A father's death date (Calkins-1855 died 1800) should not be more than nine months before one of his children's birth dates (Calkins-1878 born 1819) .
A father's birth date (Calkins-1855 born 1762) should not be more than 100 years before the birth date of one of his children (Calkins-1875 born 1885) .
A parent (Calkins-1855 born 1762) should not have been born more than 170 years before one of their children died (Calkins-1875 died 1940) . This would mean that even if the parent gave birth at 70, the child lived to be over 100.
A parent's death date (Calkins-1855 died 1800) should not be more than 120 years before one of their children died (Calkins-1875 died 1940) . This would mean the child lived to be over 120.
A marriage date (1818) should not be after a spouse's death date (Hindman-102 died 1822) .
This profile is a collaborative work-in-progress. Can you contribute information or sources?
Sources
↑ First-hand information as remembered by Thomas Calkins, Sunday, October 12, 2014. Replace this citation if there is another source.
Is Thomas your ancestor? Please don't go away! Login to collaborate or comment, or ask our community of genealogists a question.
Sponsored Search by Ancestry.com
DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Thomas by comparing test results with other carriers of his Y-chromosome or his mother's mitochondrial DNA.
Y-chromosome DNA test-takers in his direct paternal line on WikiTree: