I wrote an AI-assisted ABC biography for the family of my 4th great-grandfather Rudolf Spangler, a Revolutionhary War soldier, in ABC Biography of the Rudolf and Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler Family of York, Pennsylvania (1738-1835), based on my genealogical research over 38 years.
I wondered what Rudolf Spangler might have told his grandchildren in a life memoir in 1810.
1) I requested Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 to "Please write a life memoir for Rudolf Spangler based on the attached biography, as he might tell his grandchildren in 1819."
2) The AI Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 memoir (edited for accuracy and completeness) is:
Come closer to the fire, all of you. Yes, you too, little ones — pull your stools in. Your grandmother says I have been promising this evening for two winters past, and she is right, as she is right about most things. I am seventy-two years old, my hands are slower than they were, and the cold finds me now in ways it never did when I was chasing deer through Baumgardner’s Woods before sunrise. So tonight I will tell you what I can, while the telling is still in me.
I am Rudolf Spangler — your grandfather, your Grossvater — and I have lived in York, Pennsylvania, for every one of my seventy-two years. I have made silver and I have made clocks. I have served as a soldier, as a treasurer, as a senator of this commonwealth. I have buried friends and watched children grow. I have seen this land go from a British colony to a free republic. It has been a full life, and it is not finished yet — though I confess some evenings it feels closer to its end than its beginning.
What I tell you tonight is true, as best an old man’s memory can make it. I will not flatter myself, and I will not shame my family. I will tell you about my father and mother, who came from Germany with nothing but their faith and their hands. I will tell you about your grandmother — the finest woman God ever set down in Pennsylvania — and how we married on the first day of January in the year 1767. I will tell you about the war, and about the clocks, and about the deer.
Now. Are you ready? Good. Then here is the story.
My Father’s People, and How We Came to York
My father — your great-grandfather — was a man named Baltzer Spangler, and he came from Baden-Württemberg in Germany, which is a green and hilly country along the Rhine. My father spoke of the old country sometimes, in the way men speak of a place they loved but cannot return to — with a kind of ache in the voice that has no English word for it, only the German: Heimweh.
Baltzer married a woman named Maria Magdalena Ritter in 1732, and together they crossed the ocean to Pennsylvania. Can you imagine it? Think of the longest journey you have ever made — perhaps to Philadelphia, perhaps to the Susquehanna — and now make it ten times worse, on a wooden ship, for eight or ten weeks, with the Atlantic Ocean trying its best to swallow you whole. Many did not survive such crossings. Whole families were lost to fever below decks. That Baltzer and Magdalena arrived safely, and arrived in Pennsylvania of all places, was in my estimation a kind of miracle, or at the very least a very considerable piece of good fortune.
They settled in York — this very borough where we sit tonight — and they raised eight children here, of which I, Rudolf, was the fifth. My brothers were George, Baltzer, Michael, Daniel, and John. My sisters were Maria Juliana and Elizabeth. We were a loud and busy household, I can tell you that. When I was a boy this house smelled of bread and sawdust and whatever my mother had on the fire, and there was never a moment of quiet except on Sunday morning before the service, when my father would sit at the table with his Bible and none of us dared speak.
My father — your great-grandfather Baltzer — died in 1770 when I was already a grown man of thirty-two and well established in my trade. My mother Magdalena lived until 1784. They are buried here in York, not far from where we shall all be buried in our time. I think of them often. They crossed an ocean so that I might be born a free man in a free land, and in the end that freedom cost something more than an ocean crossing. But I am getting ahead of myself.
Now, I must tell you something curious about our family, because you will want to know it. My brother Michael — God rest him, he died in 1793 — married a woman named Margaret Dinkel. And your grandmother Dorothea, as you know, was also a Dinkel. She was Margaret’s aunt. My great-uncle, Philip Spangler, also married a Margaret Dinkel, a sister of your grandmother. So the Spanglers and the Dinkels have been tangled up together since before your grandmother and I were even married. Some families are like that — they circle each other for a generation or two until finally someone has the good sense to make it official.
The Craft of the Clockmaker and Silversmith
When I was old enough to be apprenticed, my father sent me to learn the silversmith’s trade. I will not tell you it was easy, because it was not. You work in heat, with tiny tools, on pieces so small a sneeze can ruin an hour’s labor. Silver is an unforgiving metal. It shows every mistake. But it also shows every triumph, and when you hold up a finished piece — a buckle, a spoon, a brooch — and the light catches it just so, there is a satisfaction in that which I have never found equaled in any office or chamber of government.
I learned clockmaking as well, because the two trades were often practiced together. A clockmaker works with gears and springs and escapements — those are the little mechanisms that make the tick-tock — and it requires the same steady hand and patient temperament as silversmithing. I made many clocks in my working years. Long clocks — what some call grandfather’s clocks — that stand tall in a hall and mark the hours with a deep and serious voice. On every dial I inscribed my name: Rudy Spengler, York town. That was my mark. That was how anyone who owned one of my clocks would know who made it.
