When I first did the DNA thing, I did it with one goal in mind, seeing if I could find who the father of my Great Great Grandfather George was.
Records show that he was Christened in 1851 with his mother's surname and no details of his father were recorded.
Attitudes to babies out of wedlock were a lot different back then I suppose. Then about a year and a half later he was adopted by Charles when he married George's mother.
There in an entry in Charles' parents family bible saying George was born before Charles was married, and makes no mention as to who is the father, but records now show George with the same surname as Charles (the adopter).
A few years later Charles would have sons Charles (jnr) and Robert with George's mother.
I took the Y-DNA 111 test as I thought this would give me the highest probability of matches within a reasonable genetic distance. Even if I did not get a comprehensive match, I thought it should point me in the direction with surnames.
I got absolutely zero matches with this test. Not at any level whatsoever, disappointing considering the cost of the test.
I seemed to be the only one of this 'line' to take the Y-DNA test. Family Finder showed 3000+ 'matches', and the closest 'matches' had no trees of their own and no ancestral names recorded and none had my surname. I found one link but that was on a paternal female line, so it didn't help to determine who my paternal ancestors might be. I even submitted info to Gedmatch, no real help there either.
With this sort of venture into the past it is good to have some sort of game plan thought out, so that any results have high degree of accuracy and leave no room for doubt.
Plan B was to enlist the DNA of relatives to see if can get autosomal and (hopefully) Y-DNA to see if can get more info,
if any Y-DNA matches appear in the future then it will be an obvious match as there is no one else in the system.
I had enlisted (DNA) help of my Father, Aunty, Uncle and Charles' son Robert - direct paternal great grandson, a sort of 3rd cousin once removed (3C1R).
The 'uncle' is the Great grandson of Charles (Charles jnr daughter's son) who is now well into his 90s, which is great for autosomal data as he is one generation closer, but has zero of the needed Y-DNA. Compared the Family Finder (autosomal) with all four samples, my Father, his sister, the 'uncle' and the distant (3C1R) cousin.
I only shared 65cM with the cousin, which the site said was "3rd Cousin - 5th Cousin". I could not determine anything paternally from this either with any high certainty. With my 'uncle' I shared 84 cms it guessing a "4th Cousin - Remote Cousin" relationship. As expected the cousin and the uncle shared the higher 384cMs (2nd cousins).
So a little though occurred, what if Charles was the father of the son he adopted?, they must have been courting each other sometime in the 18 months before hand?
So I did a Y-DNA 111 test with the cousin....
It came back as a match at all markers up to 67 with zero GD (genetic distance), and at 111, only a GD of 1 with my father (GD 2 with me). This kinda proves that Charles is father of my GG Grandfather George as probabilities are in the 90%+ related in last 6 generations, and 99%+ for last 9 gens.
Myself and the cousin went next step further with the Big Y test,
there are only 1 out of 650 Big Y STR Differences, and recently have been given our own terminal SNP.
So a 169 year old mystery has been solved, as up until now my ancestral parentage only went back 4 generations. Now I am able to go back with certainty to 11 generations, and have confirmed who father of the "adopted" was. Charles must have tried to keep this secret from people at the time.
Hoping those who are still searching for their adoptive links have similar success than I.. and that this gives encouragement to not give up....
Records show that he was Christened in 1851 with his mother's surname and no details of his father were recorded.
Attitudes to babies out of wedlock were a lot different back then I suppose. Then about a year and a half later he was adopted by Charles when he married George's mother.
There in an entry in Charles' parents family bible saying George was born before Charles was married, and makes no mention as to who is the father, but records now show George with the same surname as Charles (the adopter).
A few years later Charles would have sons Charles (jnr) and Robert with George's mother.
I took the Y-DNA 111 test as I thought this would give me the highest probability of matches within a reasonable genetic distance. Even if I did not get a comprehensive match, I thought it should point me in the direction with surnames.
I got absolutely zero matches with this test. Not at any level whatsoever, disappointing considering the cost of the test.

With this sort of venture into the past it is good to have some sort of game plan thought out, so that any results have high degree of accuracy and leave no room for doubt.
Plan B was to enlist the DNA of relatives to see if can get autosomal and (hopefully) Y-DNA to see if can get more info,
if any Y-DNA matches appear in the future then it will be an obvious match as there is no one else in the system.
I had enlisted (DNA) help of my Father, Aunty, Uncle and Charles' son Robert - direct paternal great grandson, a sort of 3rd cousin once removed (3C1R).
The 'uncle' is the Great grandson of Charles (Charles jnr daughter's son) who is now well into his 90s, which is great for autosomal data as he is one generation closer, but has zero of the needed Y-DNA. Compared the Family Finder (autosomal) with all four samples, my Father, his sister, the 'uncle' and the distant (3C1R) cousin.
I only shared 65cM with the cousin, which the site said was "3rd Cousin - 5th Cousin". I could not determine anything paternally from this either with any high certainty. With my 'uncle' I shared 84 cms it guessing a "4th Cousin - Remote Cousin" relationship. As expected the cousin and the uncle shared the higher 384cMs (2nd cousins).

So a little though occurred, what if Charles was the father of the son he adopted?, they must have been courting each other sometime in the 18 months before hand?
So I did a Y-DNA 111 test with the cousin....
It came back as a match at all markers up to 67 with zero GD (genetic distance), and at 111, only a GD of 1 with my father (GD 2 with me). This kinda proves that Charles is father of my GG Grandfather George as probabilities are in the 90%+ related in last 6 generations, and 99%+ for last 9 gens.

Myself and the cousin went next step further with the Big Y test,
there are only 1 out of 650 Big Y STR Differences, and recently have been given our own terminal SNP.
So a 169 year old mystery has been solved, as up until now my ancestral parentage only went back 4 generations. Now I am able to go back with certainty to 11 generations, and have confirmed who father of the "adopted" was. Charles must have tried to keep this secret from people at the time.
Hoping those who are still searching for their adoptive links have similar success than I.. and that this gives encouragement to not give up....
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