I wrote an AI-assisted ABC biography for the family of my wife's grandparents Paul Frederick and Edna Catherine (McKnew) Schaffner in ABC Biography of Paul Frederick Schaffner (1879-1934) and Edna Catherine McKnew (1884-1974) Family of San Francisco, California. based on my genealogical research over 38 years.
I wondered what Edna (McKnew) Schaffner might have told her grandchildren in a life memoir in 1972.
(AI Google NotebookLM Infographic for Edna (McKnew) Schaffner's life memoir)
I requested Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 to "Please write a life memoir for Edna (McKnew) Schaffner based on the attached biography, as she might tell her grandchildren in 1972."
The AI Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 memoir (edited for accuracy and completeness) is:
My
Life: A Story for My Grandchildren
As
told by Edna Catherine (McKnew) Schaffner in 1972
My dears, you've asked me to tell you
about my life, and I suppose at eighty-eight years old, I've earned
the right to reminisce. Pull up your chairs and let me tell you about
San Francisco, about my family, and about the journey that brought me
to this house on Rivoli Street where you've grown up knowing your "Oo
Hoo."
The
San Francisco of My Childhood
I was born in 1884, in a San Francisco
that was so different from the city you know today. My father, Elijah
Pickrell McKnew, was an oysterman—he worked down at the waterfront,
harvesting oysters from the bay and selling them to restaurants and
markets throughout the city. My mother, Jane Whittle McKnew, came all
the way from Australia as a little girl. She was born there and came
to America when she was just a child. Can you imagine? Coming across
the entire ocean at that age? She was a remarkable woman, my mother,
and she taught me everything about managing a household, about
stretching every penny, and about the importance of family.
I was the eighth child of eleven
children—eight! That means I grew up in a house that was always
full of noise and activity and love. My oldest siblings—Allethia,
Alfred, Henry, and Alice—were already married and starting their
own families by the time I was thirteen. Having older sisters who
were wives and mothers gave me something precious: I could see what
my own future might look like. I could watch how they managed their
households, how they raised their children, how they navigated
marriage. It was like having living instruction in how to become a
woman.
My childhood home was at 4131 19th Street
in the Castro District. That big house! I can still see it so
clearly—the street number above the front door, the way the light
came through the windows, the feeling of constantly being needed,
constantly being part of something larger than myself.
With so many siblings, there was always
work to do. I helped my mother with everything—the cooking, the
cleaning, the mending, the laundry. Laundry day was a full day's
work, let me tell you. We didn't have washing machines like you have
now. Everything was scrubbed by hand on a washboard, boiled in great
pots, wrung out by hand until your arms ached, hung on the lines to
dry, and then ironed with heavy flat irons heated on the stove. With
eleven children producing dirty clothes, laundry day was
never-ending.
But the work didn't feel like drudgery,
you see. It was simply what we did. We were a family, and we took
care of each other. My mother showed me how to make soups and stews,
how to bake bread, how to prepare oysters in a dozen different ways
since my father's work brought fresh oysters home regularly. I
learned to sew and mend, to keep a clean house, to care for younger
siblings. These skills would serve me well my entire life.
Learning
a Trade
By the time I was sixteen, I was working
as a milliner—making and decorating women's hats. This was skilled
work, you understand. A hat wasn't just something you threw on your
head. It was a work of art. It required taste, an eye for color and
style, and the ability to work with your hands in precise ways. You
had to understand fashion, know what was coming, what would suit
different faces and different occasions.
I loved that work. There was something
deeply satisfying about creating something beautiful and practical at
the same time. A woman might come into the shop discouraged about her
appearance, and you could create or modify a hat that made her feel
beautiful, confident, ready to face the world.
The millinery trade also gave me
something my father's work as an oysterman couldn't—a degree of
independence. I was earning my own money, but living with my parents
and siblings. I was learning a skill that was respected. I was part
of the working world, even though I was a woman in an era when women
were expected to stay home.
The
Earthquake
I'll never forget April nineteenth,
nineteen hundred and six. I was twenty-two years old, and I had not
yet married my Paul. But that morning—that terrible morning—the
earth itself began to shake.
I've never experienced anything like it
before or since. The ground moved beneath our feet like the earth was
alive. It felt like the whole world was coming apart. Buildings
crumbled. People screamed. And the fires—oh God, the fires that
came afterward. For three days the city burned. For three days we
didn't know if we would lose everything.
