Bennett C. Greenspan (born 1952) is an American businessman. His business ventures have covered industries from real estate to the .com boom. Though he has mainly worked in the fields of photography and genetic testing,[2][3][4] he is best known for his pioneering work in genetic genealogy.[5][6][7][8][9]
A Jewish American, Greenspan was born in Omaha, Nebraska to Maurice and Rosalie Greenspan.[1][20][21] He and his brother were raised there.[20][22] As a young child, Greenspan had a love of family history and would interview the oldest members of his family during gatherings. He drew his first family tree when he was 11 or 12.[3][21]
Nancy Summer and Bennett Greenspan qualified as quarter finalists in the South High Novice Debate Tournament in October. Both divisions attended the OU Debate Tournament in November.
Tournaments Spell Success As Debaters Earn Honors – The Shield 1968[23]
Greenspan attended Westside High School and was part of the graduating class of 1970.[24] In high school, he was involved with the debate team. There, he gained valuable speaking skills.[23] Outside school, he was part of the Omaha Chaim Weizmann AZA chapter, a Jewish youth group. As part of that group, he originated the idea for brightly colored Civil Rights Movement seals in 1969. These were marketed both locally, and in The National Jewish Monthly, to raise funds for the group, as well as human rights awareness.[25]
Upon graduation, Greenspan moved south to Texas, and studied political science at the University of Texas. He graduated with a BA.[4][26] After graduating, he took additional courses in business and entrepreneurship at SMU in Dallas between 1975 and 1976. He did not, however, complete the program.[26]
After college, business interests took Greenspan away from Texas. However, he returned in 1980 and has since remained there. While he married his wife near family in Los Angeles County, California,[27][28] their two children were born and raised in Texas.[20][29][30]
Early business ventures
Greenspan's first two businesses involved photographic supplies.[4] The second of these was Industrial Photographic Supply. Based in Texas, from 1980 to 1996, it sold industrial grade goods to advertising agencies, art studios, newspapers, and printing companies. In its first four years, its profit grew by over 600 percent.[31][32] This company was sold to Bell Industries, Inc in 1996. Greenspan remained as an employee of the new owners for roughly a year.[3][9][10]
In 1997, Greenspan founded GoCollege.com with Max Blankfeld. GoCollege.com is an online college-search website. While there, he was the chief executive officer.[2][26][33]
Family Tree DNA
We all have a storybook within ourselves. The real challenge is figuring out how to read it. We really don't know where this is going but I’m convinced because of the scientific teams we work with, that wherever this leads, we will be at the forefront of the next cutting-edge revolution.
After leaving GoCollege.com, Greenspan became semi-retired and returned to working on his family history. In 1999, he began work on his mother's Nitz lineage.[3][10][21] When faced with an unsurmountable obstacle using standard genealogical methods in his work, he remembered two cases of genetics being used to prove ancestry that had recently been covered by the media. One was a study by University of Arizona researchers showing that many Cohen men from both Ashkenazic and Sephardic groups share the same Y-Chromosome pattern of markers, the Cohen Modal Haplotype.[35] The other was a DNA study showing that male descendants of US President Thomas Jefferson with the Jefferson surname, and male descendants of his freed slave Sally Hemings, shared the same Y-Chromosome markers and a recent common ancestry.[36]
Greenspan had Nitz cousins in California, and he had discovered someone in Argentina with the same ancestral surname and the same ancestral location in Eastern Europe. Wishing to use the same method of DNA comparison for his own genealogy, he contacted Dr. Michael Hammer at the University of Arizona. Their conversation inspired Greenspan to start a company dedicated to using genetics to solve genealogy problems, Family Tree DNA.[3][9][11][22][34]
As personal genetic ancestry and genealogy industries grew,[5][6] and so did Family Tree DNA.[7][26] In 2004, Greenspan and Blankfeld hosted the first conference for advocates in the field.[3] However, the industry faced ethics and infrastructure challenges.[3][8][14][12]
Gene by Gene
We believe the first step to unearthing your personal and family history is to better understand your DNA. That's why we are continuously investing in new technology and experienced scientists at our Genomics Research Center, enabling us to conduct tests more accurately and efficiently.
Though Family Tree DNA originally partnered with the University of Arizona for testing,[3][17] Greenspan, and his now longtime business partner Max Blankfeld, eventually started their own testing laboratory in Houston, Texas under the Genealogy by Genetics, Ltd. parent company.[26] This is the Genomics Research Center (GRC) laboratory in Houston, Texas.[37][38] With the opening of the GRC, Greenspan and Blankfeld formed additional business units under the Genealogy by Genetics company, between 2008 and 2012, to sell non-genealogical genetics tests.[39][40]
In September 2012, Greenspan and Blankfeld restructured Genealogy by Genetics, Ltd. This included renaming it Gene by Gene, Ltd.[38][41] After restructuring, the business comprises four divisions. These are DNA DTC, DNA Findings, DNA Traits, and Family Tree DNA.[16][41]
^ ab"Bennett Greenspan Discusses Using DNA to Track Genealogy @ The Breman Museum, Atlanta GA". Eventbrite. April 28, 2013. Retrieved June 18, 2013. Mr. Greenspan will be speaking on 'Using DNA to settle family disputes, connect to long-lost relatives and to garner an appreciation for where your ancestors came from and where they journeyed since our departure from Africa.'
^"CSE Distinguished Lecture Series: Bennett Greenspan". Georgia Tech College of Computing. April 29, 2013. Retrieved June 17, 2013. Title of Talk: The Genomic Revolution Thirteen Years Later: Genetic Genealogy and Beyond
^State of California. "California Marriage Index, 1960–1985" (Microfiche). Center for Health Statistics, California Department of Health Services, Sacramento, California. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
^Greenspan, Bennett (2007). Opening Talk. Genetic Genealogy Conference for Family Tree DNA Group Administrators. Houston, Texas.
^Texas: Texas Department of State Health Services. "Texas Birth Index, 1903–1997" (Microfiche). {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
"Bennett Greenspan". Jewish Genealogical Society of Toronto. January 26, 2011. Archived from the original on February 5, 2013. Retrieved June 17, 2013.
"2011 Events". Jewish Genealogical Society of Toronto. March 23, 2011. Archived from the original on February 5, 2013. Retrieved June 18, 2013. Topic: What We Can Learn from DNA Testing to Help our Genealogy Research