DNA testing of the seven additional participants who have Orange/Rockland Co., NY roots, we discovered that the two original test results had led us to the false conclusion that the Lawrence Ellison and Joseph Allison lines were unrelated. The Allison male (# 618) who was one of the two original testees has done very careful research and had traced his ancestry back to Lawrence. However, his DNA score is very different from the other eight men who have Orange County, NY Allison/Ellison roots. This seems to be a classic case of a non-paternity event and he has no idea during which generation it occurred.

Purpose of Project

The purpose of the Allison/Ellison Surname DNA Project is to perform Y chromosome DNA tests on men with the ALLISON or ELLISON surnames (includes all variants), to calculate the Most Recent Common Ancestor for those participants with a significant DNA marker match, and to create a report describing the results. The report will then be available to all Allison/Ellison researchers worldwide on this website.

The goal of the Allison/Ellison DNA project is to include male Allisons, Ellisons and variant surnames worldwide for the purpose of finding common paternal ancestors and establishing the genetic connections among the various families through Y-Chromosome DNA test results. Research shows that most Allisons and Ellisons trace their lineages back to countries of the United Kingdom. Therefore, we are very interested in including more participation by Allison and Ellison males who live in the UK.

In the cases where the Allison/Ellison researcher is a female or a male who does not carry the Allison or Ellison surnames, we encourage all researchers to try to get their relatives to participate, especially those who are direct line male descendants WITH the surnames of ALLISON or ELLISON (or variant spellings). Male researchers who do not carry the Allison or Ellison surnames and female researchers can participate by offering to share the cost of the DNA test kit with his or her male relative who HAS the ALLISON or ELLISON surnames. The more participants we can get, the more complete the results of the project will be.

Funding

Please consider making a donation towards the growth of our Allison / Ellison DNA project. Any amount of monetary donation, small or large, will be greatly appreciated. In fact, no amount will be considered to be too small. It is to the benefit of all Allison/Ellison family researchers that the maximum number of people get tested. Visiting the following link will take you to a page giving you more information about this new service. FTDNA collects and holds the money which it then applies towards tests at the direction of the Group Coordinator. The following link also provides links for those who wish to contribute and for those who wish to take a test at a discounted rate. Our General fund

At the moment we have $100 in donations from Allison/Ellison researchers in our fund. If you are a male with the Allison, Ellison or related surname who would like to be part of the project at a discounted rate then visit the above link.

Results

The results are on a separate results page.

Analysis


Group A

The participants in Group A trace their ancestry back to Ellisons/Ellysons/Allisons who lived on farms near Strathaven in Lanarkshire, Scotland in the 1600s. The DNA score of two ALLISON males (# 13358 & #20491) have ancestors who lived in Lanarkshire for many generations. An Allison ancestor of # 2659 in Group A migrated from Lanarkshire, Scotland, to New Zealand in the 1800s and # 2659 still lives in New Zealand. Participants #8913 & #20827 both live in the United States and trace their ancestry back to Lanarkshire, Scotland. Two of the participants in Group A #2659 and #13358 have received their 37 marker DNA test results. The 37 marker results show a 36/37 match, which is a genetic distance of only one marker, which proves that they do share a common ancestor.

Group B

Six of the eight Ellison/Allison DNA project participants in Group B have good paper trails which trace their genealogies back to Allisons/Ellisons in Orange Co., NY in the 1700s and two men believe that their early Allison ancestors were from Orange Co., NY. All eight have matching DNA scores, which is good evidence that they all descend from the same line of Allisons.

Two of the six men with good paper trails (# 2442 & # 5788) have genealogical proof which traces their Allison/Ellison lines back to Lawrence Ellison who was born in Yorkshire, England. # 5788 is a descendant of George Suffern Allison of New York, who was a G3 grandson of Lawrence Ellison. # 2442 lives in Canada. He is a descendant of the Lawrence Ellison/Allison group from Orange Co., NY who were Loyalists and went to Canada after the Revolutionary War.

