Sunday, June 14, 2026

Best of the Genea-Blogs -- Week of 7 to 13 June 2026

  Scores of genealogy and family history bloggers write hundreds of posts every week about their research, their families, and their interests. I appreciate each one of them and their efforts.


My criteria for "Best of ..." are pretty simple - I pick posts that advance knowledge about genealogy and family history, address current genealogy issues, provide personal family history, are funny or are poignant. I don't list posts destined for most daily blog prompts or meme submissions (but I do include summaries of them), or my own posts.

Here are my picks for great reads from the genealogy blogs for this past week:

*  Immigration & Passenger List Research Checklist: A Quick Guide to Finding Your Ancestor’s Journey by Diane Henriks on Know Who Wears the Genes in Your Family.

*  New Ancestry Features: One Disappeared and One Made Me Smile by Doris Kenney on A Tree With No Name.

*  What Is an NPE? Understanding Unexpected DNA Results by Courtney Eberhart on FamilyTreeDNA Blog.

*  Two New Rules for Genealogy and Some Random Thoughts and How to Improve any Prompt by James Tanner on Genealogy's Star.

*  Smarter AI Prompts for Genealogists by Natalie Webb on Family Tree Technology.

*  From Pointers to Proof by N.P. Maling on Sea Genes Family History & Genealogy Research.

*  Scream Silent, Scream Deep - Part I and Part II by David Shaw on Serengenity.

*  What are the Possibilities? by Lisa S. Gorrell on My Trails To the Past.

*  Full-Text Search + Research = A Win! by Ken McKinlay on Family Tree Knots.

*  THE SHOOTING AT LOWER HOUSE FARM Part 3 — The Name Hidden in the Records by Paul Chiddicks on Stories Behind the Records.

*  Reading Between the Lines: Part 3 ... What Language Shapes Our Judgment? by Jen Baldwin on Jen Baldwin.

*  The Amazing Women in Stephen Colbert’s Family Tree by Megan Smolenyak on Megan Smolenyak.

*  Content for Bite-Sized Family History Projects by Marian B. Wood on Climbing My Family Tree.

*  "How Far Back?" by Jacqi Stevens on A Family Tapestry.

*  A Sheriff’s Sale Record Solves a Genetic Genealogy Mystery by Melvin Collier on Roots Revealed.

*  One Prompt. One Hundred Posts. by Carole McCulloch on Essential Genealogy.

Here are pick posts by other geneabloggers this week: 


*  Friday’s Family History Finds [12 June 2026] by Linda Stufflebean on Empty Branches on the Family Tree.
*  GenStack [13 June 2026] by Robin Stewart on Genealogy Matters.

Readers are encouraged to go to the blogs listed above and read their articles, and add the blogs to your Favorites, Feedly, another RSS feed, or email if you like what you read. Please make a comment to them also - all bloggers appreciate feedback on what they write.

Did I miss a great genealogy blog post? Tell me! I currently am reading posts from over 900 genealogy bloggers using Feedly, but I still miss quite a few it seems.


Read past Best of the Genea-Blogs posts here.

             ==========================================================

Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver


Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post. Share it on X, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below. Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.  Please note that all comments are moderated and may not appear immediately.

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Life Memoir of Severt Oliver Leland (1878-1940) of Wisconsin, Montana and California

 I wrote an AI-assisted ABC biography for the family of my wife's paternal grandparents Severt Oliver and Amelia Anna (Natvig Leland in ABC Biography of Severt Oliver Leland (1878-1940) and Amelia Anna Brocke (1884-1975) Family of San Francisco, California  based on my genealogical research over 38 years.  

I wondered what Severt Oliver Leland might have told his grandchildren in a life memoir in early 1940.

(AI Google NotebookLM Infographic for Severt Oliver Leland's life memoir)

I requested Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 to   "Please write a life memoir for Severt Oliver Leland based on the attached biography, as he might tell his grandchildren in early 1940."

The AI Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 memoir (edited for accuracy and completeness) is: 


My Life as I Remember It

As told by Severt Oliver Leland to his grandchildren, early 1940


Well now, pull up a chair and sit close, children. Your grandmother thinks I talk too much about the old days, but you asked, and I'm not one to disappoint a curious grandchild. Besides, a man who has lived sixty-one years on this earth has earned the right to remember out loud.

I won't be around forever—none of us will—and someday you might want to know where you came from. So let me tell you about it, from the very beginning.

