I wondered if the FREE AI tools could provide me with information about a teenage boy's life in Roxbury, Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1686. My 7th great-grandfather, Joseph Seaver (1672-1754) was age 14 in 1686. The ABC Biography for Joseph Seaver is in ABC Biography of Joseph Seaver (1672-1754) of Massachusetts.
My Prompt for Anthropic Claude Sonnet 5 Medium was: "Please describe the life of 14-year-old Joseph Seaver in Roxbury, Massachusetts Bay in 1686, based on the attached biography. Consider family, work, education, community activities, entertainment, fun?"
Here is the Anthropic Claude Sonnet 5 response:
A Puritan Boy in Roxbury, Massachusetts Bay in
1686
In 1686, Joseph Seaver was fourteen years old — right in the thick of Puritan adolescence, old enough to do a full day's work but still years from having his own household. Here's what his boyhood in Roxbury likely looked like, drawing on what's documented about his family and what's known about Roxbury and Puritan New England life in that era.
Family Life
Joseph was growing up in a household anchored by his father Shubael, a wheelwright — a trade that meant the family's dooryard was probably cluttered with wheel stock, iron tires, spokes, and half-finished wagon wheels, and that neighbors and farmers from across Roxbury and nearby towns would have been in and out of the yard needing repairs. This gave Joseph early exposure to a skilled trade even though he'd eventually choose farming.
By 1686, the household included:
His mother, Hannah, who kept the family fed and clothed
Joseph himself (14)
His sister Hannah (about 12)
Abigail (about 9)
Shubael Jr. (about 7)
Thankful, still a toddler (about 2)
His older brother Robert, born 1670, may or may not have still been alive or in the household at this point — he vanishes from the records early, so it's possible Joseph was already functioning as the eldest son in practice. If so, that would have meant extra responsibility fell on him: assisting his father, minding younger siblings, and being groomed as the one who'd eventually inherit the largest share of the estate (which, decades later, he did).
His grandfather Robert Seaver, one of the town's early settlers who'd arrived in 1634, had died in 1683 — just three years earlier — so Joseph would have grown up hearing firsthand stories from him about the founding generation, and would have been old enough at his grandfather's death to remember him and understand what his passing meant for the family's standing in Roxbury.
Education
Massachusetts law (the 1647 "Old Deluder Satan" Act) required towns of fifty or more households to maintain a school, and Roxbury — one of the older, more established towns in the colony — had a grammar school going back to the 1640s, endowed in part by the town's minister John Eliot. Boys like Joseph would have attended a "dame school" for basic reading in early childhood, then moved to the town school for reading, writing, and arithmetic, taught heavily through religious material — the New England Primer and the Bible were the core texts. By 14, most boys destined for farming or a trade (rather than Harvard and the ministry) would have already finished their formal schooling and been working full-time, so Joseph's education by this point was probably essentially complete: functional literacy, basic ciphering, and a thorough grounding in Scripture and catechism.
Work
At 14, Joseph was fully integrated into the household economy. Depending on the season, his days would have included:
Farm labor — Roxbury families kept livestock and worked fields even if farming wasn't the primary trade, so there would have been planting, haying, harvesting corn, tending animals, mending fences, and hauling wood
Assisting his father in the wheelwright's shop — fetching materials, holding pieces steady, learning to use tools, possibly starting to learn the trade itself
Errands and chores tied to the family's place in town — running messages, tending younger siblings, helping his mother Hannah with heavier household tasks
Boys this age were considered nearly adult laborers. There was no real concept of adolescence as a protected period — a 14-year-old was expected to put in a man's day of work whenever the season demanded it.
Community
Roxbury in the 1680s was a well-established town, not a frontier settlement — this is part of what makes Joseph's later decision to leave for Framingham in 1697 notable; he was leaving relative security for raw frontier land. As a boy, Joseph would have known his neighbors intimately in the way small Puritan towns worked: attendance at the meetinghouse every Sabbath (twice — morning and afternoon services, each running two hours or more) was mandatory, and it was as much a social institution as a religious one. Seating in the meetinghouse was assigned by rank and status, so Joseph would have had a very concrete, visible sense of where the Seaver family stood in Roxbury's social order.
Town meetings, militia training days, and market days would have brought the community together, and a boy of 14 would have been present at the edges of these events, watching the men conduct town business and increasingly expected to understand it, since he'd be a voting town member himself within a decade.
Entertainment and Fun
Puritan Roxbury didn't sanction idle amusement, but boys still found ways to be boys. Likely activities included:
Fishing and hunting small game in the woods and streams around Roxbury, which was still fairly rural
Swimming in warmer months
Games with balls, hoops, and marbles — town records and probate inventories from the period show these existed even in strict Puritan households
Sledding and skating in winter
Wrestling and informal contests of strength among boys his age
Training day (militia muster) itself was part spectacle, part social event, with boys watching the men drill and dreaming of the day they'd carry a musket themselves
Muster days, in particular, doubled as one of the few sanctioned "holidays" in the Puritan calendar, complete with food, drink for the men, and a general town gathering — probably one of the more exciting fixed points in a Roxbury boy's year.
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3) The Google NotebookLM Video Overview of this post is below.
4) As genealogists, we can usually find the 17th to 19th century town records, and the later census and civil records, for New England families, and we may find occupation, military, land and probate records. In addition, there are books and websites about the daily lives of people in those times. The AI tools have been pre-trained on historical events, social history, geography, literature and other disciplines so they can provide information for questions like this one, and by 2025 they have the ability to search the Internet.
5) After I read these types of social history summaries, I wish that I could be a time traveler for one day to visit the Seaver family in Massachusetts Bayand witness their daily lives. I'm glad that the general lifestyles and occupations are known from historical records and witness accounts.
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