Sunday, June 7, 2026

"Seaver Roots of Roxbury" -- A Family History Poem and Song

 I've used FREE Artificial Intelligence tools to create biographies, poems, songs and podcasts about my ancestors lives, plus my genealogy research and family history in the recent past. 

Every ancestor lives a unique life with unique relationships and life stories.  Today, I want to share a poem and song about my 9th great-grandparents, Robert Seaver (1608-1683) and Elizabeth Ballard (1616-1657) of Roxbury, Massachusetts Bay Colony, #1024 and #1025 on my Ahnentafel list.

I requested Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 (a FREE AI tool) to create a poem and song lyrics to describe and celebrate the life of Robert and Elizabeth (Ballard) Seaver  I uploaded a PDF of my updated couple ABC Biography which has all of the information I have about their lives.

(AI NotebookLM infographic of Robert Seaver family of Roxbury)

1)  The prompt I used for the poem and song lyrics was: "Please create a poem and song lyrics to describe and celebrate the lives of Robert and Elizabeth (Ballard) Seaver using the attached document."

2)  The Poem created by AQnthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 is:

Seaver Roots of Roxbury

They came across the water, two strangers to this shore,
with faith stitched in their heartbeats and the life they'd known before
packed away like old linen —England fading in the wake —
two souls the Lord had fashioned for a new world yet to make.

She arrived first, a maid servant, quiet, steady, true,
and joined the church in Roxbury before the year was through.
She led a godly conversation — so the old church record says —
a woman of such gentle grace she lit the darkest days.

He came aboard the Mary and John in the raw March of '34,
took his oaths in London harbor and set his face toward that far shore.
By summer he was rooted in the rocky Roxbury clay,
a young man building something that would never fade away.

On the tenth of December, sixteen hundred thirty-four,
they stood before their congregation and promised evermore.
Two English hearts in a new land, two strangers now made one,
with a homestead still to fashion and a family yet to come.

They built their house on rising ground near Muddy River's bend,
cleared the fields and salted hay and set the fences end to end.
He plowed and planted, hauled and mended, worked from frost to frost,
she kept the fire, spun the wool, and counted nothing lost.

Seven children filled their house with laughter, prayer, and need —
Shubael, Caleb, Joshua born, Elizabeth to lead,
and Nathaniel, strong and faithful, two small Hannahs, gone too soon,
two candles briefly shining beneath the same cold moon.

Oh, the grief of little Hannah, sixteen months and then away,
and the second Hannah taken on a February day.
What prayers rose from that household, what tears fell on the snow —
yet they bore it, as the faithful learn to bear what they can't know.

He was made a freeman early, cast his voice in the town's affairs,
served as constable and bayly, climbed the selectman's stairs.
He signed petitions, mended bridges, carted wood through winter's bite,
and on the common trained with musket by the fading autumn light.

He put his name on a petition —*let not the Harvard men grow long their hair* —
a man of plain and Puritan conviction, a man who always did his share.

But ah, the year of sixteen fifty-seven, the cruelest year of all,
when Elizabeth, his godly wife, answered a different call.
The church record says it plainly, four words carved in grief:
“Sister Seaver, buryed” — and the house held no relief.

Still he carried on for Roxbury, still he worked the land,
still he raised his sons to manhood with a steady, callused hand.
The twins grew tall beside him, his daughter wed and thrived,
and through the fires, through the wars, Robert Seaver survived.

When lightning struck his haycock and the flames leapt to the sky,
when his very house burned round him on an October night gone awry —
he built again, as settlers do, from ash and faith and bone,
for a man who'd crossed an ocean is a man who finds his home.

And when King Philip's war came and took his Nathaniel's life,
he bore that loss as he bore the others — through prayer, through toil, through strife.
He served as soldier, old though he was, and carried the colony's care,
for the New England he had helped to build was worth every wound to bear.

He wrote his will in January, sixteen hundred eighty-one,
*sick and weake of body* but his memory still strong,
and left the marsh to Shubael, the pasture land to Caleb's name,
six pounds for young John, the orphan, so the boy would not bear shame.

