Saturday, June 6, 2026

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, 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

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.  Note that all comments are moderated, so they may not appear immediately.

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ABC Biography of Philip Jacob and Maria Barbara (Wilhelm) König Family of Rheinland-Pfalz and Pennsylvania

Using the ABC method described in Using Artificial Intelligence In the Ancestor Biography Creation (ABC) Process -- Updated, enhanced by further developments, here is another ancestor couple biography using the Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 AI tool.

1) The genealogical sketch for my 5th great-grandparents Philip Jacob and Maria Barbara (Wilhelm) König of Pennsylvania, including family members, record abstracts and sources, is in Genealogical Sketch for the Philip Jacob König (1738-1792) and Maria Barbara Wilhelm (1740-before 1779) Family of Rheinland-Pfalz and Pennsylvania.


(AI NotebookLM Infographic - Philp Jacob and Maria Barbara (Wilhelm) Konig  Family Biography)

2) For the Claude AI biography, I attached a PDF of the genealogical sketch for the specific ancestors using the plus (+) icon, and then prompted the AI tool with:  "You are an expert genealogist and family historian. Please create a biography based on information in the attached file for the Philip Jacob and Maria Barbara (Wilhelm) König family. Include parents, siblings, spouses and children (with birth and death dates and places). Summarize life events, add historical events as appropriate, but do not add or embellish any extra genealogical details. Use section headings. Expand the information in each section to add more details. The tone should be engaging and suitable for family members."

3)  The Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 biography (lightly edited for accuracy) is: 


Philip Jacob König and Maria Barbara Wilhelm

A Family History from Rheinland-Pfalz to 

 Pennsylvania -- 1738–1792


Philip Jacob König: Early Life in Germany

Philip Jacob König was born on 15 February 1738 in the small village of Niederhorbach, in the Rheinland-Pfalz region of what is now southwestern Germany. Three days later, on 18 February 1739, he was baptized in nearby Edenkoben — a time when the church and family were inseparably intertwined, and baptism was both a spiritual and civic event of great importance.

Philip Jacob was the son of Johann Nicolaus König (1707–1776) and his second wife, Maria Margaretha Stuber (1702–1771), who had married in 1735 in Edenkoben. Nicolaus had previously been married to Maria Ursula Bohringer (1709–before 1735), with whom he had two sons before her early death.

Philip Jacob's Siblings

From his father Nicolaus's first marriage, Philip Jacob had two older half-brothers:

  • Johann Gottfried König, born before 24 October 1728 in Edenkoben — he would later marry Anna Christina Ziegler around 1761 in York, Pennsylvania, and lived until 19 October 1805 in Manchester, York County, Pennsylvania.
  • Johann Peter König, born December 1730 in Edenkoben — he settled in Hatfield, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, where he died in 1793.
From his parents' marriage, Philip Jacob had three siblings:
  • Anna Elisabetha König, born before 6 March 1737 in Edenkoben — she married Johann Martin Cronemiller on 20 June 1756 in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and lived until after 1776 in Manchester, York County.
  • Johan Wilhelm König, born about 1745 in Edenkoben — no further record has been found.
  • Maria Barbara König, born before 11 February 1750 in Edenkoben — she married Johann Adam Wilhelm about 1770 in York, Pennsylvania.

The Journey to Pennsylvania

In October 1752, when Philip Jacob was about fourteen years old, his entire family uprooted their lives and joined the great wave of Palatine German emigration to colonial America. The Nicolaus König family sailed aboard the ship Kitty, crossing the Atlantic to begin a new chapter in Pennsylvania Colony. They settled in York County, joining a thriving German-speaking community that had established churches, farms, and mills in the fertile Pennsylvania countryside.

This was a time of tremendous movement — tens of thousands of German-speaking families fled economic hardship, religious persecution, and political instability in the Rhine Valley, seeking land and liberty in the New World. The journey itself was grueling: weeks at sea in cramped conditions, with disease an ever-present danger. That the König family arrived together and intact was itself a blessing.

After arriving in Pennsylvania, Philip Jacob König took the important civic step of becoming a naturalized British subject in 1762, in accordance with an act of Parliament — a formal declaration of his commitment to his new home just one year before he would take a wife.

Maria Barbara Wilhelm: Born in the New World

Maria Barbara Wilhelm was born 7 September 1740 in Tulpehoeken, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania Colony — the fifth child and second daughter of Johann Jacob Wilhelm (1698–1773) and Anna Catherina Unruh (1709–1771). Unlike her future husband, Maria Barbara was American-born, though her parents had made their own Atlantic crossing just six years before her birth.

