I have ongoing low-level rage that my closest EU relative was my Austrian grandmother, and Austria because ohferfucksakeyoucrazyassedpatriarchalcountry only recognizes grandfathers.
Book ,'Our Mrs. Reynolds'
Delurking 1: Because we don't always check our e-mail.
My closest EU relatives are my paternal great grand parents. Grandpa was apparently born within a month of his parents' immigration. I never cared before, but now I kinda wish great grandpa Issac had put that trip off a few months.
My paternal great grandfather was born in Italy in 1881. Which would actually work, except that my father was born in 1928, and he needed to have been born after Jan. 1, 1948 in order for him to be able to inherit his Italian citizenship from my grandmother.
My Dad's side of the family has been in the U.S. since the 1720s so no such options for me!
3 of my great grandparents were born in Ireland and 1 in Germany. My mother went over and met some Irish relatives, but I haven't, yet.
The guy who's probably my biological father was British. I'm grumpy about that - so close! But there's no way to prove it now, he's dead, my mom's dead (and would never admit it anyway), and my legal father is probably dead but who knows where he is. Well, okay, he's probably in Pennsylvania, but we haven't spoken in 30 years. Man, my family is a Lifetime movie just waiting to be written.
My maternal grandparents were British, so I suppose there might be something there. But I've already got two citizenships so it's not exactly pressing.
I don't think any of my ancestors left their home countries with their original citizenship intact. Maybe the Italians: that would be my great grandmother, I don't know when exactly, but Mom was definitely born before 1948 so I will assume amyth's info applies.
I still think it would be hilarious if I could actually qualify for the DAR, just to get my last name on the roster. We have forebears who were in the right place at the right time but historically my people fled wars in general and ran away specifically to avoid being drafted and there is no evidence that those in the American Revolution era were any different. It's a heritage I am proud of, though, all things considered.
My maternal grandparents were British, so I suppose there might be something there. But I've already got two citizenships so it's not exactly pressing.
You'd get an ancestry visa good for 5 years as a Commonwealth citizen with at least one grandparent born in the UK.
Signed, has looked into this, in same situation.
I may qualify for Spanish citizenship under the reparations they started a few years back to descendants of people who were kicked out of the country during the Inquisition. I keep meaning to look into it.
For Reasons.