He is known in folklore as a raider of the British and French coasts. If one starts with a lower number of markers and wishes to upgrade to more markers later(without sending in another sample), it is possible to do so with additional payment. Concerning matches with the Ball surname, two of whom have tested only to 37 markers and two to 67 markers. Not so! Kit 148064. Marian Hazel McCabe (1968-1989), English factory worker who was attending the FA Cup semi-final at Hillsborough Stadium, in Sheffield. County Monaghan is in the historic province of Ulster, but now is in the Republic of Ireland. Since its inception, the McCabe DNA project has had a large number of genealogical Brick Walls that have been shattered with the use of Y-DNA. The man who provided the DNA for this kit does not have the surname of McCabe. Catherine WALLACE was born c1788She was convicted of theft (1 bonnet and 1 feather) and sentenced to 7 years transportation. [7] According to a pedigree written by Dubhaltach Mac Fhirbhisigh, the MacCabes descend from the MacLeods and king Sitric Silkenbeard. 1. The SSDI is a searchable database of more than 70 million names. 2. [Philadelphia's Benjamin Franklin had a monetary interest in this plantation in Nova Scotia.] The mtDNA results, as seen by clicking on the mtDNA Results section at the left side of this page, are limited to the study of DNA from mitochondria (plural form of "mitochondrion"), small particles (organelles) within cells. Marguerite attended teaching classes at the University one summer in the 1920s. The MaCabes lost their estates after the battle of Aughrim in 1691. The provider of the DNA for Kit 147686 states that his earliest known McCabe ancestor (his g. g. grandfather) was John McCabe, born in England in 1832, married in 1852 and worked as a carpenter. Extension of the 12-marker test to 67 markers was performed on DNA samples from each of these four McCabes. Birthplace: Loch Broom, Pictou County, Nova Scotia, Canada. The most recent common ancestor for this McCabe-named man and the Cabe-named men, however, must be in Ireland, as the earliest known McCabe in this McCabe line, Patrick McCabe, was born in Ireland (specific location unknown) about 1870, immigrated to America in 1876, was in Indiana in 1889 and later moved to Texas. The most Mccabe families were found in USA in 1880. Eleanor was enumerated (as widowed) in the 1910 census of Seattle, Washington, in the family of her son, Ernest McCabe (grandfather of the kit provider), who is listed as born in Michigan. The nickname or personal name Cba is of uncertain origin. The man who provided the DNA for Kit 139489 is descended from John Cabe/McCabe (1810 will) in this order: Samuel Cabe, James S. Cabe, Samuel W. Cabe, James L. Cabe (grandfather of the kit provider), which produces a fifth cousin relationship with the provider of kit 139946, yet they differ at one mutation step for each of three markers, two of which are fast-mutating markers. S-4 Surname matches with Munday, Thomas, Crossen. 1980), Northern Irish actor, Eamonn McCabe (1948-2022), English photographer born in London, many of his portraits are held in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery, London, Frank Reilly McCabe (1927-2021), American gold medalist basketball player in the 1952 Summer Olympics, David Edward McCabe (1940-2021), British fashion photographer, noted for photographing Andy Warhol throughout 1964, Arva Moore Parks McCabe (1939-2020), American historian, author and preservationist in Miami, Florida, inducted into the Florida Women's Hall of Fame (1986), Andrew George McCabe (b. 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. 1891 .. 2 John McCabe b: Abt. This John's son, Joseph McCabe, was born in 1853 in Shelderslow, England, and came to America in 1857 with his parents, became a U.S. citizen, but went back to England and married in 1878 in Oldham, England, where the grandfather (John McCabe) of the kit provider was born in 1880. Individuals can be tested either for the HVR1 section or BOTH HVR1 and HVR2 sections (not just the HVR2 section) at FTDNA. At the 25 marker level, these men differ at only one marker, 464a, which is a fast-mutating marker. Enniskillen is the main town of Fermanagh County, the westernmost county of present day Northern Ireland. 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. As of October2015, the following changes occurred with the McCabe website: With over 100 members, it has became possible to identify one sequence of marker values unique to men who have the McCabe ancestry! [This man is a descendant of the McCabes who built and operated numerous McCabe grain elevators in USA and Canada border states and provinces.] Sister of John McCabe; James McCabe; Nancy Agnes McCabe; Thomas McCabe; George McCabe and 5 others. Fermanagh County is located in the historic province of Ulster. The DNA sample from Kit number 75386 has been assigned to haplogroup E1b1b1, whereas all of the other McCabe-named men in this project have a haplogroup designation of R1b (except Kit #148064, Group G, Haplogroup G2a). 