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Kissing (and Marrying) Cousins in Our Ancestry

Since eligible partners were not as plentiful in the limited gene pool in colonial New England, a few of our ancestors married cousins--either first cousins (different parents but same grandparents) or second cousins (different grandparents but same great-grandparents). (We know of some ancestors who were third cousins--having different great-grandparents but the same great-great-grandparents--and even seventh cousins, with the same great-great-great-great-great-great-grandparents--but there are probably many instances of this, even in contemporary marriages.)

To put this fact into context, here are some famous first-cousin married couples: Old Testament Jacob and Leah, and then Jacob and Rachel, Charles and Emma Darwin, Albert and Elsa Einstein, Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. In Saudi Arabia, nearly 40% of all marriages are between first cousins.

In today's United States, however, first-cousin marriages are outlawed altogether in 24 states, and in an additional 5 states such a marriage is allowed only if the couple is unable to bear children. Doctors have routinely recommended sterilization or, in the event of a pregnancy, abortion.

Behind these laws is the notion that children of first-cousin marriages are especially susceptible to congenital diseases. Yet, according to a study in the Journal of Genetic Counseling, these children have only a slightly higher risk of such genetic disorders as congenital heart defects or cystic fibrosis, and the study's author, Robin Bennett, has stated that there is no need for genetic testing solely on the basis of consanguinity.

Information in the preceding three paragraphs was distilled from Richard Corliss, "Cousins: A New Theory of Relativity," Time, 15 April 2002, p. 60.

First Cousins

John Chandler I, 1655-1721 and Hannah Abbott, 1650-1741, both grandchildren of William Chandler, 1595-1641 and Annis Bayford Chandler, 1603-1683
See a chart of this relationship.

Probably John Richie and his unnamed wife, both grandchildren of the same Sherett couple

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Second Cousins

Lieutenant Samuel Phelps III, 1712-1795 and Priscilla Chandler, 1713-1778, both great-grandchildren of Thomas Chandler, 1628-1703 and Hannah Brewer Chandler, 1630-1717
See a chart of this relationship.

Joshua Phelps I, 1738-1798 (son of the foregoing couple) and Lois Ballard, 1746-1836, both great-grandchildren of John Chandler I, 1655-1721 and Hannah Abbott Chandler, 1650-1741 (who were themselves first cousins)
See a chart of this relationship.

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Third Cousins

Artemas Seymour Edmands, 1837-1920 and Ella Josephine Mansfield, 1849-1923, were actually third cousins once removed: Ella was the third cousin of Artemas's father, Artemas Edmands, 1813-1896, since both of them the same great-great-grandparents, Thomas Mansfield I, 1717-1758 and Bethiah Poole Mansfield, 1718-1750. Artemas Seymour Edmands was the great-great-great-grandson of Thomas and Bethiah.
See a chart of this relationship.

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Seventh Cousins

Artemas Edmands, 1813-1896 and Margaret M. Wilson, 1811-1879, both great-great-great-great-great-great-grandchildren of Robert Mansfield, 1594-1666 and Elizabeth Townsend Mansfield, 1596-1673.
See a chart of this relationship.

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Other Marrying Kin

Nelson Wilfred Edmands, 1875-1950 and Alice E. Blaney, 1886-1924, are kinsfolk of ours though they are not direct ancestors. They married as second cousins. Nelson was a brother of our ancestor Ernest Carl Edmands, 1884-1929. Nelson and Alice had the same great-grandparents, Lott Edmands, 1791-1877 and Esther Burrill Edmands, 1790-1883 (our ancestors).
See a chart of this relationship.

Arthur Seymour Edmands, 1862-1951 and Edith G. Mansfield, 1865-1926, are kinsfolk of ours though they are not direct ancestors. They married as third cousins twice removed. Arthur was half-brother of our ancestor Ernest Carl Edmands, 1884-1929, and Edith was the kid sister of our ancestor Ella Josephine Mansfield, 1849-1923. Edith's great-great-grandparents, Thomas Mansfield I, 1717-1758 and Bethiah Poole Mansfield, 1718-1750 were the same as Arthur's great-great-great-great-grandparents.
See a chart of this relationship.

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