Ancestry.com DNA Testing Reveals 'Roots' Author's Scottish Ancestry

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Tue Apr 7, 2009 6:00am EDT

Nephew of Alex Haley Meets Newfound Scottish Cousin for the First Time

PROVO, Utah, April 7 /PRNewswire/ -- Ancestry.com, the world's largest online
resource for family history, announced today that the late Alex Haley, author
of Roots - the decisive masterpiece that inspired many Americans to take pride
in their heritage - was the direct descendent of a Scottish ancestor. The
discovery came through an Ancestry.com DNA test taken by Alex Haley's nephew
Chris Haley in 2007, where his results were added to a growing database of
others who had taken DNA tests. 

(Photo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20090407/LA95570)

In February 2009, Chris Haley received an e-mail from a Scottish woman in the
database, June Baff Black, whose father's DNA very closely matched his.
According to the DNA results, an ancestor who likely lived in the 1600 or
1700s in Scotland connects Mr. Haley with Ms. Black, making them distant
cousins. Mr. Haley and Ms. Black met for the first time on Feb. 28, 2009, in
London, England.

Until the confirmation by Ancestry.com, Mr. Haley had only word-of-mouth
history to prove that his great-grandfather had been born of a slave mother
and a white father, both of whom lived and worked on an Alabama slave
plantation. This scientific finding adds weight to research conducted by Mr.
Haley's uncle, Alex Haley, in which he traced his ancestry back to Baugh
(variation of Baff) - an overseer of an Alabama slave plantation - who was
thought to have fathered Mr. Haley's great-grandfather with a female slave.
The story is cited in Alex Haley's book Queen. 

"Through the writing of Roots, my uncle Alex Haley sparked a fascination in
researching the past. DNA testing is a continuation of that and is another way
of emboldening yourself with pride. To be able to find out that you are from
another part of the world, and to meet a person who shares your heritage, is
an amazing experience," said Chris Haley, who is currently the director of the
Study of the Legacy of Slavery at the Maryland State Archives. 

"The match between Mr. Haley and Ms. Black is a perfect example of how DNA
testing can prove exceptionally useful in advancing family history, especially
in cases of African-American research in which traditional channels often hit
'brick walls,'" said DNA genealogy expert Megan Smolenyak.

Genetic genealogy is a technology that reveals family relatedness - a genetic
(DNA) connection to individuals to whom you are related. Ancestry.com's DNA
kits test the paternal or maternal line by studying either the 'Y-chromosome'
(passed from father to son) or 'mitochondrial DNA' (which is passed from
mother to son and daughter). The Ancestry.com DNA service compares the results
from one DNA test with thousands of other people in its database who have
taken the same test, identifying possible matches around the world as well as
supplying the recipient with rich detail about their ancient ancestry.

 "This is a perfect example of what a simple cheek swab can achieve," said Tim
Sullivan, CEO of The Generations Network, Inc., parent company of
Ancestry.com. "DNA testing uses science in a way that enables people to
discover their ancestry where traditional research goes cold and to connect
with living relatives they never knew they had."

Ancestry.com's DNA test results can help introduce living cousins, help you
prove your genetic relation to a specific individual and trace the migration
patterns ancient ancestors followed as they left Africa. Ancestry.com's
33-marker paternal DNA test is available for $79. For more information about
Ancestry.com's DNA testing kits, visit www.dna.ancestry.com.  

About Ancestry.com and The Generations Network
The Generations Network, Inc., through its flagship Ancestry.com property, is
the world's leading resource for online family history. Ancestry.com has local
websites in nine countries and has digitized and put online over 7 billion
names and 27,000 historical records collections over the past ten years. Since
July 2006, Ancestry.com users have created 9.3 million family trees containing
915 million profiles and 18 million photographs and stories. The Generations
Network also includes myfamily.com, Genealogy.com, Rootsweb.ancestry.com,
MyCanvas.com, dna.ancestry.com, Family Tree Maker and Ancestry Magazine. More
than 7 million unique visitors spent over 3 million hours on a TGN website in
January 2009 (comScore Media Metrix, Worldwide).

Web sites:
http://www.ancestry.com
http://www.myfamily.com
http://www.genealogy.com
http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com
http://www.mycanvas.com
http://www.dna.ancestry.com
http://www.familytreemaker.com
http://www.ancestrymagazine.com



SOURCE  Ancestry.com

Sara Black of PainePR, +1-213-996-3812, sblack@painepr.com, for Ancestry.com
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