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. You can find birthdates, death dates, addresses and more. Among those 17 men who do not match the proposed McCabe haplotype at least to a 11/12 match are the three in Group B, who have a slightly different R1b Haplogroup, two who do not have an R1b type haplogroup, and about eight men who, with continued studies, either do not have the McCabe surname or who do not appear to have verified McCabe ancestry. as shown at the bottom of the page. Between 1943 and 2004, in the United States, Mccabe life expectancy was at its lowest point in 1945, and highest in 1996. 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. ", the same as their mother. which would be true if this David McCabe is the grandson of the 1740s emigrant, James McCabe, from northern Ireland to Pennsylvania and the same James McCabe who emigrated in 1767 from Pennsylvania to Nova Scotia. (Updated 10/08/10 for Kits 153311 & 148651.) Owen McCabe was born circa 1899, at birth place, Michigan. Forebears, Convict Records Voyages to Australia (Retrieved 25th October 2020). Kit 156857. The man who provided the DNA sample for kit 135391 traces his ancestry back to Owen McCabe who immigrated in the 1830s from County Monaghan to Ops Township. The question tested in this study was Are all McCabe families in this area descended from a common ancestor? The first man tested (kit 49932) had traced his earliest known McCabe ancestor to Francis McCabe, born in Magheracloone Parish, County Monaghan, Ireland, in 1782. 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). 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. Genealogy for Owen McCabe (1869 - ) family tree on Geni, with over 230 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives. Immediate Family: Daughter of James McCabe and Catherine Elizabeth McCabe. 1840, IOM, d. 1938, California), and the g. grandfather of the kit provider, Harry Kermode Cain (1882-1950). 1791 VA. However, other oral history suggested that James Edward McCabe was born in Beaver Falls, PA, but no records have been found to confirm this location. The surnames McCabe (Irish: Mac Cba)[2] and MacCabe(/mkeb/ muh-KAYB) are Irish and Scottish surnames. County Cavan is within the historic province of Ulster, but is now in the Republic of Ireland. [This man is a descendant of the McCabes who built and operated numerous McCabe grain elevators in USA and Canada border states and provinces.] There are 43,000 immigration records available for the last name Mccabe. 1967), Canadian-born, British scientist and novelist, Professor of Molecular Endocrinology at the University of Birmingham and writes novels under the pseudonyms John McCabe and John Macken, Brigadier-General Edward Raynsford Warner McCabe (1876-1960), American Assistant Chief of Staff (G2) US Army (1937-1940), (Another 10 notables are available in all our, Mr. James McCabe, British Fireman from United Kingdom who worked aboard the, Mr. Richard McCabe, British Trimmer from United Kingdom who worked aboard the, Mr. Thomas McCabe, British Trimmer from United Kingdom who worked aboard the, Mrs. J. H. Mccabe, American employee of the Grover Shoe factory in Brockton, Massachusetts on 20th March 1905 when the boiler exploded and collapsed the wooden building; she survived. Lots of families have this name in Inverclyde. She was born Abt. [4] Patrick Woulfe considered that the surname was possibly derived from a nickname, meaning "a cap", or "hood". Click. This web page shows only a small excerpt of our McCabe research. The kit provider has the surname of Young. 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. In 1940, Laborer and Teacher were the top reported jobs for men and women in the USA named Mccabe. 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. 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). Among the 44 participants (as of early August 2009) 20 had an exact match, 12/12 with these values, and 7 men have a match at 11/12! The McCabe Y-DNA project was changed to delineate the following, as of 2023: C groups - highlighted in purple - 5 groups - These McCabe men have proof of descent from a McCabe in a specific county in Ireland - all are in the R-M269 haplogroup. Within census records, you can often find information like name of household members, ages, birthplaces, residences, and occupations. All of the information below was written in 2009. Mottoes first began to be shown with arms in the 14th and 15th centuries, but were not in general use until the 17th century. The DYS marker (DYS number) is listed first followed by the unique marker value. Consequently, he has a genetic distance (GD) of only one (one-step mutation difference) with kit 151400 (marker 576, a fast mutator). The line from this George McCabe down to the father of the man tested is as follows: Charles Walter McCabe (b. All of the Cabe-named family members in this group have roots in North Carolina or Tennessee. COMMENTS on mtDNA RESULTS (updated 4/12/09) 1777, Virginia, died after 1844 in Mississippi); Silas McCabe (b. III. Without even considering specific marker matches or non-matches, the haplogroup designation for this man as G2a leaves no doubt that there is no genetic relationship between the earlier-tested Cabes and the Amos Cabe descendant, within historic times (since surnames were initiated). A brother of Thomas was also named James McCabe and may be the James McCabe in the 1871 census of Ontario. (Retrieved 2014, June 17) . 