I was raised being told my paternal great grandparents were English Gypsies. My grandmother told me her parents would not allow her to marry my grandfather for 13 years (until they left England and came to America) because his parents were Gypsies. And there were many other stories.
I have discovered several generations of ancestors who appear that they could have been Gypsies or Travellers based on their occupations: hawkers, tinkers, mat makers, general dealer, umbrella maker. And they intermarried with only a few families with names like Richardson, Smith and Loveday. Many of the females were named Kezia.
Most lived in Rutland and some in Islip and Cottingham, Northamptonshire. Surnames were Browett, Blades, Frisby, Mitchell, Sculthorpe, Woodcock, Sharman, Wright.
Now here’s what I don’t understand. According to my DNA testing, I’m 97% English and 3% Irish. So it seems unlikely my family’s “Gypsies” were Romany or even Irish Travellers.
So what makes someone a Gypsy (or Traveller) if they weren’t Romany or Irish? Did families sometimes "choose" to call themselves Gypsies and live the "lifestyle" for any variety of reasons?