Where I Came From

I was born on August 2, 1878, in a small place called London—not the famous one in England, mind you, but a little farming community in Dane County, Wisconsin. When I tell people I was born in London, they look at me sideways until I explain myself. Your great-grandmother used to laugh every time I said it.

My father was Torger Sjursen Leland, and my mother was Anna Ellingsdatter Natvig. Both of them came over from Norway—from the old country—and built their life from nothing on the Wisconsin prairie. Father was born in 1850, though he was just a young man then, and Mother was born in 1853. They married in 1876 and started their family right away. I was the first one born—the eldest—which meant I got the most responsibility and, some days, the most trouble.

Now, I want you to understand something about your great-grandparents. They left everything they knew. They said goodbye to their families, their villages, their language, everything familiar—and they crossed an ocean to start fresh in America. I never forgot that. Every time things got hard for me, I thought about what they had done, and my own troubles seemed smaller.

Father was a farmer and a carpenter, a man of strong hands and few words. He could build you a barn or a cabinet with equal care, and everything he made was built to last. Mother was the warmth of the house—she sang Norwegian songs while she worked, and she could stretch a meal to feed twice as many people as expected. I carry them both with me still.

Growing Up in Deerfield

We eventually settled near Deerfield, in Dane County. I grew up with brothers and sisters all around me—Bertina, Theodore, Mabelle, Lewis, Arthur, Anna Ruth, and the little ones we lost too soon, Herman and Anna Amanda. A child didn't know much loneliness in our house, that is certain.

My childhood was not what you children know today. There were no moving pictures, no radio programs, no automobiles taking us places. Life was work, and work was life, and that was simply how things were. I was up before sunrise helping Father with the animals—feeding the pigs and cattle, milking cows, chopping wood. In summer we planted and tended crops. In fall we harvested. In winter we survived.

But don't feel sorry for me—I wouldn't trade those years for anything. I learned things no schoolroom could teach. I learned that hard work is its own reward. I learned that animals depend on you whether you feel like getting up or not. I learned to use my hands, following Father around as he framed walls, planed lumber, joined wood with mortise and tenon. He never wasted a word of instruction but you watched, and you learned, and eventually you could do it yourself.

School was a one-room building not far from our farm. We went when the season allowed it—winters mostly, when the farm didn't need us so desperately. All ages together in one room, the bigger ones helping the smaller ones with their letters and sums. I was a fair student. I could read and write well, and I had a head for numbers that would serve me later in business. Mother and Father insisted we learn English properly, even though Norwegian was the language of our home. "This is America," Father would say. "Speak it well."

Evenings in winter were my favorite time. The stove throwing heat, Mother knitting or mending, Father at the table with his pipe, we children doing our lessons or listening to the stories they told about Norway—the fjords, the villages, the relatives we would never meet. It seemed like another world entirely. In a way, I suppose it was.

By the time I was a young man, I knew I wanted something beyond the farm. Not that I was ungrateful—Lord knows I wasn't—but America was spreading westward and opportunity was out there for a man willing to find it. So around the turn of the century, I struck out on my own.

Finding My Way

I worked as a salesman for a time, boarding with different families, traveling from town to town in Wisconsin. The 1900 census found me lodging with the Thomas Nelson family in Deerfield. I was twenty-one years old, on my own, earning my way. A salesman learns to read people quickly—you learn who is trustworthy, who is not, when to talk and when to listen. Those lessons proved useful my whole life.

I made my way westward in the years that followed, as so many young men did in those days. The frontier was still open, and Montana called to those with ambition and energy. I wound up in Helena, the capital city of Lewis and Clark County—a proper Western city, full of miners and merchants and men making their fortunes.

And that is where I met your grandmother.

The Day Everything Changed

Now pay attention here, because this is the most important part of my story.

On February 12, 1904, I married Amelia Anna Brocke in Helena, Montana. I was twenty-five years old. She had just turned nineteen. And I want you to know—from that day forward, everything I did, every decision I made, every morning I got up and went to work—all of it was for her and for the family we were going to build together.

Your grandmother was born in Kendrick, Idaho, out on the frontier—a pioneer's daughter through and through. Her father, John Nicholas Brocke, was of German extraction and had brought his family west from Nebraska, and Amelia grew up among those high Idaho mountains and wide open spaces. She was practical and strong and sensible, the way frontier women are. She didn't complain and she didn't quit. In sixty-one years on this earth, she is the finest person I have known.

