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Node Chart to Aid in Unraveling the Carrico-Littleton NPE
We have results returned for four project members who are paper descendants of Charles CARRICO (1770s-1830s), one through his son, Josiah CARRICO (1803/4-1871), one through his son, Basil CARRICO (1795-1872), and two through his son, Reason CARRICO (1790s-1878).  Charles was born in MD, then passed through KY and settled in Sullivan Co., IN.  His sons were born in KY, then also settled in Sullivan Co., IN.  Charles was migrating with other CARRICOs, all of whom are either proven or presumed descendants of Peter CARRICO I, 1764 immigrant to Maryland.  So, even though a paper connection from Charles to Peter has yet to be made, the connection has always been assumed.

Test results for the descendant of Charles's son, Basil, show he has a 66/67 match with the modal haplotype for descendants of the immigrant, Peter I, thus confirming the long-assumed connection.  The descendant of Josiah has tested only 12 markers, and he is a 12/12 match with the modal haplotype of the descendants of Peter I.  However, the results for the two brothers who are descendants of Charles's son, Reason, do not remotely match the rest of these CARRICOs.  The inescapable conclusion is that the two brothers descended from Reason have an NPE, a "non-paternal event" (i.e., hidden adoption or illicit paternity), in their patrilineal line, somewhere between their father and Reason's father.

Fortunately, despite being Haplogroup R-1b1b2, the most common Y-DNA haplogroup in western Europe, these two CARRICO brothers have a unique haplotype, even at 12 markers.  They have only one near match in the FTDNA, Ysearch, or SMGF databases (at least as of Apr 2009), and that is a 62/67 match with a patrilineal descendant of Farrell LITTLETON.

Farrell is believed to have been born in 1740 in London, England, and to have died ca. 1775 in Virginia.  His grandsons later moved from VA into KY, so it would appear that the NPE had to have occurred in KY, which would make Reason CARRICO a son of John LITTLETON I.  This scenario is only weakly plausible because, although both families were in Kentucky at the time (ca. 1791), the LITTLETONs were in Mason County, while Charles was in Washington County, although he was also said to be in Carroll County.  On the other hand, both Carroll and Mason Counties are on the Ohio River, and travel between cities on the river was comparatively easy.

The 62/67 match is not as close as one would expect from a common ancestor just five generations back, so other scenarios are more likely.  One is that the connection is to a different branch of this LITTLETON family, with a common ancestor ten to fifteen generations removed.  In other words, to a different LITTLETON immigrant than Farrell, one whose descendants have yet to be tested.  Given that this paper descendant of Farrell has no match in the LITTLETON project, it may also turn out that he has an NPE in his lineage, too.  These questions can be answered by testing more individuals.  If doing genealogy requires patience — and we all know it does — doing genetic genealogy can require extreme patience.

By testing near kin and cousins, Reason's descendant can at least determine the generation in which the NPE occurred. 

