According to MacLysaght in the mid 20th century, statistics then showed that the surname was more numerous in the Breffny area than anywhere else. Some updates in 2014. It is apparent that two surname discontinuities occurred in his ancestry, with the first one probably occurring several generations ago (due to the genetic distance from the Ewing surname being above 2) and the second one occurring with the changing of his father's McCabe surname to Young. S-4 Surname matches with Munday, Thomas, Crossen. 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. All of the Cabe-named family members in this group have roots in North Carolina or Tennessee. [1], McCabes are now found mostly in the United States, Ireland and the United Kingdom, Australia, South Africa, and New Zealand. Comparing kits 99404 with 40344 at 67 markers produces a 61/67 marker match, with two of these markers being fast-mutating markers. McCabe Genealogy and McCabe Family History Information Back to Surnames Index edit The more specific haplogroup of R1b1b2a1b5 suggests an origin of this Owen McCabe family in northern Ireland. 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. Forebears. 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 results for this descendant of Amos Cabe show that the man who provided this DNA sample is definitely NOT a biological descendant of John Cabe/McCabe and supports the hypothesis that Amos may have been an adopted son. (Updated 9/14/10) Memorials may be made to the family. In his adult years he was informed that his biological father was named "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. 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". The family history (not yet documented) suggests that this Cabe/McCabe family came to North Carolina from Maryland, the Valley of Virginia, or perhaps Pennsylvania. 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. 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. You can see how Mccabe families moved over time by selecting different census years. New York had the highest population of Mccabe families in 1840. The person with the surname of Cabeen (Kit 56221) hypothesized that his Cabeen name may have been derived from the McCabe surname. The modal (most common and perhaps ancestral haplotype) value of marker number 490 for this entire group is 12, but for these three men, the value is 10, a two-step change from the modal value. The man who provided the sample for kit 146133 joined this McCabe/Mecabe/Cabe project on 7/11/09, based on the observation that he has no matches with his own surname of Searcy, which may be expected as the father of the man tested was adopted into a Searcy family. Kit 137198. Understand it all by viewing our, Family Crest Download (JPG) Heritage Series - 600 DPI, Family Crests and Genealogy: how they relate, https://forebears.io/new-zealand/surnames, https://www.surnamemap.eu/unitedkingdom/surnames_ranking.php?p=10, https://convictrecords.com.au/ships/boddingtons, https://convictrecords.com.au/ships/countess-of-harcourt, https://convictrecords.com.au/ships/elizabeth, http://www.slsa.sa.gov.au/BSA/1838PestonjeeBomanjee.htm, https://convictrecords.com.au/ships/canton, https://convictrecords.com.au/ships/emma-eugenia, http://www.yesteryears.co.nz/shipping/passlist.html, http://generals.dk/general/McCabe/Edward_Raynsford_Warner/USA.html, http://www.empress2014.ca/seclangen/listepsc1.html, https://cdnc.ucr.edu/?a=d&d=SFC19050321.2.19&e=-------en--20--1--txt-txIN--------1, https://metro.co.uk/2019/04/15/remembering-96-victims-hillsborough-disaster-30-years-9206566/, https://uboat.net/allies/merchants/crews/ship68.html, http://www.rmslusitania.info/lusitania-passenger-list/, Contemporary Notables of the name McCabe (post 1700), Sarah McCabe, who arrived in America in 1764, Edward McCabe, aged 35, who landed in New Castle or Philadelphia in 1805, Joseph McCabe, who landed in America in 1811, Linus McCabe, aged 27, who arrived in New York in 1812, Owen McCabe, aged 30, who landed in New York in 1812, Hugh McCabe, aged 29, who arrived in Maryland in 1813, Elizabeth McCabe, who arrived in Arkansas in 1905, James McCabe, who landed in Nova Scotia in 1783, Richard McCabe, who arrived in Nova Scotia in 1821, Francis McCabe, who landed in Canada in 1829, Eliza McCabe, aged 21, who arrived in Saint John, New Brunswick in 1833 aboard the brig "Ugoni" from Belfast, Ireland, Michael McCabe, aged 24, a labourer, who arrived in Saint John, New Brunswick in 1834 aboard the ship "Edwin" from, Mary McCabe, aged 21, who arrived in Saint John, New Brunswick in 1834 aboard the ship "Edwin" from Dublin, Ireland. The DNA results, however, do NOT match any of the McCabe lines studied so far. Retrieved from, New Zealand Yesteryears Passenger Lists 1800 to 1900 (Retrieved 17th October 2018). 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). NOTE 3: Two "movable bars" ("scrolling bars") on the Y-DNA RESULTS webpage (right side and at the bottom) assist in moving the contents up and down, left and right. The "Google Earth" map will appear with push pins showing your matches (if you have any). (McCabe?) 