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Non-Cattle Specific Topics
Coffee Shop
Tracing Family History
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<blockquote data-quote="HDRider" data-source="post: 1262781" data-attributes="member: 17025"><p>I never knew anything past my great grandfather. I had an aunt that used <a href="http://www.ancestry.com" target="_blank">www.ancestry.com</a> and went as far back as our family coming from England to Long Island in the late 1600's. On top of that, I did a DNA test and it allows you to connect it to ancestry.com and allow others that match your DNA to share e-mail addresses.</p><p></p><p>The internet has really made it much easier.</p><p></p><p>My first American born ancestor moved to the Hillsborough NC area, to middle Tennessee to Texas. It is fascinating how one guy can propagate such a herd in a few hundred years.</p><p></p><p>What I saw about my ancestor's were every time people moved in, they moved out.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="HDRider, post: 1262781, member: 17025"] I never knew anything past my great grandfather. I had an aunt that used [url=http://www.ancestry.com]www.ancestry.com[/url] and went as far back as our family coming from England to Long Island in the late 1600's. On top of that, I did a DNA test and it allows you to connect it to ancestry.com and allow others that match your DNA to share e-mail addresses. The internet has really made it much easier. My first American born ancestor moved to the Hillsborough NC area, to middle Tennessee to Texas. It is fascinating how one guy can propagate such a herd in a few hundred years. What I saw about my ancestor's were every time people moved in, they moved out. [/QUOTE]
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