When Lois M. Elmore was born on March 22, 1852, in Bergen, New York, her father, Jonathan, was 46, and her mother, Mabel, was 42. She had four brothers and four sisters. She died as a child on May 3, 1858, in her hometown, and was buried there.
There is a direct ancestral relationship. Lois Elmore is the great, great, great, great grand daughter of Edward Elmer.
We can't call this relationship DNA-Confirmed, Confident, or Uncertain because one or more parent-child relationships in the connection are unmarked or non-biological.
Relationship Trail
Lois is the daughter of Jonathan Jenner Elmore [unknown confidence]
Jonathan is the son of Eliakim (Elmer) Elmore [unknown confidence]
Eliakim is the son of David Elmer [unknown confidence]
David is the son of Jonathan Elmer DNA confirmed
Jonathan is the son of Samuel Elmer DNA confirmed
Samuel is the son of Edward Elmer DNA confirmed
This trail tells us that Edward is the fourth great grandfather of Lois.
Birth
22 March 1852 • Bergen, Genesee, New York, USA [1]
Mount Rest Cemetery • Bergen, Genesee, New York, USA
Sources
Elmore, Theodore James Family Memorials in Prose and Verse (Published 1880 by Morning News Steam Printing House; Savannah, GA) Part 3, Section 1, Page 304-6.
JONATHAN JENNER ELMORE, fourth son of Eliakim and Lois Elmore, b. at Whitestown, N.Y., June 29, 1805. On December 28, 1826, at LeRoy, N.Y., m. Mabel E. Smith (who was b. in LeRoy, N.Y., November 19, 1809, and d. at Bergen, N.Y., August 29, 1858). They had issue (seven in all), as follows:
MONTRAVILLE H. ELMORE, b. LeRoy, N.Y., May 11, 1828, and m. Geraldine A. Smith, Hillsdale, Mich., August 29, 1849. They had issue (three in all), as follows:
The family residence is in Hillsdale Mich. Montraville was very much given to music, and was the inventor of the arrangement by which the bellows of the melodeon is enabled to drop from the back.
HENRY S. ELMORE, b. Stafford, N.Y., April 5, 1831, m. Adaline L. Matoon, Bergen, N.Y., January 2, 1853. Is a commission merchant, and resides in New York City. They had issue (two in all), as follows:
In November, 1878, HENRY S. ELMORE, m., as his second wife, Mrs., Chas. D. Hutchins.
WILLIAM O. ELMORE, b. Bergen, N.Y., July 5, 1834, d. at same place, April 5, 1835.
SABRINA C. ELMORE, b. Bergen, N.Y., April 6, 1836, m. Henry M. Cook, Bergen, N.Y., October 18, 1854. She now resides in Mich. They had issue (seven in all), as follows:
WILLIAM O. ELMORE, 2d, b. Bergen, N.Y., May 6, 1838. On September 19, 1858, m. Emily A. Gilman, (who was b. Ogden, N.Y., May 16, 1837). They had issue (three in all), as follows:
Present residence of the family, Albany, N.Y.
AVIS E. ELMORE, b. Bergen, N.Y., April 17, 1847, m. Henry S. Ryan, Lawton, Mich., December 16, 1866, and d. Lansing, Mich., November 7, 1873.
LOIS M. ELMORE, b. Bergen, N.Y., March 22, 1852, d. same place May 3, 1858.
JONATHAN JENNER ELMORE, m. as his second wife, on June 23, 1859, Harriet O. Goodrich (who was b. Castile, N.Y., September 6, 1830). By her he had issue (two in all), as follows:
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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Lois by comparing test results with other carriers of her ancestors' 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 Lois: