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Woodall DNA and Family Results

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DNA PROJECT TEST RESULTS

Jefferson Woodall
Admin
August 4, 2017 @ 11:10pm
(updated March 14, 2020):

This first Woodall family group had a paper trail to the earliest US Woodall we have in our database and hereinafter will refer to as John of Genitoe Creek (died 1750). We believe we have figured out why the descendants of the sons of John of Genitoe Creek whose Will probated in 1750 do not have matching DNA results. It seems that one or both of the two sons of John Woodall, John & William were adopted. There were many orphaned children in early Colonial Virginia. One of these sons may have been a child from a previous marriage of John's wife, or could have been a child belonging to John's sister and her husband, or been born out of wedlock or been born from a non-parental event. More records will be posted in the near future on this recent discovery.There's other evidence besides the DNA testing such as through land records and Wills that help us understand this. Land Deeds through the years show both sons John and William selling their land to their neighbors, the widow Jane Watkins and Joseph Watkins. In 1769 this William was deeded land on Tuckahoe Creek, near the family land he and brother John had inherited from father John Woodall.

1750- John Woodall (of Genitoe Creek) Will names 2 sons, a William and a John. The Valentine Papers document the land on Genito creek that the 2 sons of John have in 1747. Will of John Woodall gives 150 acres of land to John and 150 acres to William, land on which they lived bounded by a straight line between them. (Source: deed book #6 1748-1755, pgs 130-131)

1757- A dividing line on Genitoe Creek between a William Woodall, Senior and John Woodall, Senior. (Source: deed book # 7)

1758- Douglas Register records marriage of William Woodhall the Widower (of Tuckahoe Creek) to a Marianne Hancock followed by Christening of some of their children Susannah 1761 , Sarah 1763, Benjamin 1765,Susannah 1768. (Source: Douglas Register)

1762- Wm Woodell (of Genitoe Creek) Grantor-deed to Widow Jane Watkins. (Source: Deed Book 6, page 360.)

1765- Charles Woodhall (son of William the widower of Genitoe Creek then Tuckahoe Creek) & Eliz Black record of Marriage followed by Christening of some of their children, William 1768, John 1773, ________ 1775, male Name smudged). (Source Douglas register )

1766- Wm. Woodall- (of Genitoe Creek) Grantor- Deed to Joseph Watkins (Source Watkins, 2)

1769- John Pleasants and son, of Henrico Co., deed to William Woodall (of Genitoe Creek) of Goochland County, Virginia 62 acres in Goochland County (on Tuckahoe Creek) adjacent to the land of Strangeman Hutchins, William Harding, and John Whitlow. March 13, 1769. (Source D.B. 9, p. 196 e.p.v. Papers Page 985 Valentine Papers.

1797- 29 Feb. Will of estate of William Woodall (of Genitoe Creek then Tuckahoe Creek); in this he names children: Mary Childress, Charles Woodall, John Woodall, Shadrach Woodall, wife Marian Woodall, children: Sarah Woodall, Susanna Woodall, Benjamin Woodall. (Source Goochland County Virginia Will Book 17, 1796-1800, p. 104)


A Summary on the 25 Various Woodall Family Groups------

FAMILY GROUP 1- Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. Family Group 1 descends from patriarch William Woodall who is 1st documented in Goochland County, Virginia in 1758 (Douglas Register). William purchased land in Tuckahoe Creek, Goochland County in 1769. William’s 1796 Will names his wife Marion and his 7 children; Charles Woodall, John Woodall, Shadrach Woodall, Mary Childress, Benjamin Woodall, Susanna Woodall and Sarah Woodall. William signed his Will with only the letter “W”.

FAMILY GROUP 2- Haplogroup I-M253 Haplogroup I-M253 is a Ychromosome haplogroup which occurs at greatest frequency in Fenno-Scandia. The mutations identified with Haplogroup I-M253(Y-DNA) are M253, M307, P30, and P40. These are known as single nucleotidepolymorphisms (SNPs). It is a subclade of Haplogroup I. Before a reclassification in 2008, the group was known as Haplogroup I1a The group displays a very clear frequency gradient, with a peak of approximately 40 percent among the populations of western Finland and more than 50 percent in the province of Satakunta, one living in Sweden as a whole, with a peak of 52 percent in Vastra Gotaland County.and around 38 percent in central Sweden. A member of this family group who is a direct descendant of Lieutenant General Sir John (Dane) Woodall KCMG KBE CB MC (1897–1985) the General Officer Commanding Northern Ireland District. I have personally seen his family crest and it is quite similar to Barber Surgeon John Woodall of London. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Woodall_(British_Army_officer) The elderly Barber- Surgeon John Woodall stated in his 24 April 1640 Court Case "DUCK VS. WOODALL" that he came from "VUEDALL" One member who recently joined the Woodall DNA Project and also belongs to this group traces his family back to the UDALL & early VUEDALLS in England- the same group of people Barber Surgeon traces his lineage back to. I feel pretty confident that Family Group 2 is distantly related to but not direct descendants of Barber-Surgeon Woodall.

FAMILY GROUP 3 Haplogroup Q1a3a1 Family 3 now consists of nine testees. All have a paper trail to John Woodall of Gennytoe Creek, Goochland County, and we were very surprised to see the prediction of a Haplogroup of Q3 also known as Q1a3a1 which is native American, or in other words, American Indian. This haplogroup is strictly associated with the indigenous peoples of the Americas and is defined by the genetic marker M3, which occurred on the Q lineage roughly 10-15 thousand years ago as the migration from Siberia into the Americas was in progress. The common ancestor of the men in Family Group 3 is a William Wagner Woodall who was born 5 June 1818 and was 100% Cherokee Indian. William could have obtained the Woodall surname by adoption or changed his name to Woodall. William was a farmer and later married a Mamie Elizabeth Smith. Together they had 10 children. In 1870 he purchased 100 acres of land in Harris County, Georgia. He died in 1906 in Alabama.

FAMILY GROUP 4 Haplogroup R1a1 with mutation seen as M512 . The modern distribution of R1a1 has two widely separated areas of high frequency, one in South Asia, and the other in Eastern Europe. The demographic reasons for this are the subject of on-going discussion and attention among population geneticists and genetic genealogists. Haplogroup R1a1. Possible place of origin, Eurasia.R-M448. Defining mutations, M17, M198, M512, M514, M515, L168, L449 Results indicate that family group 4 goes back to the name of Odell with one group member going back to a William Odell,his son William Odell born June 17, 1656 in Marston Mortaine, Bedfordshire ,England. The Odell name originated in Bedfordshire. Quote from a reference book, ___THE WOODALLS OF TALBOT Abner and Salie Baugh Woodall PIONEERS OF TALBOT COUNTY, GEORGIA Ancestry, Family and Descendants___ by Margaret Woodall Browne and Jane Nicholson Grider, copyright 1993. "The name is ENGLISH in origin, but with a French-Norman background. William the Conqueror, in 1066, created the barony and made his brother-in-law, Walter de Flandrensis, Baron du Wuhulle. A feudal castle (now in ruins) lived in for years by the Barons of Wahulle, was located on the Ouse River in Bedfordshire." (source Hubbard O'Dell Ferrell. Origin of the name Odell, a manuscript page 1.) Origin of name from Old English wudu for wood, plus hull for hill or hall gives wudgull or wudhall. The name means living on a wooded hill or a dweller at the hall by the wood. Many, but not all group members can trace their family back to a John Woodall who first had land in Henrico County Virginia in 1719 (later boundary changes made it Goochland County). This John had his will recorded in 1747 and he died shortly before 9 March 1750, as his will probated on that date. In his Will he gives 150 acres of land to each of his 2 sons: John, William with his daughter Sarah Prior as Executrix of his will. He is illiterate and signs his name with just the letter "W" with a seal around the "W". His wife name is unknown and she is obviously dead at the time his Will was written in 1747. Test results show descendants of his son John and William do not match meaning one or both of his two sons were orphans and or adopted by John (his wife may have had children from a previous marriage or one or more children could have became orphans from friends or family of John and his wife. Other members of this family group can trace their line back to early colonial Maryland and Rhode Island. Family 4 now consists of forty-three testees, six of whom bear the name Odell. When one looks at the Oldest Ancestors page for this family, one will notice most of this family descends from John, the son of John Woodall of Gennytoe Creek, Goochland County.

