For a good example of integrating genetic genealogy into your family history research,
see this USAToday article (Tweeted by
Blaine Bettinger and
Megan Smolenyak Smolenyak) about Chris Haley’s DNA connections with a Scottish man.
Haley is a
Maryland State Archives research administrator and the nephew of the deceased
Roots author, Alex Haley.
Haley took a Y-DNA test, which examines the paternal line (the father’s father’s father, and so on), and found a couple of matches through
Ancestry.com’s Y-DNA database. One match was a man in Scotland, whose daughter June Baff Black had just started doing genealogy (talk about beginner’s luck).
Though Haley and Black haven’t yet been able to find a paper trail leading to their common ancestor, the match on 45 out of 46 markers confirms they’re on the right track.
Roots Television has a
video about their first meeting, which happened in March at the Who Do You Think You Are? Live! show in London.
You can order a DNA test through Ancestry.com. It's free to search Ancestry.com's DNA database by last name (via a search box
at the bottom of the DNA landing page) or
enter your test results from another company.
The USAToday story
also mentions a limitation of Y-DNA testing. Since it’s a relatively
new science, you may not find a close match in online databases as
quickly as Haley and Black did.