Thursday, May 7, 2026

Ask AI: Edward Hildreth Courts and Marries Sophia Newton in 1852 in Northborough, Massachusetts

 I wondered if the FREE AI tools could provide me with a story about the courtship and marriage of my 2nd great-grandparents, Edward Hildreth and Sophia Newton, who married in 1852 in Northborough, Massachusetts.

1)  I chose to use the responses from free Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 today.  

I uploaded a PDF of ABC Biography of #18 Edward Hildreth (1831-1899) of Massachusetts to provide information about Edward and Sophia and their life together to the AI Tool.

(Google NoteobookLM Infographic - Courtship and Marriage of Edward Hildreth and Sophia Newton)

My Prompt was:  "Please create a family story of the courtship and marriage of Edward Hildreth and Sophia Newton in 1852 in Northborough, Massachusetts."

2)  The free Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 AI tool responded with: 

A Christmas Wedding: Edward and Sophia's Story, 1852

Spring 1852 - The Meeting

The spring of 1852 found Edward Hildreth settling into life in Northborough, Massachusetts, a young man of twenty-one making his way in the world. He had left behind his childhood home in Townsend and his clerking position in Berlin to learn the trade of combmaking in Worcester County, where the industry was thriving. The work was exacting -- shaping horn and ivory into the combs that every household needed -- but Edward had steady hands and a quick mind for the craft.

Edward was boarding with his brother Milo's family, a common arrangement for young unmarried men of the era. Living with family provided not just room and board but also the respectability and connection to the community that a young tradesman needed to establish himself. Milo's household would have given Edward a home base as he learned his trade and began to build his future.

Northborough, with its mix of farms and small manufactories, was a close-knit community where everyone knew their neighbors' business. It was the kind of place where a newcomer like Edward would be noticed, assessed, and -- if he proved himself hardworking and respectable -- welcomed.

It was likely at church or perhaps at a community gathering that Edward first noticed Sophia Newton. She was just seventeen, with the fresh beauty of youth, living with her widowed mother, a seamstress, on the modest income they managed together. Sophia (Buck) Newton, her twice-widowed mother, had been left to raise her daughter alone, and at fifty-five, she kept a watchful eye on the young men who showed interest in her girl.

Edward would have been cautious in his approach. A young tradesman courting in 1852 needed to demonstrate not just affection but prospects -- the ability to provide for a wife and future family. His position as a combmaker, while not making him wealthy, showed he had learned a useful trade and could earn a steady living.

Summer 1852 -- The Courtship

As spring gave way to summer, Edward found reasons to be where Sophia might be. Perhaps he timed his walks to coincide with her errands to the dry goods store. Maybe he attended the same church services, lingering afterward in the hope of a few words of conversation. In an era of strict propriety, courtship required patience and creativity.

The formal courtship likely began with Edward calling at the Newton home, presenting himself to Mrs. Newton with the respect due a concerned mother. Sitting in the parlor under her watchful gaze, Edward and Sophia would have conversed about safe topics -- the weather, local news, mutual acquaintances -- while stealing glances that spoke volumes more than their careful words.

Mrs. Newton, having survived the loss of two husbands, raising four children, and the challenges of widowhood, would have scrutinized this young combmaker closely. Was he steady in his work? Did he drink to excess? Was he known for honesty and fair dealing? The small-town network of Northborough would have provided answers to these questions, and Edward must have passed the test, for the courtship continued through the warm months.

As summer progressed, the couple would have enjoyed the simple pleasures available to young people of their time. Chaperoned walks after church, perhaps picnics with other young couples, and always those precious moments of conversation that allowed two souls to discover their compatibility. Edward, having left his own family behind in Townsend as his parents aged, may have found comfort in the warm household Sophia shared with her mother. For Sophia, Edward represented not just romance but the promise of a home of her own, the transition from daughter to wife that marked a young woman's passage to adulthood.

Fall 1852 -- The Engagement

By autumn, Edward's intentions were clear. He would have approached Mrs. Newton formally to ask for Sophia's hand in marriage. This was no small request -- he was asking to take her only daughter, her companion and helper, into his own household. But Mrs. Newton, practical woman that she must have been, would have recognized that Sophia, now age 18, needed a husband to secure her future, and Edward seemed a solid choice.