*An aged Christian, buryed* — so the final record reads,
seventy-five years given to a colony's greatest needs.
Four hundred thirty pounds he'd gathered from one acre and a dream,
and a family planted deeply in the rich New England seam.

So raise a voice for Robert, raise a voice for Elizabeth the Maid,
for the life they built together and the price so gladly paid.
For the children who outlived them, for the grandchildren who came,
for every Seaver walking who still carries on their name.

They came across the water — she in thirty-three,
he the following springtime — and together they set free
a family rooted firmly in the Roxbury clay and stone,
two strangers to this new world who made it fully home.

*In memory of Elizabeth (Ballard) Seaver, born before 1616, died 1657,*
*and Robert Seaver, born about 1608, died June 1683,*
*of Roxbury, Massachusetts Bay Colony.*

3) The AI Claude Sonnet 4.5 created song lyrics are:

Seaver Roots in Roxbury


(Verse 1)
She crossed the water in thirty-three,
a maid servant, young and free,
she joined the church and found her place
in a raw new town, by God's good grace.
He sailed out of London in the spring,
took his oaths, left everything,
stepped ashore with nothing but his name
and a heart that burned like a holy flame.

(Verse 2)
December cold, sixteen thirty-four,
they stood together, said the words,
built their home on the Roxbury ground,
the finest life that could be found.
Seven children filled the rooms with light,
prayers rising every morning, every night,
they worked the marsh and the stony field
and praised the Lord for every yield.

(Chorus)
Roots in Roxbury, deep in the ground,
two souls from England, New England bound,
through fire and grief and the winters long,
their love became a family's song.
Robert and Elizabeth, hand in hand,
they gave their lives to build this land —
roots in Roxbury, still holding on,
in every name that carries them on.

(Verse 3)
She led a life the church called good,
she did everything a good woman could,
but the year of fifty-seven came with grief —
*Sister Seaver, buryed* — Lord, bring relief.
He carried on through the loss and pain,
worked the orchard, worked the grain,
served the town as a faithful man —
constable, selectman, he did what he can.

(Verse 4)
Lightning struck on an October dawn,
burned his haycock down to the lawn,
and the night his very house caught flame
he built it back just the same.
King Philip's War took Nathaniel's life,
more sorrow laid on a widower's strife,
but he wrote his will with a steady hand —
to my children I leave this promised land.

(Chorus)
Roots in Roxbury, deep in the ground,
two souls from England, New England bound,
through fire and grief and the winters long,
their love became a family's song.
Robert and Elizabeth, hand in hand,
they gave their lives to build this land —
roots in Roxbury, still holding on,
in every name that carries them on.

(Bridge)
Two little Hannahs gone before their time,
a son cut down in the war's dark climb,
a house burned down, a wife laid to rest —
they gave this new world their very best.
But Shubael lived, and Caleb too,
and Joshua and Elizabeth saw it through,
and the grandchildren came, and the years rolled on —
an aged Christian, buryed — but never gone.

(Chorus)
Roots in Roxbury, deep in the ground,
two souls from England, New England bound,
through fire and grief and the winters long,
their love became a family's song.
Robert and Elizabeth, hand in hand,
they gave their lives to build this land —
roots in Roxbury, still holding on,
in every name that carries them on.

(Outro) 
If you carry the name, or carry the blood,
if your roots reach back to that Roxbury mud,
then you carry the faith of a maid and a man
who crossed the great water and said "yes, we can."

So sing for Robert, sing for Elizabeth Ballard,
sing for the life that they built and they hallowed,
sing for the children who grew tall and strong —
Roots in Roxbury — this is your song.

*Roots in Roxbury…*
*roots in Roxbury…*
*still holding on.*

*Words inspired by the life and legacy of Robert Seaver (c.1608–1683)*
*and Elizabeth (Ballard) Seaver (before 1616–1657) of Roxbury, Massachusetts Bay Colony*

"Seaver Roots of Roxbury" (based on the song lyrics created using Suno.com, with a folk ballad style in an upbeat tempo) can be played below (created with Canva.ai):


4)  The AI tools do this so much better and faster than I can, and weave the poem and song along a story theme that is true and heartfelt. Each tool provides a different poem and song from the same prompt --I love fishing in all of the AI streams!! Frankly, doing the poems and song are the most genealogy fun I have every week!