My family's house on 19th Street
survived. Can you imagine? With the fires burning around it, with
people losing everything, our house stood. We had to repair it, yes,
but we were among the fortunate ones. My mother was so grateful. I
remember her looking at that house, at the street number above the
door, and saying a prayer of thanksgiving.
We have a photograph of our family taken
right after the earthquake, standing on the street with our stove and
other household goods pulled out of the house. You can still see the
house number clearly—4131. That photograph reminds us always of how
close we came to losing everything. Dear grandchildren – please
save that photograph!
My
Paul
I want to tell you about your grandfather
Paul, because he was a good man and I loved him very much, even
though our time together was shorter than I would have wished.
I met Paul in the ways young people met
back then—through family, through church, through the community. He
was the son of Herman Schaffner, a man who was involved in fraternal
organizations. Paul was handsome and hardworking and kind. He had
ambition. He wanted to build something, to provide for a family.
We married on June twenty-fourth,
nineteen hundred and six. Can you believe it? Two months after the
earthquake. The city was still smoking. Thousands of people were
homeless and living in tents in Golden Gate Park. The future seemed
uncertain. But Paul and I looked at each other and decided to have
faith. We decided to begin our life together anyway.
The ceremony was small and
simple—performed by a Methodist clergyman, with my sister May and
Paul's brother Herman as witnesses. I was twenty-two years old. Paul
was twenty-six. We were young and hopeful, and we were going to build
a life together in the city we both loved.
Paul worked his way up in the oil
company—he started as a stenographer and became a manager. He was a
hard worker, and he was respected by the people he worked with. He
was also deeply involved in fraternal organizations—the Masons, the
Shrine. These organizations were about more than just fraternity;
they were about service to the community, about charity, about
brotherhood.
But I want you to understand something
about your grandfather. He wasn't just a businessman. He was a man of
principle. He believed in helping others. He believed in being part
of something larger than himself. He passed those values on to your
mothers, and I hope you'll carry them forward as well.
My
Daughters
Our first daughter, Muriel Jean, was born
in nineteen hundred and nine. Oh, how happy we were! A beautiful baby
girl. Then Edna May came along in nineteen hundred and thirteen. I
was a mother now, and it was the most important work I'd ever done.
Paul and I worked together to raise our
daughters with good values. We wanted them to be educated, to be
kind, to understand that they had responsibilities to family and
community. We wanted them to marry well and be happy.
Muriel married Samuel Blair Mertes in
nineteen hundred and thirty. They had one daughter, Jean in nineteen
hundred and thirty three, who was the light of my life. After Paul
passed away in nineteen thirty-four, Muriel and her family came to
live with me here at 46 Rivoli Street, and Jean grew up right here in
this house. I taught her things. I loved her with all my heart. Jean
married William duBos in 1955, and they have two children –
Michelle born in 1961 and William born in 19658.
Edna May married Leo Severt Leland in
nineteen hundred and thirty-seven. They have two children, Linda born
in 1942 and Paul born in 1945. Linda married Randy Seaver in 1970 and
I went to the wedding in Chula Vista with Lee, Edna and Paul!
I was a grandmother now, and then a
great-grandmother, and I loved all my grandchildren and great-grands
fiercely.
Paul's
Passing
In nineteen thirty-four, when Paul was
only fifty-five years old, his heart gave out. It was sudden, and it
was devastating. One day he was here, and the next day he was gone.
I was fifty years old when I became a
widow. I won't lie to you—it was hard. We had been married for
twenty-eight years. I had depended on him. I loved him. But I had my
daughters, and I had my grandchildren, and I had my faith. I also had
the knowledge that I was capable—I had managed households, I had
worked, I had raised children. I knew I could survive this.
After Paul died, Muriel and her family
moved in with me permanently. This house on Rivoli Street became our
home together. We all helped each other. I helped raise Jean. Blair
worked as a pressman. I did what I could to help manage the
household. We were a family taking care of each other, just as my own
family had done when I was young.
My
Later Years
These past forty years without your
grandfather have been long, but they have been filled with meaning
because of you—my grandchildren, my great-grandchildren.
I've been a member of the Order of the
Eastern Star for sixty-three years. Do you know what that is? It's an
organization for women connected to the Masons—an organization that
emphasizes charity, truth, and loving-kindness. I've served in that
organization, and I've been proud to be part of a group of women
dedicated to helping others and supporting each other.