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.] The McCabe Family DNA study was originally started in the spring of 2001 in an attempt to find the father of an 1840's McCabe orphan. GROUP A, the R1b1b2 OWEN McCABE FAMILY STUDY. This George McCabe lived in Lowell, Michigan and perhaps in Wisconsin before moving to Nevada where he died in Virginia City, Nevada in 1875. Anne Butler 1794 - Unknown. Proving that the Mecabe name must have been derived from the McCabe surname (Group B). These two men had hypothesized that they both descend from the immigrant, Francis McCabe. Eventually Y-DNA proved the father to be James B. McCabe and his ancestor was Owen McCabe, an immigrant about 1837 from County Tyrone in Ireland. "What are the 5,000 Most Common Last Names in the U.S.?". men share a common ancestor with the individuals in the Cabe family (Group G) and also with the descendants of the Nova Scotia immigrant, James McCabe (Group C-3). The reader of this section may profit from printing this page and considering the comments below while viewing the tables of results from either the Y-DNA Results section or the mtDNA Results section. DNA studies have confirmed that they are very closely related, and strongly support the hypothesis that if one of them descends from Francis McCabe, Sr., both of them descend from Francis McCabe, Sr. View Census Data for Mccabe | Data not to scale. There are minor differences in the groups A through M-4, and these differences will be explained in the Results section. Significant differences with C and M groups. Continuation of kit 156857's study through 67 markers would provide more definitive information. Kit 159052. [Amos Cabe and Zachariah Cabe, who are mentioned below, are listed with the McCabe name in the 1820 census of Haywood County, NC.] His DNA at 12 markers matches the Western Atlantic Modal Haplotype (WAMH), the most common Y-DNA signature of Europes most common Haplogroup, R1b, and as such, he has hundreds of matches at the 12 marker level, but none with the McCabe surname. 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. Kits 825 and 1106 come from McCabes who are third cousins of each other. At 25 markers and higher, the comparison of results between groups A and D show numerous differences. You can find birthdates, death dates, addresses and more. Their connections to this Cabe family may be either in Ireland (probably kits 82164, 176320, 14056, and 86111) OR in the USA (kit 146133). 1827 in Co. Cavan, Ireland. Extension of kit 160306s studies to at least 37 markers would provide much more information for further studying of this ancestral McCabe line. (2), William Cain, Sr., is mentioned in the estate of John Cabe, who died in 1818 in Orange County, NC. For information on specific haplogroups, google on "mitochondrial haplogroup H", for example (replacing the "H" with the haplogroup of interest). An unexpected, yet fascinating result of this study was produced when the provider of kit 99404, who also descends from the Sussex County, Delaware immigrant, John McCabe, had his DNA haplogroup studied to the furthest extent currently possible. The descent down to the g. grandfather of the person tested is as follows: James Harrison McCabe (b. The provider of kit 49932 descends from Francis, Jr.; the provider of kit 119756 descends from Simon McCabe. Daniel and Eleanor have been found together in both the 1860 and 1870 censuses of Van Buren County, Michigan, immediately above the entries (in both censuses) for a David McCabe. At least these specific McCabe and Ball lines do NOT have close matches in either the Ball or the McCabe surname DNA studies. Shortly after his arrival in Auckland the Thames goldfields . 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. All of the Cabe-named family members in this group have roots in North Carolina or Tennessee. Parents. The men who provided the DNA for kits 139946 and 146567 have an exact 67/67 match, yet prior to this DNA study, no evidence had been found to connect these two Cabe families! Two individuals with the surname of McMannes or McManus (or who do not have this surname, but can trace their immediate paternal line to this surname) have joined the McCabe Surname DNA Project (on the recommendation of the administrator) based on the close matching of these men with several men in this McCabe project. 7. 1 1. The second hypothesis was that the Mecabe (yes Mecabe, NOT McCabe) families (descendants of Elisha Mecabe, born 1799, Monmouth, New Jersey) are actually descended from a McCabe family. This McCabe man has 52 exact matches at 12 markers at FTDNA, but no McCabe-named men are included. This group study involved at least two different hypotheses. Irish (especially Monaghan and Cavan): Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Cba 'son of Cba' a nickname or personal name of obscure origin. 