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. Counties bordering Monaghan are: Tyrone, Armagh, Louth, Cavan, and Fermanaugh, all of which are within the historic province of Ulster except County Louth. This would be their homeland for centuries. At 67 markers this kit's DNA differs from the proposed ancestral haplotype of the Owen McCabe descendants at only two markers, 449 and CDYb, both fast-mutating markers. IV C-2, McCABES FROM COUNTY MAYO, IRELAND, TO KENT COUNTY, ONTARIO, CANADA. Sons of Thomas McCabe were William George McCabe (grandfather of the provider of kit 111254) and the following sons with Thomas' second wife (Josephine Peasley): James McCabe, Joseph McCabe and Charles McCabe. 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. His earliest known Cabe ancestor is John James Cabe, born 13 Jan 1859, Tennessee. 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. The name is sometimes used (incorrectly) as a synonym for Northern Ireland." http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~geneticgenealogy/yfreq.htm) November 20, 1782. Further, those McCabe Surname DNA group participants (who have a kit number and password) can now go to their own Family Tree DNA personal pages and find matches located on the map, by the following procedure: Under "My Maps" at the left side of your personal webpage, click on "Maps". JOHN MCCABE , J.P., was born in County Cavan, Ireland, in 1836. GROUP A, the R1b1b2 OWEN McCABE FAMILY STUDY. Thomas had a sister, Kate Martin. 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. Reports from the Family Tree DNA Company state that with 35 out of 37 matching markers, there is 99% likelihood that they share a common ancestor! PATRICK MCCABE was born Abt. 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. At this point in time, it is not clear in which surname lines these MPE's occurred. The quote is from the R1b1b2 section of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. He also had a sister Mary who accompanied him in 1853. Prices are occasionally reduced for a short time interval each year. Hint: Try searching for a relative alive in 1940. He married (2) ELLEN Abt. [Reference: McLaughlin, John D., "The 463x ccgg Project Results", Genealogy-DNA-L Archives (RootsWeb, 3 September 2008, #1220482508).] Significant differences with C and M . Family tree of the Mccabe Web Site on MyHeritage. Owen and Catherine (Sears) McCabe had four sons, James McCabe, John McCabe, William McCabe and Robert McCabe. Mr. John Herbert McCabe who was convicted in London, Margaret McCabe, who arrived in Glenelg Roads aboard the ship "Pestonjee Bomanjee" in 1838, Mr. Michael McCabe, British Convict who was convicted in Jamaica for 14 years, transported aboard the "Canton" on 20th September 1839, arriving in Tasmania (. One reference (see below), states Belfast as the Irish home of this James McCabe. 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. Finding the father of an 1840's McCabe orphan (Group A, kits 825, 826, 827 & 1106). 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). (Group Created 07/03/09; updated 11/13/09). Kit 9587. County Clare is located on the west coast of Ireland, bordered on the north, east, and south by Counties Galway, Tipperary and Limerick, respectively, all in the Republic of Ireland. Alexander McCABE was born c1770He was convicted (unknown crime) and sentenced to transportation for life. This group contains individuals who, concluded from the results shown, descend from Owen McCabe who emigrated from County Tyrone, Ireland, in the 1740's, to Philadelphia, settled in Cumberland County, Pennsylvania in the 1750's (in that portion that became Perry County in 1820), and later moved to southwestern Pennsylvania. See Terms of Use for details. 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. Extension of this study to 67 markers is highly advisable. [The DNA from kit #147989 has not been tested for this additional marker for DYS 385.] His g.g.g. This site was created using MyHeritage. Kit #54231. (Updated 8/19/10) Further, these three are more closely related to each other than to the other members of this group as shown by their results at 67 markers. Knowing that the kit provider does not share a common ancestor with these two other men at least within the last four generations, FTDNA calculates that this kit provider has a 68% chance of sharing ancestors in the last 4 - 6 generations with these other two men. , the following changes occurred with the McCabe website: Showing that four of the McCabe DNA project participants are descendants of Niall of the Nine Hostages. 