I wondered if the FREE AI tools could provide me with information about the work of my 3rd great-grandfather Jonathan Oatley (1791-1872) of East Killingly, Connecticut -- he was a Baptist minister and a stonecutter. The ABC Biography for Jonathan Oatley is in ABC Biography of #46 Jonathan Oatley (1790-1872) of Rhode Island and Connecticut.
1) My Prompt for Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 was: "Jonathan Oatley was both a Baptist minister and a "stonecutter" with a quarry near Killingly Old Pond in Connecticut in the 1840 to 1870 time frame. Please describe how Jonathan worked in the quarry, what products did he and his sons produce and estimate the costs, who were his customers, and how did his stonecutting work influence his preaching."
2) Here is the Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 response:
Rev. Jonathan Oatley: Minister and Stonecutter
Based on historical records and the context of 19th-century Connecticut granite quarrying, here's a detailed picture of Jonathan Oatley's dual vocation:
Working the Quarry (1840s-1870s)
The Physical Labor
In the 19th century, quarrying required removing surface soil and underbrush by wheelbarrow, finding suitable seams, and drilling holes by hand. Black powder was used to open seams with minimal damage, whereas dynamite would shatter the stone into useless fragments.
Jonathan and his sons would have worked the "Oatley Ledges" near Killingly Old Pond using these labor-intensive methods:
Extracting the stone: Hand-drilling holes for black powder charges, carefully blasting to preserve large, usable blocks
Splitting and shaping: Using wedges, feathers (metal shims), chisels, and hammers to split granite along its natural grain
Rough cutting: Shaping blocks into the desired dimensions for their various products
Fine finishing: Hand-carving details, smoothing surfaces, and cutting precise edges for finished products
The work was physically demanding, dangerous, and required both strength and skill. Census records show Jonathan listed as a "stone cutter" (1850) and "mason" (1860), while his son Joseph was also a "stone cutter" (1870). This was year-round work when weather permitted, though winter would have slowed production considerably.
Products and Prices
What the Oatleys Made
According to family records, the Oatleys were known for producing:
Church steps and architectural elements: The document specifically mentions they "made long granite steps for the church in 'Kentuck'" which were later moved to the Union Baptist Church in East Killingly—testament to their quality and durability.
Gravestones and monuments: Connecticut stonecutters in the mid-1800s produced gravestones and monuments as basic finished dimension stones that made up the majority of granite shed production. This would have been a steady business for a minister who knew every family in the community and surrounding area.
Building stone: Foundation stones, lintels, sills, and other architectural elements for local construction
Functional stonework: Possibly millstones, mounting blocks, hitching posts, and other utilitarian items
Estimated Costs (1840s-1860s)
Precise pricing from the 1840s-1860s is difficult to establish, but we can make educated estimates based on later records and accounting for inflation:
Gravestones and Monuments: In the mid-to-late 1800s, a simple upright granite headstone would have cost approximately $5-$25 depending on size and carving detail. More elaborate monuments might range from $25-$100. By the latter part of the 1800s, granite usage greatly increased on larger simple headstones and obelisks with less detailed carving.
Church steps and architectural work: Custom-cut long granite steps for a church building would have been a premium product, likely costing $50-$200 for a complete set, representing weeks of skilled labor.
Building stone: Rough-cut building blocks might sell for $0.50-$2.00 per cubic foot, depending on quality and finish.
For context, the 1850 census shows Jonathan's real property valued at $1,000, indicating a modest but stable income from his combined ministerial and stonecutting work.
Customers
Jonathan's customer base would have included:
Local church congregations: Both for construction projects and memorial stones for deceased members—Jonathan's pastoral role gave him natural connections to this market
Families in East Killingly and surrounding towns: For gravestones, monuments, and family memorials. As a respected minister who had performed baptisms, weddings, and funerals, Jonathan would have been a trusted choice for memorial work.
Local builders and contractors: For foundation stones, steps, lintels, and other architectural elements
Municipal projects: Possibly bridge abutments, public building foundations, and infrastructure work
Fellow church members: Both from his Baptist congregation and the wider Christian community in Windham County
The fact that the Oatleys' work—particularly the church steps—survived removal and reinstallation suggests they built a reputation for quality craftsmanship that would have attracted customers through word-of-mouth in the close-knit rural Connecticut community.