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. DISCUSSION OF SPECIFIC PROJECT RESULTS ORGANIZED AROUND THE TWELVE GROUPS ON THE RESULTS TABLE. BUT, at 12 markers he does NOT match any men with the surname of McCabe in the FTDNA database. Another 112 words (8 lines of text) covering the years 1601, 1613, 1810, 1740 and 1689 are included under the topic Early McCabe History in all our PDF Extended History products and printed products wherever possible. Then HAVE FUN in finding matches on the map by placing your pointer on the push pins. To determine your closeness to this unique sequence, you count the number of differences from your own marker values compared to the unique sequence marker value (for example, DYS390 is 25 and if your marker value is 24, then that is counted as 1 genetic difference, and if your marker value is 27, then that is counted as 2 genetic differences). Please join us. Also note that if a geographical location on the island of Ireland includes a county name and U.K., this location is in Northern Ireland. NOTE 4: The Y-DNA MOST DISTANT KNOWN ANCESTOR DISTRIBUTION MAP was added by FTDNA in May 2009, but originally only available on participant's personal pages. Kit 156857. 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. 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. The modal values (most common values for each marker) for this group are similar to Group A (the Owen McCabe group), with the modal value of the first 12 markers being exactly the same. Where or how can the text of this specific obituary be found. The number of McCabes as of 2014 was as follows:[3], In the 1990 United States Census, McCabe was ranked 1,200th most common surname, and MacCabe was ranked 43,031st. 1841, Pennsylvania) born in 1816 in Ireland, as were his parents (names not known). These results suggest that these men could be in either groups D or G, but Group G is somewhat reserved for the Cabe family studies or for those who have results closer than four mismatches to the Cabes. Residents of Scotland, Australia, and USA. The next closest matches (with the Cabe surname) of kit 159905 are with kit 139489 with a genetic distance of three, and kit 146733 with a genetic distance of five. They had 3 children: Joan McCabe and 2 other children. Comparing kits 99404 with 40344 at 67 markers produces a 61/67 marker match, with two of these markers being fast-mutating markers. Visitation will be held on Monday, May 1st 2023 from 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM at the Halligan-McCabe-DeVries Funeral Home (614 Main St, Davenport, IA 52803). 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. McCabes are considered to have moved from the Western Isles of Scotland to Ireland sometime around 1350. VII, Group E, McCabe/Ball/Beatty(Beattie)/Propes Family. Thus, the project design was changed to include this new haplogroup labeled as the T group. 1827 in Co. Cavan, Ireland .. +Catherine U. b: Abt. 3. A brother of Thomas was also named James McCabe and may be the James McCabe in the 1871 census of Ontario. 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.'. Counties bordering Monaghan are: Tyrone, Armagh, Louth, Cavan, and Fermanaugh, all of which are within the historic province of Ulster except County Louth. The kit provider descends from Patrick through his son, Robert Cain (1781-1866, IOM), John Cain (b. Kit 127552. Tyrone County is immediately to the north of Fermanagh County and is the only county of Northern Ireland which shares a border with Fermanagh County. THESE three men probably have a more recent common ancestor with each other than with other Cabe-named men in this project. No significant matches have been reported for this kit at 67 markers. However, the match with the Francis surname may not be an indication of relationship with the Francis surname, because the specific Francis male has a male line cousin (Francis surname) who has does not have a G2 haplogroup. Kits 127552 and 147989. V. GROUP C-3, McCABES FROM NORTHERN IRELAND TO NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA. Last Group ("UNASSIGNED") (UPDATED 11/17/09) if listed on the current table. At one time it was in the County of Dublin. Considering just these 35 markers, the Cabe results included a match of 34/35 markers with the Owen McCabe family (Group A in this FTDNA study, whose Irish roots are in Ulster). The definitive publication on this family is the book by Vernon W. McCabe, Jr., "Descendants of John McCabe, 1727-1800 of Sussex County, Delaware", Edition III, 2003, privately printed. SUMMARY COMMENTS on Group C-3. 1773), aged 20, Irish convict who was convicted in Dundalk, Mr. John Mccabe, (b. Raymond F Mccabe was born on March 8, 1924. This MCCABE index was pre-built so it loads quickly. The definitive publication on this McCabe family is the book by Allen E. Marble, The Descendants of James McCabe and Ann Pettigrew, New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, 1986. Francis McCabe is listed in the 1856 Griffin Evaluation as a plot holder (leasing the land). We use cookies to enhance your personalized experience for ads, analytics, and more. "Most Common Last Names in Australia." An early hypothesis was that this James McCabe (Nova Scotia) and Owen McCabe [Cumberland County (later Perry County), Pennsylvania, Group A in this study] were very likely brothers, since they were apparently both from the north of Ireland, and both arrived in Philadelphia in the 1740s. Further, the DNA from kit 146133 has the modal values of 25 and 11 for markers 390 and 391 with a genetic distance (G.D.) of only two (Marker 490, 10 rather than 12) from the modal value of Group G, whereas kits 146733 and 168113 each have a G.D. of three from the modal values of Group G. Kits 146733 and 168113 have a G.D. of two with each other, a 65/67 match. County Tyrone is in the historic province of Ulster and in current Northern Ireland of the United Kingdom. 