History Ireland – Sheep stealers from the north of England: the Riding Clans in Ulster by Robert Bell
Look at times. What an hour can do.
FTDNA Johnson, but not Johnston or Johnstone
County Fermanagh, Johnston, of the Scottish Johnstone is second. https://www.familytreedna.com/public/Johnson/default.aspx?section=yresults https://www.familytreedna.com/public/Carruthers?iframe=yresults
Wonder where that I-CTS11603 Y-DNA is from.
https://named.publicprofiler.org/
Carruthers likely from a single male I-CTS11603 Y-DNA, which does not seem to have any matches to the Brus/Bruce family but relation of Mouswald Carruthers, seem to share the same shield with the Pickering of Oswaldkirk, Yorkshire, Brus/Bruce family relations. Noted, share Y-DNA first 12 markers with Cave ‘de Cave’, and Scarborough. The Bruce had land of Cave, North and South, in east Riding Yorkshire, and in Annandale, land also of the Nicholas Stuteville (Nicholforest), and Wake families. The Stuteville had land of Gresham Castle, and Scarborough region, also of The Mote, which had Liddel Strength Castle on it of the Wake and Stuteville. No previous is pretty rough, but feel people are checking the research. added 4/9/2020
How family members are being successful at family history;
The concept of majority rules desecrates and destroys the concept, of any family history or genealogy being done on the FTDNA Johnson, blog, which is extremely destructive to the surnames Johnstone and Johnston, the first Johnstone, is a Scottish place name which derives the second which is an Ulster name Johnston. Unlike the extreme majority name Johnson which is the Anglo naming pattern as being ‘the son of John’.
Clan Johnston/e
FTDNA Clan Johnson
Have a single upload from elwald.com;
FTDNA Argyll Colony NC, USA – Elwald
https://named.publicprofiler.org/
https://nvk.genealogy.net/map
Above with help from Edward McDonald, Argyll Colony, North Carolina.
I am Mark Stephen Elliott, son of Loren Spencer Elliott;
Utilizing my over a half century of genealogical, family history experience, FTDNA Y-DNA, back in time, and FTDNA is censoring me from blogs, which may help me as with my background and experience to push my Y-DNA line of the father’s father back in line. They aredefinitely a profit making industry are being extremely destruct to the objective I tested my Y-DNA, and that was find my father’s line further back in time. That is why I paid money for the Y-DNA testing; I and everyone else kicked off of an FTDNA blog, should acquire in a mass lawsuit a refund. 12/5/2019 Mark Stephen Elliott.
Am even afraid to try to become a full administrator on the FTDNA Argyll Colony, North Carolina blog for fear they will kick me off and will not be able to service it.
Now because admin are kicking people off the FTDNA blogs. The information of these blogs can be extremely destructive when applied to the use of family history. The admin which do not kick people off their FTDNA blogs have viable and useful blogs. FTDNA allowing the admin to kick people off blogs makes these blog extremely useless to genealogical research. Anyone being kick off a FTDNA blog makes an extreme undervaluation of these service as an applicable Y-DNA family history down the father’s line search site, and deserve a refund. Mark Stephen Elliott 12/5/2019.
‘Sheep stealers from the north of England’: the Riding Clans in Ulster by Robert Bell
https://forebears.io/surnames/johnson
http://www.irishorigenes.com/johnson
https://forebears.io/surnames/johnston
httpd://www.irishorigenes.com/johnston
https://forebears.io/surnames/johnstone
http://www.irishorigenes.com/johnstone
https://named.publicprofiler.org/
http://named.publicprofiler.org/
From the Muster Roll Of The County Of Fermanagh 1631 (21 Johnston, 6 Ellot, 2 Armstrong)
http://www.ulsterancestry.com/muster-roll_1663.html
Sheep-stealers-from-the-north-of-England-the-Riding-Clans-in-Ulster-by-Robert-Bell
http://named.publicprofiler.org/
http://worldnames.publicprofiler.org/
http://forebears.io/surnames/Johnson
http://forebears.io/surnames/Johnston
http://forebears.io/surnames/Johnstone
http://forebears.io/surnames/Johansen
http://forebears.io/surnames/Johansson
FTDNA results link;
https://www.familytreedna.com/public/Johnson/default.aspx?section=yresults
Armstrong, Elliot, Crozier, Nixon, Johnson, Graham; Ulster-Scot.