We were quite a pair, I suppose. A Norwegian farmer's son from Wisconsin and an Idaho pioneer's daughter. Two different worlds, finding each other in Montana. But that is America, isn't it? People come from everywhere and meet in the middle and make something new together.

Gardiner, Montana: Our First Home

After our wedding, Amelia and I settled in Gardiner, a small railroad town at the northern entrance to Yellowstone National Park in Park County. Now there is a place I will never forget as long as I live.

Imagine it—the Rocky Mountains rising up around you on every side, the Yellowstone River running cold and fast through the valley, the steam from the park's geysers visible on clear days above the ridgeline. President Theodore Roosevelt himself had come through Gardiner just the year before to dedicate the Roosevelt Arch at the park entrance. We arrived in a place that felt like the very edge of the wild world.

I opened a grocery store in Gardiner and made a decent go of it. A man who grew up on a farm knows his provisions, and a man who worked as a salesman knows how to deal with customers. Supplying railroad workers, park employees, and tourists passing through was good business, and I am proud to say we were never hungry and never in want during our Montana years.

Four of your aunts and uncles were born in Montana. Juanita came in June of 1904—she arrived so fast after our wedding that Amelia and I used to laugh about it—and Evelyn the following year. Harold was born in 1908, strong and healthy right from the start, and Lee arrived in 1911. We were building something real in that little mountain town.

Those were hard years in some ways. Montana winters are not Wisconsin winters—they are something altogether more serious. The cold could crack wood and freeze pipes and drop a grown man if he wasn't careful. But the community in Gardiner was tight. Neighbors helped neighbors. When someone's barn needed raising or someone's family needed food, everyone pitched in. I never felt that we were alone out there.

I lost my mother, Anna Natvig Leland, in 1911, back in Deerfield. She died not knowing how well things had turned out for her eldest son, or perhaps she did know—mothers always seem to know these things. I wish she could have seen her grandchildren.

California and the City Life

Around 1914, Amelia and I made the decision to move the family to San Francisco. It was not an easy choice. Gardiner had been good to us, and we had roots there. But the children were growing, and we wanted better schooling for them, more opportunity, a more settled life than a small frontier town could offer.

Our youngest, Frances—we called her Alda, or sometimes Toots—was born right there in San Francisco in February of 1915. She is the only true Californian among our children, and she lets the others know it.

San Francisco in those days was recovering from the great earthquake and fire of 1906—you could still see signs of the rebuilding all over the city when we arrived. It was magnificent and chaotic and full of life. The streetcars ran everywhere. The bay sparkled on clear days. Chinatown and the Italian neighborhoods and the Irish neighborhoods all rubbed shoulders together. After the solitude of Montana, the city felt like the whole world compressed into a few square miles.

I found work as a government clerk, and then eventually made my way into the Distributing Department of the United States Navy, where I work to this day. It is steady, honorable work, and it has kept this family clothed and fed through the Depression years when so many others suffered terribly. I am grateful every day for that steady paycheck.

We lived on Chattanooga Street in the early years, and later moved to 1287 37th Avenue, where your grandmother and I have lived now for many years. We own that house—I want you to know that. An immigrant's son, born in a Wisconsin farmhouse, owns his own home in San Francisco. If that does not tell you something about this country, nothing will.

The War and the Years Between

In September of 1918, I registered for the draft. I was forty years old by then—not exactly a young soldier—and I did not have to serve overseas. The war ended in November of that year. I won't pretend I wasn't relieved. I had five children and a wife who needed me, and I had already done my soldiering against the everyday battles of making a living.

The twenties were good years. All five children were growing up strong and healthy. Juanita and Evelyn became fine young women. Harold and Lee were becoming men. Little Alda kept us all laughing. Amelia ran that household like a general commands an army—organized, efficient, never flustered. I don't know how she managed it, frankly. Seven people plus relatives passing through, and she kept everyone fed, clothed, and pointed in the right direction.

Then came the Depression. I will not dwell on it too long—you have heard enough about the Depression from everyone of my generation—but I want you to know it was real and it was hard. Men I knew lost their jobs, their savings, their homes. We were luckier than most because of my government position. We tightened our belts considerably. Your grandmother was a genius at making a dollar stretch. We did not go hungry, and we did not lose the house. I count that among the things I am most proud of.

