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Digging Up My Roots

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Digging Up My Roots

Tag Archives: Squires

Analyzing Cox Family DNA Matches and Shared Ancestors

05 Sunday Apr 2026

Posted by suzieg1969 in DNA Matches, Genealogy

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

ancestry, Ballard, Caplinger, Cox, family-history, Genealogy, Gott, Piety, Polk, Squires

This week I want to do something a little different–DNA match investigation. I’m looking at the matches descending from Benjamin Cox and Sarah Piety. I want to tag the shared matches to see if I can pull any additional matches into my tree.

ELIZABETH COX MILLER: Ben and Sarah’s daughter Elizabeth married widower Samuel Miller for her second husband. Unfortunately, the algorithm is attaching two of his daughters from the first marriage to Elizabeth. The first one, AA, is through his daughter Louisiana. She has two shared matches that are in my tree already. Interestingly, one is connected through my Lowe line. The other is through Elizabeth Cox.

There are two matches descended from Margaret Miller. The first, ME, has a shared match that is descended through Mary Gott. Mary Gott was the mother of Nancy Squires Cox. The other, MA, did not have any shared matches currently in the tree.

SUSANNAH COX BALLARD: Susannah Cox Ballard has one match (DF) the algorithm has descended through her son Bland Ballard, however, it would seem it has attached her to the wrong Bland Ballard. This match does not have a shared matches in my tree.

JOSEPH COX: Four of my matches in my tree are descended through Joseph’s daughter Mary Elizabeth. From what I can tell, Mary Elizabeth’s daughter Isabelle was born out of wedlock and her father, to the best of my knowledge, is unidentified. Mary Elizabeth’s brother Henry played a significant role in Isabelle’s life and is misattributed as her father.

JONATHAN PIETY COX: ThruLines has assigned two different Mary Jane Coxes to Jonathan. Based on preliminary findings in FamilySearch, the second Mary Jane might be the daughter of Jonathan Cox who was the son of David Cox who married Margaret Bruce. I will need to investigate this further.

NANCY COX: ThruLines has attributed a Nancy Cox Nelson as a daughter of Ben and Sarah, however, I have no record of them having a daughter with that name. Also, the documents other researchers have attached to her all have her residing in Maryland and never in Kentucky.

SARAH COX: The Sarah Cox ThruLines has assigned as a daughter of Ben and Sarah was born in Tennessee. Ben and Sarah’s daughter never married and has no known children.

BENJAMIN F COX: The algorithm has a match (LD) descended through BF’s son Albert. There is conflicting information from other researchers about the parentage of Albert. Based on his location, it is doubtful BF’s son Albert is the ancestor to LD.

After tagging all the shared matches with those I have added to my tree, I then filtered by each of the eight lines.

  • Finetta Cox only has seven shared matches and none of them overlapped with any of her siblings’ groups.
  • Isaac Cox has nineteen shared matches. Five of those have already been matched to my tree and all five shared matches with at least one descendant of Isaac’s siblings, most frequently Joseph. There were two who are not in my tree and there is not enough information available to add them.
  • Elizabeth Cox has thirty-four shared matches. Two of Elizabeth’s matches are shared matches with descendants of Joseph. Not enough information is available to match the others to my tree.
  • Susannah Cox has one hundred two shared matches. Forty-four of those matched were shared matches with descendants of Jonathan, John Calhoun, and Austin.
    • I was able to correct a misassigned match and have three generations of the same family tagged in my tree. They actually descend from Isaac and Susannah Tomlinson Cox through their daughter Mary Cox. Mary married John Lemen and had a son named Gabriel. Gabriel married Mary Gott Squires Caplinger’s daughter Mary Caplinger which may have given the DNA a bit of a boost. Mary Caplinger is the half-sister of my 4th great grandmother Nancy Squires Cox.
    • I was also able to assign the mother of a match in my tree.
  • Austin Cox has one hundred thirty-four shared matches. The vast majority shared matches with at least one of Austin’s siblings, if not two or three.
  • Joseph Cox had one hundred fifty-nine shared matches. There were a good number of these shared matches that were not common with the other siblings.
    • A huge boon was discovered sifting through these shared matches. A seventh cousin one time removed was discovered! She is descended from FRIEND COX!!! This gives me some proof that the Friend Cox and Isaac Cox lines are related.
    • There are a couple shared matches that potentially connect back to the Polk line. This would make sense since Sarah Piety’s mother was a Polk. Their lineage didn’t quite match up with what I have entered so I will need to readdress that later when I am researching the Polks.
  • Jonathan Piety Cox has two hundred twenty shared matches. What was interesting is that several of them are identified as primarily being a match on my mom’s side of the family, not my dad’s. This could make sense, however, since Jonathan migrated to Knox County with Gabriel. Jonathan’s descendants could have intermarried with ancestors on my mother’s side. This would theoretically boost the DNA count since there were multiple sources in common with my own.

Having made a DNA match with a descendant of Friend Cox, I have filtered by those twenty-nine shared matches.

  • Match MD appears to be descended from a Charles Cox. Friend’s son Benjamin had a son named Charles. To better confirm this match, I will need to build out the tree from Benjamin. That was on my to do list anyway.

The last thing I want to do in this exercise is check those matches that supposedly have Ben and Sarah as a common ancestor to see if any of they share any of my potential Cox matches. The ones that do not exhibit any shared DNA with my possible Cox matches will be relegated to my unknown match list for review at a later date.

  • LD has several to my Briscoe line. There is one shared Cox match, but nothing to make me believe this person is related through the Cox family.
  • AA shares DNA was a match on my Lowe Line.
  • MH has no shared Cox matches.
  • PH has no shared Cox matches.
  • KP has several who share matches with Joseph Cox. I am inclined to think that she is related further back on the Polk line.
  • MC has a few shared Cox matches.
  • CT & ET has one shared Cox match. They are managed by the same person.
  • JLF has no shared Cox matches.
  • KAH has one shared Cox match…Friend Cox.
  • DF only has one shared Cox match…Elizabeth.
  • MT only has one shared Cox match…Joseph.

Overall, I think this was a worthwhile exercise. I was able to make a few matches with my tree. More importantly, I was able to link Isaac Cox’s family to Friend Cox’s family through my DNA match. I am more convinced now that I should include information about Friend and Gabriel’s family in my manuscript.


Error resolution. The last available update: I have 5018 errors in the tree–511 possible duplicates, 4059 with no documents, 448 other errors.

  • The first error to correct this week is the father-in-law of a distant cousin. Normally I delete these, however, his wife is a Cox. I haven’t figured out if she is part of the Cox family I am currently researching or a different one. He was missing references so I found a couple census records for him.
  • The second is a distant cousin needing references…the 1950 census got that ball rolling.
  • The last error to fix is actually two errors. This 3rd cousin had a possible duplicate and no references. He is not a duplicate; his mother’s obituary clearly states she had two sons named John. The first died as an infant. It took a ChatGPT search to find his obituary.

Goals and progress…
Beginning of Week: 27,279 people
End of Week: 27,321 people
Change = +42 persons
Tasks for coming week:

  • Continue research on Isaac Cox, “The Immigrant” and his wife Susannah Tomlinson.
  • Review Coxes of Cox Creek
  • Run newspaper search, especially for articles recounting local history
  • Review the Cox package of information from Sweden
  • Look for documents in Virginia, Maryland, West Virginia, Pennsylvania and Kentucky

2025 Week 17

27 Sunday Apr 2025

Posted by suzieg1969 in DNA Matches, Genealogy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

ancestry, Cox, family-history, Genealogy, history, Piety, Squires

It’s been a productive week for me in the world of genealogy. First and foremost, I finished writing the chapter on the family of Gabriel Cox and Nancy Squires. I documented the last two daughters and put together what I hope is a coherent and cohesive argument for John S Cox to be Gabe and Nancy’s son. I do need to look up a few Indiana marriage records to complete citations at the library next weekend. I’ll let it meld and marinate for a while, then revisit it for possible revisions. I will continue to search for documents periodically on this family to hopefully add more about their lives.

Moving on! The next family unit to research is Gabriel’s parents Benjamin Cox and Sarah Piety. My first task is to attempt to resolve the DNA matches I have tagged for this couple. There were a dozen or so when I pulled up the list. So far I have been successful in connecting two of them.

  • P.H. – The algorithm tries to connect this individual through a Nancy Cox to Ben and Sarah. I am not aware of them having a daughter named Nancy, let alone one that was born in Maryland. Nancy may be a descendant of Isaac Cox (Ben’s father) or one of his brothers.
  • L.D. – The algorithm has misidentified the Albert Cox in this match’s line to a grandson of Ben and Sarah. The Albert Cox belonging to L.D. resided in Pike County, Indiana, whereas my Albert Cox did not. The Albert in question may descend down a different line from Ben or from one of his brothers.
  • M.H. – When I originally tagged this one, the algorithm suggested that Ben and Sarah were the common ancestors. That assertion has been removed. I will leave it tagged for Ben and Sarah for now, but this one could be a hard one to sort out. The match’s mother was involved in a bit of dramatic scandal as a baby so parentage is questionable.
  • K.P. – This is another match that was originally attributed to Ben and Sarah but no longer are. I’ll definitely monitor the situation.
  • M.C. – This match also was previously tied to Ben and Sarah. I did note that she was descended from a step-granddaughter of Ben and Sarah when I first tried to resolve the match. We don’t have any shared matches which is concerning for me.

I still have five matches to work through this week before I start reviewing the data I already have on Ben and start collecting as much detail as I can on my 5th great grandfather.


This week Ancestry gave me three new errors to resolve. I have 5275 errors in the tree–376 possible duplicates, 4294 with no documents, 607 other errors.

  • A 5th cousin 1x removed needed some documentation. She’s a cousin down my Ireland line which I haven’t worked on in a long time.
  • A 5th cousin also needed to be documented. For whatever reason, I listed her last name as her mother’s maiden name in error. Unfortunately, I was unable to find any documents for her.
  • The spouse of a 3rd cousin 2x removed was undocumented. He had several references to update his record with.

This week in the past…
I’d like to take an opportunity to celebrate the anniversaries of births, marriages, and deaths of my bloodlines which will occur during the week ahead.
316 years ago – marriage of Jacques Duguay (8th ggf) to his second wife Anne Baillargeon
145 years ago – death of Robert C. Thompson (3rd ggf)


Goals and progress…
Beginning of Week: 27,769 people
End of Week: 27,829 people
Change = +60 person
Tasks for coming week:

  • Document retrieval at FamilySearch Affiliate Library
  • Resolve remaining Ben Cox DNA matches
  • Start data mining on Ben Cox

2025 Week 15

13 Sunday Apr 2025

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

ancestry, Cox, family-history, Genealogy, history, Polk, Squires, Wabash-Erie Canal

It’s manuscript time! This is where I try to bring my ancestors to life. I approach it one sentence and one fact at a time.

While trying to include what little I know about Gabriel Cox, I found his name on a list of jurors from 1829. There were actually two lists–the grand jury and the traverse jury. Not familiar with the term “traverse jury”, I decided to look it up.

A TRAVERSE JURY‘s primary role is to listen to evidence presented in court, deliberate, and render a verdict based on the facts of the case. 

What I found interesting was that a Jacob Pea and Philip Catt from my mother’s bloodline were also on this same jury.  Not sure if they are my great-grandfathers or their sons. Hopefully I can figure it out when I start researching those families. Small world!


In writing up Nancy’s part of the biography, I included a land record where she received 40 acres of land near Freelandville, Indiana, using a certificate issued by the Wabash-Erie Canal Board of Trustees. I don’t know that the land was ever improved with a house or buildings. Today it is still used for growing crops while a swath is covered with mature trees.

Land purchased by Nancy Squires Cox in 1857.

This week Ancestry gave me three new errors to resolve. I have 5289 errors in the tree–378 possible duplicates, 4304 with no documents, 607 other errors.

  • First up was 1st cousin 5x removed Sarah Arnold who didn’t have any sources attached. Interestingly enough, I will be working on her family unit in the near future. She was the daughter of Elbridge Arnold and Finetta Cox. Finetta was one of Gabriel’s siblings. I added a census record and will come back to Sarah soon.
  • Error correction #2 this week was for a 6th cousin who did not have any sources attached. He was located in the 1950 US Census, along with other undocumented family members and cleared from the list.
  • My last record to clean up belongs to Margaret Polk. I believe she was added to the tree when I was entering information from the text Polk Family and Kinsmen by William Harrison Polk. Obviously I did not finish the task of researching the Polk family. Her father was Brigadier General Thomas Polk. I was able to add a source for Margaret and several other family members, clearing several extra records from the errors list! I am definitely looking forward to researching this line of the family and its contribution to our country’s history.

This week in the past…
I’d like to take an opportunity to celebrate the anniversaries of births, marriages, and deaths of my bloodlines which will occur during the week ahead.
246 years ago – birth of William Briscoe (5th ggf)
233 years ago – marriage of Mary M. Overlin (6th ggm) and Jacob Pea Jr (6th ggf)
213 years ago – death of John Keirsey (6th ggf)
205 years ago – death of John C Cunningham (6th ggf)
187 years ago – marriage of Sally Mattocks (4th ggm) and Benjamin W Lankford (4th ggf)
161 years ago – death of Louisa Reeve DeMoss (3rd ggm)
and most importantly, MY BIRTHDAY!


Goals and progress…
Beginning of Week: 27,760 people
End of Week: 27,761 people
Change = +1 person
Tasks for coming week:

  • Continue editing and footnoting the bio of Gabriel and Nancy Cox and their children.
  • Start writing the discussion of indirect evidence supporting Nancy and Gabriel are the parents of John S Cox.

2025 Week 14

06 Sunday Apr 2025

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

ancestry, Caplinger, Cox, DNA Matches, Family Tree Maker, family-history, Genealogy, Gott, history, Lemen, Squires

I use Family Tree Maker for my offline family tree. It syncs with Ancestry so I don’t have to do double entry and and I have a backup copy of my work. Backups are important. It has a Plugin called Family Book Creator. I use this to generate the rough drafts of my family bios. I like it because you can include an abbreviated family tree with the text. It incorporates the facts from FTM and has the ability to include citations as well. I personally do not use the citation function when I generate the bios because of the way I am assembling my final document. It gets all discombobulated with the formatting.

After I generated the rough draft for Gabriel Cox and Nancy Squires, I realized I did not have Nancy’s parents entered into the tree, and as a result, they did not show up on the chart. I also realized that I needed to at least research the DNA matches from Nancy’s parents so I could make my case for John S Cox being a child of Gabe and Nancy. So researching my matches through John Squires and Mary Gott has been this week’s research focus. I have 16 matches through John and 22 through Mary. John was much older than Mary and died a few years after their marriage. She remarried and some of my matches are from the second marriage.


I have seven DNA matches from the lines of Nancy’s siblings–one from her full sister Margaret Squires and six from her half-sister Mary Caplinger. Interestingly enough, the match through Margaret is only 8 cM. Several of the matches from Mary are close to double that. It’s likely that there is an amplification effect from Mary’s husband, Gabriel Lemen. Gabriel’s mother was Mary Cox Lemen, an aunt to Nancy’s husband Gabriel Cox. The fact that these matches through Mary Caplinger circle back to the Cox line muddies my reasoning that John S Cox is a child of Gabriel and Nancy Cox. However, the one match through Margaret does, in fact, help the case. Such a tangled tree!


This week Ancestry gave me three new errors to resolve. I have 5265 errors in the tree–384 possible duplicates, 4273 with no documents, 608 other errors.

  • This week’s first error to correct is for an unconnected person in the tree. I cannot figure why he was added. Maybe a distant collateral family? I have removed him.
  • My second error to “fix” is the mother-in-law of a 3rd cousin 6x removed. I have not attached any records to her. Since I typically do not include in-laws of distant cousins, I will remove her and her husband.
  • My last person to clean up is the husband of a 5th cousin. He I will keep. I updated him and his wife (my 5th cousin). I even added a bit to that family to bring it up to date.

This week in the past…
I’d like to take an opportunity to celebrate the anniversaries of births, marriages, and deaths of my bloodlines which will occur during the week ahead.
346 years ago – birth of Jean Baptiste Creely (8th ggf)
333 years ago – birth of Jeanne Duguay (7th ggm)
282 years ago – marriage of Anna Mohr (7th ggm) and Michael Katz (7th ggf)
133 years ago – death of Caroline Nagley Nagele (3rd ggm)
114 years ago – death of Eli T Butler (3rd ggf)
113 years ago – death of Joseph Nagele (3rd ggf)
89 years ago – death of Anna Gravel Cardinal (2nd ggm)


Goals and progress…
Beginning of Week: 27,622 people
End of Week: 27,760 people
Change = +138 people
Tasks for coming week:

  • Continue editing and footnoting the bio of Gabriel and Nancy Cox and their children.

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