The engagement would have been announced to family and friends, setting off a flurry of preparation. Sophia and her mother would have begun assembling her trousseau -- the linens, clothing, and household goods a bride brought to her marriage. Every stitch in the quilts and hemmed sheets represented hours of work and mother-daughter conversation about the life Sophia was about to begin.

Edward, meanwhile, would have worked to ensure he could provide for a wife. As a combmaker, he needed to prove his reliability and skill, perhaps saving every penny he could toward establishing a household. The practical considerations of marriage -- where they would live, how they would manage their finances -- would have occupied much of their conversation during this period.

During these months of preparation, mother and daughter shared many quiet moments together, and Mrs. Newton knew she needed to prepare Sophia for the realities of married life. One evening, as they worked together on the wedding linens, the older woman set aside her needle and looked at her daughter with the wisdom of her own years of marriage and widowhood.

"Marriage is not always easy, my dear girl," she said gently. "There will be times when money is tight, when you'll need to make a little stretch far. You'll have to manage a household on whatever Edward can provide, and some months will be harder than others." She paused, choosing her words carefully.

In the quiet of your bedchamber, remember that your greatest virtue lies in a patient and submissive spirit,” she said, “for it is your sacred duty to yield to your husband’s desires with modesty and grace. Do not seek your own pleasure, but rather find contentment in providing him a peaceful refuge and in the noble hope of bringing children into a Christian home. Above all, endure any hardships with silent dignity, trusting that your obedience strengthens the holy bond of marriage and fulfills your role as a true woman of New England.”

"And motherhood -- when it comes, as I pray it will -- brings its own trials. The birthing bed is a place of both joy and danger, and raising children tests you in ways you cannot yet imagine."

Sophia's eyes grew serious as she listened, but her mother reached across and took her hand. "But you have been raised to be strong, and Edward seems a steady man. You'll face these challenges together, and that makes all the difference. The hardships of life are bearable when you have a good partner beside you. Remember that on the difficult days -- and there will be difficult days -- but remember too that there will be joys that make it all worthwhile."

Christmas 1852 - The Wedding

As December arrived and the Christmas season approached, the young couple prepared for their wedding day. December 25th -- Christmas Day itself -- was an unusual but not unheard-of choice for a wedding. Perhaps it held special meaning for Edward and Sophia, or perhaps the holiday allowed for family members to gather more easily, or maybe it simply seemed auspicious to begin their married life on such a joyful day.

The morning of Saturday, December 25, 1852, dawned cold, as Massachusetts winters tend to be. Sophia, in her best dress (few families could afford elaborate wedding gowns in those days), would have dressed with her mother's help, perhaps feeling the bittersweet mix of excitement and trepidation that attends every bride. For Mrs. Newton, watching her daughter prepare for marriage, the day must have brought its own complex emotions -- pride in seeing Sophia settled, but sadness at the impending change to their household.

Edward, twenty-one years old and about to take on the responsibilities of a husband, likely dressed in his Sunday best and made his way to the appointed place with a heart full of hope and determination. He was starting a new chapter, creating a family of his own to replace the one he'd left behind in Townsend.

The ceremony was performed by Reverend Samuel S. Ashley in Northborough. It would have been a simple service, perhaps with a close family members and friends gathered as witnesses. In 1852, weddings were often brief affairs -- the long white-gown ceremonies we associate with weddings today were still primarily the province of the wealthy. But what the ceremony may have lacked in grandeur, it made up for in sincerity.

The vows exchanged, Edward Hildreth and Sophia Newton became husband and wife. The marriage record would carefully note the details: Edward, age 21, combmaker, born in Townsend, son of Zachariah Hildreth, first marriage. Sophia, age 18, born in Vermont, daughter of Thomas J. Newton, first marriage.

Beginning Their Life Together

As Christmas Day 1852 drew to a close, Edward and Sophia began their married life together. Rather than Sophia moving into the Hildreth household or finding separate lodgings, the practical solution was for the young couple to live with Mrs. Newton. At fifty-five, the widow would have welcomed having her daughter near, and the arrangement made economic sense for a young combmaker just starting out. Edward would contribute to the household expenses while learning to manage a home with his new bride.