Two other men in Group B (# 617 & # 2846) have paper trails which definitely trace their ancestry back to Joseph Allison. They descend from two different sons of Joseph Allison. # 617 & # 2846 have received the results of their 37 marker DNA tests. #2846 is a descendant of Richardson Allison, Joseph's son. . # 617 is a descendant of Isaac Allison Sr., who was also Joseph's son. Participants # 617, # 2846 & # 3182 match perfectly on markers 1-25. Participant # 3182 has a paper trail back to Benjamin Allison who fought in the Revolutionary War from Orange Co., NY and moved to Greenbrier Co., VA (now WV) by 1792. Researchers have believed that this Benjamin Allison was another son of Joseph Allison and the 37 marker DNA results of # 3182 has proven the accuracy of that belief, even though the documented proof is missing. Participants #2846 & #3182 match perfectly on all 37 markers. Participant # 617 (Isaac line) differs by one point on marker 442 from #2846 (Richardson line) & # 3182 (Benjamin line) , which seems to indicate that the mutation occurred in one of the generations of the Isaac Allison line.

Participant # 22004 does not have a solid paper trail back to Joseph Allison in Orange Co., NY, but research provides strong clues that such is the case. His matching DNA score with the other descendants of Joseph has provided good evidence that such is the case.

Two of the eight men in Group B (# 2165 & # 3182) trace their Allison ancestry back to Orange County, NY but do not know for sure if their earliest Allison ancestors belonged to the Lawrence Ellison or Joseph Allison lines. However their DNA scores are identical to the five men above, so we feel confident that they all have a common Allison ancestor. # 2165 knows that his first known ancestor was in Orange Co., NY, in the 1700s and then moved to NJ and later descendants moved to Botetourt Co., VA. # 3182 has a paper trail back to Benjamin Allison who fought in the Revolutionary War from Orange Co., NY and moved to Greenbrier Co., VA (now WV) by 1792. The interesting thing about Greenbrier and Botetourt Counties in VA is that they were originally all part of the same county in VA in the 1700s.

An eighth man (# 2442) has a DNA score that matches the seven men described above. # 2442 knows that his Ellison ancestor moved from Michigan to Pennsylvania in the early 1800s, but he does not have any information about his ancestor's parents. However we have evidence that Orange County Allisons migrated to Michigan in the late 1700s so there is an Orange County migratory geographical link for the most mysterious of these Allison/Ellison ancestors. It's also possible that he could have left his Loyalist Allison/Ellison relatives and migrated to MI from Canada. It seems likely that there were large families of Allisons that lived close together in NY and NJ in the 1700s. We know that some migrated to VA , some to MI, others to OH and the Loyalists moved to Canada. As these families migrated westward they lost track of their relatives, but DNA test results is helping us reconstruct our Orange County Allison/Ellison family.

The beauty of the DNA test results is definitive proof that all eight men have very similar DNA test scores and therefore all descend from a common Ellison/Allison ancestor. We still need to do more research and find out whether the Orange county Allison/Ellison line's common ancestor was Lawrence Ellison who migrated to New England ca 1632 or if both Lawrence and Joseph descended from an earlier Ellison or Allison who lived in the British Isles prior to Lawrence's migration to America.

The 25 marker analysis showed that participants in Group B have a genetic distance of 4 or 5 markersfrom the 5 participants in Group A who have definite Lanarkshire, Scotland roots. Most of the differences were on fast-moving markers and it appeared, based on the 25 marker results, that there was some possibility that the Group B Orange County, NY Allisons could trace their ancestry back to Lanarkshire, Scotland, albeit many, many generations in the past. The 37 marker upgrade seems to be a very valuable tool in confirming or refuting common ancestry of men with the same surname . Three of the Group B participants (#617, #2846, #2665) and two of the Group A participants (# 13358 & # 20491) have received the results of the 37 marker upgrade which show a big difference in genetic distance between the scoresof #617, #2846, & #2665 in Group B and the scores of # 13358 & # 20491 in Group A on the 37 marker test, which refutes the assumption that there might be a distant genetic connection between Group A & Group B . The 37 marker results of #2665 & #2846 in Group B show a 35/37 match, a genetic distance of only two markers, which proves that they do share a common ancestor.