Her parents, Johann Jacob Wilhelm and Anna Catherina Unruh, had married around 1727 in Bavaria and made their voyage to Pennsylvania aboard the ship Saint Andrew, arriving in Philadelphia on 12 September 1734. They settled in the Tulpehoeken region of Lancaster County, where Maria Barbara was born. The Tulpehoeken Valley was a particularly vibrant center of German settlement, its fertile farmland attracting many Palatine families.

Maria Barbara's Siblings

Maria Barbara grew up in a large and close-knit family with five siblings:

  • Johann Jacob Wilhelm, born 9 February 1728 in Walsheim, Rheinland-Pfalz — he married Sophia Catharine Schupp in 1754 in Lancaster and died 16 November 1784 in Donegal, Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania.
  • Johann Valentin Wilhelm, born before 2 December 1731 in Niederhochstadt, Rheinland-Pfalz — remarkably, he returned to Europe and died 17 March 1809 at the age of 77 in Harras, Thüringen, Germany.
  • Maria Catharina Wilhelm, born about 1736, probably in Berks County — she married Henrich Zanck before 1752 and died 4 February 1793 in Lancaster.
  • Philip Jacob Wilhelm, born 10 January 1738 in Tulpehoeken — he married Maria Elisabeth Haberstich on 25 May 1762 in Lancaster and died 20 October 1795 in Lancaster.
  • Johann Adam Wilhelm, born before 24 November 1742 in Tulpehoeken — he married Maria Barbara König (Philip Jacob's sister!) around 1770, a charming intertwining of the two families. He died 20 July 1824 in Lancaster.
Marriage and Family Life

On 1 April 1763, Philip Jacob König and Maria Barbara Wilhelm were joined in marriage in a ceremony performed by the Reverend John Waldschmidt of the Reformed faith. The wedding took place in the parlor of the bride's family home in Lancaster County — an intimate and personal setting befitting the close family ties of the German Reformed community. The Lancaster church records capture the moment simply but warmly:

"König, Philip Jacob, s. of Nicolaus König, and Maria Barbara, d. of Jacob Wilhelm; Apr. 1, 1763; in Jacob Wilhelm's house."
It is a tender detail that their wedding took place in Maria Barbara's childhood home, surrounded by family. The couple made their home in York County, Pennsylvania, where they would raise their family. The note that Philip Jacob's sister Maria Barbara König would eventually marry Maria Barbara Wilhelm's brother Johann Adam Wilhelm speaks to the depth of connection between these two families.

Philip Jacob and Maria Barbara had seven children together between 1764 and 1777, the first four baptized in the First Reformed (Trinity) Church in York, and the last three in Manchester Lutheran Church:
  • Philip Jacob König, born 24 February 1764 in York, York County — he married Catherine Ruth before 1789 (12 children together), and after her death married Christina Miller on 8 March 1814 (three more children). He died 2 March 1829 in Spring Garden Township, York County.
  • Elizabeth König, born 17 May 1767 in York, York County — she married Bernard Pentz in York; no known children.
  • Henry König, born 8 January 1770 in York, York County — he married Elizabeth Diehl about 1790; they had one child. He died about 1805 in York.
  • George König, born 4 July 1774 in York, York County — he married Catherine Mary Stickle in 1794 in Somerset County; they had 11 children. He died 4 October 1844 in Perryopolis, Fayette County, Pennsylvania.
  • Peter König, born 18 December 1775 in Manchester, York County — he married Susanna Miller on 3 March 1800; they had nine children. He died May 1847 in York.
  • John König, born 16 May 1776 in Manchester, York County — no further record has been found.
  • Barbara König, born 30 November 1777 in Manchester, York County — she married John Rouse in 1796 in York; they had six children. She died 13 February 1805 in York.
Building a Life: Farm, Mill, and Community

Philip Jacob König was a man of industry and civic energy. As early as 27 December 1763 — just months after his wedding — he purchased 200 acres of his parents' farm, including the family home. He worked the land as a farmer for several years, building a foundation for his growing family.

Then, in 1771, his path changed. His brother-in-law Martin Cronemiller (husband of Philip Jacob's sister Anna Elisabetha) died that year, leaving behind a grist mill and his widow. On 10 June 1771, Philip Jacob became the owner of the grist mill and 13 acres of adjoining land — stepping into both a new livelihood and a responsibility to the family. The transition from farmer to miller was a significant step up in both economic standing and community importance; a grist mill was the beating heart of any agricultural settlement, where neighbors brought their grain and debts were settled.