My Father's Last Years

On March 18, 1933, my father Torger Leland passed away here in San Francisco, at the age of eighty-two. He had come to live near us in his final years, which was a blessing. That old Norwegian farmer who had crossed an ocean to build something in America—he spent his last years in California, seeing his grandchildren, sitting in the sun, far from the cold Wisconsin winters he had endured for so long.

I sat with him near the end and thought about how much his life had contained—Norway, immigration, Wisconsin frontier, watching his children scatter across a continent. He was a quiet man who showed love through work rather than words, but in those last days I told him plainly what he had given me: the work ethic, the honesty, the belief that a man who works hard and deals fairly will be alright in the end. I believe he heard me. I hope he did.

My Children

Now let me tell you about your aunts and uncles, because they are the best proof that Amelia and I did something right.

Juanita—your Aunt Juanita—is thirty-five now and works as a stenographer for a hardware company right here in the city. She is sharp as a tack, that one, always has been. She has her mother's practical nature and her father's stubbornness, which I say with affection.

Evelyn married a good man, Sigmond Virag, back in 1926 in San Francisco. They have two children, and she has made a fine life for herself. She takes after her grandmother Natvig in her temperament—steady and warm.

Harold is out in the world finding his own way. He married Frances Provenzano down in San Jose back in 1928, and they have two children. Harold has my height and, Amelia would tell you, my stubbornness.

Leo—we call him Lee—married a lovely girl, Edna Schaffner, in 1937, right here in San Francisco. No children yet. Leo is perhaps the most like me in temperament—quiet, observant, takes his time before speaking. A good quality in a man, though his mother would argue he could speak up more often.

Alda—our youngest, our California girl—is twenty-five now and finding her footing. She has more energy than the rest of them combined, which is saying something. She married Dino Iacopetti in 1935 and they have a young girl.

Five grandchildren between them so far, and I expect more to come. Five grandchildren for a Norwegian farmer's boy from London, Wisconsin. When I count them up, I feel like the richest man alive.

What I Have Learned

You asked me to tell you my story, and I have. But let me leave you with a few things I believe to be true, gathered across sixty-one years of living.

Work is not a punishment. I have worked hard every day of my life—on the farm, in the store, at my government desk—and I have never regretted a day of honest labor. Work gives a man purpose. It gives him dignity. Do not be afraid of it.

Choose your partner with great care. I have been married to your grandmother for thirty-six years, and she is the best decision I ever made. The right partner will lift you up on the hard days and keep you honest on the easy ones. I would not have built any of this without her.

Move toward opportunity, not away from fear. I left Wisconsin not because I was running from something, but because I was running toward something. Montana, then California—each move was a step toward a better life. America rewards the brave and the willing.

Family is what you build, not just what you are born into. My parents gave me a foundation. But this family—your grandmother, your aunts and uncles, you children—this I helped build board by board, year by year. Nothing I have ever made with my hands means as much to me.

The country is bigger than its troubles. We have lived through a World War, a great epidemic, a financial crash that brought the whole nation to its knees, and we are still here. America has always found its way through, and I believe it will again, whatever comes next.

Here Near the End

I am sixty-one years old as I tell you this, sitting in my house on 37th Avenue in San Francisco. From the window I can see the neighborhood your grandmother and I have called home for many years now. It is not a grand house—it is not a mansion or a palace—but it is ours, paid for by honest work, filled with the memories of raising a family.

I think sometimes about that farm boy in London, getting up before sunrise to milk cows in the Wisconsin cold. I think about the young salesman boarding with strangers and dreaming of something bigger. I think about the merchant in Gardiner watching elk move through the mountain meadow outside his store window. I think about the clerk taking the streetcar to work in San Francisco, watching this beautiful, impossible city wake up in the morning fog.

All of those men are me. All of those lives are the same life.

I came from Norway—not me personally, but in my blood, in my bones, in the way I approach work and weather and hardship. I grew up American, right down to my core. I married a pioneer's daughter and built a family in three different states. I watched my children grow into fine adults and my grandchildren arrive into a world that I hope will be good to them.

It has been a good life, children. More than I deserved, perhaps. Less than I sometimes wanted. About right, on balance. One more thing – take good care of your grandmother for me if I pass away.

Now go find your grandmother. She has been remarkably patient waiting for you to come back in for supper, and we both know she has been listening from the kitchen doorway this entire time.

Haven't you, Amelia?