5)  These stories, told in verse and song are part of my genealogy and family research.  My hope is that they will be passed down to my grandchildren and their descendants to highlight the importance of sharing stories, memories, admiration, and love of our ancestors. I will add them to my Google Drive, to my YouTube channel, and to my FOREVER account.

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

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) 2025, 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 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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Betty and Fred’s Story: Building a Life Together -- February To April 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 mid-February 1944, two years plus into World War II, and life goes on. 


                               (AI NotebookLM Infographic - February to April 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 -- February to April 1944

The Rhythm of the Months

There is a particular kind of life that does not make headlines — that generates no drama sufficient for the evening news, no crises requiring resolution in a single chapter — and yet is lived with an intensity and fullness that the headline-makers might envy if they stopped long enough to notice it. February to April of 1944 was that kind of life for Fred and Betty Seaver on Twin Oaks Avenue in Chula Vista.

It was, in the best sense, ordinary. And ordinary, in the third year of a world war, was something to be held carefully, like a thing you understand might not last.

Fred left for Rohr every morning at the same hour, in the same reliable routine — coffee, breakfast, the lunch pail Betty packed the night before, a kiss at the door, the sound of the car backing out of the drive. The work at Rohr was not getting simpler. If anything, the pace had accelerated through the winter and into the spring with a momentum that reflected the war's own appetite. The plant was producing better than fifty B-24 bomber powerplants every single day in 1944 — fifty — and Fred occasionally paused at his desk amid the requisitions and supply manifests and allowed himself to comprehend that number. Each one of those powerplants was going somewhere. Each one was going into an aircraft that would fly over something that mattered. The material control was not glamorous, but it was part of an enormous, grinding, necessary machine, and Fred understood his place in it.

There were other contracts too — Rohr's production commitments spread across multiple programs, the plant running at a pitch that required constant attention to the supply chain. Fred was good at the attention. He had a mind that found satisfaction in systems, in the elegant solving of logistical problems, in the moment when a supply tangle resolved itself into clean order. His manager, a lanky man from Ohio named Garfield who had been at Rohr since 1940, told him in March that he was the best materials man they had in his section. Fred thanked him and meant it and went back to work.

He didn't tell Betty for three days, and when he did, she looked at him with an expression of complete unsurprise.

"I know," she said.

"You know?"

"Fred. Of course you are."

Betty's days had the shape that new mothers' days have — structured by Randy's schedule, which was gradually, mercifully becoming more predictable, but still fundamentally his rather than hers. She had accepted this with the practical grace she brought to most things, understanding it as a season rather than a permanent condition, finding the particular pleasures available within it.

Randy at five months, at six months, was a revelation in installments.

Each week delivered something new. In February it was rolling — he discovered he could shift his weight and tip himself to one side, and he practiced this with the focused determination of someone learning a skill, until one morning he made it all the way over from back to front and lay there on his stomach looking startled by his own success. Betty applauded. Randy appeared to feel the applause was warranted.

In March it was sound — a new range of it, consonants beginning to form at the edges of his vocalizations, ba and ma appearing not yet with meaning but as sounds he was learning to make and seemed to enjoy. He would lie in his crib in the morning, before anyone came to get him, and practice. Betty would stand in the hallway and listen to her son rehearsing language and feel something she didn't have a word for.

In April he sat up with support, then with less support, then — briefly, triumphantly — without any support at all for three or four seconds before toppling gently to one side. In May he was sitting reliably, surveying the world from this new elevation with visible satisfaction.

He was solid and bright-eyed and had Fred's forehead and Betty's smile and some quality of concentrated attention that seemed entirely his own, as though he had arrived with it — this particular way of looking at things as if they were worth understanding.

Fred called it the studying look.

Betty called it the Seaver look, which Fred disputed.

Randy offered no opinion on the matter, being occupied with studying something.

The Writing on the Wall

Fred did not talk about the draft constantly. He was not a man who made a habit of saying aloud the things he could not change, and he had no interest in casting a shadow over the months they had. But he thought about it, with the steady background attention a navigator gives to weather — not panicking, not ignoring, simply tracking.