FAMILY GROUP 5 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. The test results tend to confirm the paper trail that they all three descend from James Duncan Woodall. James Duncan was the son of Mastin Woodall's sister Diana Woodall and that James Duncan's father was Seamore Duncan. The fact that Seamore Duncan was the father is confirmed by court records and DNA results that match the Duncan family. We have Duncan testees that match this Woodall family.

FAMILY GROUP 6 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. This family is headed by John Wooddall, Sr. who we believe came to America from Scotland via Ireland in the early part of 1766. Many Protestant immigrants came to America during this time period to take advantage of an Act by the South Carolina Assembly of monies for passage to America and land grants upon arrival. A son, William Wooddall, is shown in Janie Revill's book "Protestant Immigrants to South Carolina 1763-1773" as being granted 400 acres at Long Canes, SC in Oct. 1766 after being in "Country" for a few months. The amount of land granted to him indicates he brought other family members with him. There are other SC records of land transactions by this family in 1700's. John Wooddall's will probated in SC in 1806 named his second wife and all of his children. There is a Biblical record of John Wooddall, Sr. and William Wooddall. The spelling of Woodall as "Wooddall" remained within some family members for many years.

FAMILY GROUP 7 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. Members of this family are in the US and in England.

FAMILY GROUP 8 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia.

FAMILY GROUP 9 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. FAMILY GROUP 9 consists of one individual. His oldest known ancestor is Andrew Woodall born about 1820 in Georgia.

FAMILY GROUP 10 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia.

FAMILY GROUP 10 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. consists of one individual whose paper trail goes back to a John Woodell 1761 in Virginia, Kit 45418. Kit 45418' s ancestor William Woodell, b. c. 1795 was dead by 29 May of 1849. William's widow, Maulsey (Maines) Woodell, petitioned the Robeson County Court for her rights to dower. Charles P. and Rhoda (Woodell) Creech were two of the heirs of William Woodell, b. c. 1795. A guardianship entry in the Columbus Co., NC Court Minutes named William's minor children, including Elias P. Woodell, Richard Woodell, Rebecca Woodell, and David Woodell.

FAMILY GROUP 11 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia.

FAMILY GROUP 12 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia.

FAMILY GROUP 13 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. Family 13 - has 2 individuals in this family group one spells his name Woodle and the other spells his name as Woodel.

FAMILY GROUP 14 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia.

FAMILY GROUP 15 Haplogroup I-M253 Haplogroup I-M253 is a Y chromosome haplogroup which occurs at greatest frequency in Fenno-Scandia. The mutations identified with Haplogroup I-M253 (Y-DNA) are M253, M307, P30, and P40. These are known as single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). It is a subclade of Haplogroup I. Before a reclassification in 2008, the group was known as Haplogroup I1a. The group displays a very clear frequency gradient, with a peak of approximately 40 percent among the populations of western Finland and more than 50 percent in the province of Satakunta, and around 38 percent in Sweden as a whole, with a peak of 52 percent in Västra Götaland County in central Sweden. Their Lineage is this: William>Charles>Jehu>Mary Ann Woodall (who had son a with a man with the last name Ketchum) > James Leondogist Woodall b. 1839 (fought in Civil War)

FAMILY GROUP 16 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 - found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia.

FAMILY GROUP 17 Haplogroup R-DF41- primarily found in Ireland, Scotland, Isle of Man & Wales with some results in Western England & Southern France.

FAMILY GROUP 18 Haplogroup E-V38 Subgroup E-M2- is a human Y-chromosome DNA haplogroup. It is often found in African males and their descendants and is heritably passed in lineage from father to son. Geneticists study these variants in populations to find the evolutionary lineage to a common male human ancestor. It can also be referred to in phylogenetic nomenclature by names such as E1b1a(although the exact definition of phylogenetic names can vary over time).E-V38 has two basal branches, E-M329 (formerly E1b1c) and E-M2 (formerly E1b1a), the former is almost exclusively found in Ethiopia. The E-M2 branches are the predominant lineage in Western Africa, Central Africa, Southern Africa, and the southern parts of Eastern Africa. E-M2 has several subclades, however many members are included in either E-L485 or E-U175.

