ICFA launched its Y-chromosome DNA project in 2015. The effort now includes 43 men, most from member families with genealogical data stored in the ICFA database. Two very experienced DNA testing and analysis volunteers, John Cleary and Tim Cummings, help administer the initiative along with Association member David Roland. John and Tim prepared the following summary of results to date.
Isaac Cummings emigrated to colonial North America in the mid-1630s. Members of his family remained in the home villages in Essex and Suffolk, England. While it is possible that collateral descendants could still live in England today, ICFA’s current DNA project principally focuses on Isaac’s descendants from his two sons, four grandsons, and other males in subsequent generations. Y-DNA is particularly useful to study the spread of a surname or a male-line descent lineage. The first phase of the project tested invited Association members (and several other related men who had been previously tested, some with surnames other than Cummings). The invited testers were selected to ensure a representative spread across all of the known branches of the lineage. The initial testing was done at Family Tree DNA (familytreedna.com) on 67 short tandem repeat (STR) markers. A few men have progressed to 111 markers. Three participants have been tested at 500 markers.
Phase 1 of the project which ran from 2015 to 2018 hoped to gain answers to a number of initial questions such as:
Copyright © Isaac Cummings Family Association
A 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization.