There is always the possibility that one or more of your ancestors did not have the same surname as their birth parents. I have several ancestors for whom I cannot identify birth parents. The reasons for this are many - due to adoption, family circumstances, orphans, out-of-wedlock births, an intentional name change, criminal activity, or other reasons are distinct possibilities.
For example, my 2nd great-grandfather, Devier J. Lamphier (1839-1894) was, apparently, adopted as a small child by Ranslow and Mary (Bell) Smith in Jefferson County, New York, and petitioned the Wisconsin Senate to change his name to Devier J. Smith in 1866. I got lucky with a Google search on that. I am pretty sure that Devier's birth mother was a Lamphier (or variant surname) but have no clue about his birth father's name.
(image created by ChatGPT4 AI)
I wondered what the Artificial Intelligence chatbots would say in response to my question about this issue that may affect almost every genealogy researcher (who may not think about this situation).
1) My first prompt to ChatGPT4 was: "You are an experienced genealogist. Why would a person not have their birth parents surname in the 1850 to 1920 time frame? How could a researcher find the names of the biological parents?"
ChatGPT4 easily informed me of reasons for a surname change, and provided strategies for finding biological parents. The initial response was:
There are several reasons why someone born between 1850 and 1920 might not carry their birth parents' surname. These cases often involved adoption, family circumstances, or social conventions of the time. Here are some common reasons:
Reasons for Surname Changes
Adoption or Informal Adoption: Children might be adopted by relatives, neighbors, or unrelated families, especially if their birth parents died young, were unable to care for them, or were impoverished. Formal adoptions weren’t standardized in the U.S. until the early 1900s, so many children informally adopted took on the surname of their new family.
Stepfamily Situations: When a widowed or divorced parent remarried, the child might take the surname of the stepfather. This could be for social acceptance or to align with siblings born in the new marriage.
Orphanages and Foundling Homes: Orphaned or abandoned children raised in these institutions were sometimes given new surnames, either for record-keeping purposes or because they were placed with foster families.
Name Changes for Assimilation: Immigrants or their children sometimes changed their names to blend in or avoid discrimination. In some cases, entire families might adopt a new surname.
Legal Name Change: Sometimes, a child or young adult would change their name legally to reflect a new family situation, such as being formally adopted by an adoptive parent, or for personal or professional reasons.
Scandal or Family Secret: If a child was born out of wedlock, the family might give them a different surname, either the mother's surname or that of another family member, to avoid social stigma. In some cases, a different surname might be used to hide paternity.
Strategies for Finding Biological Parents
To uncover biological parentage, a genealogist can use various strategies depending on the case. Here are some useful steps and sources:
Adoption Records: For adoptions after the 1900s, state courts sometimes kept records of adoptions, but access to these records varies by state. For earlier cases, look for informal mentions in wills, guardianship papers, or probate records, which may reference a child being “placed with” or “cared for” by another family.
Guardianship Records: If a child was taken in by another family but not formally adopted, there may still be guardianship records, especially if the child inherited property. County probate records can sometimes list a child’s biological parents in cases where they were orphaned.
Family Letters and Diaries: Private family records like letters or diaries sometimes mention guardianship, fostering, or adoption details, even when not formally recorded elsewhere.
DNA Testing: For more recent research, DNA testing has proven invaluable in identifying biological families. Using autosomal DNA tests can reveal connections to biological parents or relatives. Matching with known relatives can help confirm suspicions about biological parentage, and tools on DNA websites can help analyze connections.
Newspaper Articles: Newspapers might mention adoption, guardianship, or child placements, particularly if the parents’ deaths were reported or if there was a public guardianship hearing. Articles about charitable organizations or orphanages sometimes list the names of children they placed.
Census Records: Census records can give clues, especially if a child appears with one family in an early census and then in another in subsequent censuses. Pay close attention to relationships, neighbors, or nearby families who might have taken in the child.
Church Records: Baptismal, confirmation, or other church records can sometimes list biological parents even if a child was raised by someone else. Churches sometimes recorded “base-born” children with the mother’s name, or with both parents' names if known.
Probate and Land Records: If a biological parent died, probate records often list children and may mention who cared for them. In some cases, land records mention children and may provide evidence of guardianship or inheritance through extended family.
