One of my early blog posts, published in September of 2020, was titled Henry Hale Unsolved, and in it I shared all that I knew about Henry Hale who is one of my 3rd great grandfathers. Capt Henry Hale married Martha Susannah Hall, often referred to as Susan Hall, in September of 1800 in Baltimore County, Maryland.
While we know that Capt Henry Hale died in 1841, the year of his birth is still very debatable as either 1773 (per his newspaper obituary) or 1754/55 (per his gravestone). Refer to the earlier blog post for a more in depth discussion of his birth date sources and analysis.
A couple of census records for Henry’s children tell us that he was born in Maryland. Beyond the information about Henry Hale as noted above, I have never been able to find anything about Henry’s parents or siblings, and thus I have not been able to solve that brick wall and take our Hale line back any earlier.
There is a HAILE family in the Baltimore area in the 1700’s that I have always considered a possible early extension for our HALE line, but have found nothing conclusive to document the connection to our Henry Hale – until now with DNA – specifically with Ancestry’s ThruLines DNA matches.
First
let me tell you about Ancestry’s ThruLines DNA matches. If you take an Ancestry DNA test, then
Ancestry will generate for you a list of other people that have also taken the
Ancestry DNA test AND who share with you “some” common DNA. Also, Ancestry will give an approximate guess as
to how close that relationship could be – often 5th-8th
cousins.
Next, Ancestry uses a program called ThruLines to compare your online Ancestry tree with the trees of your DNA matches looking for possible common ancestors. Of course, not everyone who has taken an Ancestry DNA test has built an online Ancestry tree, and some trees are marked private and can’t be viewed online. Also there is always the fact that some of those trees might simply be wrong. Thus, the results for common ancestry shown by ThruLines will only be as good as the information that was used to build those trees. There is a lot of room for error, especially when we are looking back at early generations.
ThruLines has identified that I have as many as 16 matches that descend from a HAILE family line. That’s a lot of DNA matches! And most of the matches are small matches indicating a possible 5th-8th cousin relationship. Three of those 16 matches are other descendants of my Henry Hale who died in 1841, and are not new to me. However, the 13 other matches all tie into the HAILE family of Baltimore one or more generations earlier than our Henry Hale, and that is significant.
Those 13 ThruLines DNA matches all seem flow to relationships with sons of George Haile Sr (1712-1791) who married Elizabeth Chaffinch (1716-1788):
1a) John Halle/Hale (1734-1817) 1 DNA match*
1b) Capt John Haile (1743-1798) 1 DNA match*
2) George
Haile Jr (1735-1805) 5 DNA matches
3) Meshack
Haile (1738-1834) 6 DNA matches
*The matched DNA Ancestry trees for the two
John’s have different dates – so you know that they are either different John's or something is not quite right on
at least one of those trees.
While we had DNA matches for descendants of 3 of George Haile Sr’s sons, there were several other children. The Will of George Haile Sr lists 7 sons and 3 daughters in 1788 when it was written: Henry, Joseph, Nicholas, Abednego, George, John, Elizabeth, Frances and Sarah were named in the will. And probably there was one other son as he also willed a parcel of land to be split between 2 Haile grandsons, Alexander & Joseph. It is possible that we didn’t get DNA matches with more of the children because they don’t have current descendants. Another possibility is that there were no descendants of those siblings that have taken an Ancestry DNA test AND have an Ancestry tree for ThruLines to analyze that connects to a Haile tree. That could change in the future as the Ancestry database grows.
Ancestry’s ThruLines program shows to track our line specifically through George Sr & Elizabeth’s son, George Haile Jr & his wife Nancy Anne Grant (1735-?), but I’m not even sure that is a given. I think that ThruLines routed my suggested tree through the younger George because the trees of 2 of those 13 DNA matches “seem” to connect thru Nancy Anne Grant who was the wife of the younger George Haile Jr, and for that reason both of those matches are categorized by Ancestry as possible “half” 5th cousins.
I strongly believe that both of these Ancestry trees aren’t quite right and that they may have wrongly directed the ThruLines results. However, in spite of the irregularities in those 2 Ancestry trees, there is no question that the owners of these 2 outlying trees are still a DNA match for me. Like all of the other DNA matches, their link seems to be through one of the children of the elder George Haile Sr. Another possibility would be that we might link one generation earlier through a brother of that George Haile Sr.
Making research more difficult is the fact that several names were used in this HAILE family repeatedly over several generations, specifically the names of George, Nicholas and Henry. There are quite a few Henry’s in the trees for several of my DNA matches, but I found none with documentation clearly indicating a Henry that could be our Henry Hale.
