Although my only planned book on
the Wehners, Bier und Brot,* has long been
completed and published, I still dabble in Wehner genealogy, while working on other,
unfinished studies.

Nevertheless, my wife, Mary
Frances (who is the Wehner descendant, not me), did take an autosomal DNA test
several years back. The test was not to determine ethnicity, for which DNA is
not all that accurate. From classical paper studies we knew that she was almost
solely European (German and English), just like me. But we were curious whether
DNA results might show relatives and branches we knew nothing about. One thing
that surprised us was that her early matches included no claimed Wehner relatives. No, she
was not adopted. It just turns our that Wehner descendants have had little
interest in DNA studies, resulting in an absence of Wehner relatives to match
with. With more and more people undergoing DNA studies, this has now changed.

Mary Frances also shows distant matches
with three people descended from Johann Michael Wehner, born in Bad Kissingen,
Bavaria, Germany in 1796, who immigrated to Boston in 1838. Was Johann related
to Nicholas, who was born near Fulda, Hesse, Germany, 3 May 1825 and immigrated
to Baltimore, arriving 31 May 1847? Perhaps, even probably. But
autosomal testing includes so many ancestors (32 GGG grandparents for Mary
Frances by the time one gets to Johann George and Flora (Müller) Wehner, parents
of Nicholas and Lorenz), matches may occur because of non-Wehner connections.
Nevertheless, it might be a starting point for an investigation of Wehner genealogy
in Germany, something I have no intention of doing.
*There are no more paper copies of Bier und Brot
available, but I am offering electronic copies free of charge. Just email me
with information about who you are, and I will return the email with a digital
copy attached