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Kerri-Anne Fraser

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Signed 18 Feb 2024 | 67 contributions | 4 thank-yous | 686 connections

Looking for information about John Fraser b 1776, Edinburgh, Scotland, who married Elizabeth Euphan Scott. They lived in Edinburgh and had 5 children. Alexander, John, Andrew, Simon and Mary. Simon is our relative, his son, Francis Humphris Fraser, emigrated to NZ in 1864.

With permission, I have provided my fathers' DNA info (gedmatch UX7062505) I have marked 'male' on my profile for chromosome reasons. (I am still learning)

Kerri-Anne Fraser
Ancestors ancestors
Son of [private father (1940s - unknown)] and [mother unknown]
[sibling(s) unknown]
[children unknown]
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Profile last modified | Created 22 Aug 2020
This page has been accessed 152 times.

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Hi Kerri-Anne,

Thank you for signing the WikiTree Honor Code! We're happy to have you as a new Wiki Genealogist.

Make sure to check out the Intro to WikiTree page to learn how to get involved: https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Help:How_to_Use_WikiTree

David ~ WikiTree Greeter

posted by David Selman
Hi Kerri-Anne. Actually Frazer isn't a mispell. It's an attempt to incorporate an old Scottish letter called a yogh. It looked something like "z" but was an aspirant akin to "gh" which is why you get the variations of Frazer, Fraser, Frasier, Frazier, Frasher, Fryer, Frissell etc.
Hi Elizabeth, thanks for your message. I realise there are a few variants of the name Fraser, and even your own name Elizabeth, has had the Z swapped out for an S in many of the records I find for our Elizabeth in our family tree.

From what I can gather, our line of FraSers , who were recorded as such, tracing back to became FraZer for a while during the 1700's, and then went back to Fraser at the end of 1700. This spelling certainly put a halt to my tracing, and I was baffled to why I couldn't trace my Fraser side past 1776. Luckily for me, I stumbled upon someone on wikitree who had found the missing link :-)

posted by Kerri-Anne Fraser
Hi Kerri-Anne

Thank you for upgrading, 😊

I am very pleased to welcome you to the WikiTree family, your contributions will go a long way to joining the world together.

It is best to start with the New Member How-To pages, they will save you a lot of time and frustration.

I am here to answer any question you have, no matter how trivial you may think it is. There is no such thing as a silly question. Please add as much information as you can, it all helps to turn a “name” back into a person. I hope you enjoy the site as much as I do.

Thank you for adding your DNA Test information to your profile on WikiTree. Your information will be propagated to the profiles of your parents and your ancestors within about 24 hours of being added. It will also propagate to the profiles of the descendants of your ancestors, so they may see your information under the heading "DNA Connections" just as you can see theirs.

Getting started with DNA outlines how to proceed to use your DNA test information on WikiTree and DNA is a link to a collection of links about WikiTree's many features involving DNA.

The DNA Connections list on your profile will provide a visual way for you to find potential relatives on WikiTree who have also added their DNA test information. Using DNA tools at sites like GEDMatch.com, if you find a relative that matches your DNA sufficiently and you have genealogical sources for the intermediate relationships, you can mark the specific parental relationships back to the most recent ancestor that you both share as "confirmed with DNA." For details, guidance, and examples of how to properly document DNA confirmations, see DNA confirmation.

To get the best results, begin adding sourced profiles for your ancestors until you can connect to ancestors already in WikiTree. If you have exhausted what you know on one line, it can sometimes help to add what you know on another line. The more branches you are able to add the greater the likelihood of finding potential cousins to match with. The process of identifying which branch elements of DNA relate to will better enable you to find matches that relate to the particular branches you are researching.

Happy tree climbing

Karen ~ WikiTree Greeter

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