I struggle to create a Register-Style family history report from all of my research notes. I like to add a Narrative Report created by RootsMagic with Source Citations to my Person Notes for a Person profile page in RootsMagic in addition to my Research Notes (which may or may not have Source Citations)
I wondered if an AI Browser Agent like the FREE Perplexity's Comet could take my Person Notes for a RootsMagic profile and create a (New England Historical and Genealogical) Register-style family history report. Here is what I found:
1) Here is the top of my Person Notes on the Person Screen in RootsMagic for Johann Nicolaus König (1707-1776) of Germany and Pennsylvania:
I copied the Person Notes into a Genea-Musings blog post, brought the blog post up on the screen in Perplexity Comet, and asked Perplexity Comet to "Please write a Register style family history report for the family in these notes, including source citations as endnotes":
Johann Nicolaus König of Leinenweber and later York County, Pennsylvania, married three times and left four known children who accompanied him from the Palatinate to Pennsylvania and are treated here in Register style.[geneamusings]
1. Johann Nicolaus¹ König (1707–1776)
Johann Nicolaus¹ König was born 18 May 1707 in Leinenweber, Rheinland‑Pfalz, Germany, son of Hans Paulus König and Anna Catharina (—?). He was of the Reformed faith and spent his early life in the Palatinate, a region repeatedly ravaged by war and religious conflict in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, conditions that helped prompt his emigration. He is found in German records and later Pennsylvania records under several forms of his name, including Johann Nicolaus König, Nicholas König, Nicolaus Konig, and Nicholas Koenig/King.[geneamusings]
He married first, at Edenkoben, Rheinland‑Pfalz, on 20 January 1728, MARIA URSULA BOCHINGER, who was born about 1709, likely in Rheinland‑Pfalz, and died before 1735 at Niederhorbach, Rheinland‑Pfalz. They had two known sons, both baptized in the Palatinate, before Maria Ursula’s death.[geneamusings]
He married second, at Edenkoben, on 19 June 1735, MARIA MARGARETHA STUBER, daughter of Johann Jacob Stuber and Anna Catherina Mann, who was baptized 30 November 1702 at Herren‑Sulzbach, Rheinland‑Pfalz, and was living as late as the family’s move to York County but died there before 1771. She appears in later records as Maria Margaretha König, reflecting her married surname.[geneamusings]
Johann Nicolaus and Maria Margaretha emigrated from the Palatinate in 1752 with their blended family, leaving a war‑torn, religiously divided region for British North America. They traveled down the Rhine to Rotterdam, embarked on the ship Ketty (Capt. Theophilus Barnes), and sailed via Portsmouth, England, to Philadelphia, where they arrived in mid‑October 1752 and took the oath of allegiance on 16 October 1752. The Ketty passenger list names Johann Nicolaus König, age 45, wife Maria Margaretha, and children Gottfried, Johann Peter, Anna Elisabeth, Philipp Jacob, Johann Wilhelm, and Maria Barbara, and notes that they went on to Chester County.[geneamusings]
The family’s precise whereabouts between 1752 and 1760 are uncertain, though later ties of two König children to the Wilhelm family of Lancaster County suggest a possible residence in Lancaster or Berks County during that period. By 1760 Johann Nicolaus had settled in Manchester Township on the north side of the Codorus River in York County, where he purchased 200 acres of land for 600 pounds and, with his sons, established a home and farm. He became a naturalized British subject on 21 March 1762, and his sons Jacob and Godfrey were naturalized 9 September 1762, further anchoring the family in the region.[geneamusings]
Between 1764 and 1771 his second wife, Margaret (Maria Margaretha) King, died, and on 27 December 1764 his son Jacob bought the original 200‑acre tract for 600 pounds. On 22 August 1765 Nicholas King purchased another 200 acres, and on 19 November 1770 he acquired a house and lot on the east side of Beaver Street in the town of York from Andrew Rudisilly for 60 pounds.[geneamusings]