By 1779, Philip Jacob had expanded his operations further, purchasing a large lot in York for 1,500 pounds from Henry and Catharine Wolf. A sawmill was built on the property and was operational before 1781, giving the König family a remarkable dual enterprise of milling both grain and timber.

The scale of his success is reflected in the 1780 Tax and Exoneration List for York County, where Philip Jacob King (as the name was increasingly Anglicized) was recorded in Manchester Township with:
  • 256 acres of warranted land
  • 3 horses and mares
  • 4 horned cattle
  • 1 grist mill and 1 sawmill
  • A total assessed value of £132 7s 6d
By 1783, his prosperity had grown further: two houses, a grist mill, a sawmill, 250 acres, three horses, five cows, and twelve sheep. He was a substantial landowner and businessman by any measure of the era.

A Patriot in the American Revolution

Philip Jacob König was no mere bystander when the colonies rose against British rule. In 1775, he emerged as a public figure in York County, first appointed as Supervisor of Highways for Manchester Township and then, in November 1775, chosen by popular vote as a member of the York County Committee of Safety. This was a position of real power and real risk — the committee functioned as the local government in all matters relating to the war effort, selecting officers for the Sixth Pennsylvania Battalion, organizing and training troops, and overseeing the local militia.

On 7 July 1776 — just three days after the Declaration of Independence was signed in Philadelphia — the five militia battalions of York County were on the march toward Perth Amboy, New Jersey, to prepare for battle against General Howe's forces threatening New York City. The campaign that followed was a sobering one: after New York fell to the British, the catastrophic Battle of Fort Washington on 16 November 1776 resulted in the near-total capture of many American forces, as the American troops were outflanked by the enemy. Many of the York County troops were not captured and returned to York.

Yet from disaster came triumph. The York County troops were at the vanguard of Washington's legendary crossing of the Delaware River on the night of 25–26 December 1776, and were among those who struck at Trenton and Princeton — the victories that revived American spirits and changed the course of the war.

Upon returning home, Philip Jacob resumed his work with the Committee of Safety and served as Assessor for Manchester Township in 1777 and 1778. In 1779, he began a three-year enlistment as Commanding Officer of the Fourth Company, Third Battalion, holding the rank of Captain and commanding 72 men. His company served until it was disbanded after the war's end in 1783. Philip Jacob König was a Patriot in both word and deed.

Loss, and a New Beginning

No death or burial record for Maria Barbara (Wilhelm) König has been found, and the silence of the historical record speaks to how invisible women's lives could be in this era. She likely died sometime before 1779, probably in York County, Pennsylvania — a young woman in her late thirties, having borne seven children in fourteen years. Her death would have left Philip Jacob with children ranging from infants to teenagers.

By around 1781, Philip Jacob had remarried. His second wife was Maria Catherina Ziegler, born 10 March 1749 in York and baptized at Christ Lutheran Church. She was the daughter of John and Anna Ziegler — and notably, Philip Jacob's own brother Johann Gottfried had married an Anna Christina Ziegler, suggesting the two families were already well acquainted. Philip Jacob and Maria Catherina had three children:
  • John Adam König, born 20 January 1783 in York — he died 7 May 1835 at the age of 52 in York.
  • Catherine König, born 1787 in York — no further record.
  • Anna Maria König, born 10 August 1791 in York — she married Johan George Slouch on 12 November 1809 in York, had two children, and died 16 July 1859 in York. 
Later Years and Legacy

In 1786, Philip Jacob King was enumerated in the Pennsylvania Septennial Census in Manchester, York County. In April 1787, he petitioned to take up 50 acres of additional land in Manchester Township, and the warrant was signed by none other than Benjamin Franklin, then President of the Supreme Executive Council of Pennsylvania — a remarkable detail that places Philip Jacob in direct contact, however bureaucratically, with one of the Founding Fathers.

The 1790 United States Census found the household in Manchester Township with one free white male over 16 (Philip Jacob himself), three free white males under 16, four free white females, and one other free person — possibly a mill or farm laborer. It was a busy and productive household.

Philip Jacob King drafted his will on 29 November 1791, a thorough and thoughtful document that reveals both the scale of his estate and his care for his family. The will was probated on 25 February 1792 in York County, indicating he had died shortly before that date, at the age of approximately 53.

The will's provisions tell us much about the man:
  • His widow Catherine was to receive a house in York (not to exceed 100 pounds), 600 pounds annually from the estate, and a careful list of household goods — including a cow, beds, pewter plates and basins, a copper kettle, a clothes press, and linens — ensuring she and the younger children would be comfortable.
  • His son Henry inherited the grist mill and sawmill together with 50 acres, on the condition that he make payments to equalize the inheritance among all nine children.
  • Sons Adam, Peter, and George received equal shares of land in Westmoreland County.
  • Fifty pounds was bequeathed to the First Reformed Church in York — a lasting expression of his faith.
  • The remainder of his property was to be sold at public auction and the proceeds divided equally among his nine children, with a modest additional sum to his eldest son Philip Jacob.
The life estate in York for Catherine was finalized on 17 March 1792 for 180 pounds. She lived there for 34 years until her own death on 5 February 1826 at the age of 76.