I have been told that three of my clocks are still ticking in homes around this county. I confess that gives me more pleasure than I can easily express. A law I wrote may be forgotten. A road I argued for in the Senate will be worn away in time. But a clock, properly made, will keep on counting the hours long after the man who made it is silent. There is something in that I find very comforting.
By 1773 I had expanded my business and was reckoned a merchant of York — that is how the tax assessors listed me, and I did not complain about it. A merchant was a respectable thing to be. I had a shop, I had customers, I had a reputation for honest work. Your grandmother used to say that I was better at making silver than I was at selling it, because I would rather give a good price to a neighbor than argue over a fair one. She was not wrong about that either.
I want each of you — every grandchild here tonight — to remember this about honest work: it does not merely feed you. It makes you. A man who does poor work knows it, even if his customer does not find out for a year. That knowledge sits in him like a stone. But a man who does fine work carries himself differently. He can look any man in the eye. That is worth more than the coin difference between good work and shoddy work, though the coin difference is nothing to be sneezed at either.
Your Grandmother Dorothea, and Our Wedding Day
Now I come to the part of the story your grandmother has forbidden me to tell, and so naturally it is the part I most enjoy telling.
Dorothea Dinkel came from Strasbourg, which is a city in Alsace — that is a border country between France and Germany, and the people there speak both tongues and sometimes neither very cleanly. She was born in 1748, ten years after me, and her family had come to York sometime in her early childhood. Her father, Daniel Dinkel, had died when she was only seven, so it was her mother Ursula who raised the family here. Ursula Hornuss Dinkel was a formidable woman. She lived to be eighty. That is where your grandmother gets it from, I think.
I first knew Dorothea as a young woman of perhaps sixteen or seventeen, and I knew immediately that I intended to marry her, though I had the good sense not to say so aloud to anyone for some time. She was quick-minded and warm and had a way of laughing that made whatever room she was in feel larger and more alive. She is sixty-two years old now and she still has that laugh. I have heard it nearly every day for forty-three years and it has never once grown tiresome.
We were married on the first day of January, in the year 1767, at Trinity Reformed Church. Now. Here is the part your grandmother does not wish me to tell. On the morning of my own wedding day, I rose before sunrise, took my gun and my deer hounds, and went out to Baumgardner’s Woods, which lies about a mile southeast of York. And there I shot a deer.
Why? Because we needed meat for the wedding dinner, and I had promised the table would not lack for it, and I was not a man who broke promises — not even on his own wedding morning. Your grandmother has pretended for forty-three years that she found this outrageous. But I noticed she ate the venison without complaint.
She was eighteen years old when we married and I was twenty-eight. We had nothing much but our two pairs of hands, a small house, and the kind of confidence in the future that only the young possess without effort. We have had eleven children together. We have buried none of them, which is more than most families can say, and for that I thank God on my knees every night. Jacob, Catherine, Elizabeth, Margaret, Jesse, Johannes, Anna Maria, Daniel, Mary Margaret, Peter, and little Helen Dorothea — named for her mother — who was born the year I turned fifty-one. Eleven souls, all living. Your grandmother carried and bore and raised every one of them, and I will tell you plainly that whatever good thing has been said of me in this borough, I have done nothing so remarkable as that.
The War, and the Flying Camp
I need to tell you about the war, because you will ask, and because it matters.
In April of 1775, British soldiers fired on American militiamen at Lexington and Concord, in Massachusetts. I was thirty-seven years old. I had a wife, several young children, a trade, and a house. I had, in other words, a great deal to lose. And I did not hesitate for a single day.
I joined Captain George Eichelberger’s Company of the York County Militia in 1775. My neighbors and fellow citizens then elected me Captain of the Sixth Company of the York County Militia — which was, I confess, one of the proudest moments of my life, because a man does not choose his own rank among free men; they choose it for him, and that choice means something. It means they trust you with their lives, and with their sons’ lives. I did not take that lightly.
In 1776 our five York County battalions marched east to New Jersey to join what the Congress had called the Flying Camp. You may not know this name, so let me explain it. When General Washington needed a mobile reserve force — troops that could move quickly to wherever the British threatened — Congress assembled some ten thousand men from Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Delaware. We were that force. We were meant to be fast, and flexible, and ready.
What we actually were, in the summer and autumn of 1776, was frightened. I say that not to dishonor those men — many of whom were the finest I have ever known — but because I want you to understand the truth of war, which is nothing like the stories. The British army in New York was enormous and professional and equipped in ways we could barely imagine. We had muskets and courage and not much else. Washington’s army was retreating across New Jersey that autumn, and there were days when it seemed the whole enterprise of American independence might simply collapse before winter.
