Charles E. Beal has started a fascinating DNA project to study
the origins of his family. Here is an extract from some messages that Charles
wrote to describe the project and locate potential participants.
I had noticed a number of questions that were being asked about
our ancestors and no one could provide satisfactory answers. There were individuals
with the surname Beal, Beale, Beals, Beall, and Bell that had never traced
their ancestors beyond a few generations. They had no idea which lines were
theirs. Others had traced their ancestors for many generations, but still
were looking for the place of origin and the first ancestor that had started
their line.
As examples:
Beal, I had my first ancestor William Beale, b. 1664, York, ME. He had Zaccheus,
Richard, Obadiah, William, Jr., Samuel, Simeon, and Benjamin to carry on
the family name. Later four generations down, Jonathan, Jr., took the "e"
off, and then the surname Beal carried down another eight generations to
my great grandsons, Christopher and Stephen Beal. I have cousins that were
spun off from various generations who still carry the surname Beal. They
all ask who was the father of William Beal and from where in England did
he come?
Another line, alleged not to be related, was started in York,
ME, by Arthur Beal. In Hingham, ME, John Beal, started his American line
and other lines of Beal existed at Portsmouth, ME; Boston, Marblehead, MA;
York, VA; PA, and the other colonies. They most often went by these surnames:
Beal, Beale, Bale, Beel, Beals.
A legend exists that the Beale and Beal families were "Border"
Scot Clans that raided into England during and after the 1100s. We even
see Beal villages remaining today in Northumberland and North Yorkshire,
England. Who established these villages?
There were Beall families established in Maryland and Virginia;
among the most famous was Ninian BEALL, an indentured Scot, sent to America,
who became a Colonel and was known for his size, similar to the strongman,
Tall Barney of Beals Island in New England. Also well known are the lines
of Alexander Beall, Robert Beall which are contained in books sold by BELL
Association
There were over one-hundred-and-seventeen Patriots with these
names in the Revolutionary War, including my ancestor Jonathan Beale, Sr.
You only have to read the Beall Genealogical News by
the Beall Family Association and their related publications, packed with
lineage and sources, to learn about the many individuals with the above
surnames. The Maryland Bealls pronounce their surname as Bell.
Then we get to the Bell lineage, which rightfully claims a
clan name in Scotland. They have spread throughout the United States and
other countries. The Bell-A-Peal is the publication of The Bell
Family Association and they also have many books, like the Beall Genealogical
News above, containing pedigrees and articles on Bell, Beall, Beale, etc.
The Bells have the best established ancestry connecting their US lineage
to Scotland & England.
I have seen articles questioning the connections between the
Alabama, Georgia, Texas Bells, and their northern relatives. Other questions
concern the earliest origin of the Bell surname in Scotland.
There were over one-hundred-and-seventy-four Patriots with
the Bell surname in the Revolutionary War.
It is impossible to do justice to the many thousands of descendants
descended from the above surnames, spread throughout the United States &
other countries in this short article.
If we can establish "Y" chromosome markers in the
form of one or several genetic haplotypes for each of the surnames that
I am including in the Beal, Beale, Beals, Beall, and Bell DNA studies that
are part of: Beal Surname DNA Project, we may have a better idea how our
lineages connect or where they come from in Scotland, England or elsewhere.
Genealogists, who have dead ends, may be able to link their
individual haplotype to a mainstream surname haplotype established in this
study. Regardless of any name changes, it is the genes that are carried
by the Y chromosome from one male ancestor down though the male direct descent
that will prove the lineage. There may be exceptions arising out of rape
and affairs, but they should be small in number. I think it is well worth
the small amount of money required to be a participant in this study. We
might be amazed at what is revealed.
Your questions about genetic genealogy will find answers in
the Web sites listed in the following e-mail describing and explaining the
project. Explore and become familiar with the Duerinck and Mumma DNA Projects
and Savin, etc. DNA Studies.
