30 Jan 1795: "John Martin gave consent for his daughter "Betsey" to marry Henry Lisle. John's son Valentine signed the surety bond. John Lisle Sr. and son Henry had lived in Fluvanna County near the Martins before Henry moved to Clark County. George F. Doyle, Marriage Bonds of Clark County, Kentucky 1793-1850 (1933)[1][2]
↑ Enoch, Harry G. John Martin of Lower Howard's Creek, Clark County, Kentucky. 2015. p. 27 Book Preview
↑ Clark County (Kentucky). Clerk of the County Court, and George F. Doyle. 1959. Marriage bonds of Clark County, Kentucky from the formation of the county in 1793 to 1850. Salt Lake City, Utah: Filmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah. p. 238. Image 248 of 429
↑ Source: #S11 Page: downloaded 3 Mar 2006 Quality or Certainty of Data: 3 Date: 3 Mar 2006
Source: S11 Media: Index Abbreviation: International Genealogical Index(R) Title: International Genealogical Index(R) Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Publication: Copyright (c) 1980, 2002 Date: 2 Dec 2005 Italicized: Y Paranthetical: Y
Paternal relationship is confirmed on MyHeritage by a triangulated 14.1 cM segment on chromosome 1 from 212344489 to 224881828 (rs11119866 – rs1436171, 5760 SNPs). MRCAs are Valentine Martin and Jane Bridgewater with DNA matches between descendants J. Hornbacher (6GGS), ESV (6GGS), and DS (5GGS). J. Hornbacher and ESV are 5th cousins, descendants of son John. They are 6C1R to DS who is a descendant of both son Orson and daughter Jane. The portion of DS's lineage affected by this pedigree collapse cannot be marked as 'confirmed by DNA' due to uncertainty regarding which line the matching DNA passed through.
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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Elizabeth by comparing test results with other carriers of her mitochondrial DNA.
However, there are no known mtDNA test-takers in her direct maternal line.
It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with Elizabeth: