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Photos, PDF's and GEDCOM's, Oh My!!
开云体育If you want to add content, simply contact me. Technology allows you to send me a GEDCOM, photos, files and PDF's. If you send it, I understand you are sharing to allow me to use it in the study, either as knowledge or display. ? The TNG system can host several GEDCOMs allowing you to access your own tree line using these features. This data will also be preserved forever. Information and photos can be nicely put into a web page that might help others and be interesting. The blog feature is a nice place to create a story or remembrance to share with others. Again, preserved forever. ? GEDCOMS (Genealogical Data Communication) are special output of Ancestry.com trees or of your genealogy software. They are created by either downloading from Ancestry.com or by the process of exporting in your software, these are two main examples. They are current as of the last time you created it; to add more recent information you simply create a new GEDCOM. It can be important to share and preserve your genealogy information using software techniques; these processes are substitutes for the hand-written family trees someone always had at those family reunions. ? The Yates one-name-study will agree to add your valuable work into its collection using this GEDCOM process. A separate tree will be created in the TNG software to host and display your GEDCOM. In this way you will preserve, share and display your valuable work using all the features of the website. There are many features of TNG that prove helpful in understanding our ancestor's lives. ? Easy Share and Manage GEDCOMS Process ? To successfully accomplish this goal of helping preserve your work and do it in a way that is easy, predictable, routine and recoverable a simple procedure has been created: ? 1. You create and save a GEDCOM deciding what information will be included. TNG automatically protects the living and marked private individuals. ? 2. A tree will be created for you on the TNG system and the tree will be named as follows: yates-?. You can specify what other name is meaningful to you. For example, we have a tree for James Yates and Agnes Webster and the tree name is yates-webster. ? 3. A TNG administrator will import your submitted GEDCOM into your named tree. In the background we will save your tree in a folder on the Yates one-name-study website to preserve your current GEDCOM and provide for the ability to recover, if needed. ? 4. To give you the ability to upload and attach photos to people in your GEDCOM relevant to this study would require access to the administrative panel of the website. It can be assured that doing so creates an unwanted exponential level of complexity for all. The compromise is this, if you have a Yates relevant image, I will need to add it to the base tree. The reason for this is the image is associated with the person and the media links are imported via GEDCOM. If you want to send one item with a file name including the person and individual ID# I will add it as time allows. ? 5. If you want to have a tree via GEDCOM, you must be a subscriber to the Yates io group. It is planned that we will update all GEDCOM's quarterly, if needed. An alert will be sent to all Yates io members that if they want to update their tree it is time to prepare and share their GEDCOM. And the easiest way to do that is via the share function below as many GEDCOM will not move over email because of size. ? As with many things, this process sounds complicated and stuffy; we are trying to keep it easy for all. If you have a question just pop it on over and we will do our best to help. ? To send me something, https://yates.one-name.net/contribute.htm ? It is our name, not mine; everything you see here, or you contribute, will be preserved and accessible forever, by the Guild. This preservation feature is the number 1 reason you might contribute. Many times, our years of collecting are lost when we die. This is your chance to avoid that. |
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Lt. Bartholomew Yates Birth: 1759 Gloucester County Virginia, USA Death: Jan. 9, 1777, Princeton
开云体育础苍肠别蝉迟辞谤’蝉: ? Lt. Bartholomew Yates Birth: 1759 Gloucester County Virginia, USA Death: Jan. 9, 1777, Princeton Mercer County New Jersey, USA ? By the end of December 1776, Washington's immediate army had shrunk from casualties, disease, desertion, and the termination of enlistments to about 2,500 men fit for duty. In the hope of seizing another morale victory, if not a strategic one, Washington decided on a daring attack on Hessian troops at Trenton, New Jersey. ? In the early morning hours of December 26, Washington's small band, including the First Virginia, crossed the Delaware River, reaching the outskirts of Trenton about 8:00 am. The surprised Hessians tried in vain to hold off the Americans, but by 9:45 am the Germans were forced to surrender. Within a few days of the American victory at Trenton, British troops marched to the town to engage Washington's small army. The two armies began firing on each other across a creek, but darkness soon put an end to the fighting. ? When dawn arrived the next morning, the British were surprised to find that