I will not pretend I was not afraid. Any man who says he was not afraid in that time is either a liar or a fool, and I hope I am neither. But fear and courage are not opposites — courage is what you do despite the fear, and I saw more courage in those York County farm boys and tradesmen than in any speech I ever heard in the Senate. We held. We did our part. We came home.
Your grandmother received me back without a word of reproach for having left, though I had been gone for months and she had managed the household, the children, and the shop entirely alone. She simply looked at me when I walked through the door and said, in German, ‘Good. Now wash your hands and come to supper.’ That is the woman I married.
After the war, men began calling me Captain, and they have never stopped. That title will be on my gravestone — your grandmother told me she has arranged it — and I do not mind it. Captain of the Sixth Company, York County Militia, 1775. There are worse things to be remembered as.
Public Life, and What I Think of It
After the war, York grew and I grew with it. The borough had been incorporated, the new nation was finding its feet, and men of some standing were expected to contribute to its governance. I served as County Treasurer from 1801 to 1805 — four years of adding up other men’s money, which I found less satisfying than making clocks, but someone had to do it, and I flatter myself that the accounts were honest when I left them.
I was a Burgess of York and a State Senator in 1803, and this past year — 1810 — I have sat as a member of the General Assembly of Pennsylvania. I will be honest with you, grandchildren: politics is a strange trade for a clockmaker. In my shop, if a gear was wrong, you knew it immediately — the clock stopped, or ran fast, or ran slow, and the fault was plain to see. In the legislature, a man can argue all day and never come to a conclusion, and everyone goes home satisfied with his own opinion while nothing whatever has been accomplished. I have sometimes wished I could open up the General Assembly like a clock case and find the piece that is preventing it from keeping proper time.
But I do not regret the public service. A free country requires men who will stand up and govern it, and if good men stay home, lesser men fill the gap. My father came from Germany, where ordinary men had no voice in how they were governed and no recourse when the powerful abused them. I have lived in a republic, and I have had a voice, and I have used it. That is not nothing. That is, in fact, everything.
I have owned property in this borough for thirty years and more — lots on West Market Street, East Market Street, South Queen, King Street, High Street. Some of it I built up myself, some came to me through my father. In my will I have left all of it to your grandmother Dorothea for her lifetime, to do with as she sees fit. She has earned it. After her, it will be divided among your fathers and mothers equally, every child the same share. I have never believed that the eldest son should inherit everything while the others get nothing. That is the old way, the German way, the way that made younger sons desperate and resentful. We are Americans now. We divide fairly.
What I Know Now, That I Did Not Know Then
You are very young, all of you. Even the oldest among you — I am looking at you, Jacob’s boy — has barely begun. I am seventy-two, and I still feel, some mornings, that I have barely begun myself, which I suppose is either encouraging or alarming, depending on how you look at it.
Here is what I know that I did not know at your age.
Time is the only thing you cannot make more of. I have made silver and I have made clocks — I have, you might say, made time, or at least measured it. But I have not been able to add a single hour to the supply. Spend it on things that matter. Spend it on your craft, on your family, on your community. Do not spend it on spite or grievance. I have seen men waste years nursing a wound that could have healed in a month, if they had let it.
Your hands are your honor. Whatever work you do — silversmithing or farming or keeping accounts or teaching children — do it as well as you possibly can. People in York will remember the quality of your work long after they have forgotten your name. Three of my clocks are still ticking in this borough. That is my truest monument.
Marry someone whose company you genuinely enjoy, because you will have a great deal of it. I have spent forty-three years in close quarters with Dorothea Dinkel Spangler, and I have not yet wished myself elsewhere. That is rarer than people suppose, and it is worth more than any amount of money or property.
Serve your country when it asks. It may ask a great deal. It may ask your comfort and your safety and your years. Give what it asks. A republic is not a gift; it is a bargain. Freedom in exchange for the willingness to defend it.
Finally: remember where you came from. Your great-grandfather crossed an ocean. Your grandmother’s family crossed an ocean. They gave up everything familiar so that you could be born here, on this ground, as free people. Do not take that for granted. Not for a single day.
Well. Your grandmother is giving me the look that means the fire is getting low and the young ones should be in bed. She has been giving me that look for forty-three years, and I have learned to obey it faster than any order I ever received in the militia.
I am Rudolf Spangler of York, Pennsylvania. Silversmith. Clockmaker. Captain of the Sixth Company of the York County Militia, 1775. County Treasurer. Senator. Burgess. Husband of Dorothea. Father of eleven. Grandfather, apparently, of a very considerable number of you, over twenty at least so far.
It has been a good life. An honest one, I think. I hope you will say the same of yours, when your time comes to sit by a fire and tell it.
Now go to bed. All of you. And tell your grandmother the deer story was my own idea.
3) The Video Overview of Rudolf Spangler's life memoir, created by the Google NotebookLM AI tool, is:
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.
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