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! grandfathers name was James McCabe; his g g grandfather was Felix McCabe, born in 1847, an only child. 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. At 25 markers and higher, the comparison of results between groups A and D show numerous differences. Francis McCabe emigrated from Ireland to Ops Township (community of Lindsay), Victoria County, Ontario, Canada, in 1827. 1891. Are these significant matches? In 1865 he again left home, this time for New Zealand, and landed in Auckland in May of the same year. PATRICK MCCABE was born Abt. Maurice R McCabe (1921 - 1975) - Biography and Family Tree (Retrieved 2014, June 17) . 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. (Extensively updated 5/06/09) Kit 97685. To further delineate the closest relatives in this McCabe Surname DNA Study, an extension to 37 markers is essential and 67 markers would be best. Cabe family researchers suggest that, based on the paper trail that has been discovered, it is more likely that David L. Cabe is the son of Samuel Cabe and grandson of John Cabe who died in 1810, which is the Cabe line of Kit 139489. Kit 160306. 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. Marguerite attended teaching classes at the University one summer in the 1920s. 13 Feb 1835, d. 30 Apr. It is likely that Mac Cba literally son of cape originated as a nickname for a galloglass. He DOES match several men who have been tested by FTDNA in the Breifne Clans Y-DNA Project at FTDNA. Thus, the project design was changed to include this new haplogroup labeled as the T group. Since there is no paper trail to connect the Propes surname with Kit 106868, it is suggested that this very tight match may be a statistical coincidence, but there MUST be a common ancestor somewhere back in this family. The results to 67 markers for the McCabe man who provided Kit 145047 were posted in late August 2009. There are 217,000 census records available for the last name Mccabe. The first misattributed paternity event (of unknown type) produced a new DNA line for the McCabe surname so that it is very likely that other McCabes have this same Y Chromosome DNA. At one time it was in the County of Dublin. McCabe Family Trees, Crests, Genealogy, DNA, More Home USA Please, add your favorite Website (s) to this page! 51, p. 285) states the following: James McCabe, native of Belfast, Ireland, wife Ann Pettigrew, a north of Ireland Presbyterian. At 67 markers this man (kit 146733) matches the DNA of Kit 139946 (Group G) with a mismatch at only three markers (genetic distance of three). On 8/19/10 his results were received for 67 markers. Pat Mc Cabe 1881 - Unknown. James McCabe in MyHeritage family trees (Flannery Web Site) view all 21 Immediate Family Roseana "Rose" McCabe wife James S. McCabe son Mary McCabe daughter John McCabe son Ellen McCabe daughter Francis McCabe son Peter McCabe son Owen McCabe son Daniel McCabe son Fredrick McCabe son Elizabeth McCabe daughter Lillie McCabe daughter 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). Jeremiah O'Neal will be assuming the duties of Administrator. The conclusions from the results shown are that both men who provided DNA samples for this study are very closely related. The kit provider has the surname of Young. At 67 markers, Kit 159905 has a genetic distance of only two (two mutation steps), with the above mentioned kits 139946 and 146567. Please join us in collaborating on MCCABE family trees. UNIQUE DNA RESULTS. Initially this group contained only members with the surname of Cabe. James Mccabe 1844 - Unknown. Kits 9586, 40344, 99404. Forebears, Convict Records Voyages to Australia (Retrieved 25th October 2020). 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). For the Y-DNA results, the kit # is used to link the results with a specific individual known to the Group Administrator. Retrieved from. Mr. Alexander Mccabe, (b. The results at 67 markers (for kit 148651) show that this man matches individuals in both Groups D and G. He matches 63/67 with the modal values (most common values) of group D with the following markers (all "slow mutators") producing the mismatches: DYS numbers 390, 389-2, 413a, and 557. 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. 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. There does not appear to be any historical evidence that indicates a relationship of any of these men in Group D with the Owen McCabe family (Group A) since the 1740's in America, but complete information is not available for all participants. Kits 49932, 119756.. 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 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. This James McCabe was apparently Catholic. You can find birthdates, death dates, addresses and more. GROUP A, the R1b1b2 OWEN McCABE FAMILY STUDY. Please join us. 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 Consequently, this James McCabe of Pictou, Nova Scotia, cannot be a brother of Owen McCabe of Cumberland and Perry Counties of Pennsylvania. Raymond F Mccabe (1924 - 1991) - Biography and Family Tree Convict Records Voyages to Australia (Retrieved 4th April 2022). 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.