ChatterBank9 mins ago
Genes reunited source data
22 Answers
I have found a record of a birth that has a different surname to that on the birth certificate. Genes reunited does not recognise a search for the name on the birth certificate. Can anyone offer an explanation?
TIA
TIA
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by EcclesCake. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.More than an hint of illegitimacy! The child appears with the mothers surname in GR but with fathers name on birth certificate.
Adoption highly unlikely.
Don't know how to search under parents surnames. I'm new to this and just had a wee poke around in Genes Reunited today.
I just don't understand what the source data is and why the discrepancy.
Adoption highly unlikely.
Don't know how to search under parents surnames. I'm new to this and just had a wee poke around in Genes Reunited today.
I just don't understand what the source data is and why the discrepancy.
I can only see what GR gives me there are no scanned official documents available for me to view (or I don't know how to vie them)
The person in question appears on Genes Reunited as Sancha Carolyn Eccles born Chatham, Kent in 1970. However I her birth certificate shows Chamberlain-Page as the surname. Eccles is the Mothers maiden name and Chamberlain-Page is the Fathers name.
I'm confused by the discrepancy.
The person in question appears on Genes Reunited as Sancha Carolyn Eccles born Chatham, Kent in 1970. However I her birth certificate shows Chamberlain-Page as the surname. Eccles is the Mothers maiden name and Chamberlain-Page is the Fathers name.
I'm confused by the discrepancy.
lol, ancestry have transcribed her as Caroly N Eccles
Name: Sancha Caroly N Eccles
Mother's Maiden Surname: Eccles
Date of Registration: Apr May Jun 1970
Registration district: Chatham
Registration county: Surrey, Kent
Volume Number: 5f
Page Number: 709 (click to see others on page)
actually on the typed index (which will have been typed up in 1970) the name appears like that!
as I suggested, she is recorded twice:
Name: Sancha Caroly N Eccles
Mother's Maiden Surname: Eccles
Date of Registration: Apr May Jun 1970
Registration district: Chatham
Registration county: Surrey, Kent
Volume Number: 5f
Page Number: 709 (click to see others on page
Name: Sancha Caroly N Eccles
Mother's Maiden Surname: Eccles
Date of Registration: Apr May Jun 1970
Registration district: Chatham
Registration county: Surrey, Kent
Volume Number: 5f
Page Number: 709 (click to see others on page)
actually on the typed index (which will have been typed up in 1970) the name appears like that!
as I suggested, she is recorded twice:
Name: Sancha Caroly N Eccles
Mother's Maiden Surname: Eccles
Date of Registration: Apr May Jun 1970
Registration district: Chatham
Registration county: Surrey, Kent
Volume Number: 5f
Page Number: 709 (click to see others on page
Genes reunited have bought or paid for a transcription of the general register office index , the index was compiled after each quarter and then the whole year was put on microfilm sometime in the 1980s. Therefore I am looking at an index compiled by the GRO in London from all the births registered around England and Wales in 1970.
The birth certificate you have is a long birthcert i expect as they only changed to the A4 size in the mid 1970s, the child, like my birth reg will not have had a surname registered. Only the later style registrations used a surname on the entry for the baby. This is why an unmarried woman had the baby registered in her name and why, if the father of the child attended the registration, he had his name added and also added to the index. If you look, it is probable that the father signed the registration, certainly he will have had to attend with the mother to register the birth, she couls not have added his name unless he did,
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.