Marble's book (referenced above, p. 21) states that this David McCabe was a son of John McCabe, son of the immigrant, James McCabe, and that in 1818, this David McCabe left West River, [Nova Scotia] and went to Skaneateles, N.Y. [Skaneateles is in Onondaga County, and about 20 miles southeast of Butler, NY, where Daniel and Eleanor were married.] This means that the other kit providers in Group B are also the same haplogroup and also indicates that their roots are in the area of northwestern Ireland, Ulster and lowland Scotland. Based on these results, the James J. McCabe descendants may be considered to have the ancestral haplotype (determined by including the results of kit 54231 which will be discussed later). IV C-2, McCABES FROM COUNTY MAYO, IRELAND, TO KENT COUNTY, ONTARIO, CANADA. The surnames McCabe ( Irish: Mac Cba) [2] and MacCabe ( / mkeb / muh-KAYB) are Irish and Scottish surnames. He married (2) ELLEN Abt. According to the Barnaby Cabe records compiled by Hugh Conway Browning, Joseph Latta married Sarah Cabe in 1810" [Sarah Cabe who m. Joseph Latta was one of the 9 daughters of John Cabe and Mary Strayhorn and granddaughter of Barnaby Cabe.] He is listed with his brothers, John and James (both of whom had arrived earlier), in Philadelphia, in the 1860 census. FamilyTreeDNA - The McCabe DNA Surname Project All of the Cabe-named family members in this group have roots in North Carolina or Tennessee. There are 43,000 immigration records available for the last name Mccabe. An unusually short lifespan might indicate that your Mccabe ancestors lived in harsh conditions. Some members of this Cabe family had been tested previously with another DNA testing company (Genebase), and amazingly, the results showed a strong relationship to some of the McCabes in this FTDNA testing, but only 35 markers were the same markers between the two companies. The results at 67 markers (for kit 148651) show that this man matches individuals in both Groups D and G. He matches 63/67 with the modal values (most common values) of group D with the following markers (all "slow mutators") producing the mismatches: DYS numbers 390, 389-2, 413a, and 557. RELATIONSHIPS. This is clearly a unique McCabe family, until other McCabes are tested that might include a match. S-4 Surname matches with Munday, Thomas, Crossen. Thomass son, Benjamin Franklin McCabe (g. grandfather of the participant) was born March 9, 1855 in Kansas, but this family soon moved to the Chicago area. Kit 137198. Raymond F Mccabe was born on March 8, 1924. Wayne D. McCabe Obituary It is with deep sorrow that we announce the death of Wayne D. McCabe (Little Falls, New York), who passed away on April 21, 2023, at the age of 75, leaving to mourn family and friends. The family of James and Anne Pettigrew McCabe arrived at the Philadelphia Plantation in Pictou, Nova Scotia, in 1767, as one of six families who were the first immigrants from Philadelphia to Pictou. Showing that an American man, who could not trace his McCabe ancestry back further than his g. grandfather, definitely descends from James McCabe, 1767 Irish immigrant to Nova Scotia, Canada (originally to Philadelphia, USA in the 1740s), and in fact, has the deduced ancestral haplotype (at 67 markers) of this McCabe family (Group C-3, Kit 145047). He was orphaned during the Civil War and taken in by the Stapp/Stepp family. The g. grandparents of the participant was said to be George McCabe and Mollie McCabe of Belfast, Ireland (Northern Ireland, within the historic province of Ulster). We need the help of good genealogists to grow a completely free shared family tree to connect us all. (Updated 8/19/10) Understand it all by viewing our, Family Crest Download (JPG) Heritage Series - 600 DPI, Family Crests and Genealogy: how they