The draft board had been calling men up to age thirty with increasing consistency, and deferments that had held through '42 and '43 were loosening in '44 as the demand for men grew with the expanding theaters of the war. Fred was thirty-two. The Rohr work provided a deferment — war production, essential industry — but he was not naive about what essential meant in an environment of escalating need. He watched the numbers. He read the papers. He knew men at Rohr who had received notices despite their age and positions.

He was not afraid, exactly. He had thought about it long enough that the fear had been worked down into something more like steady acknowledgment. He might go. If he went, he would do what was required. Betty and Randy would be at Fern Street with Lyle and Emily — that was settled, that was certain, Lyle had said so and Lyle was a man who said what he meant.

What he felt most, when he let himself feel it squarely, was not dread but something closer to reluctance. This life — this specific life on Twin Oaks Avenue with the man who worked in the garden and the baby in the highchair and the woman who read poetry in the good chair by the window — was not something he was eager to leave, however temporarily, however necessarily. He had worked for this. They had worked for it together. The wanting to stay was not cowardice. He had decided that clearly.

He said something of this to Betty on a Sunday evening in March, sitting on the back steps in the mild California dusk while Randy slept inside.

Betty listened to all of it without interrupting, which was one of the things about her.

"I know," she said, when he was done.

"I know you know," he said.

"If it happens," she said, "we'll manage it the way we manage everything." A pause. "And it hasn't happened yet."

"No," Fred said. "It hasn't happened yet."

She leaned against his shoulder and they sat in the evening and didn't say anything else about it, which was the right thing.

Fern Street

Every week, without exception, they went to Fern Street.

Sunday afternoons, usually — they arrived before lunch, the drive up from Chula Vista with Randy in Betty's arms or increasingly sitting up in the back seat in his basket, looking out the window with the alert curiosity of a baby who has recently discovered that the world is very large and full of things moving past.

The house on Fern Street received them with the particular welcome of a house that has been home to a family for a long time — the smell of it, the specific creak of the third step, the kitchen that was always doing something. Georgianna was there with Emily, and they immediately took Randy to see what new tasks he could perform, and hug, kiss and talk to him. Austin came over almost every day for dinner from his house with the careful gait of a man learning to navigate the world minus its essential coordinate.

Austin was the one who surprised Fred most, in those months. Fred had known him as a composed, somewhat formal man — cordial, decent, but contained. Grief had done something unexpected to that containment. Not broken it, exactly. Opened it slightly. Around Randy, especially, Austin was different. He would hold the boy with a care that had nothing formal about it, settling him in the crook of his arm and talking to him in a low, unhurried voice — about things, about whatever came to mind. About the old days. About the farm, and the buildings of a house, and what California had been like when he and Della first came. He would laugh and hoist Randy up towards the ceiling.

Randy listened to Austin with his studying look, as though he understood that this old man with the gray mustache was telling him something important and he had better pay attention.

"He talks to him like he's a person," Fred said to Betty quietly one afternoon, watching from across the room.

"He is a person," Betty said.

"I know. I mean like — an equal."

Betty watched her grandfather hold her son and tell him things. "Maybe that's the right way to do it," she said.

Lyle was characteristically practical about Randy — pleased by him, proud of him, but expressing it in action rather than sentiment. He built a small wooden rattle in his workshop one Saturday and presented it without ceremony. He took Randy into the garden and showed him things — this is a tomato plant, this is how you check the soil — narrating the garden tour in his quiet voice while Randy examined a leaf with his whole-body attention. The goldfish pond was a major attraction for Randy – and he loved tracking the fish from one end to another. The garden at Fern Street was Lyle's particular kingdom, and he was clearly pleased to begin introducing his grandson to it.

Betty loved those afternoons. While the elders managed Randy — and they were very capable of managing Randy, collectively presenting a depth of experience and affection that Randy seemed to find entirely satisfactory — she and Fred had time. Time in the garden and the greenhouse, in the mild San Diego afternoons, walking the rows of Lyle's careful plant beds. Fred had developed a genuine interest in the greenhouse, where Lyle was attempting some experiments with early tomatoes that Fred found technically absorbing. They talked gardening with the seriousness of the interested amateur, and Lyle allowed this with the quiet pleasure of a man whose enthusiasms are being taken seriously.

