« Reply #120 on: Friday 23 January 26 18:16 GMT (UK) »
If I have an illegitimate ancestor, ancestor sibling or cousin, or a direct ancestor who had a baseborn child before marrying, often Anc trees will have the man the mother married a year or two, or even more, later as the father of the child. It is possible of course but only DNA may reveal or deny that, or any documents such as bastardy bonds/maintenance orders etc.
My ancestor's sister born 1833 had a illegitimate child in 1851 in Braintree. In 1857 she wed 30 miles away in Great Burstead, South Essex, and the new husband was a few years her junior, he was born 1838. Yet many other trees on Anc have the man she married in 1857 at the bio father of her baseborn child born 1851. Highly unlikely, he was only 13 in 1851 and was born and raised 30 miles away from Braintree. Of course he was a father figure, as he wed his mother when her son was a child.
Researching:
LONDON, Coombs, Roberts, Auber, Helsdon, Fradine, Morin, Goodacre
DORSET Coombs, Munday
NORFOLK Helsdon, Riches, Harbord, Budery
KENT Roberts, Goodacre
SUSSEX Walder, Boniface, Dinnage, Standen, Lee, Botten, Wickham, Jupp
SUFFOLK Titshall, Frost, Fairweather, Mayhew, Archer, Eade, Scarfe
DURHAM Stewart, Musgrave, Wilson, Forster
SCOTLAND Stewart in Selkirk
USA Musgrave, Saix
ESSEX Cornwell, Stock, Quilter, Lawrence, Whale, Clift
OXON Edgington, Smith, Inkpen, Snell, Batten, Brain