relate, https://forebears.io/new-zealand/surnames, https://www.surnamemap.eu/unitedkingdom/surnames_ranking.php?p=10, https://convictrecords.com.au/ships/boddingtons, https://convictrecords.com.au/ships/countess-of-harcourt, https://convictrecords.com.au/ships/elizabeth, http://www.slsa.sa.gov.au/BSA/1838PestonjeeBomanjee.htm, https://convictrecords.com.au/ships/canton, https://convictrecords.com.au/ships/emma-eugenia, http://www.yesteryears.co.nz/shipping/passlist.html, http://generals.dk/general/McCabe/Edward_Raynsford_Warner/USA.html, http://www.empress2014.ca/seclangen/listepsc1.html, https://cdnc.ucr.edu/?a=d&d=SFC19050321.2.19&e=-------en--20--1--txt-txIN--------1, https://metro.co.uk/2019/04/15/remembering-96-victims-hillsborough-disaster-30-years-9206566/, https://uboat.net/allies/merchants/crews/ship68.html, http://www.rmslusitania.info/lusitania-passenger-list/, Contemporary Notables of the name McCabe (post 1700), Sarah McCabe, who arrived in America in 1764, Edward McCabe, aged 35, who landed in New Castle or Philadelphia in 1805, Joseph McCabe, who landed in America in 1811, Linus McCabe, aged 27, who arrived in New York in 1812, Owen McCabe, aged 30, who landed in New York in 1812, Hugh McCabe, aged 29, who arrived in Maryland in 1813, Elizabeth McCabe, who arrived in Arkansas in 1905, James McCabe, who landed in Nova Scotia in 1783, Richard McCabe, who arrived in Nova Scotia in 1821, Francis McCabe, who landed in Canada in 1829, Eliza McCabe, aged 21, who arrived in Saint John, New Brunswick in 1833 aboard the brig "Ugoni" from Belfast, Ireland, Michael McCabe, aged 24, a labourer, who arrived in Saint John, New Brunswick in 1834 aboard the ship "Edwin" from, Mary McCabe, aged 21, who arrived in Saint John, New Brunswick in 1834 aboard the ship "Edwin" from Dublin, Ireland. At 12 markers, he, amazingly, matches 11/12 the DNA provided by Kit 129216 (also in Group J), with the one mismatch being marker DYS 439, a fast-mutating marker. This kit 95179 also matches at 64/67 with another man from Group C-3 (151400) and three men in Group G (Cabe), Kits 139946, 14567, and 159905. With kit #159052, he has a GD of three, but with kit #9587, he has a GD of five. The family history (not yet documented) suggests that this Cabe/McCabe family came to North Carolina from Maryland, the Valley of Virginia, or perhaps Pennsylvania. Forebears. Individuals within this group have been tested for the number of markers listed. At 12 markers, he matches 12/12 with many of the McCabes and Cabes in this McCabe surname project. Raymond Mccabe passed away at age 67 years old on April 16, 1991. The man who provided the DNA for kit 159905 descends from David L. Cabe (wife Louisa Miller), b. ca 1826 in North Carolina, and died in 1893 in Indian Territory (now Oklahoma). Subsequently, five men who do NOT have the Cabe surname, but have very close matches with some Cabe family members are now included, two with the McCabe surname (kits 82164 and 176320), one man with the Cain surname (kit 140524), one man with the Searcy surname (Kit 146133) and one man with the Denny Surname (Kit 86111). The grandfather of the participant was also named Benjamin Franklin McCabe. Thus, the project design was changed to include this new haplogroup labeled as the T group. SUMMARY COMMENTS on Group C-3. Francis McCabe is reported to have had two sons, Francis, Jr., and Simon McCabe, and one daughter, Elizabeth McCabe, all three of whom came to Ops before 1862. , his descendants were the most powerful rulersin Ireland, Scientists found an area in northwest Ireland, where they claim 21.5% carry Nialls genetic fingerprint.. GROUP A, the R1b1b2 OWEN McCABE FAMILY STUDY. These two counties are on the northeastern coast of the island of Ireland, and adjacent to the following counties: Londonderry, Tyrone, and Armagh. The most Mccabe families were found in USA in 1880. The provider of the DNA for this kit descends from this 1799 John Cabe in this order: Thomas Jefferson Cabe (b 1839, Tennessee), John William Cabe (b. His DNA does not match any of the descendants in Group A, indicating that a "misattributed paternity" event (MPE) or "surname discontinuity" (a disconnect between the surname and the Y chromosome) has occurred, such as in an unrecorded adoption, intentional name change, mother using her maiden name for her children, etc. Thus the oldest coats of arms generally do not include a motto. Memorials may be made to the family. New York had the highest population of Mccabe families in 1840. Some of these ancestors are most likely from the historic province of Ulster. 