Gantry 5
  • Home
  • Goals
  • yResults
      • Back
      • yResults Chart
          • Back
          • Intro to yResults
      • yResults (Large View)
      • mtDNA Results
          • Back
          • mtDNA Results (Lg View)
      • yResults - 111 Markers
  • yLineages
      • Back
      • All yLineages
      • yLineage by Group
          • Back
          • Groups Explained
      • Phillips Family Photos
  • Join
      • Back
      • Never DNA Tested
      • FTDNA Tested
      • Tested with NGGP
      • Tested Other Co.
  • FAQs
      • Back
      • DNA FAQs
      • Family Groups FAQs
      • General FAQs
      • Using This Site
  • News
      • Back
      • Project News
      • Newsletter Main Page
          • Back
          • Current Newsletter PDF
          • Current Newsletter Text Format
      • Archived Newsletters
      • Phillips Blog Archive
      • Genealogy News
  • Community
      • Back
      • Web Links
      • Project Success Stories
      • Phillips Research
      • Families Needed
      • Phillips General Fund
  • Contact
      • Back
      • Our Privacy Policy
      • Helping our Project
  • Account

Phillips DNA Blog

  • 2026 Father's Day Sale

    Information
    97 hit(s) 15 June 2026
    Family Tree DNA is holding a Father's Day sale on its DNA tests now through June 22. The 37 marker...
  • DNA Test Sale

    Information
    348 hit(s) 07 April 2026
    Family Tree DNA is holding a sale on its DNA tests now through April 30. The 37 marker Y-DNA test...
  • DNA tests for Native American DNA

    Information
    494 hit(s) 04 February 2026
    If you have Native American ancestry on your direct paternal side (father<father<father<father etc) without any influence from females at all, Y-DNA tests can detect those origins. If you have maternal Native American ancestry or non-direct paternal Native American ancestry, autosomal tests like Family Finder MAY be able to detect it if it is not more than six generations back.
  • 2025 Early Bird Sale at FTDNA

    Information
    1229 hit(s) 13 October 2025
    Family Tree DNA is holding an Early Bird Sale now through November 12th. The following Y-DNA tests...
  • What will a Y-DNA test tell me?

    Information
    981 hit(s) 06 October 2025
    Identify your family’s detailed placement on the Great Family Tree of Mankind Discover your...
  • Understanding Y-DNA Matches

    Information
    2135 hit(s) 04 September 2025
    All human Y chromosomes descend from one ancestral person. Since they all descend from one person...
  • Summer Sale at FTDNA

    Information
    2230 hit(s) 03 August 2025
    UPDATE:The ability to join Group Projects is temporarily unavailable. Here is a link to a page...

Phillips DNA Success Stories

Genetic Genealogy really works!

Genetic Genealogy combined with traditional genealogy does work to help break down your brick walls, connect those families you thought should be connected and aid in future research as a Genetic Census of a Surname grows over time.

Here are a few of the Phillips Success Stories
Details
Written by: R. Wayne Phillips (Phillips Family Group10)
Created: 12 March 2009
Last Updated: 27 May 2014

Many folks often get discouraged when they reach a "brick wall" and can't proceed further with their investigation.  That "brick wall" comes to most every one whose ancestors left few if any documents to trace.  I reached my "brick wall" with Robert PHILLIPS, born 3 January 1786 in Lancaster Co., SC, and died 31 March 1861, Flat Creek Township, Lancaster Co., SC.  He married Susanna DEASON, daughter of Edmond Riley DEASON, Sr. and Hester CATO.

It appeared I would not be able to advance my ancestral lineage in a traditional way, searching records in courthouses, corresponding or visiting with older family members (they are a treasure of info when they are contacted), and seeking the help of distant folks on the Internet.  That is how I found that Robert PHILLIPS had a half-brother, Joel Phillips.  Who was the mother of this new person I had in my data base?  Robert's father apparently had been married twice.  A family member near Kershaw helped expand that family, but I was still unable to determine who their father was, and who his wives were.  Another link was that this family may have come to South Carolina from southwest Virginia.