FAMILY GROUP 19 Haplogroup R1a1, also referred to as haplogroup R-M17 or R-M198, is a Y-DNA haplogroup defining one of the most common human male lines found in modern Eurasia. It is defined by the SNP mutation M17, and is particularly common in a large region extending from South Asia and Southern Siberia to Central Europe and Scandinavia (Underhill 2009). The R1a1 is the most common subclade within the family of the Y-DNA Haplogroup R1a, which share in common the M420 SNP mutation, and before the discovery of M420, R1a1 was itself referred to as R1a. The modern distribution of R1a1 has two widely separated areas of high frequency, one in South Asia, and the other in Eastern Europe. The demographic reasons for this are the subject of on-going discussion and attention among population geneticists and genetic genealogists. Archaeologists recognize a complex of inter-related and relatively mobile cultures living on the Eurasian steppe, part of which protrudes into Europe as far west as Ukraine. These cultures from the late Neolithic and into the Iron Age, with specific traits such as Kurgan burials and horse domestication, have been associated with the dispersal of Indo-European languages across Eurasia. Nearly all samples from Bronze and Iron Age graves in the Krasnoyarsk area in south Siberia belonged to R1a1 and appeared to represent an eastward migration from Europe. In central Europe, Corded Ware period human remains at Eulau from which Y-DNA was extracted appear to be R-M17(xM458) (which they found most similar to the modern German R-M17* haplotype.

FAMILY GROUP 20- Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia.

FAMILY GROUP 21- Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. Family Group 21- oldest living known Woodall is James Woodall b. 1815. His census lists he was born in Pennsylvania but he grew up in Virginia. John married Elizabeth Martin in now West Virginia in 1838. They moved to Ohio in the 1850s and that is where the next seven generations live(d). Ancestry Tree DNA indicates they are possibly related to Polly Lentz from Johnston, NC where many Woodalls resided. They also found a possible DNA link to Woodalls from Maryland.

FAMILY GROUP 22- Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. The man in this Woodall family group is of Scottish descent.

FAMILY GROUP 23- Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia.

FAMILY GROUP 24- Haplogroup J-M172 also known as J2 is common in modern populations in Western Asia, Central Asia, South Asia, Europe and North Africa. It is thought that J-M172 may have originated between the Caucasus Mountains, Mesopotamia and the Levant. It is likely that J2 men had settled over most of Anatolia, the South Caucasus and Iran by the end of the Last Glaciation 12,000 years ago. Researchers claimed to have uncovered the earliest known migration of J2, from Sumeria to Canaan and that in today's populations, Eu 9 (the post-mutation form of M172) is strongest in the Caucasus, Asia Minor and the Levant, whilst Eu 10 becomes stronger and replaces the frequency of Eu 9 as one moves south into the Arabian Peninsula, so that people from the Caucasus met with Arabs near and between Mesopotamia (formerly Sumeria) and the Negev Desert, as "Arabisation" spread from Arabia to the Levant and Turkey, as well as many peoples (e.g. Jews, Armenians, Lebanese) having returned from diasporas.

FAMILY GROUP 25- Haplogroup E-M35, which accounts for approximately 18% to 20% of Ashkenazi and 8.6% to 30% of Sephardi Y-chromosomes, appears to be one of the major founding lineages of the Jewish population. All major sub-branches of E-M35 are thought to have originated in North Africa, the Horn of Africa, or nearby areas of the Near East. Some branches of E-M35 are assumed to have left Africa thousands of years ago, whereas others may have arrived from the Near East. E-M215 and E-M35 are quite common among Afroasiatic speakers. The linguistic group and carriers of E-M35 lineage have a high probability to have arisen and dispersed together from the Afroasiatic Urheimat. Amongst populations with an Afro-Asiatic speaking history, a significant proportion of Jewish male lineages are E-M35. Approximately 35% to 43% of Jewish men are in the paternal line known as haplogroup J and its sub-haplogroups. This haplogroup is particularly present in the Middle East and Southern Europe. 15% to 30% are in haplogroup E1b1b (or E-M35) and its sub-haplogroups which is common in the Middle East, North Africa, and Southern Europe.

