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Programme: 2008 |
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Wednesday 3rd September
Research &
Enquires Evening |
Wednesday 1st October
Shaw’s Ribble Valley Journey No1
Jim Halsall |
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Wednesday November 5th
Short talks by Members. |
Wednesday 3rd December
Christmas Social Evening |
Coming
Events
North West
Group of Family History Societies Family History Day Fair
2008
Saturday
1st November 2008 at St. Georges Hall, Liverpool 10.00 –
1600 celebrating: ’08 Liverpool – European Capital of
Culture’. featuring:
Family
History Societies, GRO,, Register and Record Offices, etc.
and lectures by Dr. Nick Barratt, Consultant Genealogist for
the BBC, David Stoker, Manager Liverpool Record Office and
the Rev. Professor D. Ben Rees talking on the Welsh
Immigration to Liverpool (1750-2007)
Admission
is £2,00 on the door, £4.00 if you wish to attend the talks.
Seating for the talks is limited and will be on a first come
first served basis. No charge for young persons under 16.
Research
and Advice Sessions at Rawtenstall Library
every
Tuesday 1.30 - 3.30 pm
The
Rossendale Branch now holds regular Research and Advice
sessions at Rawtenstall Library. We have arranged a rota of
10 members, of whom 2 or 3 will be on hand each week to
assist members of the public. We may also be able to do
simple look-ups for members not able to attend the library
in person.
Rossendale Miscellany:
News,
notes and queries
Haslingden Roots
Due to
refurbishment work being carried out at Haslingden Library
over the next few months Haslingden Roots have decided to
take a break and will therefore not be meeting on our
regular Monday night slots for the foreseeable future.
However
during the month of September they will be exhibiting a
collection of old photographs of the Haslingden & District
area in the upstairs lecture hall at the library.
I will keep
you posted on how the work is going and when we will be
returning to the library and if you have any enquiries
during that time please feel free to e.mail me on
jax@grane92.freeserve.co.uk
Jackie
Ramsbottom
Secretary
Haslingden
Roots
Open
Days at St. Nicholas
The annual
open days at St. Nicholas, Newchurch will take place
Saturday 6th September 10.30 – 4.30 Sunday 7th September
12.00 – 5.00. Michael Hiluta will be in attendance on Sunday
and will be willing help you to find your way round the
graveyard. Last year Michael was ecstatic to find that all
the original parish registers were on view and available for
consultation
The
Haworth-Howarth DNA Project.
Stephen
Howarth member 949 has contacted me from Chester about his
DNA Project we have never dealt with this topic before. I
hope our Haworth members will cooperate with Stephen in this
project.
Stephen
writes:
"Many
branch members will have Haworth ancestors (all spelling
variants included) and know first hand how difficult it is
to disentangle one branch from another. My own
3xgreatgrandfather Richard Haworth was a calico printer
described unhelpfully in the 1851 and 1861 censuses as born
‘Rossendale’ in 1786/87. He must have had parents and I have
spent the last 30 years trying to find some for him and to
link him convincingly with a home location in either
Rossendale or Bury. Until now I have put my faith in naming
patterns – my family have recurrent Abrahams, Benjamins,
Josephs and Richards but other common Haworth family names
such as Henry, Edmund, Lawrence and Dennis are conspicuous
by their absence.
The
development of DNA testing interested me from the start
since it seemed to offer a new line of attack. Since Haworth
is my paternal line I will have inherited a distinctive
Y-chromosome from the very distant past, when our ancestors
came out of Africa into Europe by a variety of different
routes. The y-chromosome mutates slowly over time, and by
comparing the different patterns at consistent marker points
in each male’s DNA sample it is becoming possible to glean
information about their families’ distant past. More
important for family historians, mutations in the 20 or so
generations since surnames came into common use indicate to
holders of the same surname whether or not they have a
common paternal ancestor in this period, give some
indication of how long ago the lines diverged and make it
easier to link individuals into groups and tie them down to
locations.
The
potential for this to deliver breakthroughs with ‘problem’
families like the Haworths is considerable. We believe we
are a single family, but there will be some Haworths
(probably in Yorkshire not Lancashire) who originate in the
Bronte’s parish of Haworth and are completely unrelated to
us. There will also be a proportion, perhaps 20-30%, whose
paternal line turns out not to be the core Haworth one. For
a single-source surname like Haworth it ought to be
possible, provided the tests are detailed enough and
sufficient Haworth’s participate to build up a
representative sample, to distinguish between the various
branches that have evolved. We know (unless DNA has shocks
in store) that the name originates with the family living at
Great Howarth or Howarth Hall in Rochdale. Some branches
will have stayed in Rochdale or moved south into Oldham or
Manchester. Others will have moved into the Bury and
Rossendale areas and further north and west. It is a working
hypothesis that most of the Haworths in these northern
areas, often coinciding with the Haworth spelling, are
descended from the first settlers who took up land in
Rossendale after deforestation in 1507. The hope is that we
shall eventually be able not just to separate out Rossendale
from Oldham or Manchester origins but also to identify
whether within the Rossendale group the descent is from the
Haworths of Crawshawbooth or the Haworths of Constablee and
the many other branches into which we split over the 17th
and in the 18th centuries.