The arrangement also meant that Mrs. Newton would not face the loneliness of an empty house, and Sophia would have her mother's guidance as she navigated the early days of marriage and, eventually, motherhood. For Edward, it provided a ready-made home while he continued to build his skills and savings in the combmaking trade.

For Edward and Sophia, Christmas Day 1852 marked the beginning of a partnership that would last nearly forty-seven years, until Edward's death in 1899. They would face joys and sorrows together -- the birth of their daughter Hattie in 1857, moves from Northborough to Leominster, the long years between children, the birth of their son Clarence in 1874, and the heartbreak of losing him just four years later.

But on that Christmas Day, all of that lay in the unknown future. What they had was each other, their youth, their hopes, and the promise of building a life together in the rapidly changing world of mid-19th-century Massachusetts. It was enough. It was everything.

And so, as winter darkness fell on Christmas evening 1852, Edward Hildreth, combmaker, and his bride Sophia began their journey together in the household they would share with mother Sophia—a journey that would span five decades and create a family legacy that would extend far beyond their own lifetimes.

3)  The Google NotebookLM Video Overview of this story is below.

4)  This is historical fiction based on known events in the lives of my ancestors -- it might have been this way. The family mentioned are my 2nd great-grandparents, and I have significant information about their lives from the available records, but I know nothing about their day-to-day lives.

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 Hildreth and Newton families in Massachusetts and 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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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:  

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Treasure Chest Thursday - 1820 U.S. Census Record for the Isaac Lanfier Household in Lorraine, New York

It's Treasure Chest Thursday - time to look in my digital image files to see what treasures I can find for my family history and genealogy musings.

The treasure today is the 1820 United States Census record for the Isaac Lanfier (one of my 4th great-grandfathers) household in Lorraine, Jefferson County, New York.


The Isaac Lanfier household is the 2nd person on the image:


The extracted information for the Isaac Lanfier household (with my educated guess as to the names of the family members, assuming that they are all from the Isaac Lanfear family):

*  Name of head of family:  Isaac Lanfier
*  Males under age 10:   one (probably son Latham born 1824)
*  Males aged 26-44:  one (certainly Isaac born 1777)
*  Females under age 10:  four (probably daughters Susan (born 181), Eleanor born 1818, Polly born 1817, and Nancy born 1816) 
*  Females aged 10 to 15: one (probably daughter Anna born 1807 or Elizabeth born 1809)
*  Females aged 26-44;  one ( certainly wife Rosina born 1781)
*  Number of persons engaged in agriculture:  one
*  Total number of persons:  8

There are seven living children in the Isaac and Rosian (Laun) Lanfear family in 1820. Either daughter Anna (born 1807) or Elizabwth (born 1809) is missing from this enumeration.

The source citation for this entry (census date 1 June 1820) is:

1820 United States Federal Census, Jefferson County, New York, Lorraine town, page 2 (penned, image 2 of 4), Isaac Lanfier household; imaged, "
1820 United States Federal Census," Ancestry.com (
https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/7734/images/4433244_00246 : accessed 15 June 2023); original image on NARA Microfilm publication M-33.

Some readers may wonder "why post pre-1850 U.S. census records - you can't be sure who is in the household."  That's true, but it can still provide some clues to the age of the head of household, and tracking a household through the years may indicate family additions or subtractions, plus narrowing the location of the residence by using the neighbors.  This is especially useful for same-name problems in a community. 


In this case, I'm still searching for the birth parents of Devier J. Lamphear Smith (1839-1894, my 2nd great-grandfather) whose name was changed in Wisconsin from Lamphear to Smith in 1866, and is identified as an adopted child in the name change record and Ranslow Smith's will (his adoptive father).  One of the young females in the 1820 census may be the mother of Devier.   

I share significant DNA segments, consistent with descent from common 4th great-grandparents, with descendants of Isaac and Rosina (Laun) Lanfear.  If Devier's mother or father was a child of Isaac and Rosina Lanfear, then Isaac and Rosina would be my 4th great-grandparents.

