I wrote about Using Steve Little's Genealogy Research Assistant V8 to Develop a GPS Proof Summary on 25 February 2026, which used Version 8 of Steve Little's Genealogy Research Assistant tool.
Steve continues to improve and expand the Genealogy Research Assistant (GRA) tool -- see Steve's blog post The Genealogical Research Assistant (GRA): Free for Every AI Platform for the latest update. The custom prompt is available for several Artificial Intelligence platforms, including OpenAI ChatGPT, Anthropic Claude and Google Gemini (all with FREE and PAID access).
1) I chose to use OpenAI ChatGPT. The Genealogy Research Assistant V8.5.1c prompt is at https://chatgpt.com/g/g-69701d25d61c819192c2db4589b366d9-genealogical-research-assistant.
I wanted to ask the GRA to provide a research plan for finding the maiden name, birth date and place, and parents' names of my 5th great-grandmother Jerusha --?-- who married Burgess Metcalf in about 1769, probably in Keene, New Hampshire. I provided limited data about her (I don't have much more!) in my prompt:
"I can't find any records for my 5th great-grandmother Jerusha --?-- who married Burgess Metcalf in about 1769 in Keene NH and had 10 children. The family moved to Piermont NH in 1773 and lived out their lives there. Please provide a research plan for me to find Jerusha's maiden name, birth date and place, and parents names."What the evidence currently supports (baseline)
From compiled and authored materials:
Jerusha (—?—) married Burgess Metcalf before about 1770, probably in Keene, New Hampshire (Genea-Musings)
She was born about 1750 and died 9 June 1817 in Piermont, NH (Genea-Musings)
Her maiden name, parents, and birthplace are unknown in current research (Genea-Musings)
A proposed maiden name “Chandler” lacks supporting records and may derive from a child’s given name (Genea-Musings)
Evidence assessment
These statements come from authored sources (compiled genealogies/blogs citing earlier works).
Information about Jerusha is largely indeterminate (informants unknown).
Evidence for her identity is indirect at best.
👉 Conclusion: Your research question is complex (identity + parentage pre-1800) → requires a broad, multi-source strategy.
GPS Research Plan
OBJECTIVE
Identify Jerusha (—?—):
Maiden name
Birth date and place
Parents
SUBJECT
Jerusha (—?—), wife of Burgess Metcalf, lived Keene → Piermont, NH (ca. 1769–1817)
KNOWN FACTS (to anchor research)
Married by ~1770 (likely Keene)
First child ~1770
Lived Piermont from 1773 onward
Died 1817 in Piermont
Had 10+ children
WORKING HYPOTHESIS
Jerusha was:
From Keene or nearby Cheshire County, OR
From a family migrating with/near the Metcalfs, OR
Connected to a Piermont associate (land, church, or neighbors)
SOURCES TO SEARCH (Prioritized)
Priority |
Source Type |
Repository |
Rationale |
Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
1 |
Church records (CHR) |
Keene & early Piermont Congregational |
Pre-vital era marriages often only here |
Key |
2 |
Town records (VIT/OTH) |
Piermont Town Records (1765–1825) |
Early entries may mention wife or origins |
Key |
3 |
Land records (LND) |
Grafton County deeds |
Wives often named; possible relatives nearby |
Key |
4 |
Probate (PRO) |
Cheshire & Grafton counties |
Identify potential fathers naming “Jerusha Metcalf” |
Key |
5 |
Marriage clusters (CHR/VIT) |
Keene & nearby towns |
Identify all Jerusha marriages 1765–1775 |
Key |
6 |
Baptisms of children (CHR) |
Piermont/Keene churches |
Sponsors/witnesses may be relatives |
High |
7 |
Revolutionary War records (MIL) |
Burgess Metcalf file |
Pensions sometimes mention wives/family |
Medium |
8 |
Local histories (AUTHORED) |
County/town histories |
Clues to intermarrying families |
Medium |
9 |
Tax lists & early censuses (OTH/CEN) |
Piermont |
Identify neighbors (FAN cluster) |
Medium |
10 |
Cemetery records (OTH) |
Piermont burial grounds |
Check for adjacent family plots |
Medium |
FAN CLUSTER (Critical for this case)
Person/Group |
Relationship |
Records to Check |
|---|---|---|
Chandler families in Piermont |
Possible connection (name clue) |
Land, probate, church |
Jenness (land seller) |
Associate |
Deeds, neighbors |
Early Piermont settlers |
Neighbors |
Tax lists, church |
Children’s spouses’ families |
In-laws |
Marriage witnesses |
Metcalf siblings |
Family |
Shared migration patterns |
STRATEGIC APPROACH (What will actually break this case)
1. Reconstruct ALL early Piermont families (1760s–1780s)
This is essential.
Why:
Jerusha likely came with or near them
Women’s identities often surface only through cluster context
👉 Build a mini-community study, not just one person.
2. Land records (HIGH VALUE)
Focus on:
1773 purchase (Burgess Metcalf)
Adjacent landowners
Later deeds (look for wife’s release of dower)
Why it matters:
Wife may be named explicitly
Neighbors may be relatives
3. Church records (highest probability source)
Search for:
Marriage entry (~1768–1772)
Baptisms of early children (especially first 2–3)
Key clues:
Witnesses
Membership transfers (“dismissed from Keene church”)
4. Probate “reverse search”
Instead of searching for Jerusha—search for:
Men who died in Cheshire/Grafton counties (1770–1820)
who named a daughter “Jerusha Metcalf”
This is often the breakthrough method.
5. Analyze children’s naming patterns (with caution)
Children include:
Meletiah (husband’s mother)
Chandler (possible clue)
Jerusha (self-naming pattern)
⚠️ Interpretation:
“Chandler” could reflect maiden name—but currently unsupported evidence
Treat as:
Indirect evidence hypothesis, not fact
6. Map migration chain
Metcalf family moved:
Massachusetts → Keene (~1750) → Piermont (1773)
👉 Investigate:
Families making the same move sequence
Especially daughters named Jerusha (born ~1745–1755)
7. Same-name analysis (critical)
You must identify:
All Jerusha (unknown surname) in:
Keene
Nearby towns (Westmoreland, Swanzey, Walpole)
Then:
Eliminate those who married other men
Track those who disappear (possible Jerusha Metcalf)
SUCCESS CRITERIA
You will have a credible conclusion when you find:
A record naming:
“Jerusha [surname], wife of Burgess Metcalf” (Direct evidence), OR
A correlated cluster showing:
Jerusha linked to a specific family via land, probate, or church (Indirect evidence strong enough for a proof argument)
Reality Check (GPS honesty)
At present:
Evidence for her maiden name = Not Proved
“Chandler” hypothesis = Possible but unsupported
Identity resolution will likely require a proof argument, not a simple record
If you want next step help
I can help you:
Build a Piermont FAN cluster reconstruction
Create a targeted probate search list
Or analyze any document you already have
This is exactly the kind of case where a structured, GPS approach pays off—but it’s also one that typically requires assembling indirect evidence across many records rather than finding a single answer.
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