1. This George McCabe lived in Lowell, Michigan and perhaps in Wisconsin before moving to Nevada where he died in Virginia City, Nevada in 1875. These Ball-named men trace their ancestry back to two different Ball-named individuals (James William Ball, 1797 and Samuel Ball, born 1811) in Loudoun County, Virginia. Jump to: Biography Memories Family Tree Followers Harry Mccabe's Biography The MaCabes lost their estates after the battle of Aughrim in 1691. ), jmfreed218@gmail.com ). of the distribution of various allelic values for specific markers, 95% of men who are in the haplogroup R1b have a value of 9 repeats, whereas less than 0.5% have a value of 7 repeats. 1829 in Ireland, and died Bef. They were known as mercenaries to the O'Reillys and the O'Rourkes, but then became their own Sept in Breffny and their Chief was the 'Constable of the two Breffnys.'. He DOES match 33/37 with two other participants in this McCabe DNA project, kits 23747 and 37202, neither of which has extended their study to 67 markers. The g. grandfather of the man who provided the DNA for this kit was George Washington McCabe, born in June 1842, in Ohio, and who had sons Charles McCabe, Lloyd McCabe, and George Alvin McCabe, the latter of whom (George, born in Illinois, grandfather of the kit provider) was born in July 1878 in Illinois (in the 1900 census was in the military in the Philippine Islands) and married Ida in 1934 in Hot Springs, ND. At 67 markers the DNA from Kit 95179 also matches 65/67 with kit 145047 (Group C-3). Kits 825 and 1106 come from McCabes who are third cousins of each other. ( Judith V. Miley Freed (1940- ? On the map, "Y Haplogroups of the World", which represents the situation about 1500 A.D., the E1b haplogroup (still listed as E3B on this map, as of October 2008) is highest in Morocco (ca 75%) with other large percentages in Maori (ca 25%), Sudan (ca 25%) and Ethiopia (ca 50%). For information on specific haplogroups, google on "mitochondrial haplogroup H", for example (replacing the "H" with the haplogroup of interest). If you are a male with the surname of McCabe, Mecabe or Cabe and wish to join this surname DNA project (or if you are organizing a DNA test for a male with the surname of McCabe, Mecabe, or Cabe, or if your surname is NOT McCabe, or variations thereof, but you expect that your straight line male ancestry DOES include a McCabe male), then you should join this McCabe Y-DNA project. Concerning other DNA matches, the DNA from kit 49932, at 25 markers has numerous matches, but the only McCabe surname match is that of kit 119756. The son of Bernard McCabe (died 1952), who was the father of the man who provided kit 148651, immigrated to New York City in 1949 from Scotland. McCabe Family Site - MyHeritage Basic family site Welcome My name is Fiona McCabe and I started this site. We are often asked, How common it is for McCabe siblings to have the same first name? The man who provided the sample for kit 146133 joined this McCabe/Mecabe/Cabe project on 7/11/09, based on the observation that he has no matches with his own surname of Searcy, which may be expected as the father of the man tested was adopted into a Searcy family. This MCCABE index was pre-built so it loads quickly. The men who provided the DNA for these kits lists their earliest known McCabe ancestor as Francis McCabe from the town of Aghintra, County Fermanagh, of the historic province of Ulster, and who was married in 1837. 