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Damian asked in Arts & HumanitiesGenealogy · 3 months ago

How to know if my ancestor's mother was his biological mom on census?

So I've been looking at records for my ancestor for a few years trying to find out why he was the only one with Dark Brown complexion who's fathers family came from England . And my suspicion is his mom listed wasn't his actual mother . So how would i find if this was true or not?

5 Answers

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  • Maxi
    Lv 7
    3 months ago
    Favourite answer

    A birth certificate if within the dates of birth registration, you pay and apply for it and that will names both his parents

  • L
    Lv 5
    2 months ago

    A census will not show this.............only a Birth Certificate show this information.

  • 3 months ago

    A DNA test. If she had a fling with a guy who generally resembled her husband, but never told, the hubby would go on the birth certificate.

  • 3 months ago

    If you can find a birth certificate for your answer this should list both mother and father; the listing for mother is likely to be more accurate than for the father.

    Just because the father's family came from England (I'm assuming you're in the US?) doesn't mean they won't have had any dark skinned ancestry, there have been dark-skinned residents of the British Isles for 2000 years or more. Your ancestor may be a 'throwback' (not sure what a more politically correct modern term would be), someone whose appearance is more influenced by genetics from further back in their ancestry.

  • 3 months ago

    1. Look for a birth record.

    2. DNA test one of his descendants against a descendant of a known biological child.

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