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

Disclosure:  I have a paid All-Access subscription to Ancestry.com now.  Ancestry.com has provided a complimentary subscription and material considerations for travel expenses to meetings, and has hosted events and meals that I have attended in Salt Lake City, in past years.

The URL for this post is: 

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.  All comments are moderated, and may not appear immediately after posting.

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Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Beyond the Tree: Capturing Your Living Elders Before It's Too Late (Guest post by Gabriel Liu, Founder of EverMemory)

 I welcome Guest Posts on Genealogy and Family History topics.  

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

Beyond the Tree: Capturing Your Living Elders Before It's Too Late
Guest post by Gabriel Liu, Founder of EverMemory


Genealogists are, by training, optimists about time. We believe the past can be recovered — one census record, one ship manifest, one headstone at a time. But there is one gap even the best research can't close: the voice of a person who is still here, and the stories only they can tell.

I started EverMemory after my grandmother passed. My mother didn't grieve loudly. She grieved in a quieter way — she kept saying, "There were so many things I meant to ask her." My family had a thorough tree. We knew every name back five generations. What we did not have was my grandmother describing the smell of the kitchen on the day the war ended, or why she kept a particular photograph in her drawer for sixty years. Those things die with the person unless someone captures them.

EverMemory is built for that gap. It is a voice-first biography service: your parent, grandparent, aunt, or uncle speaks, and our AI writing engine turns 5–10 hours of recordings into a professionally written, professionally typeset hardcover book — in about two months, in 8 languages, without the person ever having to type a single word. There are three ways to record: 100 guided questions (2–3 minutes each), a free open-ended mode, or a conversational interview with a family member. For elderly users, there's a QR-code entry with no account, no password, no app store — a single button to start talking.

A few things genealogy readers in particular tend to appreciate:
  • It's narrative prose, not a Q&A compilation. The finished book reads like a biography, because it's structured like one — chapters, arcs, motifs, context.
  • It works in the parent's own language. English, French, Spanish, Italian, German, Japanese, Korean, Mandarin — recording, writing, and final book.
  • We offer free access (Pro-Vita) for hospice and late-stage illness. Because some families don't have two months.
If you've spent years documenting who your ancestors were, consider giving the living ones a chance to tell you who they are. The tree tells you the dates. A book tells you the person.

Readers of Genea-Musings can try it at evermemory.ai — and I'd be glad to answer questions in the comments.

Gabriel Liu is the founder of EverMemory (evermemory.ai), a voice-first biography service that turns spoken memories into printed hardcover books.

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

When I emailed with Gabriel, I asked several questions.  Here are his answers:

1)  "How many stories, or how many pages?"

There's no hard cap. A typical EverMemory book runs 180–260 pages from about 5–10 hours of recordings, organized into 8–14 chapters (childhood, schooling, career, marriage, children, turning points, reflections, etc.). Some users go longer — our longest so far is 412 pages. You control the length; Echo (our AI writer) just follows your material.

2)  "Do you take the verbal stories, clean them up, and put them together in the book?"

Yes — that's exactly the service. You talk (guided questions, free recording, or an interview with a family member — whichever you prefer). We transcribe, structure, and rewrite it into literary narrative prose — not a Q&A transcript, not a lightly edited blog post.

One thing worth calling out, because it's the question every serious researcher asks us: the book will not hallucinate. Echo doesn't "write freely" from a prompt. Every paragraph in the final book is structurally anchored to the specific recording segments it came from — each story, date, name, and place stays attached to the source audio it was spoken in. If something wasn't in your recordings, it doesn't appear in the book. You can trace any sentence back to the moment you said it.

Think of it as a ghostwriter + typesetter + printer bundled into one voice-first app. You review and edit every chapter before it goes to print. Final output is a sewn-spine hardcover, professionally typeset, delivered in about two months.

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

Disclosure:  Gabriel Liu emailed me two weeks ago about his product and I offered to publish a guest post about EverMemory.ai.  It is an interesting concept but I don't feel a need for it in my own family history work. It may be ideal for other people.  I have received no benefits or money for this post.

Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

The URL for this post is:  

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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Genealogy Education Bytes - Week of 30 April to 6 May 2026

  Welcome to Genealogy Education Bytes, posted on Wednesday afternoon for the past week, where we try to highlight some of the most important genealogy and family history education items that came across my desktop since the last issue.




1) Upcoming Conferences and Institutes

Conference Keeper Calendar - has many links to register for and/or view seminars, conferences and institutes.

National Genealogical Society 2026 Family History Conference ($$, In-person and virtual, in Fort Wayne, Indiana) - 27 to 30 May 2026.

*  Palatines To America National Conference ($$, In-person, in Lancaster, Pennsylvania) -- 18 to 19 June 2026.

*  FEEFHS Annual Conference ($$, In-person, in Salt Lake City) -- 5 to 7 August 2026.

*  Pennsylvania's Genealogy Event "PaGE" 2026 Conference ($$, Virtual) -- 6 to 8 August 2026.

2 ) Upcoming Webinars and Online Classes (times are US Pacific):

Conference Keeper Calendar - has many links to register for and/or view seminars, webinars and classes.

FamilySearch MonthlyWebinars (Free)

RootsTech 2019-2026 On-Demand Sessions (Free)

*  Legacy Family Tree Webinar --  Wednesday, 6 May, 12 a.m.: Early Europeans in Aotearoa New Zealand: Settlers Before 1840 by Michelle Patient.

*  Legacy Family Tree Webinar --  Wednesday, 6 May, 8:30 a.m.:  Top 8 Resources for Jewish Genealogy in Germany by Sabine Ababayov.

*  Legacy Family Tree Webinar --  Wednesday, 6 May, 9:45 a.m.:  Out of the Whirlwind: Resources for Holocaust Research by Deborah Long. 

*  Legacy Family Tree Webinar --  Wednesday, 6 May, 11 a.m.:  Top 10 Free Resources for Jewish Genealogy by Kaye Prince-Hollenberg.

*  Legacy Family Tree Webinar --  Friday, 8 May, 11 a.m.:  Researching in Cheshire by Margaret Roberts.

*  Legacy Family Tree Webinar --  Tuesday, 12 May, 11 a.m.:  Cousins, Clusters, and Clues: Using MyHeritage DNA for Your Genealogical Mysteries by Paula Williams.

*  Legacy Family Tree Webinar --  Wednesday, 13 May, 11 a.m.:  Caribbean Genealogy: Tracing Ancestors in Jamaica, Haiti, and Panama by Yetunde Moronke Abiola.

*  Legacy Family Tree Webinar --  Friday, 15 May, 11 a.m.:  From swords to settlers: Researching conquistador ancestors in 16th century New Spain (Mexico) by Nefi Arenas Salazar.

    3) Recent Podcasts:

    * Ancestors and Algorithms:  
    Ep. 36: The Highland Line - Tracing Scottish Ancestors with AI


    * Family Tree Talk:  Making sense of making mistakes


    4) Recent YouTube Videos








    *  Dallas Genealogical Society:  Getting Started with DNA Painter


    * Denyse Allen - Chronicle Makers:  The Genealogy Puzzle That AI Finally Solved










    *  Int'l Institute of Genealogical Studies:  Orientation Session GenealogicalStudies.com

    * Italian Roots and Genealogy:  Your Italian Ancestry is Way More Complex Than This

    *  National Genealogical Society:  MemberConnects! Up Close and Personal with PERSI



    *  Randy Seaver, Geneaholic:  Betty and Fred's Story: Thanksgiving1943





    5) Did you miss the last post in this series -- Genealogy Education Bytes - Week of 23 to 29 April 2026?

    Read past Genealogy Education Bytes here.


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

    NOTE: If I missed an upcoming conference or webinar, or a useful podcast or video, in this time period, please let me know in a comment or an email.

    The URL for this post is:  
    https://www.geneamusings.com/2026/05/genealogy-education-bytes-week-of-30.html

    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 your comment 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 https://www.Blogtrottr.com.

