I wrote an AI-assisted ABC biography for my wife's 2nd great-grandfather Elling Eriksen Natvig in ABC Biography of the Elling Eriksen (1820-1896) and Anna Ellingsdatter (1812-1901) Natvig Family of Sogndal, Norway and Dane County, Wisconsin, based on my genealogical research over 38 years.
I wondered what Elling Eriksen Natvig might have told his grandchildren in a life memoir in 1895.
(AI Google NotebookLM Infographic for Elling Natvig's life memoir)
1) I requested Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 to "Please write a life memoir for Elling Eriksen Natvig based on the attached biography, as he might tell to his grandchildren in 1895."
2) The AI Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 memoir (edited for accuracy and completeness) is:
My Life Story
As told by Elling Eriksen Natvig to his grandchildren, 1895
Come here, children, and sit close. Your grandmother has gone to tend the chickens, and I have time before supper to tell you something of my life. You know me only as an old farmer here in Cottage Grove, but I have not always been old, and I have not always lived in Wisconsin. Let me tell you of a different world, across the ocean, where I was born seventy-five years ago.
My Childhood in Eskestrand
I was born on the twelfth of October, 1820, on a farm called Eskestrand in Sogndal, Norway. Sogndal sits deep in a fjord, surrounded by mountains so tall their peaks touch the clouds. The farm clung to the hillside above the water, and from our door we could see the fjord stretching like a ribbon of dark blue glass between the cliffs.
My father was Erik Hanssen, and my mother was Kristi Ellingsdatter. I was the youngest of six children—the baby of the family, you might say. My oldest brother Sjur was already twelve years old when I was born. Then came Hans, who was nine, and my sisters Brithe, Helga, and Gunhild. With so many older siblings, I was never lonely as a boy.
But I must tell you something sad. My father died when I was only two years old, too young to remember him. The year was 1822, and I know the story only from what my mother and older brothers told me. After Father died, Mother had to run the farm alone, with the help of my brothers. It was hard for a widow with six children, but we Norwegians are stubborn people. We survived.
Growing up without a father meant I learned to work early. By the time I was six or seven, I was helping tend the animals and carrying water from the stream. The Norwegian growing season is short—the snow comes early and stays late—so when summer came, everyone worked from dawn to dark getting in the hay and barley. Even us children had our tasks.
I remember the winters best. The days were so short that the sun barely rose above the mountain peaks before it set again. We would sit by the fire while Mother spun wool or mended clothes, and my older siblings would tell stories of the old days, of trolls in the mountains and sea serpents in the fjord. My brother Hans liked to tease me with tales meant to frighten, but I always knew they were just stories.
Becoming a Man
As I grew older, I watched my brothers and sisters marry and start their own families. My brother Sjur married in 1832, when I was twelve, but he died just a year later. I remember how hard that was for Mother, to lose a son so young. My sister Helga married Ola Gjestsen in 1839, and my sister Gunhild married Nils Nilsen. These weddings were bright spots in our hard life—days of celebration with food and drink and fiddle music that made even old folks dance.
By the time I was in my twenties, I was courting a woman from Vatlestad, another farm in Sogndal. Her name was Anna Ellingsdatter, and she was eight years older than me—thirty-three to my twenty-five when we married. Some might think this strange, but age mattered less than character and hard work. Anna had been married before, to a man named Solfest Johannesen, and she had children from that marriage. But by the time I knew her, that marriage was over.
Anna was strong and capable, qualities I needed in a wife. She knew how to manage a household, how to preserve food for the long winter, how to spin and weave and bake. She had lost both her parents by the time we met—her father when she was twenty-one and her mother when she was twenty-four. Like me, she knew what it meant to carry on after loss.
We were married on the nineteenth of November, 1845, in Sogndal. It was a cold, gray day—November in Norway is always gray—but inside the church, with our families around us, it felt warm. My mother was still alive then, though she would die six years later in 1851. She was happy to see me settled with a good woman.
Our Children
Anna and I settled at Øvretun, another farm in Sogndal, and started our family. Our first child, Christina, was born just two months after our wedding, in January of 1846. Then came Solfest—your father, children, though you know him as Sylvester—in December 1847. Our son Erik was born in August 1850, and our youngest, Anna, in May 1853.
Along with our four children, we were raising Anna's two children from her first marriage—Britha and Eli. So we had six children in all to feed and clothe and teach. Those were busy years, full of work but also full of life. I would come in from the fields and find the house full of children's voices, the smell of bread baking, Anna at her spinning wheel. These were good years, hard but good.
But as the years passed, I began to worry. The farm at Øvretun was not large, and Norway was not a land of plenty. I saw other young men from Sogndal leaving for America, and we heard stories of land so rich and plentiful that any man willing to work could own his own farm. In Norway, the best farms had been in the same families for generations. There was no land for my sons to inherit, no future I could see for them here.
The Decision to Leave
It was not an easy decision, leaving Norway. This was my home, the home of my fathers and grandfathers stretching back beyond memory. Every rock and tree was familiar to me. I knew every turn of the path down to the fjord, every pasture where we took the animals in summer. The mountains and the water were in my blood.
But I knew that love of home was not enough to feed children or give them a future. Anna and I talked long into many nights. She was fifty years old by then—not a young woman to be starting over in a strange land. But she was brave, and she agreed. We would go to America.