He married third, at the First Reformed (Trinity) Church in York, Pennsylvania Colony, 17 December 1771, SUSANNA VOGELE, who was born about 1705 in Germany and was living as late as 1776 in York County. She appears in records as Susanna or Susan Vogele and, after marriage, as Susanna King.[geneamusings]
On 9 March 1776, describing himself as “sick and weak in body, but of sound disposing mind,” Nicholas King made his will at York, signing by mark. In it he commended his soul to God, directed payment of his debts and funeral charges, provided that his wife Susanna should have a life residence in his dwelling house, a cash legacy of 20 pounds, and sufficient bedding, and devised the Beaver Street house and lot in York in fee to his daughter Anna Elizabeth Cronemiller. He ordered that his remaining personal estate be sold at public vendue and the proceeds divided equally among his four children: Godfrey, Anna Elizabeth Cronemiller, Philip Jacob King, and Barbara, wife of Adam Wilhelm of Lancaster County. He appointed his “loving daughter” Ann Elizabeth Cronemiller executrix.[geneamusings]
The will was proved 29 March 1776 in York County, after testimony by witnesses Henry Wolff and George Lewis Leffler that Nicholas King had executed the instrument as his last will while of sound mind. He died between 9 and 29 March 1776 at York, York County, Pennsylvania, but no burial place has been identified for him or any of his wives.[geneamusings]
Children of Johann Nicolaus¹ König by his first wife, Maria Ursula Bochinger, all born in the Palatinate:
i. JOHANN GOTTFRIED² KÖNIG, b. before 24 Oct. 1728, Edenkoben, Rheinland‑Pfalz; m. about 1761, York Co., Pa., ANNA CHRISTINA ZIEGLER; d. 19 Oct. 1805, Manchester Twp., York Co., Pa.[geneamusings]
ii. JOHANN PETER² KÖNIG, b. Dec. 1730, Edenkoben; d. 1793, Hatfield, Montgomery Co., Pa.[geneamusings]
Children of Johann Nicolaus¹ König by his second wife, Maria Margaretha Stuber, all born in the Palatinate:[geneamusings]
iii. ANNA ELISABETHA² KÖNIG, b. before 6 Mar. 1737, Edenkoben; m. 20 June 1756, Lancaster, Lancaster Co., Pa., JOHANN MARTIN CRONEMILLER; living 1776 in Manchester Twp., York Co., Pa.; d. after 1776.[geneamusings]
iv. PHILIP JACOB² KÖNIG, b. 15 Feb. 1738, Niederhorbach, Rheinland‑Pfalz; m. (1) 1 Apr. 1763, Lancaster, Lancaster Co., Pa., MARIA BARBARA WILHELM; m. (2) about 1779, York, York Co., Pa., MARIA CATHERINA ZIEGLER; d. before 25 Feb. 1792, Manchester Twp., York Co., Pa.[geneamusings]
v. JOHAN WILHELM² KÖNIG, b. about 1745, Edenkoben; further life not traced.[geneamusings]
vi. MARIA BARBARA² KÖNIG, b. before 11 Feb. 1750, Edenkoben; m. about 1770, probably in Pennsylvania, JOHANN ADAM WILHELM; living 1776.[geneamusings]
No children are known by the third wife, Susanna Vogele.[geneamusings]
Endnotes
Richard Shue, The Kings of York County: Pioneers, Patriots and Papermakers (York, Penn.: the author, n.d.), Part I, p. 23, sketch of Johann Nicholas Konig.[geneamusings]
Konig‑King research material (letters and family group sheets), 1973–1980; Historical Society of York County, Pennsylvania; Alfred Kuby letter, 23 June 1980, Johann Nicholas Konig birth and baptism record.[geneamusings]
Konig‑King research material (letters and family group sheets), 1973–1980; Historical Society of York County, Pennsylvania; family group sheet, Johann Nicholas Konig and Maria Ursula Bochinger marriage record.[geneamusings]
Konig‑King research material (letters and family group sheets), 1973–1980; Historical Society of York County, Pennsylvania; Karl Scherer letter, 29 March 1973, Johann Nicholas Konig and Margaretha Stuber marriage record.[geneamusings]
Konig‑King research material, Alfred Kuby letter, 23 June 1980, birth and baptism of Johann Nicholas Konig, 18 May 1707, Leinenweber, Rheinland‑Pfalz.[geneamusings]
Richard Shue, Kings of York County, Part I, p. 25, Nicholas King probate.[geneamusings]