Group C

Group C participants are Allison/Ellison men with closely matching DNA scores who also have Lanarkshire, Scotland origins. The DNA scores of Group C are very different from the DNA scores of the Allisons/Ellisons in Group A. DNA test results have recently revealed that there are two unrelated lines of Allisons/Ellisons whose ancestors lived on farms near the town of Strathaven in Lanarkshire, Scotland. All of the participants in Group C have very similar DNA test scores. Many of them did not know each other prior to becoming participants in the DNA project. All of them trace their ancestry back to Ellisons/Ellysons/Allisons in Lanarkshire, Scotland in the 1600s. They have traditional genealogical proof that their earliest Allison/Ellison ancestor migrated from Windyedge Farm near Strathaven in Lanarkshire, Scotland to the American colony of Virginia in in the early 1600s. Some of the men in this group learned about their Lanarkshire roots when they received DNA test score results that matched the DNA score of the Allison/Ellison men who knew that their Allison/Ellison ancestor was John Allison/Ellison from Windyedge Farm. The Group C participants have Allison/Ellison ancestors who lived in Virginia, South Carolina, Alabama, Texas and other southern states.

The following information was provided by Participant # 4221 who has written a book about his ELLISON/ALLISON ancestors from Lanarkshire, Scotland: Land and religion were vital in the life of John and others who lived in Scotland and it seems that land and religion may have led to their departure. The following information seems to shed some light on their life about 1600. "The Temporall land of the Archbishoprick of Glasgow are the Baronies of Glasgow, Carstairs, Ancrum, Lillisleaf, Eskirk, Stobe and Eddiston, with ye Bishops forest and other little things in Carrick, Lothicin, and elsewhere .... Carstairs was situated in the quitter district of Lanarkshire ... The Royalty embraced the city of Glasgow and a wide district on the north, east and west, comprising the Barony Parish, the Parish of Cadder, the Parish of Govan, and a large portion of the Parish of old Monkland. p. 24-25. (Land rental in Windyedge is mentioned in Oct. 1546, p. 134; April 1542, p. 120; 1526, p. 86.)" RENTAL BOOK OF THE DIOCESE OF GLASGOW 1509-1570, Vol. 1, Joseph Bain and Rev. Charles Rogers, London, 1875.

"The Township and barony of Carstairs belonged, from the middle of the twelfth century, if not from an earlier period, to the Bishops of Glasgow, the rents thereof forming part of their personal revenue. Their title to it was confirmed by Pope Alexander III in 1170, and by Honorius III in 1216." p. 453, THE UPPER WARD OF LANARKSHIRE DESCRIBED AND DELINEATED, Vol. 2, Alexander Murray, Thomas Murray & Sons, London, 1894.

The above records seem to indicate some difficulty that John may have had. However, there are records of land rentals to members of the Allison families. There was a John who rented land from John Gibson 3 Oct. 1549 in Glasgow Diocese (p. 142). John Alison rented land from John Alison, his father, 25 Aug. 1563 (p. 177). Robert Alason rented land from John Alason, his brother, 5 Dec. 1545 (p. 187 ). Jonat Allason rented land from William Alanson, her father, in 1545, and she was the wife of James Mylar (p.163). RENTAL BOOK OF THE DIOCESE OF GLASGOW 1509-1570, Vol. 1, Joseph Bain and Rev. Charles Rogers, London, 1875. Robert Ellison and his family sailed from Virginia to Charleston, SC. They traveled up the Black River and settled in Williamsburg District in 1735/37. Fifty acres of land were granted to each member of the family and each servant. A half acre was granted in the village to the head of the family. The name had been spelled Ellison or Ellyson for several generations in Virginia, but one son (also named Robert) left Williamsburg and settled in Pendleton District (Laurens County, SC.). He spelled his name Allison and his descendants are scattered over much of the southern andwestern United States.

Group D

These two participants have a recent common ancestor and their grouping, while to be expected, throws no light on the overall Allison/Ellison ancestry.

Group E

Participant # 13872's ancestor, Benjamin J. Ellison, was born in 1800 probably in GA. Benjamin was the brother of Jacob Ellison who was born in Stafford County, VA about 1788. Jacob is the ancestor of the matching participant #20318. Jacob and Benjamin were sons of Robert E. Elliston, Jr. who was born in 1762 in Culpeper County, VA and died in 1836 in Burke County, GA. The common ancestry of these two participants is now verified by documentation and DNA.

Group G

This is a tentative group. Often people match 12/12, particularly with common haplotypes such as #20066, but are found to be unrelated on 25 or 37 marker comparisons.

Group H

A group that shares a common ancestor in John ALLISON who was born about 1772 in Orange County, NC.

Group I

This group contains cousins who have been discovered through this project's DNA testing.