How Stonecutting Influenced His Preaching
The combination of minister and stonecutter was not uncommon in 19th-century rural America, where Baptist preachers in the 19th century often needed to support themselves through trades, as church discipline and traditional expectations for ministerial support were changing during this era. This dual vocation would have profoundly shaped Jonathan's ministry:
1. Biblical Metaphors Made Concrete
Jonathan's daily work with stone would have enriched his sermons with vivid imagery:
Christ as the "cornerstone" wasn't abstract theology—he cut cornerstones
Building one's house upon the rock had literal meaning to a man who knew which stone would hold and which would crack
The "stone the builders rejected" had workshop reality
Peter ("the rock") and the church built upon solid foundation gained tangible significance
2. Understanding Through Manual Labor
Working alongside his sons in the quarry gave Jonathan:
Empathy for his congregation: Most were farmers, artisans, and laborers. He shared their physical exhaustion, their callused hands, their understanding of honest work
Credibility: He wasn't a gentleman minister removed from common life—he knew what it meant to earn bread by the sweat of his brow
Practical wisdom: Stonecutting taught patience (you can't rush granite), persistence (hard stone yields only to sustained effort), and precision (one misplaced blow can ruin weeks of work)
3. The Theology of Craftsmanship
Creating something permanent from raw stone paralleled spiritual formation:
Rough stone = unregenerate soul
Careful shaping = sanctification through discipline
The finished monument = the transformed Christian life
Just as hidden flaws in stone only appear under the chisel, spiritual weaknesses emerge under trial
4. Memorial Ministry
Creating gravestones for church families gave Jonathan a unique pastoral role. He would have:
Consoled families in their grief while discussing memorial designs
Selected scripture verses to carve into monuments
Literally shaped the physical memory of the deceased
Created lasting tributes that preached sermons long after he was gone—including his own gravestone, which still stands in Bartlett Cemetery
5. Economic Reality and Spiritual Independence
His trade freed him from complete dependence on church salary, which was crucial given:
The 1847 church exclusion episode—his stonecutting income provided stability during crisis
Questions over whether preachers should be paid for preaching divided Baptist churches in the 19th century
His ability to support a family of fourteen children required income beyond typical ministerial compensation
6. Teaching by Example
His sons followed him into both quarrying and church life, learning:
Dignity of manual labor
Integration of faith and work
Skill passed from father to son
That a minister's hands could be both calloused and consecrated
7. The Permanence of Faith
Working with granite—a material meant to last centuries—would have reinforced themes of:
Eternal truth versus temporary fashion
Foundations that endure
Faith that outlasts the storms
Legacy that transcends one lifetime
The church steps that survived the demolition of one building to serve another became a perfect metaphor for Jonathan's ministry: solid, enduring, useful, and still serving God's people long after the original context had changed.
Conclusion
Jonathan Oatley's life as both minister and stonecutter wasn't a divided existence but an integrated vocation. His work in the quarry didn't distract from his preaching—it deepened it. Every stone he cut, every monument he carved, every step he shaped was part of his ministry. When he stood in the pulpit on Sunday after working the ledges all week, his sermons carried the authenticity of a man who knew both the Word and the world, both Scripture and stone, both faith and the feel of granite under the chisel.
His death certificate listing his occupation as "Clergyman" rather than stonecutter suggests how the community remembered him—but the granite steps still serving the Union Baptist Church in East Killingly tell the fuller story of a man whose ministry was carved in both word and stone.
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3) The Google NotebookLM Video Overview of this post is below.
4) As genealogists, we can usually find the 17th to 19th century town records, and the later census and vital records, for Massachusetts families, and we may find occupation, immigration, land and probate records. In addition, there are books and websites about the daily lives of people in those times. The AI tools have been pre-trained on historical events, social history, geography, literature and other disciplines so they can provide information for questions like this one, and by 2025 they have the ability to search the Internet.
5) After I read these types of social history summaries, I wish that I could be a time traveler for one day to visit the Oatley family in Connecticut and witness their daily lives. I'm glad that the general lifestyles and occupations are known from historical records and witness accounts.
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