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Law change allowed adoptee, siblings to connect

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The older children were being cared for by grandparents, and the two youngest children were 2 and 5 years old, too young to realize their mother was pregnant. And her mother apparently was able to hide her pregnancy, Machin said.

This scenario, she said, comes from piecing the story together with help from her older brother and sister.

“They say she was an absolutely lovely woman and a great mom and that they can’t even fathom the idea that she would give up a child,” Machin said. “That was the story we surmised since we found each other. There are no written records. If there was any written contact, knowing my adoptive mother, she would have seen to it that it was burned.”

So at 28, Machin’s mother gave birth to her seventh child at Mt. Sinai Hospital in Chicago on Feb. 13, 1951 and named her Elizabeth Ann. Three days later, the baby became the daughter of a childless couple from Arlington Heights in a private adoption. They renamed her Laurel Eileen – though Machin prefers to be called Laura.

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Machin did not spend her life searching for birth parents. It was just the fitting-in part that was missing, she said.

“It really came to light when I had my first child,” she said. “As I looked at him, I realized that this is the first person I’ve ever known who is blood-related to me. ... It feels different than anything else.”

It took the two genealogists all of two days to find her older siblings were Mary Closson of Michigan and Gregory Gitchell of Virginia and a half-sister Deedee from her mother’s first husband who also lived in Michigan. Both her birth parents were dead.

She contacted the three of them by letter, explained her search and sent a photo montage of her family, including her current husband and two sons by a previous marriage.

Her brother sent an email saying he would talk to his sisters and get in touch. And then her sister sent an email. She wanted to see the document with her mother’s name on it. Machin sent it – and she recognized the signature of Mary Watson.


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