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. At 12 markers he had no matches with any other man in the entire FTDNA database. John and William have numerous living descendants with the surname of McCabe and descendants of John and William have been DNA tested. In summary, there is no doubt that the provider of Kit 145047 descends from the McCabe immigrant to Nova Scotia in the following way: James McCabe (the immigrant), John McCabe, David McCabe, Daniel McCabe, Ernest McCabe (grandfather of the kit provider). For the veterans among your Mccabe ancestors, military collections provide insights into where and when they served, and even physical descriptions. They will be assigned to one of the above groups, or a new group, as soon as sufficient information is available to do so. Kits 127552 and 147989. 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. The provider of Kit 145047 had no information or hypothesis whatsoever that he might descend from the Nova Scotia immigrant, James McCabe, until, at 37 markers, his DNA matched Kit 151400 at 36/37. The two McCabe-named men in Group E (who provided kits 130249 and 106868), according to paper documentation, share the common ancestor of John McCabe, born in 1810-1816 (age 34 in 1850 census, age 50 in 1860 census in Ross County, Ohio, and whose wife's name is Lucinda). Kit N16768. Thomas McCabe married Annie Spear, in Rock Island County, Illinois; Thomas died in 1911, Polk County, Iowa. 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. 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. 9. Last Group ("UNASSIGNED") (UPDATED 11/17/09) if listed on the current table. A funeral service will be held on Monday, May 1st 2023 at 12:00 PM at the same location. You can see how Mccabe families moved over time by selecting different census years. Results to 67 markers for kit 153311 match completely with the results of Kit 148651. Anne Butler 1794 - Unknown. Family (Created 11/17/09; revised 11/18/09). A possible explanation for the close matches of this Cain-named man with the Cabe/McCabe surnames, as suggested by the provider of the kit, is that a McCabe-named male may have moved to the Isle of Man and due to illiteracy or a desire to "fit in" changed his name to McCane, which was a much more common surname on the island and then the "Mc" was eventually lost. Owen lived in 1935, at address, Illinois. County Monaghan is in the historic province of Ulster, but now is in the Republic of Ireland. The results for kit #146733 suggest that this specific Cabe surname line has an ancestry similar to that of the John Cabe/McCabe family of Burke County, NC. The results to 67 markers for the McCabe man who provided Kit 145047 were posted in late August 2009. 1813, Haywood Co., NC; wife Janetta Simonds); Joshua Cabe (b. Retrieved from, Generals of World War II. A 1927 paper (by William Otis Sawtelle, Acadia: The Pre-Loyalist Migration and the Philadelphia Plantation, The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, vol. The kit provider descends from Patrick through his son, Robert Cain (1781-1866, IOM), John Cain (b. 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. This suggested descent is entirely possible based on the randomness of mutations (and the lack thereof) as evidenced with kits 139946 and 146567 (shown immediately above) in which fifth cousins, once-removed, have exact matches at 67 markers. Peter McCabe family tree Family tree Explore more family trees Parents Hugh Mc Cabe 1822 - 1902 Johanna Jane Mcdermott 1838 - 1918 Wrong Peter McCabe ? 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. 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. (Retrieved 2014, March 7) . Kit 37202. 1881 Arkansas, and grandfather of the kit provider). Raymond Mccabe passed away at age 67 years old on April 16, 1991. Miss Amelia McCabe, English convict who was convicted in Liverpool, Merseyside, Mr. James McCabe, British settler travelling from London aboard the ship "Royal Albert" arriving in Otago, South Island, New Zealand on 6th March 1853, Charles Martin McCabe, who arrived in Nelson, New Zealand aboard the ship "Eagle" in 1854, Mr. Dunbar McCabe, Scottish settler travelling from Leith aboard the ship 'Melbourne' arriving in Port Chalmers, Dunedin, Otago, South Island, New Zealand on 18th March 1861, Mr. James Mccabe, British labourer travelling from London aboard the ship "Victory " arriving in Lyttelton, Christchurch, South Island, New Zealand on 17th October 1863, Gratton McCabe, who arrived in Auckland, New Zealand aboard the ship "Surat" in 1864, Eugene McCabe (1930-2020), Scottish-born Irish novelist, short story writer, playwright, and television screenwriter, Gerard McCabe (b. IX. The significance here is that if any other man with nearly identical values at other markers, and also has the value of 7 repeats for DYS 459a, there is a MUCH greater probability of his having a common ancestor with these two McCabe men. 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. Based on federal census records and on family migration patterns, George Washington McCabe (b. ca 1842) is most likely the son of Isaac McCabe (age 36, born Ohio, cooper) and Miria McCabe (age 30, born Ohio) of the 1850 census of Fairfield County, Ohio. [4]. 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. He DOES match several men who have been tested by FTDNA in the Breifne Clans Y-DNA Project at FTDNA. The McCabe project administrator recommends starting with 67 markers. His origin in the same area in Ireland and settling in the same area in Canada as did Francis McCabe in 1827 suggests that all three men in this group may have a common ancestor. Significant differences with C and M groups. The DNA samples from Kits 95179 and 137198 have a 65/67 match, with their mismatches in markers 455 (a normal rate mutating marker) and 464d (fast mutator), although they have not yet found an ancestor in common. 