I've spent these years here at 46 Rivoli
Street. I've tended my garden where I grow Cecil Bruner roses—those
delicate pink roses. Do you remember me bringing them to you? I loved
bringing those roses to my daughters and granddaughters every week! A
rose is a simple thing, but it's beautiful, and it says "I love
you" without words.
I've watched you children grow up. I've
attended your birthday celebrations, weddings and your family
gatherings. I've tried to be present in your lives, to show you what
it means to love a family, to be part of something that lasts.
When you came to the door, you would call
out "Yoo-Hoo!" and so you called me "Oo Hoo" when
you were small. That became my name to you. That nickname makes me
happier than you know because it represents something simple and
pure—a grandmother greeting her grandchildren, welcoming them into
her home and her heart.
What
I Want You to Know
Now that I'm eighty-eight years old, and
my life is drawing toward its close, I want to tell you what I've
learned. Life is not always easy. The earth can shake beneath your
feet—literally, as it did in nineteen hundred and six, and
figuratively, as it does when loss comes to you. But you survive. You
go on. You hold onto the people you love, and you build something
meaningful.
Work hard. Whether you're an oysterman
like my father or a milliner like I was or a businessman like your
grandfather Paul, or a pressman like Muriel’s Blair, or a service
station manager like Edna’s Lee work hard at what you do. Take
pride in it. Do it well.
Love your family. My family has been my
greatest source of strength and joy. The aunts and uncles who were
there for each other, the siblings I grew up with, the husband I
cherished, the daughters I'm so proud of, the grandchildren and
great-grandchildren who have filled my life with light. Family is
everything.
Help each other. When someone needs you,
be there. When you need help, ask for it. We're not meant to go
through life alone.
Find beauty where you can. A rose in a
garden. A moment of laughter with people you love. A well-cooked meal
shared with family. The beauty of San Francisco—the fog rolling in,
our bridges, the hills, the city lights. Beauty sustains us.
Be kind. Be honest. Live by your
principles even when it's hard. Remember that the world is bigger
than yourself, and you have a responsibility to help make it better.
And hold onto hope. Even when the earth
shakes, even when you lose someone you love, even when times are
hard—hold onto hope. The future is still ahead of you. There is
still joy to experience, love to give and receive, meaning to create.
San
Francisco
I want to close by saying something about
San Francisco, the city that has been my home my entire life. I was
born here. I've watched it grow from a rough frontier town into a
great city. I've lived through the earthquake and fire that nearly
destroyed it. I've raised my family here. I've worked here. I've
loved here.
This city is in my bones. The fog, the
hills, the waterfront where my father worked, the downtown where Paul
worked, the neighborhoods where I've lived and raised my children,
the people—the wonderful, diverse, hardworking people who make this
city what it is. San Francisco is more than a place to me. It's part
of my identity. It's part of who I am.
I hope you'll love this city as I have. I
hope you'll appreciate what it took to build it and maintain it. I
hope you'll be part of the community and contribute to making it
better.
Closing
So there you have it—the story of my
life. From the daughter of an oysterman in eighteen-eighty-four to a
widow and great-grandmother in nineteen seventy-two. A life lived in
San Francisco. A life lived for family. A life lived with purpose and
love.
I won't be here forever. My body is
tiring. But I want you to know that everything I've done, everything
I've been, has been for you—for my daughters, my grandchildren, and
now my great-grandchildren. You are my legacy. You are what makes my
life meaningful.
When you see a Cecil Bruner rose, think
of me. When someone calls out "Yoo-Hoo," smile and think of
the love in that greeting. When you face difficulties, remember that
we McKnews and we Schaffners are strong—we've weathered earthquakes
and fires and loss and loneliness, and we've survived. You can too.
I love you all so very much. That's what
I want you to remember most of all. Your "Oo Hoo" loves
you.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Edna Catherine
McKnew Schaffner, November 1972
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Edna Catherine "Oo Hoo" Schaffner died on November 11, 1974 at her home on Rivoli Street at age 90 years. t. She is buried at Cypress Lawn Cemetery in Colma, California, beside her beloved Paul.
===========================
The Video Overview of Edna (McKnew) Schaffner'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 Edna "Oo Hoo" (McKnew) Schaffner might have told her grandchildren in 1972. I wish that we had asked her to recall her life story when we were in San Francisco. Oo Hoo was a sweet, happy, and dear woman to Linda and me.
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