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Severt Oliver Leland
February 1940
San Francisco, California

===========================

The Video Overview of Severt Oliver Leland's life memoir, created by the Google NotebookLM AI tool, is:      

I edited the Claude memoir text to correct minor inconsistencies and errors. Every large language model (LLM) AI tool writes descriptive text much better than I can write. The AI tools are very perceptive, insightful and inspiring, creating engaging text in seconds, including local and national historical events and social history detail when requested.

This is historical fiction, based on my own genealogical research and family records. It is what Severt Oliver Leland might have told his grandchildren in 1940.  

==============================================

Links to my blog posts about using Artificial Intelligence are on my Randy's AI and Genealogy page. Links to AI information and articles about Artificial Intelligence in Genealogy by other genealogists are on my AI and Genealogy Compendium page.

Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

The URL for this post is: https://www.geneamusings.com/2026/06/life-memoir-of-severt-oliver-leland.html

Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post. Share it on X, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below. Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com. Please note that all comments are moderated, and may not appear immediately.

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Betty and Fred’s Story: Building a Life Together -- Two Letters, May 1944

 Here is the latest chapter in the story of the married life and times of my parents, Fred and Betty (Carringer) Seaver, who married in July 1942. The background information and the list of chapters of their life together are listed at the end of this post.  This is historical fiction with real people and real events, and is how it might have been.

And now we are up to May 1944, two years plus into World War II, and change is coming.


                               (AI NotebookLM Infographic - Betty and Fred's Story, May 1944)

1)  Based on the biographies and the earlier stories, I asked Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 to tell another story - what happened next (I offered some suggestions!)?  Here is the next story (edited for more detail and accuracy):  


Betty and Fred’s Story: Building a Life Together

 – The Letters, May 1944


Betty Writes to Leominster

On a Tuesday evening in the first week of May, while Fred worked a late shift and Randy slept, Betty sat at the secretary desk and wrote to Bessie Seaver and Gerry, Fred's mother and sister in Leominster, Massachusetts.

She had been meaning to write for a month. She finally had the evening for it.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

May 7, 1944

Dear Bessie and Gerry,

I am sorry it has been too long since my last letter — the months have a way of moving faster than I expect them to, especially now with Randy demanding his share of every day, which is a considerable share.

I want to tell you about him, because I know you are too far away and that must be hard, and words are the best I can do until the distance is shorter.

Randy is seven months old now and is, I say without any bias whatsoever, the most interesting person I have ever met. He sits up on his own now and surveys the world from this new height with an expression of profound satisfaction. He has two teeth coming in on the bottom, which he is handling with more dignity than I expected though there are moments. He reaches for everything within range and a good deal outside of it. He has Fred's forehead and, I'm told, Fred's way of concentrating on things — that particular stillness that comes over Fred when he's working something out. You will recognize it when you see it.

He has started to know faces now, really know them — when Fred comes home from work and comes through the door, Randy's whole body responds before Fred has said a word. I have seen Fred stand in the doorway for an extra moment just to have that — just to be known like that. I don't blame him.

Fred is well and working hard. The work at Rohr is demanding but he is very good at it and I think takes real satisfaction in it, though he doesn't always say so directly. You know how he is about saying so. He comes home tired and has dinner and sits with Randy for an hour before bed, and I think that hour is what the day is organized around for him. For both of them.

I will tell you plainly that the draft question is on our minds. Fred doesn't talk about it constantly, which is his way, but I know he thinks about it. We are hoping the Rohr deferment holds, but we are also being realistic. If things change, Randy and I will go to my parents on Fern Street, which is a good plan and a comfort to have settled. Please don't worry about us — we are well-situated and well-loved here, and whatever comes we will manage.

The weather is beautiful, as it almost always is. San Diego in May is the world trying to show off. I wish you could see it. I wish, more than that, that you could see Randy — hold him, hear him, watch him study a thing with that Seaver look. I am hoping that before too long the distance will close, one way or another.

Give our love to everyone there. Tell Gerry that Randy already has more hair than Fred, which Fred disputes and Randy cannot yet confirm or deny.

All our love, Betty, Fred, and Randy

                                             ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

She addressed the envelope carefully, pressed it closed, set it on the corner of the desk to mail in the morning.

Then she sat for a moment in the quiet house, her son breathing down the hall, the evening settling around her, and felt the full weight and lightness of the life she was living.

She picked up her sketchbook. She drew Randy from memory — the studying look, the reaching arm — and dated it in the corner.

May 7, 1944.

She would keep it. He would want to know, someday, what he had looked like when he was new.