Washington's army had quietly pulled out in the dark. The Continentals had marched all night to the village of Princeton where they stumbled into a British force just setting out for Trenton. The Americans were divided into two groups, with the Virginians part of Green's division under Gen. Hugh Mercer, guarding the road to Trenton. ? The remaining Americans proceeded to attack Princeton from the west. Col. Mawhood's two British regiments had already departed Princeton when Mercer's troops were spotted behind them. The British turned back toward Princeton and engaged Mercer's troops. With about 300 men on each side facing one another, the British soon charged with bayonets. Mercer was one of the first to fall victim to the bayonet charge. ? Twenty-one-year-old Captain John Fleming of the First Virginia rallied the Regiment but was soon killed, and 18-year-old 2nd Lieutenant Bartholomew Yates was mortally wounded on January 3, 1777, and died 6 days later. ? Family links: Parents: Robert Yates (1715 - 1761) Mary Elizabeth Randolph Yates (1729 - 1768) Sibling: Bartholomew Yates (1759 - 1777) Catharine Randolph Yates Wellford (1760 – 1831) ? -- Ron Yates #9019 Yates name registrant London, England |
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Yates, one-name-study- now on Cyndi's list
开云体育Dear Ron Yates,
? -- Ron Yates #9019 Yates name registrant London, England |
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England-Saturday 30 March 2024-Saturday 13 April 2024
开云体育Saturday 30 March 2024-Saturday 13 April 2024 ? These dates are now confirmed for Tim and Ron Yates.? We have also confirmed our lodging for the full period at Long House Farm in Charney Bassett, England.? Charney Bassett and nearby Lyford, England is considered the ancestral home for most of the Yates family in our DNA pool. ? We will have a small 4-passenger vehicle for transportation.? It is our intent to soak up the environment leisurely, visit several historic and interesting places and do a handful of touristy activities.? Geographically we will be in a triangle area roughly out west from London, Oxford, Stratford-upon-Avon, and south to Bath and Portsmouth.? So, day trips galore! ? We know of one person who may join us for part of the time.? We are publishing our intent should you also be interested in sharing some of your time with us.? We have listed lodging options on our trip webpage: ? https://yates.one-name.net/people/12.htm ? We will have one or more GO-Pro cameras as well as the usual iPhone snaps and videos.? No promises on quantity or quality…lol -- Ron Yates #9019 Yates name registrant London, England |
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Re: England-Saturday 30 March 2024-Saturday 13 April 2024
Enjoy, and good luck hunting!
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Just a reminder: the passenger goes in the driver's seat, and the car goes on the wrong side of the road! John On 5/26/23 10:38 AM, Ron Yates wrote: Saturday 30 March 2024-Saturday 13 April 2024 |
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The formal part of the Yates Cousin DNA Study has concluded.
开云体育Hello everyone! ? The formal part of the Yates Cousin DNA Study has concluded.? I am grateful and want to thank the twenty cousins and others who gave me access to their DNA matches generating 375 unduplicated Yates ancestral lines to study.? We have achieved much more than anticipated with this study. ? Although the formal part is over, the effort to improve and extend what we have started will never truly be done if someone is willing to work on it.? The effort began with a thought borne out of desperation as to not having useful actionable DNA information. ? We now have the basis of a “Yates Cousin DNA Ancestral Index”.? The purpose of this index is to assist you in connecting your Yates ancestor tree. If you find your ancestor in either the MDA column (most distant ancestor) or the LCA column (last common ancestor) you will be able to connect your Yates line based on DNA connections. A LUNY# (Line Unique Number Yates) has been assigned to each line of Yates ancestors and their descendants which allows for referencing this Index and specifically your ancestral line. ? The index has been created in such a way that newly unmasked ancestral lines can be added and assigned their own LUNY#.? The other features include that this index is accessible world-wide and will be preserved forever by the Guild of one-name-studies. ? I will add an image showing your name code and the LUNY#’s associated with your DNA matches.? More importantly, if you access the index with the provided link you will be able to also see how you and your DNA matches fit into the overall pattern of Yates ancestral lines, please try the sorting. ? In the immediate future there will be an effort to audit the lines to ensure correctness to the best of our ability and revise the white paper draft now that we have learned more and have a usable final project. ? Please accept my personal thanks for helping me do this crazy project! ? ? tinyurl.com/Yates-Cousin-DNA-Index -- Ron Yates #9019 Yates name registrant London, England |
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Re: The formal part of the Yates Cousin DNA Study has concluded.