The public sale of Philip Jacob's estate took place in the first week of May 1792. Two plantations of approximately 200 acres each sold for nearly 1,600 pounds apiece — a testament to what he had built from the ground up over four decades in Pennsylvania.

A Family Remembered

Philip Jacob King, his two wives, and several of their children are believed to be buried at Prospect Hill Cemetery in York, Pennsylvania. Sadly, no gravestones for them survive today — their markers lost to time, weather, or the simple passage of generations. Yet the record they left behind in church registers, court documents, census rolls, tax lists, military rosters, and property deeds tells the story of an extraordinary family.

From a village in the Rhineland Palatinate to the farms and mills of York County, Pennsylvania, Philip Jacob König and Maria Barbara Wilhelm lived lives that embodied the immigrant experience: the courage to cross an ocean, the labor to build something new, the faith that sustained their community, and the patriotism that helped forge a nation. Their seven children and the families they founded carried that legacy forward for generations.

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

4) An Audio Overview (essentially a podcast) created by the Google NotebookLM AI tool) describing and celebrating the lives of the Philip Jacob and Maria Barbara (Wilhelm) König family can be heard here (click on "Play" for the "Audio Overview").

5)  The Video Overview discussing the Philip Jacob and Maria Barbara (Wilhelm) König  family created by the Google NotebookLM AI tool is:  


6)  The Slide Deck produced by Google NotebookLM was incorporated into a Google Slides file, and the created Google Vids presentation is below:  


7)  I edited the Claude biography text to correct minor inconsistencies and errors. Every large language model (LLM) AI tool writes descriptive text much better than I can write. I was an aerospace engineer in my former life, and my research reports and genealogical sketches reflect "just the facts gleaned from my research." The AI tools are very perceptive, insightful and create readable text in seconds, including local and national historical events and social history detail when requested.

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

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.

The URL for this post is:  

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.

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


Friday, June 5, 2026

Added and Updated FamilySearch Record Collections - Week of 30 May to 5 June 2026

 Each week, I try to keep track of the number of Full-Text Search collections (indexed, searchable) and the Images collections (browsable but not searchable) -- see Sections 1) and 2) below. In addition, I list the genealogy historical record collections (often name-indexed) that are added, removed, and/or updated on FamilySearch and listed on the Historical Record Collection list  --  See Section 3.

1)  As of 5 June 2026, there are now 6,668 searchable and full-text transcribed image collections on FamilySearch Full-Text Search this week, an increase of from last week. There are over 1.98 BILLION "results" in the collections.  It is not possible to see which collections are new.


 2)  As of 5 June 2026, there are now 24,821 browsable (some indexed, none transcribed) image lections on FamilySearch Images this week, a decrease of 36 from last week. There are over 6.047 BILLION images in these collections.  There are 2,118 collections from the United States, 7,076 from Europe and 221 from Canada.  It is not possible to see which collections are new.


3)  As of 5 June 2026, there are 3,437 Historical Record Collections (many indexed, browsable) on FamilySearch (an increase of 1 from last week) on the Signed In screen.

The Deleted, Added and Updated Historical Record Collections this week include:

--- Collections Deleted ---

--- Collections Added ---

*  England, Armed Forces and Overseas Vital Records, 1360-1981 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/5000359); 8,440 indexed records with 3,213 record images, ADDED 03-Jun-2026

--- Collections Updated ---

Alaska Naturalization Records, 1884-1992 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2513103); 81,597 indexed records with 71,944 record images (was 81,596 records with 71,944 images), UPDATED 29-May-2026
BillionGraves Index (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2026973); 31,122,746 indexed records with 29,319,640 record images (was 31,122,746 records with 31,122,741 images), UPDATED 02-Jun-2026
Georgia, Marriages, 1808-1967 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1674807); 663,033 indexed records with 665,103 record images (was 664,154 records with 665,103 images), UPDATED 02-Jun-2026
Idaho, Naturalization Records, 1892-1990 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/3241358); 15,936 indexed records with 15,311 record images (was 15,873 records with 15,311 images), UPDATED 01-Jun-2026
Iowa, World War II Draft Registration Cards, 1940-1945 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2796750); Index only (63 records), no images (was 63 records with 0 images), UPDATED 05-Jun-2026