The descendant of Josiah was tested at FTDNA, but he did not join the CARRICO project, hence I do not know his kit number.  This individual is now deceased, but I've invited his contact to join him to the project.  No response as yet.  Another descendant of Josiah has joined the project, and his test results are pending.
Return to Haplogroup R1b Results Page
Node Chart of the CARRICO Non-Paternal Event and the Match between CARRICO and LITTLETON
Generation Remarks
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 / 7 / 8
unknown Josiah
b. 1769, MD
              -
Charles
CARRICO
b. ca. 1772,
Montgomery Co., MD
Josiah
CARRICO
b. 1803/4,
Sullivan Co., IN
Josephus C.
CARRICO
b. 1837,
Parke Co., IN
Charles Garfield
CARRICO
b. 1885,
Howell Co. MO
#????
CARRICO
b. 1910s,
Kittitas Co., WA
(Test subject deceased.) This individual tested only 12 markers, so we
don't know what mutation(s) he may or may
not carry.  We do know he's a 12/12 match with
the modal haplotype for Peter I's descendants.
Basil Jordan
CARRICO
b. 1848,
Ozark Co., MO
Josiah Converse
CARRICO
b. 1873,
Howell Co., MO
Pvt
CARRICO
#160239
CARRICO
Testing in progress.  His value at CDYb should
tell us whether Charles had the mutation carried
by Basil's descendant. UPDATE: his first 12 
markers show he is a descendant of Peter I.
Basil / Bazil
CARRICO
b. 1793-95,
Carroll Co., KY
Charles G.
CARRICO
b. 1835,
Carroll Co., KY
John Robert
CARRICO
b. ca. 1860
Sullivan Co., IN
Max William
CARRICO
b. 1914,
Sullivan Co., IN
#143924
CARRICO
b. aft. 1930
Sullivan Co., IN
This individual has acquired one mutation
(CDYb 37 > 36) in his descent from Peter. The
big question is whether this mutation was present
in Charles, or whether the mutation is downstream
of Charles.
Charles, Jr.
b. 1792,
Carroll Co., KY
            Not known to have married or had issue.
Reason
CARRICO
b. 1791,
Carroll Co., KY
John Maxwell
b. 1815-18,
Sullivan Co., IN
          Testing descendants of the brothers of
William G. has high priority.
Josiah
b. 1821,
Sullivan Co., IN
         
Basil W.
b. 1836,
Sullivan Co., IN
         
William G.
CARRICO
b. 1831,
Sullivan Co., IN
John Wesley         Testing descendants of the brothers of
George Harrison has high priority.
Daniel Homer        
Charles Elmer        
George Harrison
CARRICO
b. 1856,
Sullivan Co., IN
John E.       Testing a descendant of John has high priority.
William
"Willie"
CARRICO
b. 1882,
Sullivan Co., IN
Pvt -
#143862
CARRICO
b. 1910s/20s,
Sullivan Co., IN
This individual has tested only 12-markers, but
he is a 12/12 match with his brother, #132113,
indicating the NPE is upstream of their father.
#132113
CARRICO
b. 1910s/20s,
Sullivan Co., IN
This individual has these differences from
the modal:
DYS 464d = 17 > 18 ; DYS 456 = 16 > 17;
DYS CDYa = ? > 41; DYS CDYb = ? > 42
? ? ? ? ?
Farrell
LITTLETON
b. by 1740,
England?
John I
LITTLETON
b. 1765,
Loudoun? Co., VA
Thomas
b. 1789, 
Loudon Co., VA
            Testing the brothers of John II has high priority.
John II
LITTLETON
b. 1791,
Loudon Co., VA
John III
LITTLETON
b. 1832,
Greenup Co., KY
John Thomas
LITTLETON
b. 1857,
Carter Co., KY
John William
LITTLETON
b. 1887,
Carter Co., KY
Jonas M.
LITTLETON
b. 1914,
Carter Co., KY
Pvt
LITTLETON
b. 1940s,
[Carter Co.,] KY
#89853
LITTLETON
b. 1960s,
Fleming Co., KY
This individual has these differences from
the modal:
GATA-H4 = 11 > 10;
DYS CDYa = ? > 40; DYS CDYb = ? > 41
Joseph
b. ca. 1793,
VA or KY
            What is needed here is to test a descendant
of one of John II's brothers.  Any of them will
do.

If that descendant matches #89853, then
we can assume that neither has an NPE in 
his line.  If they don't match, then we need to
test the descendant of a different brother to
see who is "odd man out," with the NPE.

Unless John I has some brothers to test, we
won't know whether or not John I has an NPE
until these LITTLETONs start matching some
other line of LITTLETONs — or some other
surname.

Pherrel Fielding
b. 1797,
VA or KY
           
Hugh
b. 1798,
Mason Co., KY
           
George
b. 1807,
Fleming Co. KY
           
James
b. 1808,
Fleming Co., KY
           
Reuben
b. 1810,
Fleming Co., KY
           
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