My Grandfather's elder brother Edward William Wainwright was born on 16th Sept 1879 -- I have his birth certificate to prove this.
He was not baptised as a baby, but as a teenager in May 1896. Here his birthdate is given as 23rd Sept 1880 -- a year and a week later!
This confusion of birthdates continued into later life. In 1911, when he would be in his early 30s, he travels from Germany into Belgium. On his entry documents, he originally gives his birthdate as 23 Sept 1880, but this is crossed out and 16 Sept 1879 written in a different hand
Can anyone think of any reason for the use of two birthdates like this?
I have ruled out the death of a 1879 baby and ensuing re-use of names for a 1880 baby.
I am Baffled why the Birth Certificate you have Proves you say his Birth date.
It doesn't.
It Proves Only the Date the Mother "Said" to the Registrar was the Birth Date. Nothing More.
I have a Relative and the Birth Certificate states he was born 24 June 1894 Registered on the 42nd final time-limit for Registration
However the Priest Baptised him on 30 May 1894 and recorded it in the Consecutive Baptism Log Register
And noted in the New Column alongside that entry
Gave the Actual Date of Birth as 20 May 1894
And therefore Not as the Birth Certificate Proved.
At what age was your Relative told his Birth Date ? And by Who ?
When his Mother had him Baptised 16 years later
It is not surprising she couldn't remember the exact date assuming she could count.
In 1879/80 did it matter when your Birth Date was?
You were not going to get a Pension when you reached 65
And they probably didn't celebrate Birthdates and sent cards
In my Experience 1939 Register entries copied by the Enumerator from What was Said are not very reliable either.