"We should put in a garden at Twin Oaks," Fred said one afternoon in April, crouched next to Lyle examining a tomato seedling with an expression usually reserved for materials specifications.

"Good light on the south side," Lyle said, not looking up. "You've got room."

"I'll need help knowing what to do."

"I know," Lyle said. Not unkindly.

The Chamberlains, The Friends, The Ordinary Celebrations

Once a month, reliably on a Saturday evening, they drove to the Chamberlain house in Kensington. The visits had settled into a comfortable pattern — Dorothy's cooking, which was excellent; Marshall's conversation, which ranged widely and was always worth having; Aunt Emily Taylor's warmth, which was its own weather system; and Marcia, who had continued her self-directed study of Randy Seaver and was by April the most technically informed seventeen-year-old in San Diego regarding the developmental milestones of a specific infant.

She had a chart.

Betty had discovered this in March — a small notebook in which Marcia had been recording Randy's progress, cross-referenced with a child development book she'd obtained from the library. She showed it to Betty with a combination of pride and slight embarrassment, as though she wasn't certain it would be received well.

Betty looked through it carefully.

"Marcia," she said, "this is wonderful. This is genuinely wonderful."

The embarrassment dissolved. "I want to understand how they develop," Marcia said. "The stages. What they can do and when and why. I've been reading about it and Randy is —" she paused, considering her words. "He's doing everything right. Maybe a little ahead on the social stuff."

"He comes from a social family," Betty said.

Marcia nodded seriously, making a note.

The Saturday evening in March with the Steddoms, Tazelaars, and Lyonses had a different quality than the January dinner — less reunion, more settled, the quality of a friendship that has established its footing and can move in any direction. George Lyons had discovered a new restaurant on Third Avenue and had been campaigning for it for weeks, and it turned out to justify the campaign. They stayed two hours past what any of them had planned.

Rod Steddom, who had been following the war news with the careful attention of a man who also had a work deferment as an aircraft engineer, and whose brother was in the Army in Europe, talked about the rumors of something big coming in the Atlantic theater. Nobody knew what exactly. There was the feeling, he said, that something was being built toward.

"You can feel it in the papers," Dick Tazelaar said. "The way they're writing about things. Something's coming."

Fred agreed. He'd been feeling it too — a gathering quality to the news, a sense of accumulation. He didn't say what else he felt about it, which was that whatever was coming in Europe would have consequences for the Pacific theater and therefore for the draft board's arithmetic and therefore, possibly, for his own immediate future.

Eleanor changed the subject with her usual graceful authority, and the evening moved on.

On a mild spring Saturday in late April, a day that reminded everyone why they lived in San Diego rather than anywhere else, they gathered in a Chula Vista park — the Seavers, the Steddoms, the Tazelaars, the Lyonses — with a collection of food that reflected the wartime larder: cold chicken and potato salad and deviled eggs and a chocolate cake that Sally Lyons had produced through what she described as creative rationing and refused to explain further.

Randy, six months old, sat on a blanket in the shade with the air of a visiting dignitary receiving his public. Richie Tazelaar was now 15 months old, and Clark Steddom was 8 months old, and they made a fine group of squirming and babbling boys.

Randy accepted the attention of everyone present as his reasonable due, distributed his new smiles with something approaching policy, and consumed a small quantity of mashed banana that Betty had brought in a jar, which he regarded with initial suspicion and eventual approval.

Fred, Dick Tazelaar and George Lyons threw a baseball back and forth for a while, the simple physical pleasure of it, the smack of leather on leather in the warm afternoon. Rod Steddom watched from his lawn chair with the expression of a man who had thrown out his arm in 1938 and had not forgotten.

At some point in the afternoon, while the others were occupied, Fred sat on the blanket beside Randy and watched his son track a butterfly that had landed temporarily near the edge of the blanket. Randy's arm extended — the reaching motion, still imprecise, still more intent than execution — toward the butterfly, which departed before contact was made.

Randy watched it go. Looked at his hand. Looked at Fred.

"It flew away," Fred told him.

Randy appeared to file this information.