I ordered
my yDNA test this summer and within a month had got back the
results and was able to log on to the test company’s website
to see a list of the closest matches in their database, with
an estimate of the probable time elapsed since the Most
Recent Common Ancestor (MRCA).
I had some
instant good fortune since one of the closest matches was
for a John Haworth living in Oklahoma. I was able to contact
him and learned that he is a direct descendant in the male
line, as are many Haworths in the United States, of the
Quaker George Haworth who emigrated to Pennsylvania from
Gambleside in Rossendale in 1699. The estimate was that our
common ancestor was somewhere around 1500 – 1600 which fits
reasonably well with the scenario of common descent from the
settlers of Rossendale. It means that I can be reasonably
confident that I am looking for a male line named Haworth
back to the start of parish registers, 200 years earlier
than I have traced my own family so far and that it makes
sense to focus research on the Rossendale branches of the
family.
Setting up
the project
I expected
that once I had obtained my DNA result I would simply sign
up to a flourishing Haworth family name DNA project and be
able to start swapping results with other signed up members.
Not so - there were several hundred DNA surname projects but
none for Haworth. It became clear that if I wanted to get
value from analysis of Haworth DNA, a project had to be set
up to organise it, and that I seemed to be the only person
in the frame to do this, even though I am a newcomer to
genetic genealogy and notoriously short of spare time. It
was therefore important for me to identify a specialist firm
that would provide both expert analysis and professional
admin support and after taking advice and looking at the
options I decided to set up a project using a firm in Texas
called World Families Network. They are linked to the Family
Tree DNA testing laboratory and database, which is much the
largest database for research of this kind.
The
priority now the Haworth-Howarth Project has been set up is
to persuade as many people as possible with a Haworth
paternal line (all spelling variants welcome including
Heyworth but not normally Howard or Hayward!) to join the
project and provide a sample for a yDNA test. So the purpose
of this article is to tell Rossendale branch members about
the project and to appeal to all male Haworths with an
interest in family history to join this project group, which
is also open to all female Haworths with a male Haworth
relative (eg brother or uncle) available to provide a yDNA
sample to join in this experiment. Put simply the more
family members that join, and the more representative the
sample, the more we can all hope to learn.
The way to
join – or just to find out more about use of DNA in family
history - is to log on to
www.worldfamilies.net/surnames/haworth.
To
participate, click on ‘Join Project’ and complete the form
to order a DNA test, after which enrolment in the project
will be automatic. The price for the FTDNA 37-marker test,
which is the level needed for meaningful use in family
history, is $119, which at present exchange rates is
approximately £60. Only one sample is required for each
family group of close relations which means the cost can
sometimes be shared – there is no point in buying separate
tests for brothers, fathers and sons etc. There are more
comprehensive but more expensive test options available,
such as for those who want to test maternal line mtDNA as
well, but for the purposes of this project the 37 market
test is considered fully adequate. It is usually possible
for people who have already obtained yDNA results from other
providers such as DNA Heritage, Ancestry and Relative
Genetics to join in by submitting their existing results
instead of purchasing a new test. Anyone wanting to take
this route should contact me by email on
mailto:stehowarth@aol.com or my co-administrator Terry
Barton at World Families in the first instance and we will
email the form needed for data input and conversion. When
emailing please specify which word processing programme you
use (eg Word or Work) since they require different versions
of the form.
All project
members are asked to provide the name and date and place of
birth of their earliest known paternal ancestor on joining,
and to post a simplified pedigree onto the site to help with
interpretation of results and matching. The yDNA ‘lines’ of
all participants are posted as a list for comparison, the
identity of members being indicated only by numbers, with
members’ names and email addresses kept confidential to the
project administrators. There will be an online forum for
members to discuss both their Haworth family trees and
technical issues around interpretation of yDNA results.
There will
be many LFHHS members with more remote Haworth ancestors
through female lines, who are unable to provide a Haworth
male DNA sample: the general findings of the project will be
available to all, but those unable to contribute yDNA to
this DNA database will not be able to participate directly
in the project. It is early days but as well as online
access to the website there is likely to be an email
newsletter circulated once or twice a year, depending on how
much news there is to communicate.
As a family
we Haworths are not noted for hanging back, so if you are a
Haworth and able to provide Y-DNA relevant to the project,
do please join in: it promises to be fascinating as well as
useful"
Stephen
Howarth
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