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Description
Phy or Fye is a fairly unusual name. Is it German? Is it Irish, Scottish, Sicilian or Andalusian? Most of us have had little success in discovering the origin of our surname. If your research has left you with lots of questions, perhaps DNA testing will help. We are inviting any male with the surname Phy or Fye or any variation, i.e., Fy, Phie, MacPhie, MacFie, etc. to join our surname DNA project. If you are female, perhaps a father, brother, uncle, or cousin who carries the name could test for you. Y-DNA is passed down from father to son through the generations.
If your research has left you with lots of questions, perhaps DNA testing will help. We are inviting any male with the surname Fye, Phy or any variation to join our DNA surname project. If you are female, perhaps a father, brother, uncle, or cousin could take the test. This project is mainly a Y-DNA project so we are particularly interested in males who carry the surname or a variant.
Several Phys appeared in North Carolina in the mid-1750s and migrated sometime before 1800 to Tennessee (around present day Putnam County) and then spread west to – Missouri, Kansas, Oregon, Arizona, and California. We now think that we might be descendants of the Jacob Fye line from Lincoln County, North Carolina. Jacob Fye was born in Germany in 1756, was a saddler, and lived in Crowdertown, North Carolina. He married for the second time in Lincoln County, North Carolina, and had many descendants but, so far, none of them have DNA tested.
Another Phy researcher has just received her uncle’s DNA results, and has her Phy genealogy back to Pennsylvania and then back to Germany around the time of the American Revolution! Several Phys came into New York around 1740. We would like to know if our ancestors have similar DNA to your ancestors.
This could be a great opportunity to further your family history research. Remember that the more people who take these tests, the more opportunities we have of finding a match.
Requirements
A Surname Project traces members of a family that share a common surname. They are of the most interest in cultures where surnames are passed on from father to son like the Y-Chromosome. This project is for males taking a Y-Chromosome DNA (Y-DNA) test. Thus, the individual who tests must be a male who wants to check his direct paternal line (father's father's father's...) with a Y-DNA12, Y-DNA37, Y-DNA67, or Y-DNA111 test and who has one of the surnames listed for the project. Females do not carry their father's Y-DNA. Females who would like to check their father's direct paternal line can have a male relative with his surname order a Y-DNA test. Females can also order an mtDNA test for themselves such as the mtDNAPlus test or the mtFullSequence test and participate in an mtDNA project. Both men and women may take our autosomal Family Finder test to discover recent relationships across all family lines.
Surnames In This Project
Fahy, Fees, Feese, Fey, Fies, Fiet, Fy, Fye, Fyland, Fyle, MacFee, MacPhee, McFie, Phie, Phimister, Phy, Phyland, Physyck, Phythian, Veit