RootsWeb Family 4

Oldest Ancestors for Kit Number 60073 Family 4

Generation 1 Jonathan Woodall, born about 1740, married Lincy Harvey
Generation 2 Moses Woodall, born about 1803 in VA and died in 1893 in Montgomery Co., TN
Generation 3 Wiley Washington Woodall, born 22 Feb 1840 in Robertson Co., TN and died 2 Dec 1917 in Montgomery Co., TN
Generation 4 William Austin Woodall, born 20 Feb 1875 in Montgomery Co., TN and died 13 May 1963 in Montgomery Co., TN
Generation 5 Alfred Leslie Woodall, born 27 Oct 1898 in Montgomery Co., TN and died 3 Jul 1991 in Montgomery Co., TN.


Oldest Ancestors for Kit Number 139617 Family 4

Generation 1 Jonathan Woodall, born about 1740, married Lincy Harvey
Generation 2 Zephenia Harvey Woodall, born about 1792 in Jasper Co., GA and died after 1860
Generation 3  Ewing M. Woodall, born about 1837 in AL and died after 1912.
Generation 4 Harvey Zephaniah Woodall, born 7 January 1873 in Tennessee.
Generation 5 James Harvey Woodall, born about 1892 in Tennessee.

 

Oldest Ancestors for Kit Number 87850 Family 4

Generation 1 Jonathan Woodall, born about 1740, married Lincy Harvey
Generation 2 John  A. Woodall,  born about 1799 in Millegeville, GA and died in 1860 in Dresden, Navarro, TX. Married Mary Vest
Generation 3 Albert Newton Woodall, born about 1834 in AL and married Luticea A Wynn.
Generation 4 Elkana Woodall, born about 1863 and married Antonia Lulu Seay.
Generation 5 Gettis Woodall, born 30 July 1897 in AL.

RootsWeb Oldest Ancestors All Family Kits

https://freepages.rootsweb.com/~marshalldna/genealogy/My%20Webs/Woodall/Oldest%20Ancestors.htm Entire RootsWeb Woodall

http://freepages.rootsweb.com/~morganandrelatedfamilies/genealogy/families/woodall.htm

Wives of Jonathon Woodall abt 1710

  • These two lines need to be merged there is also a missing Wife with Children
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Wooddall-4 John Woodall
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Woodall-167 John Woodall
Children of Judith Sampson married about 1731
Sampson - abt 1732 -- Goochland Virginia
John Jr.- abt 1735 -- Goochland Virginia---died Dec 1798 Wilkes Georgia
William Sr.- abt 1737-- Goochland Virginia
James B Sr - abt 1739 -- Unknown --- died before1800
Jacob Sr - abt 1740 -- Unknown --- died abt1808 North Carolina
David - abt 1742--Unknown --- abt1742
Children of Isabella (Sarah) maybe (Madison Moore) married abt 1744
William-abt 1745 -- married Julia Moore and Anne(Unknown)
Sarah-abt 1750 -- married John Power
Joseph-abt 1754 -- married Abigail Gilder --- died abt 1812
Ann-abt 1756 -- narried John Amos McCutcheon
John Jr-abt 1758
Children of Judith Holmes married aft 1758
Thomas Holmes Woodall-abt 1792

1.John Wooddall b. 1720 and d. 1806 Pendleton District SC. He was first married to Isablella ? and secondly to Judith Holmes.

John Wooddall b. 1720 (His wife Isabella ?? may have been alive at time, He later married Judith Holmes)

Children:

William Wooddall b. 1745 ( married Julia Moore and Anna Annex)

Sarah b. 1750 ( married John Power)

Joseph b. 1754 (married Abigail Gilder)

Ann b. 1756 ( married John Amos McCutchen)

John Wooddall b. 1756 (married unknown) .