    Life Memoir of John Underhill (1745-1816) of Plainfield, New Hampshire in 1814

      I wrote an AI-assisted ABC biography for the family of my 5th great-grandparents John and Hannah (Colby) Underhill in ABC Biography of the John and Hannah (Colby) Underhill Family of New Hampshire (1745-1816)based on my genealogical research over 38 years. 

    I wondered what John Underhill might have told his grandchildren in a life memoir in 1814. 


    (AI Google NotebookLM Infographic for John Underhill's life memoir
    )

    1)  I requested Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 to   "Please write a life memoir for John Underhill based on the attached biography, as he might tell to his grandchildren in 1814."

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


    As I Remember It
    Being the Life Recollections of
    Sergeant John Underhill
    of Chester and Plainfield, New Hampshire (1745 – 1816)


    As told to his grandchildren -- Plainfield, New Hampshire, 1814

    Come, sit close — the fire is low and the night is long

    Well now. You want your old grandfather to talk, do you? John's children, Jonathan's little ones — all of you crowded in here like kittens in a basket. All right then. Move that stool, there. Put another log on. If I am going to tell you the whole of it, we shall need more warmth before I am done.

    I am sixty-nine years old this summer, and there are mornings I feel the weight of every one of them. My hands are stiff before noon. My back — well, we shall say nothing about my back. But my memory, that is still sharp. Sharp enough, anyway, to carry you back to Chester, to the old Long Meadow road, to a time when this land was still a colony of the King of England, and none of us had yet learned the word republic.

    I was born on the twentieth of June, 1745, in Chester, Rockingham County — though in those days we called it New Hampshire Colony, and beyond our northern farms lay a wilderness that men like your great-great-grandfather had only just begun to push back. Chester was a young town then, settled not thirty years before by Scots-Irish families who came with strong backs and strong opinions and not much else. We fit right in.

    My Father's House

    My father was John Underhill — yes, same name; it caused no end of confusion at the tavern — and my mother was Joanna Healey before she married him. They wed in 1741, and by the time I arrived I was already the third child, with my sister Betty and my brother William ahead of me. Before all was said and done there were ten of us at that table. Ten children. Think of that. Betty, William, myself, then Molly, Moses, David, Samuel, Jeremiah, Sarah, and last of all little Joanna, who came along when I was nearly grown. My mother fed us all, clothed us all, kept us all out of serious mischief — though Moses tested her patience considerable. I do not think my father ever counted us all at once for fear of the number.

    We lived near the brick school house on the Long Meadow road — you will hear more of that road before I am done, for it runs through the whole of my life. The soil in Chester is thin and stony, as New Hampshire soil tends to be, but we knew no other kind and did not miss what we had never had. Father kept cattle and grew rye and corn, and in the winters we did what all New Hampshire farmers do: we endured.

    I was a boy during the French and Indian War — King George's War, some called it then. There was fear in those years that the French and their Indian allies would come south from Canada and fall upon the settlements. The men of Chester kept their muskets primed. I remember my father coming home from a militia muster, telling my mother something in a low voice that she did not repeat to us children. I was perhaps eight or nine. I did not know it then, but I was learning the face of a man who carries fear quietly, so that those around him can sleep.

    Hannah

    I will tell you about your grandmother now, because no honest account of my life makes any sense without her.

    The Colby family came to Chester from Amesbury, Massachusetts, sometime around 1760 — Hannah's father, Joseph Colby, moving his family north for the land, the way families did. Hannah was the fourth of five children, born on the fourteenth of February, 1744, though by the old calendar some wrote it as 1744 and some as 1745. It was Valentine's Day, which she thought was either a good omen or a great joke depending on her mood.

    I first knew her as a neighbor's daughter. She had dark eyes and a direct way of looking at you that made you feel she was deciding something important about your character. She was quick with figures, quicker than most men I have known, and she had a laugh that carried across a room. I was smitten from the first time I heard it, though it took me the better part of two years to do anything useful about it.

    We married in 1767, in Chester. I was twenty-two. She was twenty-two. We were young and thought we knew everything, which is the natural condition of the young and which I have long since forgiven in myself.