3/14/2018 MSE
I-M223;
Johnston of Ireland, four of Scotland, with one Johnstone of England
Armstrong, Elliot(t), Johnston(e), and Graham.
Fegus Graham of The Mote, and Richard Graham of Netherbye.
3/15/2018 MSE
I-M253;
Johnston
Johnson, in some cases could be derived from the Swedish Johansson. Could have branched Y-DNA in Denmark, with a branch going to Sweden another group towards east Anglia, most likely as a personnel name previous to surnames of John(Johan), the name then became in Sweden Johansson “the son of Johan” in Anglo-Saxon, Danish Northumbria, pre-England, Johnson, meaning “the son of John”, though in the same fashion as the Gaelic “MacJohn”, if existed would mean the same.
Johnston(e), from Johnstoun, is a locality, likely at first a farmstead, then a toun/town, where some on of the locality would be referred to as example; “William de Johnston”, meaning at first “William from Johnston”, then the “de/from” would be drop, with the name becoming “William Johnston”. Johnston the locality the name came from was within Annandale near the I-M253 Carruthers (from the nearby locality of Karruther/Carruther, Annandale, also there are Moffat from nearby Moffat, Annandale, few with I-M253) of the region with excepting NPEs, most likely unlike the surname Johnston, may have received their I-M253 from a single individual, which the nearby Armstrong think is a Fairbairn, which also shows I-M253 of the Scottish eastern borderlands, with excepting NPEs. There could be some truth that the border I-M253 did come from a Dane, with reference to Fairbairn, as the allied Armstrong have proposed.
http://www.armstrongclan.info/clan-history.html
Armstrong Clan History-Armstrong Origins
A traditional story claims that the Armstrong clan progenitor was Fairbairn, an armour bearer to a king of Scotland, who rescued his master when he had his horse killed under him in battle. Fairbairn allegedly grasped the king by his thigh and set him on his own horse. An astonishing feat of strength that cynics suggest was a physical impossibility due to the weight of medieval armour.
http://www.genealogy.com/forum/surnames/topics/fairbairn/499/
Where Did The Fairbairns Come From?
By Thomas Fairbairn March 12, 2010 at 02:04:40
Although there is more than one story about the origins of the Fairbairns, perhaps one of the most widely accepted is the saga of Siward. The Viking, also known as Siward Fairbairn of the Strong Arm. Siward was the son of a Danish King and lived in England from about 995 till his death in 1056.In those days, the ruler of any small territory was a king, so exactly where his father, Hringo, King of Upland, also known as Earl Beorn, would fall on the yardstick of earthly royalty is not clear; however, at the very least, he would be considered of noble birth.
3/16/2018 MSE
North Carolina, Argyll Colony oriented;
For Johnston, Johnston are likely of, Ulster, Ireland, like my family which migrated into the Carolina (my family into Massachusetts, some people are lucky and get to go to the Carolina) , likely as Anglican Scots (if your family is Presbyterian, then likely Co Antrim-Down, but if Episcopalian Methodist then Co Fermanagh), and for their info am providing these links; https://www.google.com/maps/place/Johnston+County,+NC/@34.7276391,-78.3358626,7.83z/ https://www.google.com/maps/place/Johnston,+SC+29832/@31.4587824,-89.1353125,6.08z/
3/21/2018 MSE
5/11/2018 MSE
https://www.libraryireland.com/gregg/mapping-ulster-scots.php
8/26/2018 MSE
‘Sheep stealers from the north of England’: the Riding Clans in Ulster by Robert Bell
In 1630 Ulster it is Johnston, Ellot, and Scot, forms of spellings which were used.
8/26/2018 MSE
12/5/2019 MSE
http://www.therjhuntercollection.com/resources/muster-rolls-c-1630/search-muster-rolls/
http://www.therjhuntercollection.com/resources/muster-rolls-c-1630/search-muster-rolls/
http://www.irishmanuscripts.ie/digital/censusofireland1659/index.html
12/26/2019 MSE
Ridale, Riddle, and Riddell, of Yorkshire and Roxburgshire DNA
And the Johnson;
Adding ‘Johns’, and taking out ‘John’;
https://nvk.genealogy.net/map/1890:Jonson,1890:Jon,1890:Jonsson,1890:Jonsdotter,1890:Johnson,1890:Johns
1/5/2020 MSE
1/12/2020 MSE