Historical records available in South Carolina tells us John Wooddall and his family remained in South Carolina a number of years before some migrated to other states as lands seized from Native Americans were made available to white settlers through lottery grants. Some of the records are detailed below:


10/28/1888 William Woodall do give and bequeath to my two sons John Woodall and Joseph Woodall tract on which they now live, branch on the south side of Guilder Creek, called Starks Branch to be divided between them when they are both of age, onlyu they are not to make sale of land during their mother’s life. Wit: Jean Dennis, Margret Noland. P.Deed BK D page 6230624 Winton CO. (This action probably means William had divorced his first wife, Julia Moore. He had married Anna Annex by this time and they were producing children per the Woodall Family Bible).

08/06/1795 John Wooddall, Jr. – Plat for 410 acres on Rocky Fork of Big Generostee Creek, Pendleton County, Ninety Six District, Surveyed by John McMahen

???? John Woodall and Joseph Woodall of Pendleton County SC three and twenty mile cr Children of John Wooddall and Isabella

1. William Wooddall b. 1745 in Lower Scotland or Upper Ireland and died unknown probably Georgia. He first married Julia Moore and secondly to Anna Annex. He arrived In Charleston, SC in 1766.

2. Sarah Ann Wooddall b. 1750 in Lower Scotland or Upper IrelandC. She married John Power on 19th June 1776 in Anderson, South Carolina. She died on May 4th, 1832

3. Joseph Wooddall b. 1754 in Lower Scotland or Upper Ireland and died 1812 in Pendleton , Anderson, SC. He married Abailgail Gilder. She was born in 1790 and died abt. 1830.

4. Ann Morgan Woodall was born in Lower Scotland or Upper Ireland Sept. 1757. She Married John Amos McCutchen in 1780. She died on 20 Jun 1822 in Morgan, Alabama.

5. John Wooddall was born in 1758 in Lower Scotland or Upper Ireland.

Children of John Wooddall and Judith Holmes

1. Thomas Holmes Wooddall b. 1797 in Pendleton, Anderson, SC and died 1864 probably in Cherokee County, TX. He married Susannah ?? b. 1796 in SC. Charleston, SC in 1766.

2. Sarah Ann Wooddall b. 1750 in Lower Scotland or Upper IrelandC. She married John Power on 19th June 1776 in Anderson, South Carolina. She died on May 4th, 1832

3. Joseph Wooddall b. 1754 in Lower Scotland or Upper Ireland and died 1812 in Pendleton , Anderson, SC. He married Abailgail Gilder. She was born in 1790 and died abt. 1830.

4. Ann Morgan Woodall was born in Lower Scotland or Upper Ireland Sept. 1757. She Married John Amos McCutchen in 1780. She died on 20 Jun 1822 in Morgan, Alabama.

5. John Wooddall was born in 1758 in Lower Scotland or Upper Ireland.

Children of John Wooddall and Judith Holmes

1. Thomas Holmes Wooddall b. 1797 in Pendleton, Anderson, SC and died 1864 probably in Cherokee County, TX. He married Susannah ?? b. 1796 in SC. South Carolina. She died on May 4th, 1832

3. Joseph Wooddall b. 1754 in Lower Scotland or Upper Ireland and died 1812 in Pendleton , Anderson, SC. He married Abailgail Gilder. She was born in 1790 and died abt. 1830.

4. Ann Morgan Woodall was born in Lower Scotland or Upper Ireland Sept. 1757. She Married John Amos McCutchen in 1780. She died on 20 Jun 1822 in Morgan, Alabama.

5. John Wooddall was born in 1758 in Lower Scotland or Upper Ireland.

Children of John Wooddall and Judith Holmes

1. Thomas Holmes Wooddall b. 1797 in Pendleton, Anderson, SC and died 1864 probably in Cherokee County, TX. He married Susannah ?? b. 1796 in SC.

Woodall Q-M3 Dna

Persons --- MTdna --- YDna-----
---You ----------H1---- Unavailabe
---Dan ---------K2a--- Q-M346

Sources





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