« Reply #39 on: Wednesday 22 February 23 19:29 GMT (UK) »
In my case, there is always the minor wriggle room, the small element of doubt as with any likely father of an illegitimate child, or even father of seemingly legitimate child born in wedlock. My ancestor Mary Ann Walder fell pregnant in about April 1863, unmarried, the very likely father had a dying wife who was dying on phthisis (lung TB), she died in November 1863, and the cert says "several years, certified" as to her phthisis. Then Mary Ann Walder gave birth on 31 Dec 1863, her grandfather John Walder died the following month. Mary Ann then moved to London with the very likely father and they married in July 1864, and the baby was then baptised as the daughter of the new husband and his married wife. So 99% good, only DNA will make it 99.999% certain it was Thomas Roberts, and not another man that side of The Watford Gap. Always a small chance a vulnerable man who had just become a widower met a woman who just had a baseborn child, and they fell in love. If on the minor chance Thomas Roberts was not the father, perhaps the real father died or ran off to America when he found he was to be a father, as he wanted to keep the bachelor life.
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