Groups J and K

These groups each contain people with an established recent family connection.

Ungrouped

These ALLISON and ELLISON men have received their DNA test results and are waiting for a "cousin" to join the project and provide a matching DNA score. They are currently "orphans" but hopeful that they will soon find a genetic match. Participant #N4624 has been left in Ungrouped although he matches both Groups A & B with a genetic distance of one.

One project member, #Anc001 tested with another company. He has been assigned a dummy kit number. He was tested for three markers which FTDNA do not test (DYS441=13, DYS461=12 and DYS463=24); these results are not shown in the table. They may be included in the future if others are tested for these markers.



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Feedback



We need more participants from Allisons and Ellisons (and variant spellings) around the world. DNA testing for surname projects tests so-called "junk" portions of the Y chromosome. It is not concerned with the portions of DNA which may relate to hereditary disease or other sensitive portions. If you have any information which will contribute to this project please contact the project coordinator.

If you would like to know more about Y-chromosome testing then visit blairgenealogy.com/dna/dna101.html to read an excellent beginners' guide or visit www.clanlindsay.com/genetic_dna_glossary.htm for a comprehensive glossary of genetic terms.

The Family Tree DNA Company (FTDNA) is offering at reduced prices three different Y-chromosome DNA paternal ancestry tests to registered family groups like our ELLISON/ALLISON group:

  • (1) the 12 marker test for $99 (US dollars)
  • (2) the 25 marker test for $148 (US dollars)
  • (3) the 37 Marker test for $189 (US dollars)
  • (4) the 67 Marker test for $269 (US dollars)

It is necessary to add $2 shipping cost within the US or $4 international shipping cost to any order, depending on the country to which the DNA test kit will be mailed. FTDNA can ship a DNA test kit to any country in the world.

The advantage of the 25, 37 & 67 marker tests is that testing more markers helps to narrow down how recently two or more ALLISON/ELLISON men share a common ancestor. If they substantially match on those tests then they have stronger proof that they share an ancestor within a more recent time period and it would be easier to determine where and when their mutual ancestor lived. If they match on the 12 marker test, their common ancestor probably lived longer ago than 200-300 years ago.

The Ellison and Allison men that have matching DNA scores are notified by FTDNA of the names and e-mail addresses of each man who is a match. The men then share their genealogical research with each other and work together to learn more about how they are related to each other and try to discover who their common paternal Ellison/Allison ancestor was.

You can use the link below to submit your name, address, etc. as a new member of the Allison/Ellison DNA Project and to order a DNA sample kit to be mailed to you:
http://www.familytreedna.com/surname_join.asp?code=H99693

You will need to make a choice of ordering the 12, 25, 37 or 67 marker test. There is a drop-down menu at the above website and you can click on which of the three tests you want to order. You can also choose whether you want an invoice to be mailed with the DNA sample kit or if you want to pay for it with a credit card. When you receive your DNA sample kit from FTDNA, a Release Form will be enclosed authorizing Family Tree DNA to use your DNA sample for genealogical testing. This form must be signed by you and returned with your DNA sample.

Disclaimer, Conditions and Agreement

The Allison/Ellison Surname DNA Project organizers have no commercial affiliation with FTDNA or any profit making organization and receive no compensation for services or expenses involved with the project. At present, this webpage is maintained for posting DNA results and pedigrees of participants who choose to make their information available.

Although the Allison/Ellison Project receives discounts at FTDNA, as do all Surname Projects, that by no means suggests a business partnership or other relationship between the Project and the Laboratory. All funds are payable only and directly to FTDNA. The Allison/Ellison Project Co-ordinators will not be the recipient nor steward of any DNA samples and has no responsibility for their care, handling or return to participant, nor duty to act on behalf of Participant in mediation of any dispute between the Participant and the Laboratory.

While a match between two participants may indicate that they share a common male ancestor, it will not identify the specific ancestor and there is no guarantee that every participant will match another participant.

By participation in the project, the participant agrees to all conditions of the Project.



Contacts

Please contact the Allison/Ellison DNA project coordinator for further information about the project or to contribute information.
Minor corrections to the website may be reported to the webpage administrator.

[ Email DNA project coordinator]             [ Email webpage administrator ]

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Last updated 24 Mar 2008


Copyright © 2004-2008 Mary Allison Yonan. All rights reserved.