Up until now no project has had so many participants and the
goals of identifying surname lineage for genealogists who have already researched
together for so many years, through piles of recorded pedigrees and sources.
I can only hope that an "Angel" in the true tradition
of Broadway Shows will volunteer to furnish funds (no strings attached)
for some of our genealogists who might not otherwise be able to afford to
be a participant. Hope springs eternal!
Charles E. Beal
BealsurnameDNA@aol.com
Beal Surname DNA Project
Scope
This project is a multi-surname DNA project. The Beal Surname DNA
Project includes the Beal Surname DNA Study, Beale Surname
DNA Study, Beals surname DNA Study, Beall Surname DNA Study
and Bell Surname DNA Study. Any other possible variants of the surname
will be added, if there is sufficient evidence to believe they might be
useful in the project.
The project will address the ancestry of these lines by studying
the "Y" Chromosome of living males with ancestry consisting of
father, grandfather, great grandfather, great-great-grandfather, great-great-great-grandfather,
etc., up the surname male line to their first ancestor to be positively
identified through genealogical records.
At this time, mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), which is always inherited
from the mother through female descent, will not be addressed in this project.
Background
Genealogy has traditionally used oral history and documentation
as a means of identifying family members and their ancestors. However, researchers
have primarily used documents and records to track generations of families
by establishing pedigrees and lines of descent. In genealogy research, the
surname is frequently a usable tool to trace descent from one generation
to another generation.
As early as 2850 BC, the Chinese found the use of surnames
was practical to identify families and to prevent the intermarriage of close
relatives. There were always questions regarding skin, hair color and other
physical characteristics and people recognized there must be something in
their families that passed these similarities or differences down through
successive generations. There were few answers until genetic science was
used in genealogy!
There have been questions in each of the project surname's
lineages about parallel lines of descent, with same or similar surnames,
which could not be connected to a common ancestor. Questions were also asked
about the origins of their surnames. Was each surname from the same geographical
location, maybe a county or city in England, Scotland, or elsewhere? Were
other similar surnames from the same origin? From a common ancestor?
Genealogists have examined other surnames spelled much like
their own or that sounded the same in efforts to find ancestors. Names were
frequently misspelled because individuals could not read or write, and clerks
spelled the surnames and gave the families names as they saw them. Ancestors
decided to add letters like a, s, l and e to their names; others simply
dropped letters out of their family names; while still others took completely
new names when they migrated. Records were lost by fire, war and other disasters.
Genealogy can be a very frustrating, challenging and time-consuming endeavor.
A system called Soundex was invented to include whole groups
of surnames in a numbering system, and in that system Beal is found at the
designation B400. However, investigative methods did not always find that
elusive ancestor. "Brick Walls" are what the genealogist frequently
calls the dead ends where all attempts to find an ancestor failed.
Today, there is a new investigative tool called genetic genealogy.
This is the branch of knowledge arising out of the study of genes first
identified in 1909 for identification of inherited physical characteristics.
Later, it was found that deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) was contained in chromosomes
and acted as a carrier of genetic information. Since 1940, the chemical
nature of DNA has become a science revealing more and more of the mysteries
that make up the human body. It now has become a science that permits the
identification of individuals by the use of DNA.
DNA is used widely in criminal investigations, court proceedings
on paternity cases, and other issues requiring individual identification.
Talk shows and other media have popularized identifying fathers of children
by DNA.
MtDNA has been demonstrated to be a useful way of tracing
relatives. It was successfully used in identifying the daughters and Czarina
in the Anastasia case in Russia. It was also used in Argentina in the investigation
of murder and kidnapping where children had to be identified.
More recently, the use of the Y chromosome has been used in
family reconstruction, and Y chromosome haplotypes have been used in male
descent lines to establish common markers for inclusion or exclusion from
family paternal lines. Haplotypes are a set of markers on the Y chromosome.
DNA was used in a controversial case determining relationships
in Thomas Jefferson's descent. Other examples are the Mumma and Duerinck
Surname DNA Projects, Sykes, Carvin, Savin, and Page Surname DNA studies.
