One Man, Multiple Names: A DNA-Based Case Study

Dana Leeds
Oct 5, 2022
3.2K views
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Content

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Welcome
2m 44s
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Speaker's Introduction
1m 08s
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Introduction
5m 35s
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Leeds Method
8m 23s
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Next Steps
13m 40s
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New Research Objective
30m 17s
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Onomastic Evidence
8m 23s
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Announcements / prizes
4m 14s
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Questions / answers
13m 19s

About this webinar

Sometimes our ancestors seem to have appeared out of nowhere. That was the case with William Emmitt Hunter whose life before his 1910 Oklahoma marriage was basically unknown. One record—his application for a Social Security account number—provided self-reported information about his birth in North Carolina and his parents’ names. But his alleged parents could not be found. Without DNA, this case would not have been solved. But DNA revealed that William was born as a Beddingfield, not a Hunter. Additional research identified his name at birth and traced him through multiple marriages, divorces, another alias, and indicated the possible reason why he changed his name and left behind his family and friends to start a new life in Oklahoma.

About the speaker

About the speaker

Dana Leeds started researching her family tree in 1998. She bought her first DNA kit in 2016 and solved her first unknown parentage case in early 2018. While working on another case that year, she created the innovative genetic genealogy tool know
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Comments (187)

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  1. PM
    Paula Mclaren
    2 years ago

    You need to read about my Grandpa, he gad 5 wives, 6 kids, so far, and 3 aliases, went awol, so his 1st wife thought he was dead, and carried on marrying 4 maybe 5 more wives..I found my cousin, we have talked, they gad no idea about anything…ge was Post Master in Ontario too…

    Reply
  2. SM
    Suzanne McClendon
    2 years ago

    Could W. H. Young be the wedding officiant or Justice of the Peace or town clerk, maybe?

    I enjoyed this webinar very much and use your Leeds method on every case that comes my way. Thank you!

    Reply
  3. MH
    Mary Hill
    2 years ago

    Awesome research! I really learned about how important it is to pull out specific similar pieces of DNA.

    Reply
  4. HJ
    Hjordy Johnston
    2 years ago

    Dana Leeds, is in a league of her own. Literally, without the LEEDS System, I would have never broken through my materal grandfather “brickwall”. After 13 years, I finally discovered who he was, where he was from and trace his family pedigree back generations. Similar to William Emmitt Hunter: he had multiple names, multiple locations and multiple family members who did the same. THANK YOU Dana! For Everyone, use the LEEDS System to follow the DNA, research, construct trees and verify. You can do it too!

    Reply
  5. RG
    Robin Grantham
    2 years ago

    Cram-packed with info, but easy to follow. Excellent presentation.

    Reply
  6. SB
    Susan Barry
    2 years ago

    I learned tips and techniques that will help me identify an individual who must have changed his name. The step by step visuals and explanation of the Leeds DNA Method were very helpful and I’ve been using the Leeds DNA Method for a few years. Ordering a Social Security Application record was new to me.

    Reply
  7. CS
    Charlene Shaw
    2 years ago

    Excellent in so many ways! One of the best webinars I have seen, and it has given me food for thought on routes I can take to solve a similar issue in my family.

    Reply
  8. LE
    Lisa Egner
    2 years ago

    Fantastic evidence for your research question

    Reply

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