                                      ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The Letter from Ed

The letter arrived on a Friday in the third week of May, postmarked Portland, Oregon. Fred recognized his brother's handwriting on the envelope — Ed's hand, precise and slightly compressed, the hand of an engineer — and opened it at the kitchen table after dinner while Betty put Randy to bed.

He read it twice before Betty came back.

"Betty," he said, when she appeared in the doorway.

Something in his voice brought her fully into the room. She sat across from him. "What is it? Is something wrong?"

"No," Fred said. "No — read this."

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

May 15, 1944

Dear Fred and Betty,

I hope this finds you all well and that my nephew is growing at a satisfactory rate. Janet says to send her love and Peter has recently learned to run, which I mention as a warning in case you are unaware of what is coming in a year or so with Randy.

I am writing with news. I have my orders and my ship, and I am allowed to tell you that I will be in San Diego in June, which means — if the timing works and I believe it will — that we will see each other.

I am to be the captain of LCI(G)-728. You will know what that means better than most. She is a gunboat — a Landing Craft Infantry, gunboat variant — and she is currently being fitted out here in Portland. We sail down the coast in June and will be in San Diego for a period before our deployment to the Pacific Fleet, which I expect will be in August. I cannot tell you more than that, as I expect you will understand.

I went to OCS up in Maine last year, as Mother will have told you, and they gave me my Lieutenant JG commission in November. I will confess that captaining an LCI was not what I imagined when I enlisted, but I have learned to love the boat. She is small and she is fast and her crew is as good as any I could ask for. We will do our job.

Now — Janet and Peter are coming from Leominster. I have arranged it. I know it is a distance and Janet is brave about these things in a way that makes me feel I should be braver, but she wants to come and Peter should see his father before I go, and they will be in San Diego for the weeks I am there. I have written to Aunt Emily — I hope you don't mind, but I knew they'd want to know and the Chamberlains have said Janet and Peter and I can stay with them in Kensington when I am not on the ship. Aunt Emily wrote back within the week, which should surprise no one.

Fred — I want to spend time with you while I am there. Real time. I know what is likely coming for you, draft-board-wise, and I know you know it too, and I am not going to say anything more about that in a letter. But I want to see you and Betty and my nephew before I go. I want to sit at a table with you and eat something good and talk.

Janet cannot wait to meet Betty. She has read all of Betty's letters and feels she already knows her, which I believe is the correct response to Betty's letters.

I have told Peter that Randy cannot yet throw a baseball. He is taking a long view.

More details as I have them. The ship arrives San Diego in June — I will write again when I have exact dates.

Your brother, Ed

P.S. — LCI(G)-728. Look her up if you can find anything. She is a fine boat, Fred. She is a fine boat.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Betty read the letter in full, then set it on the table and looked at Fred.

Fred was looking at the letter with an expression she had learned to read — the working-it-through expression, the one that meant he was sorting a thing into its components and examining each one.

"Ed," she said.

"Ed," Fred said.

She understood everything that was in that single syllable — the pride, the worry, the complexity of a younger brother in uniform while the older brother was at a materials desk in Chula Vista, the relief that Ed was alive and commissioned and coming here, the dread underneath the relief that Pacific Fleet, August carried with it.

"He sounds like himself," Betty said, choosing this first. "He sounds like Ed."

"He does," Fred said. He almost smiled. "She is a fine boat, Fred."

"Janet's coming," Betty said. "I'll finally meet her."

"You'll love her," Fred said. "She's — she's right for Ed. She's sturdy, underneath. Like Ed is."

"Peter and Randy," Betty said, looking at the letter again. "They can meet each other."

"Peter can run," Fred said. "Randy can sit up. I'm sure they'll find common ground."

Betty laughed — a real laugh, full and sudden — and some of the weight in the room shifted.

Fred picked up the letter again and read the postscript once more.

She is a fine boat, Fred. She is a fine boat.

He set it down. He looked at Betty.

"He's going to the Pacific," he said. Just saying it plainly.

"I know," Betty said.

"In August."

"I know." She reached across the table and took his hand. "He'll come home, Fred."

Fred looked at their joined hands.

"Yes," he said. "He will."

He said it the way you say the things you have decided to believe, firmly and without qualification, because some decisions, once made, need to be held without wobbling.

The evening settled around them. Down the hall, Randy slept in his crib — growing, dreaming, unaware of brothers and gunboats and the Pacific Ocean and the enormous, turning world.

He would learn all of it, in time.

For now he slept, and his parents sat at the kitchen table in the last of the May evening light, reading and rereading the letter from Portland, Oregon, holding hands across the table, keeping each other steady.


To be continued...

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

2) Here is the Google NotebookLM Video Overview about Betty, Fred and Randy's life in February to May 1944:    

 3) This story is historical fiction based on real people -- my parents and me -- and a real event in a real place. I don't know the full story of these events -- but this is how it might have been. I hope that it was at least this good! Claude is such a good story writer! I added some details and corrected some errors in Claude's initial version.

Stay tuned for the next chapter in this family story.

====================================

The AI-assisted ABC Biography of my mother, Betty Virginia (Carringer) Seaver, is in ABC Biography of #3 Betty Virginia (Carringer) Seaver (1919-2002) of San Diego, California. I also  wrote Betty's Story: The First-Year Art Teacher about the start of her teaching career.

The AI-assisted ABC Biography of my father, Frederick Walton Seaver, is in ABC Biography of #2 Frederick Walton Seaver Jr. (1911-1983) of Massachusetts and San Diego, California.  I also wrote Fred's Story: The Three-Day Cross-Country Escape  and Fred's Story: "I Need A Girl" about him coming to San Diego, and wanting a girlfriend.

Here are the previous chapters in this story:

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Links to my blog posts about using Artificial Intelligence are on my Randy's AI and Genealogy page. Links to AI information and articles about Artificial Intelligence in Genealogy by other genealogists are on my AI and Genealogy Compendium page.

Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver


Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post.  Share it on Twitter, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below.  Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.  Please note that all comments are moderated, and may not appear immediately.

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Saturday, June 13, 2026

Saturday Night Genealogy Fun -- What Artifacts Did You Find In An Ancestor's Closet/Attic/Garage?

 Calling all Genea-Musings Fans: 

 It's Saturday Night again - 

time for some more Genealogy Fun!!



Here is your assignment if you choose to play along (cue the Mission Impossible music, please!):


1)  Were you lucky enough to receive or find artifacts from your ancestors (parents, grandparents, outhers) as you pursued your genealogy research?  

2)  Describe one or more of the artifacts you found or received and where you obtained them?

3)  Share your information about your ancestral artifacts in your own blog post, writing a comment on this blog post, or put it in a Substack post, Facebook Note, or some other social media system.  Please leave a comment on this post so others can find it.

Thank you to Marian B. Wood for this SNGF suggestion.

Here's mine:

When I started doing genealogy research in 1988, my mother, Betty (Carringer) Seaver, gave me boxes of books and papers and pictures to sort through – the remnants of four generations of her family. Over the years, she discovered more records in her house and gave them to me. When she died in January 2002, I did not expect to find much more. So I was surprised by all the Treasures in the Closet.

A little background. My great-grandparents, Austin and Della (Smith) Carringer came to San Diego on their honeymoon in 1887 and settled in National City. In 1895, they built a one story house with a widow’s walk at the corner of 30th Street and Hawthorn Street in what is now the Brooklyn Heights section of San Diego, just east of Balboa Park. My grandfather, Lyle Carringer, who was an only child born in 1891, married in 1918 to Emily Auble, also an only child, and built a house on the family property. My mother was born in 1919, and was also an only child. Emily’s widowed mother lived with Lyle and Emily, and Della’s widowed mother lived with Austin and Della. In 1927, Austin put a second story flat on the original house and moved it to the middle of the block. Austin and Della died in the mid-1940’s, and the widowed mothers died in 1931 and 1952.

My mother married Fred Seaver in 1942, and started a family. Lyle and Emily moved into the original house in the downstairs flat, and my parents moved into the upstairs flat. This was my childhood home at 2119 30th Street in San Diego. In 1950, Lyle and Emily Carringer bought a small lot on Point Loma overlooking San Diego Bay, built a house on the lot, and moved there. They died in the mid-1970’s, and my parents moved to the Point Loma house in 1978. They then sold the 30th Street properties.