Read more: DNA - The New Tool for Genealogical Research

Details
Written by: Valerie Phillips Gildehaus (Phillips Family Group 7)
Created: 12 March 2009
Last Updated: 27 May 2014

I grew up in a very small town (1,100) in Southern Illinois where being a Phillips was like being royalty.  My father and his brother were lawyers; their father had owned the bank, which he had inherited from his father "Judge" Phillips.  When I was young (in the 50's), my Great-Aunt Anne lived in the dilapidated Phillips mansion on the edge of town.  Most people probably found it very spooky, but it was just a normal part of our lives.  Aunt Anne's husband had lost all his money in the Great Depression, and the house had been left to her in its entirety with all its contents.  They had not thrown anything out since the house was built in 1893, so it was packed to the rafters.  A few items that stand out were a boxed pair of derringers and newspapers announcing Lincoln's death.  When I was about 12, the house and all its contents were sold to pay for my aunt's move to a nursing home.  The new owners had a bonfire in the back yard with the pictures and letters and sold all the antiques to dealers who came from all over.

Read more: The Four Sons of Bennet Phillips

Details
Written by: Rex Phillips (Phillips Family Group 3)
Created: 12 March 2009
Last Updated: 27 May 2014

My father died at age 45, his father at age 51 and his grandfather at age 60.  My grandfather's mother died in her early 30's and when his father remarried and moved from Hardeman County, Texas to Oklahoma in 1903, my grandfather and two of his five siblings stayed in Texas with their father's brother in Quanah, Hardeman County.  My great grandfather died in Arkansas in the early 1920's.  I have yet to find his grave but in the 1920 census he was in Pike County, Arkansas. 

About six years ago, when I got the "itch" to find out something about my ancestors and those of my wife, I had little to work with on my paternal line. The only thing I had was an article from the Foard County, Texas Historical Society about my grandfather Arthur Phillips.  The article had been written several years after my grandfather's death and the information consisted primarily of "family tradition".  Unfortunately, that tradition proved to be about 90 percent incorrect.  It said that my grandfather, Arthur Phillips was born at Nashville, Tennessee in December 1866 to Charles W. and Betty Phillips and that the family had moved to Texas in the early 1900's. 

Read more: Shaking the Tree

Details
Written by: Connie Lou Phillips Moore (Family Group 11)
Created: 12 March 2009
Last Updated: 27 May 2014

As I opened the envelope and read the news, I found myself saying "who would have thought".  I was thinking back to two years earlier when Mike and I set out on this adventure. Mike, my husband of forty six years, was the real motivator in this journey. He had come up with the idea, in November of 2005, of doing DNA testing through Family Tree DNA.com and joining Ancesty.com. He and several of his family have long been interested in their family history and had some information already documented. So we set out to see what more we could find.

I am an only child. My parents, Vern and Ruby (Shadley) Phillips, had moved from Illinois to San Diego CA in 1939, where I was born Connie Lou Phillips in 1943. Therefore, for a Y DNA sample I needed a male donor. My father and his only brother were no longer living, so I asked my uncle's son if he would take the test. He consented and that took care of that hurdle, for the Phillips line DNA. While looking over the Family Tree DNA website Mike had discovered that there were surname projects listed. Mike and I both joined our surname projects, ordered the kits, and waited for our test results to come back.

Read more: Who Would Have Thought?

Details
Written by: Roger Phillips (Phillips Family Group 1)
Created: 12 March 2009
Last Updated: 27 May 2014

When my father died, I discovered a sketchy family tree going back to my great-great-grandfather Phillips who had five children who lived to adulthood - the tree showed most of the descendants of two of the five (my great grandfather and one of his brothers) but little information about the others. There was a letter from a third cousin of mine of whom I hadn't even known existed. He was descended from my great grandfather's brother and had recorded the information about his line. What I wanted to do at that point was to trace back my Phillips line as far as possible but there were no leads.  

On a visit to England, I met my third cousin but he could shed no light on other Phillips ancestors of ours. I then decided to track down descendants of my great-grandfather's other siblings. Two were males. The tree indicated one had left for Australia about 1871, had married "Emily", and had a son "Harry" but where in Australia the English side had not heard. I decided to look for my Australian Phillips's later. Another brother had stayed in England. Using census information for England taken in 1901 (there are no more recent censuses publicly available at this time), I discovered he was still single at age 41.

Read more: Tracing my ancestors with Y-DNA help

Page 2 of 2

  • 1
  • 2
© 2010 - 2026 The Phillips DNA Project
Powered by Gantry Framework
Back To Top
Don't follow, you've been WARNED!

mask-easter