5. Family tree of the Mccabe Web Site on MyHeritage. NameCensus.com. The historic province of Ulster is NOT equivalent to Northern Ireland. The misattributed paternity event definitely occurred with Amos Cabe, as a descendant of Amos Cabes son Thomas B. Cabe has also tested as haplogroup G2a. MyHeritage is the best place for families online. He is listed with his brothers, John and James (both of whom had arrived earlier), in Philadelphia, in the 1860 census. 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). and you might be surprised at the answer. d: Bef. 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. His earliest known McCabe ancestor (paper trail documentation, prior to this DNA study) is his g. grandfather, Daniel McCabe, who was living in Butler, Wayne County, New York, in 1857, when he married Eleanor Vanderburgh. Kits 9586, 40344, 99404. grandfathers name was James McCabe; his g g grandfather was Felix McCabe, born in 1847, an only child. ( Judith V. Miley Freed (1940- ? Emigration to New Zealand followed in the footsteps of the European explorers, such as Captain Cook (1769-70): first came sealers, whalers, missionaries, and traders. In 2009, at 37 markers, his closest matches (across all FTDNA results) are all from this McCabe surname DNA Project, indicating that it is highly likely that the information provided to this man was correct, that his biological father WAS a McCabe, and he, himself, has established a new DNA line very common to the McCabe lines, but with his own surname different from McCabe. [The DNA from kit #147989 has not been tested for this additional marker for DYS 385.] 2. John and William have numerous living descendants with the surname of McCabe and descendants of John and William have been DNA tested. M groups - highlighted in green - 7 groups - The McCabe men in groups M-2, M-3, and M-4 all match one or more of the men in the M-1 group (McCabe men who currently live in Ireland in 2022). Of the 20 living members of the McCabe clan who are UD alumni or current students, a dozen gathered during the weekend festivities on June 2, in the same spot next to Harter Hall where their matriarch had posed nearly a century ago. Counties bordering Monaghan are: Tyrone, Armagh, Louth, Cavan, and Fermanaugh, all of which are within the historic province of Ulster except County Louth. Continuing on, the unique sequence of Y-DNA marker values for the McCabe project for DYS markers 26 to 37 markers is: DYS460 is11, Y-GATA-H4 is 11, YCAii is 19-23, DYS456 is 15, DYS607 is 15, DYS576 is 18, DYS570 is 17, CDY is 35-38, DYS442 is11, DYS438 is 12. The DNA from kit 137198 at 67 markers has a Genetic Distance (GD) of 2 (65/67 match) with the Kits 139946 and 146567 (Cabe, Group G), a GD of 3 with Kit N36342 (Group D) and a GD of 4 with kits 145047, 159905, and 82165 (Cabe, Group G). Forebears. Some updates in 2014. Kit 824. Retrieved from. At 25 markers, he has only two matches (with a genetic distance of 2), one with the surname of McDonald and the other with the surname of Farr, but no matches with any McCabe-named men at this time. At 67 markers the DNA from Kit 95179 also matches 65/67 with kit 145047 (Group C-3). Highlander from Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island was travelling aboard the railway ferry "SS Caribou" when it was struck by a German submarine torpedo on 14th October 1942, the most significant sinking in Canadian waters at that time, he survived the sinking. This family returned to America and this Joseph McCabe (g. grandfather of the kit provider) died in 1915 in Wissahickon, Pennsylvania. VI GROUP D, R1b1b2, the unrelated R1b1b2 McCabe Families. Robert's line may have daughtered out. Hugh McCabe joined as an administrator and sought to verify his McCabe ancestry which descends from a different haplogroup, and McCabe men that lived in the northwest part of today's Northern Ireland. The average life expectancy for Mccabe in 1943 was 51, and 77 in 2004. These two tested McCabe men are third cousins, once-removed. Wrong Hugh McCabe? The HVR1 and HVR2 columns refer to the "hypervariable regions" one and two, which are regions of the mtDNA which have no genes within their boundaries, and are somewhat more variable than the mtDNA regions that code for proteins. County Armagh is located in the historic province of Ulster and is bordered by Lake Neagh (north), County Tyrone (northwest), County Down (east), and by County Monaghan & County Louth to the south (both in the Republic of Ireland). The results to 67 markers for the McCabe man who provided Kit 145047 were posted in late August 2009.