Also, the Ancestry trees all seem to use the birth date for our Henry Hale as 1755 (the date from his gravestone) which is easily found on the internet — though we know it could have also possibly been 1773 (the date from his obituary). And with a different birth date, it would be very easy to slot Henry into a tree incorrectly or in the wrong generation. It also should be noted that several of the individuals on the HAILE family tree did use the spelling of HALE.
Not all of the HAILE sons remained in the Baltimore area. Several branches of the family moved to either Tennessee or Ohio in the 1700’s. So there is also the scenario that our Henry might have left Maryland with family and later returned to Baltimore as an adult.
In the end, we see that DNA definitely gives us matches to the Baltimore HAILE family. ThruLines gives us possible avenues of connection, but the Ancestry trees and documentation don’t really give us any proof as to the specific route our HALE connection takes in the HAILE family. Now we know that Henry Hale links into the HAILE family, just not exactly how.
* *
* * *
Key Individuals:
Capt Henry Hale (1773 -
1841)
Martha Susannah (Susan) Hall Hale
(1778 – 1858)
Notes:
In researching documents relating to the early HAILE family, I discovered that there are a number of ways that the name has been spelled in various published family genealogy books and articles, specifically as HAILE, HALE and HEALE.
Most resources that I checked were written in the 1900’s. They included:
· 1908/1909
- The William and Mary Quarterly Journal; Vol. 17; 1st series
· 1934
– Hale Family by Edith Whitley
· 1969
– Hail, Haile, Hale by Charles M Bennett
· 1989
– Baltimore County Families, 1659-1759 by Robert W Barnes
· date
unknown - Heale-Hale of Lancaster, VA and Texas
These various resources all agree that the first HAILE immigrant was Nicholas Haile Sr, born in England, and he first arrived in Elizabeth City County, VA in 1645. In 1648 Nicholas purchased 100 acres of land in York County. And in 1654 he relocated to Lancaster County, VA where he purchased 500 acres of land in 1655. Known as a “planter”, Nicholas purchased an additional 500 acres in 1657; and in 1666 he again purchased more acreage in Lancaster County, VA.
1) Nicholas Haile Sr (~1628 - ~1670 in VA)
m. Mary ?Travers; they had 3 children, George, Nicholas & Mary
1a) George Haile (~1647-1698 in VA) m. Ellen ?; they had 2 children, Nicholas b.1672 and George b.1676
1b) Nicholas Haile (1657- ?)
The Baltimore HAILE line descends through a Nicholas Haile that was born in 1672, and died in 1730 in Baltimore. He is believed to be a grandson of the Nicholas Sr & Mary noted above, and the son of George b.~1647, though some accounts note that he might have been a later son of Nicholas Haile Sr.
This Nicholas Haile (1672-1730) was a Baltimore landowner and his will was written and probated in Baltimore. Nicholas married Frances Broad Garrett in 1701. Their children as mentioned in Nicholas’ will included sons Nicholas, George, Neale, and daughters Hannah, Ann, Millicent, Sabina, and Mary. Also it is believed there “might” have been another son, Henry, who was not noted in his will.
2a) Nicholas (1700- d.bef 1747) m. Ann Long
in 1723; had children:
Nicholas b.1724, Susanna 1727, Ann 1732,
Shadrack 1735, Meshack 1738, Abednego 1741, and John 1743
2b) George (1712 -1791) m. Elizabeth
Chawfinch in 1735; had children:
George b.1735, Henry, Joseph, Elizabeth,
Nicholas, Abednego, Meshack, Frances, Sarah, and John
2c) Neale (1718-1796) m. Sarah Robinson;
had children:
Charles, Drusilla, Charcilla, and Neal
2d) Henry? b.1721 possibly died young as he is not in his father’s will; [or he “might” be the Henry Haile who moved to St George’s Parish; m. Mary Bradley in 1741; had children: Thomas b.1741 and Ann 1744]
I also found a brief printed article, without any documentation, claiming that the first immigrant was a George Hale who arrived in Virginia in 1620 and married Mary Elizabeth Blood in 1626 – both having been born in England. This HALE line looks similar, a few dates vary, but it seems to push back one generation earlier:
George Hale m. Mary Elizabeth Blood [the
first immigrants]
Nicholas Hale
(1628-1671) m. Mary ?
Nicholas Hale
(1666-1729) m. Frances Garrett
George Hale
(1712-1788) m. Elizabeth Chaffinch
Abednego Hale (1745-1801) m. Ruth
It is complicated because there are so many questions and only sketchy documentation with nothing that specifies how my Henry Hale fits into the Baltimore HAILE family – just that DNA matches indicate that he does. I welcome your thoughts and any research that you might find about these early HAILE / HALE connections.
- Jane
Scribner McCrary
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