(Please utilize the Web sites listed below to learn more about
the use of DNA Studies as a genealogy tool. I am not a geneticist, so am
not able to provide technical details or answers on genetics
Objectives
The objectives of this Y Chromosome DNA Project are:
To establish Y chromosome haplotypes for each of the surnames
included in this project.
To set up charts of the Y Chromosome, including each DNA
sample that has been submitted by the participants.
To establish if there are common ancestors for each of the
surnames.
To determine the commonality, if any, between the participating
surnames.
To determine any commonality in the origins of the surnames,
using the first ancestral place of origin from each pedigree for each
sample.
Operation of the Project
Any descendant with at least a five-generation proven paternal lineage
will be welcome to participate. A living person's privacy will be protected
during the course of the project and in the reporting phase. I have hopes
that we will have a number of participants with many more generations of
male descent than the required five. This is a private, not commercial,
project for Beal, Beale, Beals, Beall, Bell family genealogists,
like myself.
There is nothing binding about your stating a desire, initially,
to participate in this project. When a sufficient number of participants
are available, hopefully sixty or more, we will negotiate price with a qualified,
experienced laboratory. You will be advised of the cost, method of payment,
how you will receive your kits, and any other details. You will make a final
decision and sign a form agreeing to participate and pay the laboratory
selected to perform the tests. For your information, the Page Study cost
per individual is $150.00 (a current study). We can hope for a more reasonable
cost as more and more laboratories are competing in the Y Chromosome haplotype
testing field. Our target for a price will be $100. When you compare this
with the cost of conventional genealogy research, it is a bargain.
As for a timetable, I can only offer the example of the Mumma
DNA surname project, which was initiated on 17 April 2000, and the results
were received from the surname testing on 21 January 2001. I would provide
information to the participants as it develops in the project.
I should add, for the squeamish individuals, that the testing
will not be done by drawing blood, but it will be done by swabbing
the inside of the cheeks of your mouth (self help)! Kits will be furnished
to each participant for that purpose.
If you are interested in being on the cutting edge of a new
genealogy tool and have the proven five-generation lineage or more, please
submit your name, mail address, and your established proven pedigree; including
each generation of males, dates of b., d., spouse, place of residence to
my e-mail address at: bealsurnameDNA@aol.com
For any participant that wants to use the postal services,
because they do not have access to the Internet, my address is:
Charles E. Beal
1800 Hampton Run
Broadview Heights, OH 44147-3290
I cannot enter into postal correspondence to respond to questions
on this project at my home, as the postal cost would be prohibitive for
me, as I have no sponsor for this project. I believe any individual will
find answers to their questions by using the sites below.
A Web site has been established to be a focal point for the
project and to post the project results at: Beal Surname DNA Project
at hometown.aol.com/bealsurnamedna/index.html.
Each participant will be given their individual results and given access
to the Web site. Each will be identified by a coded number in the charts.
None of the participants will be identified nor will their family lineage
be posted without their permission.
I can tell you that we already have participants in each of
the studies and many of them have more than twelve generations of male surname
ancestry to offer to the studies. As participants encourage others genealogists
to participate and as the word of mouth and published word spread, I hope
to reach our target goal of sixty participants fairly soon. Then we can
enter the final stages of the project's operation. We are at the forefront
of this new technology.
I recommend reading a layman's explanation of DNA for Family
Historians, a thirty-two-page paperback of the same name by Alan Savin
at: www.savin.org/dna/dna-book.html.
It costs $6.99 postpaid, and his site accepts other international legal
tender. He is extremely knowledgeable and has been providing me with free
advice for this project. I receive no remuneration from the sale.
Other sites that may be of interest to you and will answer
many of your questions include: The Mumma DNA Surname Project at www.mumma.org/DNA.htm
and the Kevin Duerinck Surname DNA Project Results at: www.duerinck.com/results.html.