In 1862, we sold what we could and packed what we could carry. Can you imagine, children? Everything we owned had to fit in trunks and bags we could carry onto a ship. We left behind the farm, the mountains, the fjord—everything I had known for forty-one years. We took with us our four children: Christina was sixteen, Sylvester was fourteen, Erik was eleven, and little Anna was only nine. Anna's daughters Britha and Eli came with us too. Eight of us, heading into the unknown.
Crossing the Ocean
The journey to America—ah, children, that is something I will never forget. We traveled in the lowest part of the ship, in steerage, packed in with hundreds of other emigrants. The space was dark and crowded, the air thick with the smell of too many people in too small a space. We slept on narrow bunks stacked three high, and the ship rolled and pitched with every wave.
Most of the passengers were sick from the motion of the ship. Your grandmother was sick for days, and I feared for her health. The children were frightened by the endless water, by the creaking of the ship's timbers, by the storms that sometimes struck. I remember standing on deck one night, watching the waves as tall as mountains rolling toward us, and wondering if we would ever see land again.
But God watched over us. After many weeks at sea, we saw the coast of America. I cannot tell you the feeling of that moment—after so long seeing nothing but water in every direction, to see land rising from the sea. We had made it. We were in America.
Starting Over in Wisconsin
We came to Wisconsin because we had heard there were many Norwegians here, and land was available. We settled here in Cottage Grove, in Dane County. When we first arrived, we had almost nothing. We lived in a small cabin—rough-built, not like the solid houses in Norway—and we worked to clear land and plant crops.
Those first years were the hardest of my life. I was forty-one years old, starting over like a young man. Everything was strange—the language, the customs, even the birds and trees were different from home. Many times I wondered if we had made a terrible mistake. But there was no going back. We had burned our bridges, as the saying goes.
Slowly, slowly, things got better. The land here is good—not as rocky as Norway, easier to plow. We raised wheat and corn and oats. We had cows and pigs and chickens. Your father Sylvester and your Uncle Erik worked alongside me, learning to farm the American way. The girls helped their mother with the endless work of the house—cooking, washing, preserving food, making clothes.
In 1880, I went to Madison and declared my intention to become a citizen of the United States. I stood before an official and renounced my allegiance to the King of Norway and Sweden. It was a strange moment, children. Part of me felt like a traitor to my homeland. But another part of me knew that I was already American. This land had become my home, and your grandmother and I had decided our future was here.
Watching You Grow
The years have passed quickly. Your Aunt Christina never married, and she lives here with us still—a good daughter who has been a comfort to us in our old age. Your father Sylvester married your mother Christina and has given us a house full of grandchildren. Your Uncle Erik has stayed on the farm too, working alongside his brother. And your Aunt Anna married Torger Leland and moved to Deerfield, where she has her own family.
Anna's daughters from her first marriage have their own paths. Britha married Thomas Johnson and lives in Sauk County. Eli married Lars Teigen, and I still find it strange to think that she has gone back to Norway to live. After all we went through to come to America, she chose to return to the old country. But that is her choice to make.
Now I watch you children growing up, and I see the future. You speak English better than Norwegian. You have never seen the fjords or the mountains of my childhood. You are Americans, born in this land, and this is as it should be. The struggles your grandmother and I went through—the journey across the ocean, the hard early years—we endured them so that you could have better lives than we had.
Not everything has been happy. This year we lost your Aunt Ragnhilda—your father's sister Anna's daughter—and that has been hard for all of us. She left behind four children, your cousins Oscar, Adolph, Gyda, and Alexander. They are being raised by their father now, and we pray they will grow up strong and good despite losing their mother so young. I know too well what it is to grow up without a parent.
What I Have Learned
I am seventy-four years old now, and I feel the weight of my years. My hands are gnarled from a lifetime of work, and I move more slowly than I once did. But I have lived a good life, a full life. I have seen things and done things my father never dreamed of. I crossed an ocean. I learned a new language. I built a farm from raw land. I raised children and watched them raise children of their own.
If I have learned anything, it is this: life is hard, but people are strong. When your grandmother and I stood on the deck of that ship, watching Norway disappear behind us, I was terrified. I had no idea if we would survive the journey, or if we could make a life in America. But we did. We survived. We built something here.
I want you children to remember where you came from. Your ancestors were Norwegian farmers who worked hard and endured much. They were not rich or famous, but they were strong and faithful. They loved their families and did what they had to do to give them a better life.
This farm will go to your father Sylvester when I am gone. I have already arranged it. He has worked it alongside me for more than thirty years, and he has earned it. Your grandmother will have everything she needs for as long as she lives—I have made sure of that. The other children will receive what I can leave them, but the farm must stay together, must stay in the family.
My Blessing to You
You children are Americans, and you will have opportunities I never had. You can read and write English. You can own land without being born to it. You can make your own way in this big country. But remember—remember that you come from people who were brave enough to cross an ocean for a better life. Remember that you come from the fjords of Norway, even if you have never seen them. Remember that you come from people who knew how to work hard and endure hardship.
And remember your grandmother and me. Remember that we loved you, even the ones we will never meet—the great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren who will come after. We did this for you. We left everything behind and started over so that you could have this life, this land, this future.
Now run along—I hear your grandmother calling us to supper. And don't tell her I was sentimental with you. She'll say I'm getting soft in my old age. Maybe I am. But when you are old, you will understand.
— Elling Eriksen Natvig, Cottage Grove, Wisconsin, 1895
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3) The Video Overview of Elling Natvig'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 Elling Natvig might have told his grandchildren in 1895.
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