So far
36 MacAulays have signed up for the Clan MacAulay DNA study. In addition,
a private study DNA study of MacAulays from North Uist has 13 participants,
and they are collaborating with us. Additionally, five McCulleys have
formed a separate study and are making their data available. In all, we
have DNA data from 54 MacAulay men available for analysis.
Our analysis so far has identified nine DNA groups
which include all but 8 of the 54 MacAulays. Three of these nine DNA groups
have been matched with ancient MacAulay clans or septs: (1) the MacAuleys
of Fermanagh (IG type 1), (2) the MacAulays of North Uist (SG3), and (3)
the Macaulays of Lewis (SG4 and SG5). One of the DNA groups is not a Celtic
clan at all, but a group of French Hugonaut immigrants who changed their
name to McCulley and McCauley (SA1). The other four groups have not yet
been definitively matched to an ancient clan, but a lot has been learned
from the DNA, and I am optimistic that we will soon match these groups
as well.
Of the eight MacAulay DNA participants that have
not yet been matched to a DNA group, there are several possible explanations.
Four of them probably fit in one of these DNA groups but we will need
more tests or genealogical information to confirm. Another obvious explanation
is that so far they may be the only member of their clan to take the DNA
test. Alternatively, there could have been a "non-paternal event"
in their direct male lineage, such as adoption. Finally, one of these
eight DNA participants is named "McElyea" and it could be that
this is not a variant of McAuley.
The
nine DNA group-patterns that have been discovered so far are shown in
detail in the Data Table at the end of this article. They are:
Scottish
Gaelic type 1 (D.J. Macaulay,
M.P. McCally, D.J. McCauley, W.S McCauley, Dale McCauley)
Scottish Gaelic type 2 (D.S. McColly, E.R.
McCauley, W.B. McColly,Dennis McCauley, Curtis McCauley, J.M. MacAuley)
Scottish Gaelic type 3 (J.B. MacAulay, plus
twelve others)
Scottish
Gaelic type 4 (D.A. MacAulay, R.E. McAulay,
R.P. Macaulay, B. Macaulay, I.C. MacAulay)
ScottishGaelic
Type 5 (Hugh MacAulay)
Scottish Alannic (G-Haplogroup) (A.J. McCulley, Steve McCauley,
and R. McCully)
Irish Gaelic type 1 (D.W. McCauley, P.H.
MacAuley, P.E. McCauley, T.J. McCauley, and JJT McAuley)
Irish
Gaelic type 2 (J.T. Cooley)
Irish
Gaelic type 3 (S.M. McAuley, L.R. McAuley,
Rev. J. McAuley)
It
is very likely that the men within each group are closely related to each
other, but unlikey that they are closely related to the men in the other
groups. (For example, the FTDNA Time Predictor estimates that it
is 89% probable that D.S. McColly and E.R. McCauley [who are both SG type
2] had a common male ancestor 500 years ago; but the likelihood that D.J.
Macaulay [SG type 1] and E.R. McCauley [SG type 2] had a common male ancestor
500 years ago is less than 1 percent.) We know
that there were at least five MacAulay clans/septs in Scotland and at
least two in Ireland, so these DNA results seem to be sorting out along
clan lines as expected.
****Scottish
Gaelic type 1, (Niall of the 9 Hostages)****
This DNA pattern is well-known to DNA researchers as the DNA pattern associated
with Niall of the Nine Hostages (N9H), who was High King of Ireland from
376 to 405. Many of the most important Scottish and Irish Chiefs claimed
direct-male-line descent from N9H, including the MacAulays of Ardincaple
and the McAuleys of Westmeath. Five men in the MacAulay DNA study had
this pattern, all of them apparently of Scottish or Scoth-Irish ancestry.
D.J. Macaulay, M.P. McCally, and D.J. McCauley had identical DNA results
for the 12-marker test. D.J. and M.P. also took the 37-marker test and
had 5 differences at the 37-marker level. D.J. and M.P. believe their
ancestors are Scottish or Scotch-Irish, but don’t yet know which
ancestral clan they are from. The
FTDNA Time Predictor estimates that it is 80% likely that D.J. Macaulay
and M.P. McCally had a common male ancestor 500 years ago, (I have been
contacted by the MacGregor Clan, and we discovered that a few of the McGregors
had the same FTDNA-12 pattern as MacAulay SG-type 1.
