111

Thursday 19 September 2019

Genealogy question about mistakes?

answers1: Start your own family tree so it will be correct from now on.
answers2: The simplest way (and free) is to get a bible or other place
for a family record and write down the information there. If they are
your descendants then they should have access to that in the future.
You can also go to Surname Message Boards like GenForum <a
href="http://genforum.genealogy.com/"
rel="nofollow"class=Clr-b>http://genforum.genealogy.com/</a> and
Rootsweb <a href="http://boards.rootsweb.com/"
rel="nofollow"class=Clr-b>http://boards.rootsweb.com/</a> and post
that 'John Doe' as listed on bc is not the bio father of James Doe
born in NY between 1996 and 2010, do not post mother's name, exact
place or date of birth, for privacy reasons. If you know bio dad name
then post that too. y posting bio dad name fi he had or has any other
children and they do genealogy research, they may find you and contact
you. Do not post it if you don't want to be found. Also get a generic
email account like gmail, hotmail, or yahoo to use just for genealogy
research use, as you can keep that one no matter what isp you use in
the future and also privacy.
answers3: DNA proof of parentage <br>
Signed affidavit from your mother <br>
Research your family history making sure you write all the information down <br>
<br>
Something similar has happened in my FH with my Great Grandfather, his
birth certificate, baptism record states one man as his father...for
some reason it didn't 'feel' right to me and once I started
researching this family they really didn't 'feel' like my family...so
I stopped researching and researched other lines.......then decided to
look again 10 years later finding clues ( no documentary proof)
following those clues and finding a person who I thought could be even
though he is not named in paperwork having researched and found his
line and prison record along with photograph which looked like my
grand father, Uncle and cousin........DNA proved he was related, so
the father on record is stepfather although I have researched his line
just out of interest...it just makes FH 'interesting'
answers4: You can file a petition in a state court to have your birth
certificate corrected. I am not sure how it is done so I would find a
lawyer who does free initial consultations and ask. Then you can
decide if it is worth the cost or if you might not even need an
attorney. <br>
<br>
My wife had her name on her birth certificate changed to her adoptive
father's name. It is now as if her birth father never existed in her
life. <br>
<br>
DNA genealogy has shown us that as much as 20% of people have an
unknown Non Paternal Event (NPE) in their family history someplace. I
think you have a great idea to correct that now for the future.
answers5: You could start your own family tree for your descendants.
You can use that to explain the discrepancy between your birth
certificate and the truth.

No comments:

Post a Comment