Michigan, Church Records, 1819-1991 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2787825); 33,166 indexed records with 2,670 record images (was 43,653 records with 2,670 images), UPDATED 02-Jun-2026
Michigan, Obituaries, 1820-2006 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2215693); 8,895,324 indexed records with 1,093,937 record images (was 8,914,277 records with 1,093,937 images), UPDATED 02-Jun-2026
Montana, World War II Draft Registration Cards, 1940-1945 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2796752); 141,773 indexed records with 143,907 record images (was 141,773 records with 143,907 images), UPDATED 04-Jun-2026
Nebraska, Box Butte County Marriages, 1887-2015 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2549789); 10,170 indexed records with 9,346 record images (was 0 records with 9,346 images), UPDATED 04-Jun-2026
New York, New York City, Index to Passengers Arriving at New York City, compiled 1944-1948 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/3029266); 1,129,705 indexed records with 1,112,579 record images (was 1,129,668 records with 1,112,549 images), UPDATED 29-May-2026

New York, New York, Index to Passengers Lists of Vessels, 1897-1902 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/3031525); 1,728,001 indexed records with 1,702,195 record images (was 1,727,741 records with 1,701,959 images), UPDATED 29-May-2026
North Dakota, Naturalization Records, 1868-1924 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/3241359); 1,883 indexed records with 1,296 record images (was 1,878 records with 1,260 images), UPDATED 02-Jun-2026
Oregon, World War II Draft Registration Cards, 1940-1945 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2803937); 227,626 indexed records with 286,811 record images (was 295,125 records with 286,811 images), UPDATED 02-Jun-2026
Rhode Island, Vital records, 1846-1898, 1901-1955 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1935767); 981,338 indexed records with 32,524 record images (was 981,335 records with 32,524 images), UPDATED 04-Jun-2026
South Africa, Orange Free State, Probate Records from the Master of the Supreme Court, 1832-1990 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/3040532); 532,485 indexed records with 82,342 record images (was 532,187 records with 82,306 images), UPDATED 29-May-2026

--- Collections with new images ---

Argentina, Military Records, 1911-1936 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/5000280); 2,929,239 indexed records with 2,929,276 record images (was 2,929,239 records with 2,929,272 images), last updated 03-Apr-2026
Brazil, Alagoas, Civil Registration, 1876-2023 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/4469403); 1 indexed records with 454,222 record images (was 1 records with 454,219 images), last updated 07-Jun-2024
Brazil, Sergipe, Civil Registration, 1866-2021 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/4470324); 1 indexed records with 268,945 record images (was 1 records with 268,944 images), last updated 07-Jun-2024
England, Deaths and Burials, 1538-1991 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1473016); 13,095,153 indexed records with 111,545 record images (was 13,095,153 records with 406 images), last updated 31-Jan-2026
United States City and Business Directories, ca. 1749 - ca. 1990 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/3754697); 23,400,992 indexed records with 1,296,835 record images (was 67,623,473 records with 1,215,423 images), last updated 26-Dec-2025

United States, Census, 1950 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/4464515); 157,892,854 indexed records with 52,746,265 record images (was 157,892,854 records with 52,743,735 images), last updated 16-Jun-2024
United States, Obituary Records, 2014-2023 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/5000145); 1 indexed records with 28,204,736 record images (was 1 records with 28,204,728 images), last updated 22-Jul-2024
United States, Social Security Numerical Identification Files (NUMIDENT), 1936-2007 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/5000016); 63,700,464 indexed records with 63,700,464 record images (was 63,700,464 records with 63,700,463 images), last updated 12-Feb-2023
Wales, Monmouthshire, Parish Registers, 1538-1912 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2075051); 182,928 indexed records with 432,421 record images (was 254,998 records with 427,685 images), last updated 26-Dec-2025

--- Collections with images removed ---

Find a Grave Index (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2221801); 268,931,463 indexed records with 790,893 record images (was 268,931,463 records with 1,088,742 images), last updated 28-May-2026
United Kingdom, British Armed Forces and Overseas Vital Records, 1761-2005 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/4324570); 2,878,200 indexed records with 2,801,913 record images (was 2,878,200 records with 2,802,124 images), last updated 22-Sep-2021

--- Collections with new records ---

Italy, Benevento, Arcidiocesi di Benevento, Catholic Church Records, 1575-1908 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1483010); 18,643 indexed records with 1,692 record images (was 0 records with 1,692 images), last updated 22-Oct-2025

