TURNER-L Archives
Archiver > TURNER > 2004-05 > 1083810614
From: Philip Turner <>
Subject: Re: [TURNER] South Carolina Turners
Date: Wed, 5 May 2004 19:30:20 -0700 (PDT)
In-Reply-To: <4e.2b04dd56.2dc52565@aol.com>
Elaine,
If you have a living Turner uncle, you might consider joining the Turner DNA project. The DNA in the Y (male) chromosone is used so you have to have a male relative to submit a sample. It might indicate to which family of Turners you belong, but it probably won't link you to a particular person.
If you are interested, contact Nancy Grogan .
Phil Turner
wrote:
I would like to hear from some South Carolina Turners. My ancestor, John O.
Turner, was born in 1829 in South Carolina. He migrated to Cass County (now
Bartow County), Georgia by 1850. On 31 August 1851 he married Rosanna Bean who
was born in 1835 in Tennessee. Their first child, John Charles Turner, was
born 13 November 1855 in Georgia. By 1859 they were in Linn County, Kansas
where they lived the rest of their lives. They had four more children: James A.
born in 1861, Thomas S. born in 1866, Ed. L. born in 1870 and Elijah (Lige)
born in 1874. John Charles Turner was my mother's grandfather so I have his
line down to the present day and hope to connect with some more of this line.
Elaine Russell Coffman
Dallas, Texas
==== TURNER Mailing List ====
Turner list website - http://lists.rootsweb.com/index/surname/t/turner.html
---------------------------------
Do you Yahoo!?
Win a $20,000 Career Makeover at Yahoo! HotJobs
This thread:
| Re: [TURNER] South Carolina Turners by Philip Turner <> |