Finding biological parents requires examining many sources and sometimes piecing together indirect evidence. If the usual records aren’t available, building a case through neighbors, associated families, and DNA can help create a clearer picture of the child’s origins.
2) My second question was: "What about trying to hide criminal activity or to escape parent abuse? How often did people have a surname different from their birth father?"
The ChatGPT4 response was:
Yes, hiding criminal activity or escaping abusive family situations were also reasons people might change surnames between 1850 and 1920. These cases add to the complexity of tracing a person's origins because records might be altered, withheld, or misleadingly documented. Here's more on these situations, along with general trends in surname use:
Criminal Activity and Surname Changes
Escaping Criminal Records: Some individuals changed their names to avoid association with a criminal record, often taking on entirely new identities. This could involve using a maternal surname, the name of a distant relative, or adopting a common surname for anonymity.
Witness Protection: While formal witness protection as we know it didn’t exist, some local law enforcement or families would help relocate people, advising them to change names to ensure safety. This was particularly true in cases involving organized crime, violent disputes, or contentious land issues.
Escape from Family Abuse
Running from Abusive Families: Individuals who fled abusive homes often adopted new names to distance themselves. This might involve moving to a new town and taking on an alternate surname. Some took on the surname of friends, extended family, or an employer who offered them a place to stay.
Institutionalized Children: Some children escaping abusive situations were taken in by orphanages or charitable institutions, where their surname might change to that of the institution or guardian.
Frequency of Different Surnames from Birth Fathers
It wasn’t unusual for people, particularly children, to have a surname different from their birth father's. Here’s how often this happened in different contexts:
Stepfamilies and Maternal Lineage: It was common for children of single mothers or remarried women to carry their mother’s maiden name or a stepfather’s name. If a mother remarried after a divorce or death, children from the previous marriage often adopted the stepfather’s surname, even if informally. This was a relatively common practice, particularly in rural communities where formal name changes weren’t rigorously enforced.
Orphaned or Abandoned Children: Many children raised by extended family members or unrelated guardians used the surname of their caregivers. This practice was frequent in the 19th century, especially given the informal nature of early foster arrangements.
Social and Cultural Pressure: In cases of children born out of wedlock, it was socially acceptable—and sometimes expected—for a child to use the mother’s surname or the surname of another family member. This practice was relatively frequent in communities where the stigma of illegitimacy was high.
Immigrant Adjustments: Newly arrived immigrants sometimes changed family surnames for easier integration, which meant children and parents could end up with different last names as families settled on a common surname. This was particularly true for multi-generational households where older family members kept traditional names while younger generations adopted English versions.
Research Challenges with Different Surnames
When tracing ancestors who had different surnames than their biological fathers, here are additional tips:
Look for Patterns: If a family used multiple surnames, try to find patterns in census, marriage, and death records to identify the possible reason for the changes.
Interview Descendants: Family lore might provide clues about name changes, especially if someone changed their name due to a family conflict or need to escape.
Local Records: County or city records like voter registries and tax lists sometimes show “aliases” or alternate names, especially in cases involving criminal charges.
Understanding that surname changes were often practical responses to complex situations can be key in genealogical research. For this period, surname variation was more common than we might assume today, making it essential to consider all possible surnames when tracing an ancestor’s life.
3) I asked the same questions of Perplexity AI, and received a similar response. Perplexity provided these sources as the basis for their responses:
https://familytreemagazine.com/records/vital/birth-records-guide/
https://www.archives.gov/research/genealogy/start-research/faqs
https://www.newyorkfamilyhistory.org/new-york-birth-marriage-death-vital-records
https://www.archives.gov/research/alic/reference/genealogy.html
https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/Massachusetts_Online_Genealogy_Records
https://www.nyc.gov/site/records/historical-records/genealogy.page
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/crackdown-on-criminals-who-change-their-names-to-avoid-detection
5) What other questions on this subject should I ask? Please tell me in a comment to this post.
6) Do you have elusive mystery ancestors who may have had a surname change? Asking an artificial intelligence tool may quickly provide background, process and analysis answers that help you find those elusive ancestors.
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