51, p. 285) states the following: James McCabe, native of Belfast, Ireland, wife Ann Pettigrew, a north of Ireland Presbyterian. The following information comes from the FTDNA Company: Niall of the Nine Hostages received his name from the taking of hostages as a strategy for playing mental havoc upon his opponent chieftains. In the August 1818 Court term of Orange Co., NC., William Cabe was appointed guardian to Lydia Cabe and Margaret Cabe, orphans of John Cabe, dec'd, and William CAIN, Jr., signed as surety for William Cabe's bond. The "Haplo" column provides the "haplogroup" (cluster of similar haplotypes, usually related to an origin in a specific area of the world). This would be their homeland for centuries. Kit 151400. The 1880 census for this family of Whiteside County, Illinois, Tampico, shows Owen McCabe (age 50, born in Ireland, as were both his parents) and wife Catherine (age 36, born Canada, both parents born in Ireland), and son James, (age 13, b. IL). Some of the first settlers of this family name were: 2000- 2023 Swyrich Corporation, all rights reserved. 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. At 37 markers he matches 33/37 with DNA from kits 825, 826, and 827 (Group A), kit 11254 (Group D), and Kit 139946, (Group G). Retrieved from, Hillsborough Victims (retreived 21st March 2021). 1812, IOM, immigrated to Iowa in 1865), Abram Cain (b. THESE three men probably have a more recent common ancestor with each other than with other Cabe-named men in this project. 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. Children Show all. With kit #159052, he has a GD of three, but with kit #9587, he has a GD of five. 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. McCabes are now found mostly in the United States, Ireland and the United Kingdom, Australia, South Africa, and New Zealand. Jeremiah O'Neal will be assuming the duties of Administrator. 3 Sept.1799, d. 30.Dec 1878); Lewis Mecabe (b. [It is possible that Dublin may have been the location of their emigration from Ireland and perhaps was their home for one or more generations prior to their emigration, but Y-DNA evidence suggests a very strong connection to other McCabes who have an Ulster (northern Ireland) connection.] These results will be discussed together as they are a father and son group. As of August 2022, the following changes occurred with the McCabe Y-DNA website (rearranged by Judith Miley Freed, administrator, jmfreed218@gmail.com): With over 200 members in the McCabe Y-DNA project, it became possible to identify two distinct haplogroups. This man (provider of kit 127552) descends from the immigrant James McCabe through his son Thomas McCabe. At 67 markers he matches 63/67 with kit 139946 (Group G) and 135391 (Group C-1). Enniskillen is the main town of Fermanagh County, the westernmost county of present day Northern Ireland. Please join us. 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. Individuals within this group have been tested for the number of markers listed. Francis McCabe is listed in the 1856 Griffin Evaluation as a plot holder (leasing the land). 1775). "Caba" means a cape or a hat and refers the unique style of cape worn by certain Scottish mercenary warriors who fought in Ireland during the Middle Ages. [The Kingdom of Breifne was at its height in the 12th century, and included the modern Irish counties of Leitrim and Cavan and parts of County Sligo.] "What are the 5,000 Most Common Last Names in the U.S.?". The haplogroup test also determined that this haplogroup R1b1b2a1b5 cannot be subdivided further as of July 2009, including R1b1b2a1b5b, in which Group B belongs. See other search results for Peter McCabe Top record matches for Peter McCabe Peter McCabe found in 1880 United States Federal Census Clara Mc Cabe found in 1880 United States Federal Census Kit 159052. 1856 in Co. Cavan, Ireland. Robert's line may have "daughtered out". This James McCabe was apparently Catholic. 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). Kit 176320. This means that the E1b individual does not share any ancestors in common with any of the R1b groups. 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. Early immigrants include: The motto was originally a war cry or slogan. Results to 67 markers were posted for kit 151400 in July 2009, the provider of which descends from John McCabe, son of the Nova Scotia immigrant, James McCabe, down through to the grandfather of the man tested: James, Asa, Ralph, and Harry. The records for this man indicate his earliest known ancestor is John McCabe, b. about 1752 (perhaps in Virginia) and died after 1810, probably in Chowan Co, NC. 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. Removing this item from your shopping cart will remove your associated sale items. 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. wehapa lake real estate,
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