3 Sept.1799, d. 30.Dec 1878); Lewis Mecabe (b. (Updated 08/20-23/10 for a new subgroup of kits 146133, 146733, and 168113 and revision of the description for Kit 148064) The quote is from the R1b1b2 section of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Marian Hazel McCabe (1968-1989), English factory worker who was attending the FA Cup semi-final at Hillsborough Stadium, in Sheffield. UD Messenger - McCabe Family - University of Delaware During the year 1856 he left home for India, where he stayed about four years, and then returned to the Old Country. A funeral service will be held on Monday, May 1st 2023 at 12:00 PM at the same location. Owen McCabe (1869 - ) - Genealogy To have such a tight DNA match at this distance of relationship is very unusual. One reference (see below), states Belfast as the Irish home of this James McCabe. The known places of origin of almost all of the McCabes listed below are in the northern part of the island of Ireland (historic province of ULSTER), confirming that these McCabe families were probably all of Scots-Irish origin. McCabe Genealogy, McCabe Family History Enniskillen is the main town of Fermanagh County, the westernmost county of present day Northern Ireland. Some of the first settlers of this family name were: 2000- 2023 Swyrich Corporation, all rights reserved. No other McCabes in the McCabe surname study have these same haplotype results at these five markers. Mr. Andrew Mccabe, English Fireman from Liverpool, Mr. Richard Mccabe, English Fireman from England, who worked aboard the, Mr. John Alexander Mccabe, English Trimmer from Liverpool, England, who worked aboard the, Mr. Roy A. McCabe, British passenger who was Captain of the P.E.I. That may be true, but so far, no close matches have been found between his results and any of the McCabes studied in the project so far. 5. The man who provided the DNA for kit 95179 traces his ancestry back to Luke McManus, who was born before 1759 in Ireland and died between 1820 and 1830 in Berkley County, Virginia (now West Virginia), wife Catherine. WikiTree is a community of genealogists growing an increasingly-accurate collaborative family tree that's 100% free for everyone forever. McCabe Family Trees, Crests, Genealogy, DNA, More - Linkpendium The man who provided the DNA for this kit traces his McCabe ancestry to John McCabe, born 1820 in County Armagh, Ireland, and who died in 1898 in Pinebrook, NJ, and whose wife was Catherine Sheridan. He married LeAnna Stapp/Stepp 10 Feb 1879. They had 3 children: Joan McCabe and 2 other children. He lived in 1940, at address, Illinois. I. Kits 825, 826, 827, 1106, 54231 John and William have numerous living descendants with the surname of McCabe and descendants of John and William have been DNA tested. Kits 49932, 119756.. Please join us in collaborating on MCCABE family trees. It is likely that Mac Cba literally son of cape originated as a nickname for a galloglass. These results strongly support the very strong circumstantial evidence that led to the hypothesis that James B. McCabe (born in 1807) WAS the father of James J. McCabe born in 1843. UNIQUE DNA RESULTS. (Updated 4/18/09) http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~geneticgenealogy/yfreq.htm) Kit 159052. Combining the information from the courthouse records and the DNA results very strongly supports the hypothesis that this individual is a descendant of Owen McCabe, specifically through Owen's son William. His g. grandfather (also named Felix) moved to Mullagh in County Cavan, from which town, his grandfather (also named Felix), immigrated to Scotland in 1926. This VERY STRONG MATCH definitely confirms the paper records that the Cabe name most definitely was derived from the McCabe name. James McCabe (1824 - 1906) - Genealogy 1850 in Glasgow, Lanarks. Kit 111254 Thomas McCabe, the earliest known McCabe ancestor, and great grandfather of the man who provided the DNA sample for kit 111254, was born in 1842, most likely in Brookborough near the town of Enniskillen of current Northern Ireland. The Cabe-named men discussed above, definitely, without doubt, share a common ancestry with the McCabe-named man who provided the DNA for Kit #176320, as this man matches 66/67 markers (genetic distance of only one) with Kits 139946 and 146567. Michael Mccabe (1955 - 1985) Born June 22, 1955 Death July 1985 Summary Michael Mccabe was born on June 22, 1955, and died at age 30 years old in July 1985. Thomas had a sister, Kate Martin. Some less common occupations for Americans named Mccabe were Clerk and Stenographer. The provider