--- Collections with records removed ---


California, Birth Index, 1905-1995 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2001879); Index only (24,589,387 records), no images (was 24,589,389 records with 0 images), last updated 01-Mar-2012
California, Marriage Index, 1960-1985 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1949339); Index only (4,879,200 records), no images (was 4,879,201 records with 0 images), last updated 06-Dec-2011
Kansas, World War II Draft Registration Cards, 1940-1945 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2796751); 199,218 indexed records with 124,434 record images (was 433,147 records with 124,434 images), last updated 03-Jul-2025
Kentucky, Vital Record Indexes, 1911-1999 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2531527); Index only (9,865,926 records), no images (was 9,865,927 records with 0 images), last updated 15-Jul-2015
United States, GenealogyBank Obituaries, Births, and Marriages, 1980-2015 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2333694); 28,662,176 indexed records with 46,919,022 record images (was 28,662,177 records with 46,919,022 images), last updated 29-Apr-2026

United States, Public Records, 1970-2009 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2199956); Index only (875,600,604 records), no images (was 875,600,606 records with 0 images), last updated 23-Dec-2025
United States, Residence Database, 1970-2024 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/5000290); Index only (413,858,248 records), no images (was 413,858,256 records with 0 images), last updated 22-Jun-2024

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

My friend and SDGS colleague, Marshall, has come up with a way to determine which collections are ADDED, DELETED or UPDATED, and to alphabetize the entries in each category. Thanks to Marshall for helping me out here!

Marshall notes that there are:

  • 3,437 Historical Record Collection entries
  • 0 removed entries
  • 1  added entries 
  • 15 updated entries
  • 11 entries with more or fewer images 
  • 8 entries with more or fewer records
Marshsll's list shows 3,437 Historical Record Collections this week, an increase of 1 collections. The image above shows 3,437 collections, so the Image number is in sync with Marshall's list number.

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

See previous FamilySearch-related blog posts in        https://www.geneamusings.com/search/label/FamilySearch

The URL for this post is: 

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, so they may not be posted immediately.

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Added and Updated Ancestry.com Record Collections - Week of 30 May to 5 June 2026

   The following genealogy record collections were added to the Ancestry.com Card Catalog page by "Date Updated" during the period from 30 May to 5 June 2026: 

The ADDED and Updated collections include:

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

The complete Ancestry.com Card Catalog is at https://search.ancestry.com/search/CardCatalog.aspx.

By my count, there are 1 NEW record collections ADDED this past week, per the list above. There are now 33,941 collections available as of 5 June, a DECREASE of 1 from last week. What two collections were removed, or is it a counting error?

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

Disclosure: I pay for an All-Access subscription from Ancestry.com. In past years, Ancestry.com provided a complimentary All Access subscription, an autosomal DNA test, material considerations for travel expenses to meetings, and hosted events and meals that I attended in Salt Lake City.

The URL for this post is:  
https://www.geneamusings.com/2026/06/added-and-updated-ancestrycom-record.html

 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
Facebook, X, or Pinterest using the icons below. Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com. Please note that all Comments are moderated so they may not appear immediately.

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Ask AI: "Describe Alexander and Rachel (Morley) Whittle’s Voyage on the Ship "Brothers" in 1840-1841" – Part 1

 I wondered if my AI Assistant Anthropic Claude could provide me with information about my wife's ancestral family's migration from England to Australia in 1840. My wife's 2nd great-grandparents Alexander Whittle and Rachel Morley married in 1840 and had one child at the time.  I posted an ABC Biography for them in ABC Biography of Alexander and Rachel (Morley) Whittle of Lancashire, New South Wales and California (1818-1861).

I asked Anthropic Claude to create a description of the migration trip from Lancashire, England to Sydney, Australia experienced by the Alexander Whittle family in 1840-1841.  Here is the story based on the biography and social history.  

(AI NotebookLM Infographic -- Whittle Family Adventure)

The Claude Sonnet 4.6 response was (this is Part 1 of 2): 


Alexander and Rachel (Morley) Whittle’s Adventure – Part 1

The Voyage of the Brothers

Liverpool to Sydney, 14 September 1840 – 11 March 1841


Departure — 14 September 1840

The dock at Liverpool smelled of tar, fish, coal smoke, and something else beneath it all that Alexander could not name — something vast and cold that had no smell in Lancashire, because in Lancashire it did not exist. It was the sea. Or rather, it was the idea of the sea pressing in through the narrow streets between the warehouses: the knowledge that beyond the grey stone quays the world opened out into something measureless.

He had never seen the sea before. Neither had Rachel.

