Tereasa A. Timmerman
I am very willing to look at anything you send me. Please provide links.
Indeed records of adoption did not exist at that time, for the Raleigh piece of things. I can certainly work in the Colonial period, but my expertise lies in the English side of the argument, so I am focusing there.
However, birth, baptism, marriage, and death records did, not in the form that we know them now, but in church records, in England. And I am trained to read them. So please send me links to whatever you have found.
Did you follow the logic of what I have said above?
Do you understand that Raleigh and Elizabeth Throckmorton had already had two sons by the time Edward Small was born, and that they had long been released from the Tower? They then had another son, born after Edward’s birth date. What is your theory as to why they suddenly, for no reason, gave up one son, and kept the others (with the exception of the first son, who had died already)?
What is your evidence that they were divorced at the time that Edward Small was born? They were living together, had another son later, and when Raleigh was executed, Elizabeth was given his head, because she was his wife. So, not divorced.
Please understand.
The genealogical websites, and even some of the genealogy books, are full of theories which are simply not so and for which there is no evidence. One of the major pastimes of humans over the eons has been that of inventing connections to famous, noble, royal, or mythological personages. But saying something is so does not necessarily make it true.
In this case, though as I say, I will absolutely look at any links you send me, on account of my deep and abiding love of Explaining How History Works, I have pretty clearly explained why this particular story won’t be having any actual proof show up. It’s in the chronology and the logic.
This is a story invented in the Colonies, I gather, tying ancestors with unknown antecedents back into a glorious bit of history. But it was created by people who didn’t really understand that history. And it doesn’t make any sense.