This post is more of a request for help. I am hoping someone out there reading this has a link to the ancestors I am searching for.
I am looking for anyone descended from either the surname WARD or CAIL that lived in New Brunswick in the mid to late 1800s. My great grandmother, Dora Ann Black was adopted, however, I know the names of her biological parents: Jane Ward and Thomas Cail. As well, I have found a link to a genetic relative through DNA testing to the Cail line in New Brunswick. Unfortunately, even with that link confirmed it is too removed to confirm the exact identity of 'my' Thomas Cail.
The challenge I am having with figuring out who Thomas Cail is, is that there are a few of them in the same area at the time that Dora was born, so without a closer match to a particular Thomas Cail, or finding more documentation to confirm his identity, I am stuck.
The challenge I am having with figuring out who Jane Ward is, is that I have not found sufficient documentation to confirm her identity and have found no genetic matches. I do believe that Dora's adopted mother (Anne Maria Ward) is probably related to her biological mother as they share the same last name, however, I don't have enough information at this point to confirm.
That's where you come in! If any of this information lines up with your family history, or if you descend from WARD or CAIL and have done or are willing to do a DNA test, I would love for you to get in touch with me so we can compare.
I have copied and pasted my original post about my search for Dora's biological parents below, which has more information.
Thank you!
From November 2015:
The Brick Wall
The biggest challenge in my genealogy research so far has been my great grandmother, Dora. I knew as soon as I read the information my sister, Chandra had sent me, that Dora was going to be trouble. She was adopted. There I was brand spanking new to genealogy and I was up against an adoption. I toyed with the idea of moving on to an easier ancestor, someone more obliging to give me quicker results, but I couldn’t help myself. I wanted to find out who her biological parents were.
1901 Census of Canada, Weldford, Kent County, NB |
Late Registration of Birth for Dora Ann Ward |
In the Vital Statistics records on PANB I also found the marriage record for Dora and my great grandfather, John H Farrer. On this
record Dora’s parents are listed as William and Maria (Ward) Black. I haven’t
confirmed that Anne M and Maria is the same person, but I suspect so from other
records that I’ve found. What I do want to take note of here is that Maria’s
maiden name is the same as Dora’s biological mother’s maiden name. Was she
adopted by a relative? I was unable to find Dora on the 1891 Census of Canada,
but I did find her adopted family. So where was Dora? I wonder if she was still
with her biological mother in 1891. Perhaps her mother died sometime between
1891 and 1901 and that’s why she was adopted by Anne. Unfortunately, I have
been unable to find documentation to support this theory.
I found a Jane Ward living in a nearby town but have been
unable to find sufficient documentation to prove that she is Dora’s biological
mother. With nothing to confirm her mother’s identity, and no information on
her father the trail ran dry and remained that way for a long time. I moved on
to other ancestors, but could never fully let it go, and would periodically search
again. Then one day I found a document with some incredible information. It was
the record from her marriage to her second husband, William George Wilson. WILSON!
The same last name that was listed on her Late Registration of Birth in 1953! On
this record her name is Dora Annie Farrer (her married name from her first
husband, my great grandfather, John Henry Farrer); she is 50 years old, and a
widow. It all matches AND confirms the Late Registration of Birth. As I continued
to read through the marriage record, her parents’ names were listed as: Thomas
Cail and Jane Ward! NOT William and Anne M./Maria Black, but Thomas Cail and
Jane Ward! Her biological mother’s name matched, which would imply that the
name under “Father” would be her biological father! Did I finally know her biological father’s
name? Also, her father’s last name is the name of where Dora was born, Cails Mills.
With fresh exuberance, I began searching for Thomas Cail in
the PANB database. Considering that I already knew there was a Cails Mills in
Kent County, I should have realized that this may be a big family with a long
history… and multiple Thomas Cails. Which one was mine??? Next thing I knew I
had diagrams, charts, piles of notes and a head swimming with too many Cails to
count! I made a timeline of each Thomas Cail, noting when they were married,
when their children were born and where they were living at the time of Dora’s
birth to discern a probable match.
I spent months on this, going over each record with a fine
tooth comb again and again. All the while I had the nagging thought, how does
Dora know who her father is? What if the name she wrote on her marriage record
isn’t correct? I could be spending all this time on a false trail. It was time
to take it to the next level: DNA testing. I ordered a kit through 23andMe.com. It took a few weeks to get my results, but once I did I found out that I have over 900 matches from 2nd to distant cousins just on the 23andMe site alone (sadly the two 2nd cousin matches are anonymous and haven't responded to my request to share information). I have A LOT to learn about
understanding my results, but I do know one thing for sure: I have a match that is a 3rd
to 4th cousin from the same Cail line in New Brunswick! Which proves that one of these
Thomas Cails IS my 2nd great grandfather! Now I know I have the
correct ancestral line! I still want to figure out exactly which one it is, but am still pretty excited that I've managed to piece together as much as I have. I also hope to figure out if the Jane Ward I think may be my 2nd great grandmother actually is, but I suppose I'll just have to keep digging for now.