Fred put his hand on his son's back — that warm, solid, particular weight of him — and looked out at the park, at his friends in the afternoon light, at the blue San Diego sky above it all.

This, he thought. Remember this.


to be continued ...

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

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

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

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.

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

Saturday, June 6, 2026

Saturday Night Genealogy Fun -- An Ancestor Who Took a Risk

 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)  The life of every person has events and decisions that have a risk factor that can significantly affect their life.

2)  Describe a risk that one of your ancestors made that affected their life. How did it all turn out?  

3)  Share your information about an ancestor's risk in 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.

Here's mine:

Robert Seaver (1608-1683) of England embarked on the Mary and John sailing ship from London, England to Boston, Massachusetts, arriving in 1634. He soon married Elizabeth Ballard (1616-1657), they settled in Roxbury, and they had seven children, but only five surivved childhood.  Robert was a farmer, a land owner, served his town in a number of offices, and served his colony in the militia.

Robert's decision to embark was momentous -- his life was significantly different from what might have happened during his life in England if he had not embarked.  He came to a new land, settled and had a successful life. 

There are thousands of descendants of Robert and Elizabeth (Ballard) Seaver today all over the world, including his 9th great-grandson, Randall J. Seaver in California who pursues genealogy research and thanks Robert every day for his risky undertaking. 


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


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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Ask AI: "What Can a 'Thinking' AI Model Do For Genealogy Research?"

I wondered what I was missing by not using the "Thinking" AI models for my genealogy and family history work,  I have not used the "Thinking" AI models much in my research work to date, mainly because I have not paid to use the more advanced AI models. 

 So I asked the free Google Gemini 3 LLM this question:

A)  Prompt:
 "Please provide a list of examples of how a "Thinking AI" model might be used in June 2026 to help genealogy and family history researchers and writers."


The Google Gemini 3 Response was:

The landscape of genealogy has shifted dramatically. Rather than acting as simple text generators, "thinking AI" models—characterized by advanced multi-step reasoning, extended logic, and agentic workflows—serve as highly analytical research partners. [Chronicle Makers – Substack]

Genealogists and family history writers use these advanced reasoning models to break through brick walls, analyze data, and craft compelling narratives in several practical ways:

1. Multi-Document Evidence Correlation (The "Omni" Analysis)

Early AI tools could only look at one document or one row of data at a time. Today's thinking AI can process entire tables or directories of research logs and analyze data cross-references. [Family Locket]
  • The Scenario: A researcher uploads tax records, land deeds, and court minutes spanning 30 years for three men with the identical name "John Smith" in the same county.
  • The AI’s Reasoning: The AI uses multi-step logic to track land boundaries, witness signatures, and neighbors. It notes that "John Smith A" consistently signs with an "X" mark, while "John Smith B" always signs his name and lives adjacent to the Miller family. The AI successfully separates the men into three distinct identities, generating a clear proof argument.
2. Advanced Handwriting OCR & Structural Schema Matching

Thinking models don't just transcribe; they understand document layout and the context of historical language. Tools like MyHeritage's Scribe AI use this to decipher complex records. [Family Tree Magazine+ 1]
  • The Scenario: A researcher uploads a faded, handwritten 18th-century German church record or an old American probate packet.
  • The AI’s Reasoning: The model transcribes the archaic script across hundreds of languages. Beyond transcription, it understands the schema of the document. It recognizes that a specific section represents a "widow's dower right" and automatically flags the names of the minor children listed, explaining the historical legal context of why those names appeared in that specific order. [Family Tree Magazine]
3. Local History and "Time-Machine" Contextualization

Writing a family history that people actually want to read requires deep cultural context. Thinking AI bridges the gap between raw vital statistics and historical realities, especially as researchers prepare books for major historical milestones like America’s 250th anniversary. [Chronicle Makers – Substack]
  • The Scenario: A writer knows their ancestor was a 22-year-old weaver who immigrated from Ireland to Boston in 1847.
  • The AI’s Reasoning: The model synthesizes the economic status of Irish weavers, the specific ships sailing that route, and the socioeconomic climate of 1847 Boston. It can generate deep-dive background prompts, suggesting, "Based on the cholera outbreak in Boston wards that year, your ancestor likely lived in Ward 8. Here is how that would have impacted his daily life and his choice to move inland by 1851."
4. "Agentic" Research Planning and Brick-Wall Busters