They had come down from Bolton on the cart three days earlier and spent two nights in a lodging house near the docks, waiting for the Brothers to take on her final cargo and passengers. The lodging house was loud and smelled of boiled cabbage, and Elizabeth, who was fifteen months old and had recently discovered the usefulness of her own voice, had made her feelings about the sleeping arrangements clear to all concerned. But the room was cheap and dry, and the landlady, a stout Irishwoman named Mrs. Heaney, had a weakness for babies and had twice taken Elizabeth off Rachel’s hands for an hour, which was enough.

The Brothers was larger than Alexander had imagined. She sat low in the water at her berth, a broad-beamed, three-masted sailing ship of perhaps five hundred tons, her hull dark with pitch and her decks already crowded with people. Everywhere he looked there were families: children clinging to their mothers, men carrying trunks, women with baskets balanced on their hips. The noise was extraordinary — a great layered din of English and Irish and Welsh voices, all of them carrying the particular pitch of people who are trying to be brave.

“There she is,” Alexander said.

Rachel looked at the ship for a long moment. She was holding Elizabeth on her hip, and the baby was looking at the ship too, with the solemn attention she gave to things she had not encountered before.

“She’s smaller than I thought,” Rachel said.

“She’s enormous,” Alexander said.

Rachel looked at him. “For what she’s got to do,” she said, “she’s smaller than I thought.”

He couldn’t argue with that.

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

They were assigned to the married quarters in the between-decks, the section of the ship below the main deck and above the hold where the cargo was stowed. The space was long and low-ceilinged, smelling already of sawdust and bilge-water, with wooden berths lining both walls two-high, like shelves. Each family had been allocated a berth roughly six feet by four, curtained off with a piece of sailcloth from its neighbours. The long communal table ran down the centre.

Their neighbours to one side were a couple from Rochdale, Tom and Mary Haworth, with three children under eight who immediately attempted to make friends with Elizabeth. To the other side was a young man from Wigan named Croft who was travelling alone and who seemed, in those first hours, to be holding himself together by force of will alone, staring at the hull as if he could see through it to the dock outside.

Alexander stowed their two trunks in the hold, accessible only at the discretion of the ship’s crew. What they’d need for the voyage itself — clothing, Rachel’s wrapped rosemary, the small bundle of oilskin-wrapped documents, Elizabeth’s things — went in a canvas bag that fitted under the berth.

Rachel made up the berth with their own bedding while Alexander found a sailor to ask about the mess arrangements. They had been allocated to Mess Number Eleven: eight adults and a collection of children who would cook, eat, and share rations together for the duration of the voyage. They would draw their weekly ration of salt pork, dried peas, oatmeal, and biscuit from the ship’s stores, cook it at the communal coppers when their mess’s time came, and eat it at the long table.

“It’s like being in barracks,” Mary Haworth said, surveying the between-decks with her hands on her hips.

“It’s like being in a very long, thin house,” Rachel said. “That moves.”

It did not move yet. But late in the afternoon, as the light changed and the noise on deck shifted in pitch from the chaos of loading to the purposeful shouts of sailors preparing to sail, Alexander felt the first tremor through the hull — the hawsers coming in, the ship taking the tide — and he went up on deck to watch Liverpool recede.

He had not expected it to look so small from the water. The warehouses and the church spires and the grey smoke and the whole complicated machinery of a great port city were all there, and then they were further away, and then further still, and he stood at the rail with the wind in his face — a real wind now, salt and cold, quite unlike any wind he had felt before — and watched England go.

He thought of his mother in Chorley, who had pressed a shilling into his hand when they’d said goodbye and told him not to be a fool. He thought of Leah’s face at the gate of the lodging house in Bolton, holding herself very straight, not crying. He thought of the timber yard, the smell of pine.

When there was nothing left to see but water, he went back below.

The Bay of Biscay and the Atlantic — September–October 1840

The sickness came the second morning, with the Bay of Biscay.

The Bay of Biscay had a fearsome reputation among sailors, and on the morning of the third day out of Liverpool the Brothers met it in full character: a deep Atlantic swell rolling in from the west under a grey sky, the ship rising and plunging in a slow, nauseating rhythm that had nothing to do with any motion Alexander had ever experienced on land. By midday, perhaps a third of the passengers in the married quarters were in their berths. By evening, it was half.

Rachel was not among them. This surprised him, and she noticed his surprise.

“I decided not to be sick,” she said, with a composure that was not quite accurate since her face was slightly grey.

“That’s not how it works,” he said, from where he was lying with a damp cloth over his forehead.

“Isn’t it,” she said, and went to see to Elizabeth, who had taken the whole thing philosophically and was attempting to eat a piece of biscuit that had gone soft.