“Pennsylvania, Probate Records, 1683–1994,” digital images, FamilySearch (http://familysearch.org), York Co., “Will books, 1749–1882; General index to wills, 1749–1940,” Wills v. A–D 1749–1779, vol. C, pp. 342–44, will and probate of Nicholas King, 1776; also on FHL microfilm US/CAN 22,131.[geneamusings]
“York County, Pennsylvania, 1745–1800: First Reformed (Trinity) Church,” indexed database, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com), marriage of Nicolaus Konig and Susan Vogele.[geneamusings]
“Pennsylvania and New Jersey, Church and Town Records, 1669–2013,” digital images, Ancestry.com, PA – York > York > United Church of Christ > Trinity United Church of Christ, AD 1771, image 132 of 502, marriage of Nicholas Konig and Susanna Vogele.[geneamusings]
“Deutschland Heiraten, 1558–1929,” database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org), entry for Nicklaus Koenig and Maria Ursula Bechingers, 20 Jan. 1728, Evangelisch, Kapellen‑Drusweiler, Pfalz, Bavaria; FHL microfilm 193,930.[geneamusings]
Ibid., duplicate entry cited in compiled notes.[geneamusings]
Konig‑King research material, family group sheet, Johann Nicholas Konig and Maria Ursula Bochinger marriage record.[geneamusings]
“Deutschland Heiraten, 1558–1929,” FamilySearch, Nicklaus Koenig–Maria Ursula Bechingers marriage, 20 Jan. 1728.[geneamusings]
Konig‑King research material, family group sheet, Johann Peter Konig baptism record, Dec. 1730, Edenkoben.[geneamusings]
“Deutschland Geburten und Taufen, 1558–1898,” indexed database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org), entry for Philipps Jacob Koenig, b. 15 Feb. 1738; citing FHL microfilm 193,822.[geneamusings]
Konig‑King research material, Karl Scherer letter, 29 March 1973, Johann Nicholas Konig–Margaretha Stuber marriage, 19 June 1735, Edenkoben.[geneamusings]
“Germany, Marriages, 1558–1929,” indexed database, FamilySearch (http://familysearch.org), entry for Nicolaus Koenig and Maria Margaretha Stuber.[geneamusings]
Richard Shue, Kings of York County, Part I, p. 23, data on Maria Margaretha (Stuber) König.[geneamusings]
“Deutschland Geburten und Taufen, 1558–1898,” FamilySearch, entry for Maria Margaretha Stuber, bapt. 30 Nov. 1702, Herren‑Sulzbach.[geneamusings]
“Germany, Marriages, 1558–1929,” FamilySearch, entry for Nicolaus Koenig and Maria Margaretha Stuber.[geneamusings]
“Deutschland Geburten und Taufen, 1558–1898,” FamilySearch, baptism of Maria Margaretha Stuber, Herren‑Sulzbach.[geneamusings]
Ibid., same baptismal entry as note 21.[geneamusings]
Richard Shue, Kings of York County, Part I, p. 23, death of Maria Margaretha (Stuber) König before 1771.[geneamusings]
Richard Shue, Kings of York County, Part I, p. 23, use of married form Maria Margaretha Konig.[geneamusings]
Richard Shue, Kings of York County, Part I, p. 23, third marriage of Johann Nicholas Konig to Susanna Vogele.[geneamusings]
“York County, Pennsylvania, 1745–1800: First Reformed (Trinity) Church,” Ancestry.com, marriage of Nicolaus Konig and Susan Vogele, 17 Dec. 1771.[geneamusings]
“Pennsylvania, Church and Town Records, 1669–2013,” Ancestry.com, PA – York > York > United Church of Christ > Trinity United Church of Christ, AD 1771, image 132, marriage of Nicholas Konig and Susanna Vogele.[geneamusings]
“York County, Pennsylvania, 1745–1800: First Reformed (Trinity) Church,” Ancestry.com, entry referring to Susan/Susanna Vogele.[geneamusings]
- I could also use a Narrative Report created in Family Tree Maker, Legacy Family Tree, or other genealogy software to do this Perplexity Comet task of creating a Register-style family history report.
- Instead of a blog post, I could copy a Narrative Report into a Word processing document and save it as a PDF and ask Perplexity to do the task (not Comet which is the AI Browser Agent that works on a web page).
- I asked the AI Google Gemini's Browser Agent to do this same task with the same web page and the result was similar for the facts but it lacked all of the event context and social history in the top paragraphs above.