There are several theories that could explain this and more research should
be done in this area.) Because N9H had so many descendants, this DNA pattern
might be descended from more than one McCauley Clan. Matthew McCally is
researching a possible linkage to some of the native clans of Northern
Ireland.
*****Scottish
Gaelic type 2*****
Six
participants have this DNA pattern, and they seem to all be of Scottish
or Scotch-Irish ancestry. Despite the large number of McCauleys in this
group, we have not yet been able to link it to a specific clan territory
in Scotland. D.S. McColly, E.R. McCauley, and W.B. McColly had identical
12-marker DNA results. D.S. and E.R. had 4 differences at the 37-marker
level. W.B. McColly has information on an immigrant to America born in
1754 who is a common ancestor with D.S. McColly. W.B. is sure his ancestor
immigrated directly from Scotland, while E.R. has not ruled out Scotch-Irish
immigration. The FTDNA Time Predictor estimates that it is 89% probable
that D.S. McColly and E.R. McCauley had a common male ancestor 500 years
ago.
****Scottish
Gaelic type 3, (North Uist)****
J.B. MacAulay is descended from MacAulays who emigrated from North Uist,
one of the Western Isles of Scotland. He is sponsoring a private DNA study
of MacAulays from North Uist, and has made his own DNA data available
on the Y-search website. So far he has data for 14 other North Uist MacAulays,
all of whom have a very similar DNA pattern. As the data in the Appendix
show, this DNA pattern is clearly distinct from the other 8 MacAulay DNA
types.
*****Scottish
Gaelic type 4, (Isle of Lewis)*****
D.A. MacAulay, R.E. McAulay,
and R.P. Macaulay, B. Macaulay, and I.C. MacAulay have identical DNA results
at the 12-marker level, and their DNA is extremely similar at the 25-marker
level. They all have Scottish ancestry, and three of them can trace their
ancestry to the Isle of Lewis. (Note the similarity to SG5 -- they may
be the same group.)
*****Scottish
Gaelic type 5, (Isle of Lewis)*****
Hugh MacAulay traces his ancestry to the MacAulays
of Uig Parish in the Isle of Lewis. This is the clan to which the famous
Lord Macaulay (Thomas Babington Macaulay) belonged. Although we only have
one member from this group, I have shown this pattern in the chart in
the Appendix, because of the great interest in this clan. (Note that it
is very similar to Scottish Gaelic type 4, and the difference might be
due to two recent mutations.)
****Scottish
Alannic (Haplogroup G2, (Hugonaut)****
The Y-DNA pattern for these four men is very different from the other
MacAulays, in that it is the "G2" haplogroup rather than the
“R1b” haplogroup which is extremely common in Gaelic populations.
A.J. McCulley was the first man of Scottish ancestry that FTDNA had tested
with a “G” haplogroup. These men suspect that their ancestors
were French Hugonauts named "De Cailou" who emigrated to Scotland
circa 1600 and assimilated into the Scottish and Scotch-Irish population.
Three of them are named McCulley and the fourth is McCauley. They have
formed a separate study group, but are collaborating with us.
****Irish
Gaelic type 1, (Fermanagh Maguire)****
This DNA pattern is identical to the baseline DNA pattern of the Maguire
Clan in Fermanagh, and indicates that these men are descended from the
well-documented MacAuley sept of the Maguire clan. D.W. McCauley, P.H.
MacAuley, P.E. McCauley, T.J. McCauley, and JJT McAuley fall into this
group. The first three can trace their ancestry to County Cavan, Ireland,
which is adjacent to Clanawley, the historical territory of the McCauley
sept of County Fermanagh.
Questions regarding the MacAulay DNA project should be addressed to the
Project Administrator, Wayne MacAulay, macaulay@msn.com or the Project
analyst, Patrick MacAuley, themacmog@aol.com.