of Kit #145047 can be considered as having the DEDUCED ANCESTRAL HAPLOTYPE of this Nova Scotia James McCabe family, at all 67 markers, ASSUMING that he has a common ancestry (probably in the northern part of the island of Ireland) with many of the Cabe family members in Group G (genetic distance of three with three members of Group G at 67 markers), when considering markers CDYa and 557. Another McCabe has joined this DNA project and claims descent from the 1760's immigrant to Nova Scotia, James McCabe through the immigrant's son James and down to the grandfather of the man tested (thus showing a closer paper trail connection to kit 9587 than the other two McCabes in this group): Thomas McCabe, James McCabe, and Anthony S McCabe. The Cabe-named man who provided the DNA for Kit 148064 traces his ancestry back to Amos Cabe of Burke and Lincoln Counties of North Carolina, the same area associated with the ancestry of men who provided kits 139489 and 139946. A Cain/Cabe surname connection HAS been found in Orange County, North Carolina, with three records (as reported by Margie Cabe Keener: (1), "At the November 1824 Term of Court, administration of the estate of Joseph Latta, dec'd, with the will annexed, was granted to Thomas Gaddis, who entered into bond with Jonathan P. Sneed and William Cain (either Sr. or Jr.), securities, in the sum of $5000. On the Classic chart, if the DYS marker is highlighted in red (on the top of the chart), it means that the DYS marker is a fast mutating marker. He is known in folklore as a raider of the British and French coasts. "Most Common Last Names in Australia." PROPOSED MODAL HAPLOTYPE FOR THE McCABE/CABE SURNAME DNA: When comparing the results for the first 12 markers in this study, a pattern has developed that many participants in this surname project have the following allele numbers: 13, 25, 14, 11, 11, 14, 12, 12, 11, 13, 13, 31. 1812, IOM, immigrated to Iowa in 1865), Abram Cain (b. The surname McCabe was first found in on the Isle of Arran in Scotland. . However, both mismatches with kits 139946 and 146567 are in fast mutating markers, numbers CDYa and 567. ", the same as their mother. Subsequently two of these five men (with surnames of Denny and McMannes) have joined this McCabe/Cabe DNA project. For example, for kit #N21369, this mtDNA donor, at location #304 on his mtDNA, has a C (cytosine) instead of whatever nucleotide is in the CRS (A, or G, or T). Kit 151400 does not have any significant matches with the Owen McCabe family descendants (Group A), confirming that the two 1740's immigrants to America, Owen McCabe and James McCabe, were not related within historic times. 1801), aged 21, Irish reaper who was convicted in. NameCensus.com. 1829, Ohio, d. 1905, Belton, Cass County, Missouri, wife, Mary Hawthorne) and James Edmond McMannes (b. The 1790 census of the John Cabe family of Lincoln County, NC, appears to have this Amos Cabe included, based on known records of this family. The McCabe project administrator recommends starting with 67 markers. Mottoes seldom form part of the grant of arms: Under most heraldic authorities, a motto is an optional component of the coat of arms, and can be added to or changed at will; many families have chosen not to display a motto. Most participants in this McCabe DNA now have their most distant McCabe ancestor mentioned and pinpointed on the map. County Monaghan is in the historic province of Ulster, but now is in the Republic of Ireland. Harry Mccabe (1906 - 1962) Born January 14, 1906 Death February 1962 Summary Harry Mccabe was born on January 14, 1906, and died at age 56 years old in February 1962. By 1838, the British New Zealand Company had begun buying land from the Maori tribes, and selling it to settlers, and, after the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840, many British families set out on the arduous six month journey from Britain to Aotearoa to start a new life. Also at 67 markers he matches with a genetic distance of three with kit 145047 (Group C-3), and 82164 (Group G). November 20, 1782. The man who provided the DNA for kit 139946 