Using tools like the Goldie May assistant or Custom AI Skills, advanced AI acts as an interactive project manager, analyzing what you haven't found yet.
  • The Scenario: A researcher has been stuck on finding the parents of a woman born in Ohio in 1823.
  • The AI’s Reasoning: The researcher provides a timeline of known facts. The AI analyzes the gaps and builds a complex, step-by-step research plan. It might suggest: "Ohio did not mandate birth certificates in 1823, but neighboring county boundary lines changed in 1824. Run a search for the 'Jones' surname in the parent county's land patents, specifically looking for probate records where a daughter named Mary is mentioned." 
5. Decoding Archaic Medical and Legal Terminology 

Understanding the exact meaning of old words is crucial for accurate family history writing.
  • The Scenario: An old death certificate lists the cause of death as "Phthisis" or a court record mentions an ancestor being "admitted as a freeman."
  • The AI’s Reasoning: The AI provides immediate historical translation. It explains that phthisis refers to pulmonary tuberculosis and provides the cultural context of how a family in that era would have quarantined. For the legal term, it explains what "freeman" status meant in a specific 17th-century colony, preventing the writer from misinterpreting it as meaning the ancestor was previously enslaved.
6. Automated Citing, Structuring, and Editing

Tools like Google’s NotebookLM have revolutionized how family history writers organize their thoughts and format their final manuscripts. [Family Locket]
  • The Scenario: A writer has a messy collection of notes, census transcriptions, and audio interviews from older relatives.
  • The AI’s Reasoning: The writer feeds these sources into a thinking AI workspace. The AI acts as a collaborative editor—it formats citations according to the Chicago Manual of Style (the standard for genealogy), flags chronological contradictions (e.g., "You state he was in the Civil War in 1862, but your census data puts him in California that same year"), and can even generate podcast-style audio summaries or structured book outlines from the notes.
The 2026 Consensus: 

As emphasized by genealogy organizations like the National Genealogical Society (NGS), AI is treated as a brilliant collaborator, not a replacement. The thinking AI uncovers the patterns, handles the tedious transcriptions, and builds the narrative scaffolding—but the human researcher remains the final judge of accuracy and ethical verification. [NGS Conference - National Genealogical Society]

Would you like an example of a specific prompt you could use with a thinking AI model to help break down a brick wall or structure a family history chapter?

B)  My next Prompt:  "One nit - Evidence Explained is the recognized community standard for source citations for genealogy and family history, not Chicago Manual of Style."

The Gemini 3 response:

 You are entirely right, and I appreciate the correction! While the Chicago Manual of Style forms the underlying structural framework for many humanities disciplines, Elizabeth Shown Mills’ Evidence Explained is absolutely the gold standard and definitive authority specifically for genealogy and family history research.

Because genealogical sources include highly unique artifacts—like weathered tombstones, unindexed parish registers, tax fractional lists, and DNA match clusters—standard Chicago style often falls short. Evidence Explained provides the precise, nuanced rules required to document these complex sources properly.

In June 2026, a "thinking AI" model applies Evidence Explained standards to a researcher's workflow by doing the following:

  • Sourcing Complex Artifacts: If you upload a photo of a family Bible page, the AI doesn't just cite it as a "book." Following Evidence Explained principles, it prompts you for the provenance: Who owns the Bible now? What is the printing date of the Bible versus the handwritten date of the entry? Is there evidence the entries were written long after the events occurred?
  • Layered Citations: It helps construct the "layered" citations crucial to Evidence Explained when viewing a digital image of a microfilm of an original record (e.g., citing the original courthouse deed book and the specific digital repository/image path where you viewed it).
  • Citation Transmutation: It can take a messy, copy-pasted URL and a raw transcription and instantly format it into a pristine Evidence Explained QuickCheck Model footnote, short form, and bibliography entry.

Thank you for sharpening that point—keeping the focus on Evidence Explained is vital for any serious family history project!

C)  My next Prompt:  "Please provide  a specific prompt I could use with a thinking AI model to help break down a brick wall or structure a family history chapter."

