Isabella Thomas nee Kirkwood.  
   Her portrait was painted by Duncan.   
 1851 Residence: 130 Parson Street, Glasgow St Mungo, Lanarks 
  Charles Thomas  49  
  Isabella K Thomas  42  
  John Thomas  17  
  Elizabeth W Thomas  16  
  James A Thomas  13  
  Isabella K Thomas  11  
  William K Thomas  9  
  Robert Thomas  8  
  Jane Thomas  4  
  Janet Thomas  4  
  Charles Thomas  2  
  Mary Mcinnes  30  
  Margaret Templeton  19  
  Margaret Russell  18    
 1861 Residence: Woodneuk, Cadder, Lanarks 
  Charles Thomas  59  
  Isabella Thomas  53  
  James Allan Thomas  23  
  Isabella Kirkwood Thomas  21  
  William Kirkwood Thomas  19  
  Robert Thomas  18  
  Jane Thomas  16  
  Janet Thomas  14  
  Charles Thomas  12  
  Janet Forrester  21  
  Agnes Mcinnes  22  
  Alexander Wilson       
 1871 Residence: Woodneuk, Cadder, Lanarks 
  Charles Thomas  69  
  Isabella K Thomas  61  
  James Allan Thomas  33  
  Robert Thomas  28  
  Jane Thomas  26  
  Janet Thomas  24  
  Charles Thomas  22  
  Isabella Livingston  23  
  Janet Colebrook  18  
  George White Houston  21    
 Isabella was living at Woodneuk House in 1861 and 1871 with her large family - husband Charles Thomas a coachbuilder and their 10 children.   
 Woodneuk House was pulled down sometime after 1961 and the area is now a nature reserve just to the east of juction 2a off the M73 about 5 miles north east of Glasgow.   
 She is the direct maternal great, great, great grandmother of William Bridge and so they share exactly the same mitochondrial DNA which has been analysed as belonging to Haplogroup I. 
 Haplogroup's I ancestry tree is as follows:   
 Mitochondrial Eve 
 L1'2'3'4'5'6- C146T  C182T  T4312C  T10664C  C10915T  A11914G  G13276A  G16230A  
 L2'3'4'5'6- C152T  A2758G  C2885T  G7146A  T8468C  
 L2'3'4'6- C195T  A247G  A825t  T8655C  A10688G  C10810T  G13105A  T13506C  G15301A  A16129G  T16187C  C16189T  
 L3'4'6- G4104A  A7521G  
 L3'4- T182C!  T3594C  T7256C  T13650C  T16278C  
 L3- A769G  A1018G  C16311T  
 N- G8701A  C9540T  G10398A  C10873T  A15301G!  
 N1'5- G1719A  
 N1- T10238C  G12501A  
 N1a- T204C  A13780G  
 N1a1'2- T199C  
 N1a1- 573.XC  A10398G!  G15043A  
 N1a1b- T250C  A4529t  G8251A  A15924G  G16391A  
 I- T10034C  G16129A!    
 The above tree shows the haplogroup and the mutations from the Reconstructed Sapiens Reference System (RSRS - i.e Mitochondrial Eve). Each mutation for example T10034C shows the original genotype (T) the position 10034 and the new genotype (C). Each genotype can be one of four possible letters or nucleotide bases (A - Adenine, C - Cytosine, G - Guanine, T - Thymine).   
 Isabella's and my ancestor, and the first woman belonging to Haplogroup I, is thought to have lived approximately 20,000 years ago in around Iran. 
 Haplogroup I is now found at very low frequencies (generally < 3%) throughout Europe, West Asia and South Asia with it being at a frequency of between 2 and 5 percent in Northwestern Europe (Norway, the Isle of Skye, and the British Isles). It is uncommon and sometimes absent in other parts of Western Europe (Iberia, Sweden, South-West France, and parts of Italy).   
 Haplogorup I descended through several DNA base mutations from Haplogroup N which originated in a woman living 71,000 years ago in the borders of East Africa and Asia. Haplogroup N and its sibling haplogroup M are the signature haplogroups that define the out of Africa migration and the subsequent spread to the rest of the world.   
 Haplogroup N descended from L3 which is believed to have arisen in Eastern Africa between 84,000 to 104,000 years ago who in turn descended from a woman known as 'Mitochondrial Eve' who is estimated to have lived approximately 140,000 to 200,000 years ago in East Africa. She is the most recent woman from whom all living humans today descend, on their mother's side, and through the mothers of those mothers, and so on, back until all lines converge on one person. She was not the only living human female of her time. However, her female contemporaries, except her mother, failed to produce a direct unbroken female line to any living woman in the present day.   
 Anatomically-modern humans (Homo sapiens sapiens) evolved from archaic Homo sapiens in the Middle Paleolithic, about 200,000 years ago. 
 The evolutionary history of primates can be traced back 65 million years. Molecular evidence suggests that the last common ancestor between humans and apes diverged 4 to 8 million years ago. The gorillas were the first group to split, then the chimpanzees split off from the line leading to the humans. The functional portion of human DNA is approximately 98.4% identical to that of chimpanzees when comparing single nucleotide polymorphisms. 
 Animals evolved 500 million years ago from eukaryotes (cells with a nucleus) living 2100 million years ago, our first ancestor, although the earliest life on Earth existed 3.5 billion years ago with Earth forming 4.5 billion years ago.   
 References:  
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haplogroup_I_(mtDNA)  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitochondrial_Eve  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homo_sapiens  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_human_evolution  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abiogenesis  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth