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Manchester Evening News
Manchester Evening News
National
Ashley Summerfield & Lyell Tweed

Adopted woman meets birth family after 43 years following £68 DNA test

A woman who only found out she was adopted when she was 14-years-old used a £68 DNA test to finally be reunited with her family 43-years later. Louisa Hale, now 60, only found out she was adopted when a friend of her mum 'spilt the beans'.

Louisa was raised in Melbourne, Australia, but was born in England. The mum-of-two, who now lives in the Caribbean, decided to take a £68 DNA test three years ago. She took it along with sons Matthew, 22, and Joshua, 21, as well as husband Jonny, 59, which changed everything. "I just had to know the truth," she said.

“In 2019, I was back in Australia visiting family when I decided to do a DNA test with my brother and it revealed that we were not at all related. The Ancestry results came with other information about our heritage and what parts of the world I was descended from. When the results came back, I was shocked by what they said.”

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Louisa first begun to suspect she was adopted around the age of 14 when she noticed her blue eyes and blonde hair standing out in family photos. She said: "Thinking back now, it was obvious. My sister is only six months younger than me, which doesn’t make any sense, but it wasn’t until we started learning about the birds and the bees in school that I began to realise.

“When I was a teenager, I started digging around for information and a friend’s mother ended up spilling the beans to me.” Still, despite her burning desire to know more, she did not ask her parents about her origins until she turned 32.

Louisa with her husband, Jonny, and their children, Matthew and Joshua (PA Real Life)

She added: “Back then, people just didn’t talk about these things and I very much thought of them as my parents, so I didn’t want to cause upset. Still, the not-knowing ate away at me and, as I got older, it bothered me that I didn’t know anything about my family medical history.”

Louisa’s dad would not discuss the adoption, but her mum revealed that she had been adopted in England while they were working there. She said: “My father was a heart specialist at a hospital and my mother was desperate to have more kids.”

She added: “They already had two children and my mum was pregnant with my sister, but she’d had a string of miscarriages and wasn’t sure if she would carry to full term. So, they adopted me and, after my mum gave birth to my younger sister, they brought the five of us kids back to Australia. I told my mum that I wanted to find my birth family and she warned me to be careful, as my birth mother may not want to be found.”

She was eventually given a birth certificate by her mum, showing her birth mother's name as Gayle. With this she also discovered that she was French Canadian, setting off the search for answers.

Louisa said: “By then, I had children of my own, which made the search seem far more important. But I still only managed to confirm the few details I already had.

“A friend of mine who had a big interest in family history was able to use my mother’s name to search shipping records and confirmed that she had travelled to the UK before my birth. I discovered this back in the late 1980s, but I’ve since had those same records come up on Ancestry.”

Louisa with her adoptive mum and siblings (PA Real Life)

She added: “I was born in West London’s Hammersmith Hospital and my adoptive father trained there for several years. This new record had my birth mother listed as a medical photographer, which led some people to assume she worked there and could have possibly met my father there, but that didn’t lead anywhere.

“I spent years trying to trace my birth family with no luck and it was only when social media came about that I had any real place to start.”

During this time, Louisa met and married her husband Jonny and the pair set up home in Antigua, raising a family of their own. She said: “I would still wonder a lot about my heritage and family history. It felt like a piece of who I am was missing.

“Part of me always wondered if my adoptive dad was my real father, especially when I thought he had worked with my birth mother.” She added: “Then both my adoptive parents passed away in 2011, just 10 weeks apart.”

At a dead end in her search, Louisa tried to move on with her life, only renewing her efforts in 2019 with her all-important Ancestry DNA test which, to her surprise, revealed links with Lithuania, where she was matched with distant relatives. She said: “I started talking to distant cousins in Lithuania that I never knew I had and, within two weeks, they pointed me to a Facebook page of a man in Michigan, USA, whose father had dated my birth mother in 1960 and had no idea I existed.”

She added: “His father was obviously very shocked to learn about me, but it was amazing to be able to make a small connection. It gave me a window into my family that I’d never had before and he was able to tell me more about the time he spent with my mother.

Louisa's birth parents, Larry and Gayle, at a dance in 1960 on the night that Louisa believes she was conceived (PA Real Life)

“I also found another DNA match who turned out to be my mother’s cousin, who had been raised with her in Canada. My mother had passed away five years prior, but neither her cousin nor the children she’d had later had any idea about me.”

Spurred on by the sudden influx of new relatives, Louisa decided to meet them face-to-face. She said: “My husband and I were supposed to go to a wedding in the UK in June 2019, but instead decided on a road trip to visit my family in Toronto, Canada.”

She added: “There I discovered my mother had confided in a few friends that she had met my father while on holiday in Europe. She discovered she was pregnant in the UK and what was meant to be a two-to-three-month holiday ended up being a year in the country as she was pregnant with me.

“With the global reach of the DNA database on Ancestry, even someone like me who was born in the UK and raised in Australia, was able to find the information I had been seeking since I was 14 years old. My mother did, in fact, turn out to be French Canadian from English origins and my father is a South African with origins in Lithuania.”

Louisa with her half-brother, Geoff, and half-sister, Sandi, on her dad's side of the family (PA Real Life)

Before heading back home from her trip in 2019, Louisa made a pitstop in Michigan to finally meet her birth father, half-brother and half-sister.

She said: “It was very emotional. As soon as I clapped eyes on him, I could see the resemblance to my son. Little facial features and characteristics that I never would have known were my father’s before this.”

She added: “All the family I have met have been so welcoming and loving. In recent months, my family in Canada have been looking through boxes of old photos my mother had kept and they actually found a couple of photos of my birth parents together.

Louisa with her half-sisters, Andrea (right) and Jo-Anne (left), on her mum's side of the family (PA Real Life)

“One of them, at a dance, I believe may have been taken the night I was conceived. They were both working at a summer camp together and had a fling.

"My father left the country when the season ended with no idea that my mother was pregnant. Still not much is known about the following year that my mother spent in England, but she put me up for adoption before returning to Canada.”

Now, Louisa is focussing on building relationships with her newfound siblings. She said: “I’ve already had a girls’ weekend in New York, USA, with my sisters on my mother’s side and we are constantly in touch on a WhatsApp group.

“My brother on my dad’s side of the family even came to visit us in Antigua on his honeymoon, so we definitely have an ongoing family connection. When my birth mother died, they had her ashes put into pendants for necklaces.

"An extra one was made and no one ever knew why, but when I found my sisters, they gave the spare one to me so, even though I never got to meet my mother, I now carry part of her with me wherever I go.”

She added: “It made me cry when they gave it to me. I was very emotional. I had always wanted to find my mother and was so sad to hear that she had passed away before I could see her.

"With this necklace, in a way, we are reunited. For the first time in my life I feel a sense of closure. I now know who I am.”

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