Cheryl, I don't know if you received responses on this post, but you could try 
to track down the Northern Ireland ancestor but runnin successive Origins 
Reports, with your son selected.  Set "Origin Scope" to the third choice, 
"only... oldest generation".  Then look back (say) 2 generations.  Preview.  
Northern Ireland flag showing?  No... 3 generations, then 4 generations... keep 
looking back generation by generation until Northern Ireland shows up.  Then 
take a look at those folks for clues.  (use pedigree chart from your son back 
to that generation...?  or pedigree view)

The report shows just what I suspected for my daughter's ancestry, both in the 
"only... oldest" setting and in the "all ancestors" setting (accumulation of 
generations).  --Paula


________________________________
 From: singhals <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Monday, November 17, 2014 1:41 PM
Subject: [LegacyUG] Origins Report revisited


I didn't want to start a discussion sure to provide heat
just before I scooted out of town for a month, so I'm
backtracking here to what Brian quoted in the discussion on
Ethnicity back in early October.

>>      split apart for centuries.  Legacy can gather all the
>>      ancestral birth
>>      places in your family file and let you know what
>>      percentage of each
>>      nationality makes up your heritage."



I'm puzzled by just exactly what that report is gathering.

I ran an Origins report on my son.  I was quite surprised to
learn he has/had an ancestor from Northern Ireland.

So I did a search on Individual > birthplace > contains
"Ireland" and got two hits.  Both the hits for an Irish
birthplace are in fact part of the family -- but are NOT one
of his ancestors.  One person is the 5ggf of my uncle's
ex-son-in-law.  The other is the brother of an ancestor of
my GM's brother's wife.  More, neither of them specify
"Northern" Ireland, all I have is "Ireland".  Even if both
of them were born before Northern Ireland officially split
off Ireland ... neither of them is in any way, shape, or
form an ancestor of my son's.

Just sayin' ...

Cheryl


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