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To: Dallas59
The map of "largest ancestry" doesn't mean that group is a majority in that county. Christian Co., KY, for example, has "African American" but it is not majority black--Bush won 2-1 there in 2004 and McCain beat Obama 3-2 in 2008.

When you get back to the early 1800s or earlier it gets harder and harder to trace all of your lines because of incomplete records (except perhaps in New England), so many people may not know for sure how many of their colonial or Early Republican ancestors were English, Scottish, "Scots-Irish," Catholic Irish, Welsh, German, or Huguenot--a lot of the French and German names were anglicized out of recognition. A Scottish-sounding surname may be a clue but perhaps only the direct male line was Scottish and the rest was English or something else.

When I saw the heading I thought the thread would be about the ancestry of the counties as political units--that is fairly simple to figure out from the information in The Genealogical Helper about parent counties, but probably easier to find nowadays with Wikipedia. Not that anyone cares about that information unless you need to find out where some information would be located.

99 posted on 09/29/2013 1:25:57 PM PDT by Verginius Rufus
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To: Verginius Rufus

a lot of the French and German names were anglicized out of recognition.
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and Dutch names after 1664 when the English took over the Dutch colony of New Netherland without firing a shot and changed the name to New York..


101 posted on 09/29/2013 1:35:17 PM PDT by Tennessee Nana
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