Posts Tagged ‘early study of genetics’
Genetic Genealogy
Simply put, genetic genealogy is the use of DNA to ascertain a genetic relationship between individuals. The Father of Evolution, Charles Darwin, is also credited with the early study of genetics, before the discovery of microscopic cell part deoxyribonucleic acid, or DNA.
Darwin’s son George was able to study surnames in Britain and determine the rate of incidence of marriage among people with the same last name. Interestingly, upper-class families were more likely to marry a cousin than the lower classes. In fact, Charles Darwin himself was married to his first cousin Emma Wedgwood.
It wasn’t for another 100 years that major advances would be made along Darwin’s theory and it took an unlikely American running for U.S President to thrust the issue in the public eye.
Barack Obama is reported to have German roots that go back to the 1700s. According to a popular ancestry website, Obama’s great, g, g, g, g, grandfather Johann Conrad Woelflin was born in Besigheim, Germany in January, 1729. He emigrated to America in 1750 and settled in Pennsylvannia under the name of Wolfley.
This is intriguing because the findings follow another report that Obama bears some Irish ancestry. No one who looks at Barack Obama would doubt he is anything but the product of a white American mother and a black Kenyan father, but Obama’s family tree is a common one. Many Americans believe they have only a few national strains in their DNA when in fact they have the influence of several countries in their family tree.
When told the charismatic American President was a descendant of Germany, the country responded with cheers. This isn’t the first U.S. President to be so named. Dwight Eisenhower also had German roots.
Dive into your genetic genealogy and prepare yourself for wondrous information about your family you never believed possible.