is descended from John Cabe/McCabe (1810 will mentioned above) in this order: Zachariah Cabe, Samuel Cabe, Thomas Lucius Cabe, and Thomas Jasper Cabe (grandfather of the kit provider). View Census Data for Mccabe | Data not to scale. Anne Butler 1794 - Unknown. A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z, WIKITREE HOME | ABOUT | G2G FORUM | HELP | SEARCH. At 12 markers he had no matches with any other man in the entire FTDNA database. The earliest record for John Cabe/McCabe is in 1778 in that part of Burke County that was taken into Lincoln County, NC in 1787. Family tree of the Mccabe Web Site on MyHeritage. NOTE 3: Two "movable bars" ("scrolling bars") on the Y-DNA RESULTS webpage (right side and at the bottom) assist in moving the contents up and down, left and right. The first was that the immigrant ancestor (of the provider of Kit 9586), John McCabe, may have been a brother to Owen McCabe (Group A). 10. These two men had hypothesized that they both descend from the immigrant, Francis McCabe. It should be noted that in future years the Groups may change but the Kit numbers will identify the same individuals. The men in group M-5 match one of the two men who currently live in Ireland that are included in that M-5 group. Finding the father of an 1840's McCabe orphan (Group A, kits 825, 826, 827 & 1106). Retrieved from, Convict Records Voyages to Australia (Retrieved 9th March 2022). This was about 30% of all the recorded Mccabe's in USA. Kit 176320. Felix's son (grandfather of the provider of kit 148651), Bernard McCabe, was also born in the same location (baptism record from the Diocese of Kilmore, Fermanagh, Ireland), but died in 1952 in Clydebank, Old Kilpatrick, Dunbarton, Scotland. In 1865 he again left home, this time for New Zealand, and landed in Auckland in May of the same year. Kits 139946 and 146567. At 67 markers this strong relationship does not continue. This man does not have any matches in the FTDNA Cain/Cane surname DNA study, and also does not match with any Cain, Cane, McCane or McCain surname individuals from the Isle of Man who have been tested. H. Denny's death certificate and the 1920 & 1930 U.S. Censuses state his birth in Scotland), from which city he immigrated with his parents (names unknown at this time) to America possibly about 1862. [Four of the ten men have exactly the same values for the first 12 markers as those men in Group A; these are kits numbered: N25228, N36342, 23747, and 37202.] After she married Harry E. McCabe and had a son, she divorced the father and had her son's name legally changed to the Young surname. JOHN MCCABE , J.P., was born in County Cavan, Ireland, in 1836. Early Origins of the McCabe family The surname McCabe was first found in on the Isle of Arran in Scotland. Maurice McCabe passed away at age 53 years old on October 6, 1975, and was buried at Houston National Cemetery Section E Site 106 10410 Veterans Memorial Drive, in Houston, Texas. The kit provider has the surname of Dale as he was adopted by his stepfather. The man who provided the DNA sample for this kit has an oral history, as well as some paper documentation, of descent from Owen McCabe (1740's immigrant to America from County Tyrone, Ireland, Group A in this project). These 2 men match at 2 at 111 markers. Y chromosomal tests on most (but not all) of these McCabe families have produced an "estimate" of R1b1 as the "overall" haplogroup, which indicates a Western European ancestry for each of these McCabe families. He also had a sister Mary who accompanied him in 1853. The Y chromosome DNA (originally 12 marker tests) of two male line descendants (kits 826 and 827) of two sons of the "orphan" James J. McCabe (1843-1914) matched exactly the same 12 markers of two male-line descendants (kits 825 and 1106) of two sons of James B. McCabe who was born in 1807 in Ohio, died in 1892 in Kansas, and is a descendant of Owen McCabe's son, John. However, they do match several individuals who have the surnames of Propes, Ball, and Beatty (Beattie).
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mccabe family tree 2023