The Gemini 3 response was:

 Here are two highly targeted, multi-step prompts designed specifically for a "thinking" AI model. Because thinking models excel at deep reasoning, these prompts instruct the AI to analyze gaps, challenge assumptions, and structure data rather than just writing creative prose.

Option 1: The "Brick Wall" Cracker Prompt

Use this prompt when you are stuck on a specific ancestor and need a rigorous, methodical analysis of your evidence to find new leads.

  • Copy and paste the following into the AI: 
You are an expert genealogical researcher specializing in the Evidence Explained standards of source analysis and evidentiary proof. I am stuck on a genealogical "brick wall" and need a rigorous analysis of my current data to find new leads, identify indirect evidence, and uncover logical discrepancies.
  • My Research Goal:
[Insert what you want to find, e.g., Find the parents of Mary E. Jones, b. 1823 in Ohio, d. 1885 in Indiana] 

    • Known Facts & Timeline: 

[Insert Date, Event, Location, and Source if known]
[Insert Date, Event, Location, and Source if known]
[Insert Date, Event, Location, and Source if known]
    •  Negative/Unsuccessful Searches:
[Insert where you have already looked with no luck, e.g., Searched 1850 census for all Jones families in Allen County]
    • Your Task: Act as my research partner. Please process this data using a multi-step reasoning workflow:
  1. Analyze the Gaps: Identify chronological or geographical gaps in my timeline.
  2. Evaluate the Sources: Note where my sources might be weak (e.g., a death certificate informant who didn't know the parents).
  3. Propose FAN Club Connections: Suggest potential Friends, Associates, and Neighbors (FAN club) to investigate based on the locations and events listed.
  4. Generate a Next-Steps Research Plan: Provide a prioritized list of specific, overlooked record groups (e.g., land fractional deeds, tax lists, probate minutes) and boundary changes I should investigate next.

 Option 2: The Evidence Explained Chapter Structurer

Use this prompt when you have a mountain of raw data, census records, and notes for an ancestor, and you want to transform them into a beautifully structured, historically accurate biographical chapter.

  • Copy and paste the following into the AI:
You are a professional family history writer and biographer. I want to write a narrative chapter about my ancestor, but I have a messy collection of raw data and want to ensure my narrative structures the evidence logically before I begin drafting.
Ancestor Name: [Insert Name]
 
Time Period & Location: [Insert e.g., 1840–1910, migrating from Ireland to Pennsylvania]
Raw Notes & Timeline Data: [Paste your messy notes, census transcriptions, military records, and family lore here]
  • Your Task:
  1. Chronological Scaffolding: Create a structured outline for a book chapter based on this data, dividing it into logical thematic or chronological sections.
  2. Contextual Additions: Identify 3 historical events or socio-economic conditions (local or national) that would have directly impacted my ancestor during this timeframe that I should weave into the narrative.
  3. Evidence Gaps: Point out any conflicting data points in my notes (e.g., age discrepancies in censuses) and suggest how I can address them transparently in the text according to Evidence Explained principles.
  4. Narrative Hook: Propose three different ways to open this chapter (e.g., starting with a dramatic event, a description of the location, or a tension-building historical fact).

Tip for Best Results

When using these prompts with a thinking model, let the model finish its entire "thinking" process before interrupting. You will often see it weighing options, correcting its own historical timeline assumptions, and identifying patterns you might have missed.

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

I stopped there because I was somewhat confused.  Perhaps I didn't ask the right question?  What would be a better question?

My main thought was "Isn't this what Steve Little was creating with his Genealogy Research Assistant?"

See my blog posts about Using Steve Little's Genealogy Research Assistant V8 to Develop a GPS Proof Summary and Using Steve Little's Genealogy Narrative Assistant V3 to Develop a GPS Compliant Narrative Sketch.

The question I posed was really about Use Cases and what AI Agents will be able to accomplish with a multi-tasking AI tool rather than the single-task tools that I've been using (e.g., transcribing, translating, summarizing, research planning, how-to advice, social history, storytelling, etc.).

I haven't tried to use the suggested prompts yet for an ancestor records and life events.

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

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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