    Her father, Joseph Colby, died in 1768, the year after we married. He left behind a sixty-acre homestead on the Long Meadow road — the same road where I had grown up, would you believe it. In 1774, we bought that land from Hannah's brother Joseph for one hundred and sixty-five pounds. It was Lot Number Forty, and it became ours. That farm was where we raised our children. That is where we spent the best years of our lives.

    The Trouble with the King

    I must speak now of the years when everything changed, because you cannot understand who you are without knowing what your grandfather did and why.

    By the early 1770s, the trouble with England had been building for years. The Stamp Act, the Townshend duties, the soldiers in Boston — we heard of all of it in Chester, and we argued about it at meeting and at the tavern and over the fence between farms. All of the men were in the town militia and we trained regularly. Some men were cautious. Some were hot-headed. Most of us were somewhere in between — angry at being taxed and ordered about, but also aware that war is an awful thing and not to be wished for lightly.

    I had a wife. I had children coming. We had just bought our farm. I had everything to lose. And yet when the time came, I went.

    In July of 1777 — our country had been at war for two years by then, and things were not going well — the call came for men to join General Stark's brigade and march north to block the British. General John Burgoyne was pushing south from Canada with a large army, and if he was not stopped, he might split the colonies in two. I enlisted on the twenty-first of July as a Corporal in Captain Stephen Dearborn's company of Colonel Stickney's regiment. Hannah was home with the children — Joseph was seven, Amos was five, Nancy was three. She did not weep when I left, at least not where I could see.

    The Battle of Bennington

    We marched north and then west, a company of New Hampshire farmers with muskets and determination and not much else. On the sixteenth day of August, 1777, we met the enemy near the town of Bennington — though the fighting was actually in New York, just across the border, which is the sort of thing that only matters after the fact.

    General Stark gave a speech before the battle that I have never forgotten. He pointed at the enemy camp and said — and I paraphrase, for I am old and memory condenses — that we would defeat those red-coats before nightfall, or Molly Stark would be a widow. The men roared. I roared with them, though I confess my stomach was not as brave as my voice.

    The enemy was mostly Hessian soldiers — Germans hired by the British king to fight his battles for him, because he could not find enough Englishmen willing to come over and be shot at by New Hampshire farmers. They were professional soldiers, well-equipped. We were militia. The difference, I learned that day, matters less than people suppose, when the militia is fighting for its own land.

    I will not pretend I was a hero. I loaded and fired, loaded and fired, stayed with my company, did not run. The noise of it — the smoke and the screaming and the terrible percussion of the guns — is not something you can describe to someone who has not heard it. I will only say that time does strange things in a battle. Some moments last an age. Others vanish entirely.

    We won. Stark's men routed them — captured over seven hundred prisoners, killed two hundred more, took four cannon and a thousand muskets. It was a famous victory, and New Hampshire has been proud of it ever since, as well she should be.On that same day, the sixteenth of August, I was promoted to Sergeant. One of the officers, Lieutenant Ezekiel Lane was killed, and John Lane was named Lieutenant, and I became the Sergeant. But from that day forward I was Sergeant John Underhill, and I have worn the title quietly, without much fuss, for nearly forty years now.

    I was discharged on the twenty-eighth of September, having traveled one hundred and ninety-two miles in service. I was paid thirteen pounds, fourteen shillings, and eight pence. I walked home to Chester with my fellow soldiers. Hannah met me at the door and looked me over carefully, the way she always did when I had been somewhere dangerous, checking for damage. Then she put me to work splitting wood, because the stack was low and winter was coming. That was Hannah.

    The Second Time

    You might think that one war was enough. But a few years later, in 1780, Chester was called upon to raise six men for service in the far north — the Coos country, up near Canada. The war was still grinding on. The frontier still needed watching.

    I went again. This time we marched a hundred miles north to the Haverhill area in what they called the Cohos region. I was one of three men trusted to carry and distribute the travel money for the soldiers — two dollars a mile, a hundred miles, which adds up to a sum worth protecting. We served until the end of December. The north country in December is a hard place, and I am not sorry I was young and strong when I saw it.

    I came home again. Hannah checked me for damage again. The wood was low again.