Now – the Treasures. While cleaning out the Point Loma house to prepare it for sale, I found:
  • An old brown briefcase in the back of the bedroom closet – it contained the handwritten family wills, the deeds for all of the houses, rent books and records for 40 years, and WW I military records for my grandfather, Lyle Carringer.
  • Three boxes of financial records in the bedroom closet – including my parents tax returns from 1944 on, and year-by-year envelopes for my parents and grandparents from 1971 on.
  • In another closet was my mother’s baby book, a portfolio of her school, concert and art work, her wedding album, her high school and college yearbooks, her schoolteacher credentials and work history, and my father’s WW II military records.
  • The family room book case held many books from the 1860’s and 1870’s, and some of them were Austin Carringer’s school books. An account book of Austin’s father, David Jackson Carringer, dated to 1874 in Caribou, Colorado, was found, but many pages were covered by pasted newspaper articles with later dates. Five account books of Lyle Carringer, dating from 1919 to about 1950 (not complete) were found, revealing details about their lives – income, expenses, family events, current events, etc. I have gleaned quite a few genealogical nuggets about the extended family from these books. As I read them, I shared their heartbreak when their parents died, and their joy when their daughter married and had children.
  • In the second bedroom closet, I found a spoon holder with six silver spoons. A note was attached to the back of the spoon holder giving the provenance of the spoons – four were from Della Carringer’s grandmother and two were from Emily Carringer’s great-aunt.
  • Perhaps the most intriguing find was the cache of 8 mm movie films. Lyle Carringer was an inveterate photographer, and I found about 40 movies dating to the early 1940’s and extending into the late 1950’s, including a movie of my parents wedding, and my brothers and I as children. I also found the 10 movies that my father shot in the 1965 to 1980 time frame, including my own wedding. I converted these films to digital media and have posted some of them on my YouTube channel.
Obviously, I was very happy to find all of these Treasures, and they really helped me deal with my grief for my mother’s passing. My overwhelming feeling is one of thankfulness for each member of this family – for their love in nurturing their children, for their hard work in building houses and living responsible lives, for their thrift and financial wisdom in navigating the 20th century, and for the immense good luck that they all kept most of their “household stuff.”

                          =============================================


Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post.  Share it on X, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below.  Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com. Note that all comments are moderated, and may not appear immediately.

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Compendium of Family Biographies, Stories and Videos For My Wife's Schaffner, Paul, McKnew and Whittle Lines

 My wife Linda Joan (Leland) Seaver has an interesting ancestry but there were only a few family stories handed down by her grandparents and parents over the years.  She is the daughter of Leo Severt Leland (1911-2002) and Edna May Schaffner (1913-1979) and was born and educated in San Francisco, California, and became an elementary school teacher.  In 1967, she moved to the San Diego, California area, and married Randall J. Seaver in 1970.

Over decades, I have done genealogical research for her ancestry, and have found quite a bit of information about her ancestral families.  Over the past year, I have written and published genealogical sketches for each couple in her ancestry back through the 2nd great-grandparents (with the exception of her parents). From the genealogical sketches have come AI-assisted biographies based solely on the sketches, and from the biographies have come AI-assisted ancestor life memoirs and stories for each couple. Finally, I have used Google NotebookLM to create infographics, video overviews and slide decks for the biographies and many of the stories.  

The purpose of this blog post is to collect the information for each family line in one compendium for Linda's Schaffner-related ancestral families:

1)  Parents, Leo Severt Leland (1911-2002) and Edna May (Schaffner) Leland (1913-1979):

  • Genealogical Sketch:  pending
2)  Grandparents Paul Frederick Schaffner (1879-1934) and Edna Catherine McKnew (1884-1974):
3)  Great-grandparents Herman Schaffner (1851-1921) and Mary Ann Paul (1854-1908):
4)  Great-grandparents Elijah Pickrell McKnew (1836-1912) and Jane Whittle (1847-1921):

5)  2nd Great-grandparents Frederick Schaffner (1828-1899) and Susanna Hoffman (1830-1855):

6)  2nd Great-grandparents John Charles Paul (1823-1879) and Maria T. Beamish (1827-1909):

7)  2nd Great-grandparents  Jeremiah McKnew (1804-????) and Frances Allethia Pickrell (1810-1845):

8)  2nd Great-grandparents  Alexander Whittle (1818-1853) and Rachel Morley (1818-1861):


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First Updated:  13 June 2026
Last Updated:  13 June 2026

                               ==============================================

Links to my blog posts about using Artificial Intelligence are on my Randy's AI and Genealogy page. Links to AI information and articles about Artificial Intelligence in Genealogy by other genealogists are on my AI and Genealogy Compendium page.


Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post.  Share it on X, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below.  Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com. Note that all comments are moderated, and may not appear immediately.

Subscribe to receive a free daily email from Genea-Musings using www.Blogtrottr.com.