ДНХ-ийн шинжилгээ болон түүхэн судалгааны ачаар 1780 оны Камдений тулаанд амиа алдсан цэргийн алба хаагчийн хэн болохыг эцэслэн тогтоожээ.
АНУ-ын Тусгаар тогтнолын дайны үед буюу 1780 оны наймдугаар сарын 16-нд болсон Камдений тулалдаанд амиа алдсан цэрэг Жон Памфригийн шарилыг 246 жилийн дараа ДНХ-ийн шинжилгээгээр таньж тогтоов. Тус тулаан нь Континентал армийн хувьд хамгийн хүнд ялагдлуудын нэг байсан бөгөөд 900 гаруй цэрэг амь үрэгдсэний ихэнхийг тухайн үед оршуулж чадаагүй орхисон түүхтэй.
2020 онд археологичид Камдений байлдааны талбайгаас 14 цэргийн шарил илрүүлсний нэг нь Жон Памфригийнх болох нь батлагдлаа. FHD Forensics компани болон Astrea Forensics лабораторийн мэргэжилтнүүд түүний гавлын ясны суурь хэсгээс ДНХ-ийн дээж авч, удам угсааг нь тогтоох замаар энэхүү түүхэн таамгийг баталгаажуулсан байна.
Мэриленд мужаас гаралтай Жон Памфри нь өнчин хүүхэд байхдаа цэргийн албанд элсэж, Жорж Вашингтоны удирдлага дор Valley Forge зэрэг хэд хэдэн томоохон тулаанд оролцож байжээ. Тэрээр 7-р Мэрилендийн хороонд алба хааж байхдаа 1600 орчим километр замыг туулж, эцэст нь Өмнөд Каролинагийн тулааны талбарт амь үрэгдсэн байна.
Одоогоор АНУ-ын холбогдох албаныхан түүний булшны “Тодорхойгүй” гэсэн бичээсийг нэрээр нь солих ажиллагааг хүлээж байгаа юм. Шинжилгээний баг бусад үлдэгдлүүдийг таньж тогтоох судалгааг үргэлжлүүлж байгаа бөгөөд энэхүү ололт нь АНУ-ын тусгаар тогтнолын 250 жилийн ойн босгон дээр тохиож буй түүхэн үйл явдал болж байна.
Дэлгэрэнгүйг эх сурвалжаас харах
↓Эх сурвалжийг нээх ↓
Pvt. John Pumphrey, a Maryland teenager who died in one of the American Revolution‘s last major battles, has finally been identified after 246 years.
Through DNA testing and historical sleuthing, he can now take his place in history, just in time for the nation’s 250th anniversary.
Allison Peacock, founder of FHD Forensics, a company that helped with the search, said: “There was a sense of divine timing, I guess. I don’t know what else you want to call it.”
Pumphrey died on August 16, 1780, at the Battle of Camden, South Carolina. It was one of the Continental Army’s most devastating defeats, with British Gen. Charles Lord Cornwallis routing patriot forces under Maj. Gen. Horatio Gates.
Many of the 900 killed were left where they fell, abandoned to wild animals, scorching heat, and ruinous humidity.
Bones emerge from a Revolutionary War battlefield
Archaeologists surveying the area in 2020 came across human bones protruding from the ground. Eventually, 14 sets of remains were identified — 12 of them Continental soldiers. The others were determined to be connected to the British side and were reburied at the battlefield.

The Richland County Coroner’s Office had worked with Texas-based FHD Forensics on modern-day cases and asked for their help. Peacock took to calling it the case of “America’s oldest John Doe.”
“What we did is pretty much the same as what we do with any other John Doe case,” she said. “Nobody really knew for sure whether we could get genetic profiles suitable for a genealogy investigation on 240-plus-year-old remains. But we got lucky.”
Unlike most, Pumphrey and four comrades received a cursory burial beneath a thin layer of dirt. He was dubbed “Camden 9B,” because his were the second set of remains retrieved from burial nine. The remains were examined and cataloged.
The 12 Continentals were later reinterred with full military honors. Camden 9B’s headstone read: “UNKNOWN. REV WAR. BATTLE OF CAMDEN. AUG 16 1780.”
DNA unlocks a centuries-old mystery
Meanwhile, samples from two of the soldiers were sent to Astrea Forensics in California for DNA extraction and sequencing.
“Typically, in a case like this, we work with teeth, because teeth are in the jaw and are protected, the roots are protected,” said Peacock. “In this case, they were just coming up with nothing on the teeth.”
With remains this old, it’s often difficult to separate the human DNA from all the other genetic material in the grave, said Astrea co-founder and scientific adviser Kelly Harkins Kincaid.
“It gets colonized by the microbial environment in the soil and the water in the environment,” she said.
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Although she’s worked with DNA samples as old as 10,000 years, this was the oldest sample her company has ever used to try to reconstruct a family tree.
From a petrous portion of the temporal bone, a delicate structure behind the ear at the base of the skull, they successfully extracted DNA that generated Pumphrey’s entire genome. Peacock’s team then uploaded the data to FamilyTreeDNA and GEDmatch to trace three types of DNA matches: autosomal, X chromosome and Y chromosome.
“We got 20,000 matches to work with,” she said. “So, it was a lot to kind of comb through.”
An orphan soldier’s life comes into focus
One of those matches, from the maternal line, was Russ Hudson.
The retired federal agent in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, offered to help do archival research. A profile began to emerge of a young orphan from Maryland’s Anne Arundel County, dispossessed and looking for his way in life.
“I learned that probably when he was 13, he went to Baltimore and he enlisted in the militia,” Hudson said. “And who knows what his story was? What did he accomplish in order to become a member of the militia at such a young age?”
Because no birth record has been found, it’s unclear how old Pumphrey was when he went to war. He signed his reenlistment papers with an “X.” But he was young enough that, when he died, the growth plates around his knees had not yet fully closed, Peacock said.

A witness to history
Researchers now know Pumphrey and his comrades from the 7th Maryland Regiment were with George Washington in the snows at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania. Peacock said his unit was involved in some of the major contests in the Northern Theater, including the battles of Brandywine, Germantown and Monmouth.
She figures he had marched 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers) before he met his end in the pinelands of South Carolina.
“We don’t really know what John Pumphrey’s cause of death was because they did not find a particular injury on his body,” she said. “It’s possible that he had a soft tissue injury, like a bayonet injury, but it’s a little hard to tell after 246 years.”
An unexpected twist and an emotional reunion
Work continues on the other set of remains, Camden 11A. One thing is certain: Peacock is related to him.
“One of the first things I do when I take on a case is I run my DNA against the remains to see if it’s somebody I’m related to, just on the wild chance that it might be,” she said. “It’s never happened before, but I am related to Camden 11A. So, I’m very motivated to get him identified.”

Last month, Peacock was confident enough in the research to put a name to Camden 9B. Relatives wept during an emotional ceremony at the 19th-century Benson-Hammond House in Anne Arundel County.
“The fact that some archaeologists just happened to stumble on bones that were protruding from the earth, and knowing that it would be difficult to identify those people by DNA, I just found it really exciting,” Becky Berman of Daytona Beach, Florida, Pumphrey’s first cousin, several times removed, told The Associated Press.
For Hudson, the retired federal agent, the story won’t be over until the U.S. government confirms the research and replaces his fifth great-uncle’s “UNKNOWN” gravestone. He said America owes it to John Pumphrey.
“He sacrificed himself, along with some others,” Hudson said, his eyes tearing up, “for the sake of this new nation.”

