« Reply #137 on: Sunday 25 January 26 20:59 GMT (UK) »
I have not gone down the DNA route yet but no doubt will have distant cousins who have already tested. I have a number of ancestor siblings who seem to vanish after a time in the 1800s, as many passenger lists of the time did not always record enough info to ID a person positively. For example "Mr Taylor, aged 30" arriving in Sydney in 1855. And even early 1900s lists can give vague info.
Yet i found two direct respective English ancestors who died in America and Australia, one was a convict from Suffolk, and the other from County Durham went to live with 2 married daughters in the US, and is on the 1900 US census, and did not have a very common surname anyway. The Durham one had a grandfather who was in the army in Canada and America in the 1770s. So 3 direct ancestors (past grandparents) that I know of who spent time overseas beyond just Ireland or France, or a couple of merchant ancestors who went to Poland in the late 1500s on trips.
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