Christine was born in 1755. She passed away in 1817. (Note here: find-a-grave has death as 1815. Meece-70)
Research Notes
Find-a-grave has her parents as Jacob Mosser 1714-1758 and Katharina Heydich Mosser 1714-unknwn. wit 2 children Christina Meese Litz b. 1779 cd. 1845 and John Meece b. 1794 d. 1870.
(Meece-70)
Sources
Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/149453341/christina-meese : accessed 19 February 2022), memorial page for Christina Mosser Meese (1756–1815), Find a Grave Memorial ID 149453341, ; Maintained by 47117651 (contributor 47117651) Burial Details Unknown.
Acknowledgments
Mark Lytz created WikiTree profile UNKNOWN-213918 through the import of Mark Lytz family tree.ged on Oct 13, 2013. Other contributions by Thomas M., Thursday, November 27, 2014 and Angela Keeney, Sunday, February 1, 2015.
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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Christine 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 Christine:
Hi Kristina, thanks for finding the duplicates of Thomas and Christina Meiss/Meece. Are these your relatives also? How would you like to deal with the name change? I think I would like to list them as Meece and list Meis as an alias or previous unless you have a better idea.
I'm not.. I'm just one of those addicted to wikitree.. so when I'm on transit, or waiting I'll pull up a last name I have in my recent change list, sort by date and look for duplicates..
So I'm not particular.. I'd suggest see what the documents show, pick the earliest one that looks logical and go with that and put the other in as also known as unless something else comes up. As that's what I usually do, then if more info comes along change it again later..
I'm currently making way through several Ukrainian families with that conundrum after they landed in Canada, and can't wait until I find the Ukrainian spelling to figure out what I should do with that one.. lol
So I'm not particular.. I'd suggest see what the documents show, pick the earliest one that looks logical and go with that and put the other in as also known as unless something else comes up. As that's what I usually do, then if more info comes along change it again later..
I'm currently making way through several Ukrainian families with that conundrum after they landed in Canada, and can't wait until I find the Ukrainian spelling to figure out what I should do with that one.. lol