Hello Ron, What an accomplishment! I look forward to digging into this more fully in the coming months. Thank you so much for all of your hard work and dedication! Warm regards, Pamela Wishard Tremblay? On Thu, Jun 1, 2023 at 2:26?PM Ron Yates <yatesvilleron@...> wrote:
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on-going work update via an email to a UK researcher
开云体育Hello Christopher, () Thank you for your response. I appreciate your interest in breaking through brick walls in genealogical research and your understanding of the effort required to do so. Your email has inspired me to add a new section to my Yates one-name-study, where I will clarify the study's aim and declare the known understandings and limitations of autosomal DNA testing. By focusing on my own study and its applicability, I hope to provide meaningful insights that could also benefit others. I wholeheartedly acknowledge and embrace all the known and unknown limitations of autosomal testing. I would add that some lines in genealogical research can be fictional, while others may have ill intentions, such as phishing scams targeting amateur family genealogists. The primary goal of the Yates Cousin Study is to apply data analytics techniques to a specific dataset. I have been exploring the possibility of using an analytical approach on a vast set of DNA matches to uncover any valuable insights. I must clarify that I am not an exceptional research genealogist or a data expert. My background lies in being a retired hospital administrator with a master's in public health. However, I draw inspiration from a consulting project I previously conducted with the Fair Isaac Corporation, renowned for their utilization of "Big Data" and mathematical algorithms to predict consumer behavior, which has transformed entire industries. The Fair Isaac staff once shared an intriguing finding from a deep dive into "Best Buy" sales data. Through an inexplicable algorithm, they accurately predicted customers' future purchases and provided recommendations that led to a 20% increase in sales the following year. This experience from two decades ago sparked my curiosity—could a similar approach be applied to overcome the brick walls in my own research? I was uncertain but decided to give it a try. What you have seen so far are the preliminary results of my first-generation analysis. Admittedly, the data is complex and messy. My objective was not to make predictions, but rather to discover connections and correlations within the existing data. All participants in the testing phase who granted access to their DNA matches have USA-based lineage. Interestingly, 74% of the 375 ancestral lines in the dataset connect to the Yate(s) family of Berkshire, UK. An important question that needs addressed by a data analyst is how much data frequency (number of ancestral lines) within a dataset is necessary to filter out false data interference, considering the known understandings and limitations of autosomal DNA testing. The answer remains elusive at this stage, but it is certainly more than the 375 lines included in the current index. The question of frequency defines the aim of the ongoing second-generation work.? To address the limitations of consumer autosomal testing, we are working on a Python scripting solution that will allow the automatic generation of unique ancestral lines from any GEDCOM file. We plan to add an additional element—a lone source item in each applicable record of a software program—to the GEDCOM, which can be edited by the user. This addition will likely be a numerical value representing different DNA testing services, such as 1 for an agnostic DNA match, 2 for an Ancestry DNA match, 3 for a 23&Me DNA match, 4 for an FTDNA DNA match, and so on. Upon successful implementation of this scripting solution, several benefits will be realized. Firstly, processing a complete GEDCOM will take only about 25 seconds, a significant improvement compared to the six months of manual labor previously required. Secondly, a GEDCOM file with the aforementioned numbering scheme will allow for the coding and sorting of all contents, enabling the user to cross-reference multiple family lines based on their imagination alone. Furthermore, this approach eliminates the restriction of relying solely on Ancestry.com matches, as GEDCOMs from various sources can be processed. However, the quality of the research and sourcing within the GEDCOM remains the responsibility of the user—garbage in, garbage out. Looking ahead, the third generation of our study will involve exploring the concept of Most Distant Ancestors. With numerous descendants, determining the number of authentic lines leading to Most Distant Ancestors becomes a significant question. Additionally, we are considering the creation of an index comprising impeccably researched ancestral family lines to serve as a guidepost for future research. During my six months of line development, I frequently encountered DNA matches with incomplete family trees, requiring me to reconstruct them to the best of my abilities. As I progressed, it became apparent that I could identify ancillary lines and that the line I was constructing often led to a Most Distant Ancestor already developed by another researcher. If done accurately and based on meticulously researched lines, this approach could assist future DNA matches in considering the correct ancestral line—a spin-off concept similar to Ancestry.com's Hint system. I hope this provides you with a review of my work and the direction I am taking. If you have any further questions or would like additional information, please do not hesitate to ask. Best regards, Ron Yates Charlotte, North Carolina??? ? -- Ron Yates #9019 Yates name registrant London, England |
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I AM DONE! Behold the "DNA Cousin Surname App":
开云体育The "DNA Cousin Surname App" provides a streamlined link to trace the intricate Yates lineage. Utilizing modern DNA match analysis combined with traditional genealogical research, the app offers an in-depth look into ancestry up to five generations back with suggested linkage to lines of the Medieval period created by historical research and solid traditional genealogy processes. ? DNA match technology aids in identifying potential descendants of these lines, particularly within the 5th generation bracket. It is important to note that this begins with a DNA match then a sub-sort for a surname. Each study participant will have their DNA Yates matches with associated distant ancestors. Thereafter, these same matches are grouped together for comparative recursive sorting to aid in identifying the greater sense of how Yates lines developed and migrated. Every individual within the Yates ancestral line is assigned a unique ID, which also serves as a direct link to the supporting genealogy website for the Yates one-name study. Additionally, each match now contains the amount of shared centimorgans and a streamlined ancestral line only containing the direct Yates ancestor. ? A score is currently showing but I may remove it; it is an algorithm I created to score and dilute out the specific Yates line from all the different family branches. We currently have 400 lines showing and with this App I am working on going up to 1,000. Why, volume matters when making suggestions and when doing something unconventional. "Maybe he is right"? ? In any case, I am using it daily and often. Me? I think it is beautiful, but that's me...lol ? ? -- Ron Yates #9019 Yates name registrant London, England |
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Re: I AM DONE! Behold the "DNA Cousin Surname App":
I would love to schedule a zoom for you to walk me through this. So proud of your work!! On Sun, Oct 8, 2023 at 2:57 PM Ron Yates <yatesvilleron@...> wrote:
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Re: I AM DONE! Behold the "DNA Cousin Surname App":
Great work Ron! If you do a Zoom, I'm in! I am suffering from retirement
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advanced ADD with too many projects open and too few completed! :-) Otherwise, all is well! John On 10/8/23 3:16 PM, Christine Girtain wrote: I would love to schedule a zoom for you to walk me through this. So |