    Our Children

    Let me speak of your parents and their brothers and sisters, for they are the best thing Hannah and I ever did.

    Joseph came first, in 1770. He was a serious boy who grew into a serious man — he has been up in Vermont these many years, in Cabot and Marshfield, farming and raising a family of his own. I am proud of him. 

    Amos came in April of 1772. Amos was the one who could charm anyone, man or beast, into doing what he wanted. He married Mary Metcalf up in Piermont and they have done well. They moved to Erie County, New York in about 1810. I expect he will outlive us all, the rascal.

    Nancy came in 1774, and Susan in 1778. Girls in this family have always had more sense than the boys, and those two were no exception.

    Your father John was born in 1776 — the very year of the Declaration, which Hannah took as a sign of something, though she was never entirely specific about what. He is settled in Grafton with Mary Esther, and I am glad of it.

    And then there is Jonathan — born the ninth of August, 1779, right here in Chester. Jonathan is the one who came with me when I bought this house in Plainfield. He married Sophia Slack right here in Plainfield in 1805, and they have built something worth building.

    Six children your grandmother and I brought into this world, between 1770 and 1779. Hannah labored for every one of them on that farm on the Long Meadow road, in a house that was never quite warm enough in January and never quite cool enough in July, and she never once complained about it where I could hear.

    Your Grandmother

    Hannah died on the twelfth of September, 1791. She was forty-six years old. I will not dwell long here, because some things a man carries close and does not put into words for others to examine. I will only say that the house on the Long Meadow road was a different place after she was gone, and that I was a different man.

    I stayed in Chester for some years after. I lived a while in Candia nearby. In 1801, I sold the homestead — seventy-eight acres by then, expanded from the original sixty — to Mary Brown, for six hundred dollars. It was time. The children were grown and scattered. The farm held too many voices in the walls.

    I bought land in Plainfield that same year, from Nathaniel Garland, fifty-seven acres for seven hundred dollars. A man needs something to stand on. I held it until 1806, when I passed it to Jonathan, and he took me in along with it.That was eight years ago now. I am comfortable here. I am not without my creakings and complaints, but I am comfortable.

    What I Would Have You Know

    You are young, all of you. The youngest of you — I look at your face and I see your father in it, and I see Hannah in it, and I see something that is entirely your own, which is as it should be. You will do things in your lives that I cannot imagine. This country of ours is young too, and restless, and full of a confidence that sometimes frightens me and sometimes fills me with a joy I cannot name.

    We were a colony when I was born. A possession of a king who had never set foot on this soil and did not know the name of a single man or woman who worked it. By the time your fathers were born, we were something new — a republic, the first real republic since the Romans, or so Mr. Jefferson would have us believe, and perhaps he is right.

    I did not fight at Bennington because I was brave. I fought because the land was mine and the family was mine and no king three thousand miles away had the right to tell me otherwise. That is not heroism. That is simply a man standing on his own ground.

    You come from a long line of people who stood on their own ground. Chester folk. New Hampshire folk. People who looked at stony soil and a short growing season and a winter that lasts half the year and said: yes, this will do, we will make something here. And we did.

    Your grandmother made something here. Your father made something here. I made something here, however imperfectly. Now it is your turn.

    There, now. The fire is low and your old grandfather is tired. You have had the whole of it, or as much of it as I can give you tonight. Go to bed, all of you. Leave me to the fire a while. I will sit here and think about the Long Meadow road.

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

    Sergeant John Underhill died in Plainfield, New Hampshire, in 1816. He was seventy years old.

    A Note to the Reader

    The words above are imagined, but the facts are real. John Underhill was born in Chester, New Hampshire in 1745, served in the Revolutionary War, farmed the Long Meadow road for three decades, and died in Plainfield in 1816. Every date, every place, every name of family and neighbor is drawn from the historical record. What is invented is only the voice — the warmth of a grandfather by the fire, trying to give the past to those who will carry it forward.

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

    3)  The Video Overview of John Underhill's life memoir, created by the Google NotebookLM AI tool, is:   

    4)  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.

    5)  This is historical fiction, based on my own genealogical research. It is what John Underhill  might have told his grandchildren in 1814.  

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

    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

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