Alexander spent two miserable days in the berth, contributing nothing useful to Mess Eleven, before the sickness passed as suddenly as it had come. The swell eased. The sky lightened. He came on deck to find the Atlantic spread around the Brothers in every direction — endless, glittering, slightly alarming — and felt, for the first time, something that was not quite alarm but was close to it. The sheer scale of what they had undertaken.

There were 278 bounty immigrants aboard the Brothers, and 64 of them were from Lancashire. In those first weeks, as the ship found her rhythm and the passengers found theirs, the between-decks resolved itself into something like a small village. Mess Eleven contained the Haworths, a young couple from Preston, an elderly weaver named Butterworth who had a cough that worried everyone, and a widow named Mrs. Critchley who had no children of her own but took a proprietary interest in everyone else’s.

“She’ll be walking in a month,” Mrs. Critchley said, regarding Elizabeth with the authority of a woman who had raised six.

“She’s already walking,” Rachel said.

“Walking properly,” Mrs. Critchley amended. “Not just lurching.”

Elizabeth, as if to prove a point, stood up, took three extremely confident steps, and sat down hard on the deck planking. She looked at Mrs. Critchley. Mrs. Critchley nodded, satisfied.

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

The daily routine established itself within the first week. Up at six. Wash and dress before breakfast at eight. After breakfast, clean the berth, scrub the allocated section of deck, carry out the chores designated to their mess by the surgeon-superintendent, a taciturn Scotsman named Dr. Gillespie who kept a daily log of the ship’s medical condition and conducted weekly musters at which every passenger was required to present themselves for inspection. Dinner at one. Afternoons free. Tea at six. Lights out at eight.

The afternoon hours were when the between-decks became something almost like a community. The women sewed and mended and talked in low voices about what they were leaving and what they hoped to find. The men played cards or talked or simply sat watching the sea through the open hatch when the weather was good enough to have it open. Alexander whittled. He had brought a small knife and several pieces of hard wood from the yard, and in the afternoons he sat at the table and worked at them without any clear plan, his hands finding their own occupation while his mind moved through the distance ahead.

Rachel read. She had two books — a Bible and a small volume of improving essays that Mrs. Critchley had pressed on her before they left — and she worked through them slowly and systematically, her lips occasionally moving, sometimes stopping to ask Alexander what a word meant. He usually knew, and when he didn’t they puzzled it out between them. She had learned her letters well enough over the past months, though reading was still slow work; she approached it with the same deliberate patience she brought to everything difficult.

Elizabeth, for her part, was the most popular person on the ship. She had reached the age of engaging curiosity and boundless goodwill, and she moved through the between-decks greeting strangers with the confidence of a mayor. The Haworth children followed her everywhere. Mrs. Critchley fashioned her a cloth rabbit. Young Croft from Wigan, who turned out to be twenty and homesick and heading to New South Wales to work for a cousin, became her particular champion, spending his afternoons making her small towers of biscuit to knock over.

“She’ll not remember any of this,” Rachel said one evening, watching Elizabeth knock over Croft’s latest tower with extreme satisfaction.

“No,” Alexander agreed. “But we will.”

The Tropics — October–November 1840

The weather changed as they moved south. The grey Atlantic sky turned blue, then a blue so deep it seemed almost unreal, and the sun moved higher each day until it stood almost directly overhead at noon and the deck planking was too hot for bare feet. The wind went light and variable and the Brothers sometimes stood nearly still in the water, her sails hanging slack, the only sound the creak of her spars and the occasional slap of canvas.

These were the doldrums — the belt of calm that lay along the equator, the nightmare of sailing ships that could leave a vessel motionless for days or weeks. Captain Greyburne, a compact, weathered man in his fifties who moved about his ship with the unhurried authority of someone who had made this passage many times, ordered the topsails backed and the courses handed and the crew to the sweeps when the wind fell away entirely. The passengers were sent below.

Down in the between-decks, the heat was oppressive. The hatches were open but the air barely moved, and the smell — of bodies, of the bilges, of the salt pork in the coppers — was something that took getting used to and then continued to need getting used to. Elizabeth wilted. Her cheeks flushed and she was fretful in a way she had not been in the cool Atlantic weeks, and Rachel spent the hot afternoons sitting at the hatch with her in her arms, catching whatever breath of air there was.

Dr. Gillespie moved through the between-decks twice a day in the worst of the heat, checking for fever, dispensing small doses of lime juice against the scurvy that was always a hazard on long voyages, recording everything in his log. He was not a warm man but he was thorough, and when old Butterworth’s cough grew worse in the heat, he moved him to a berth nearer the hatch and mixed him a preparation that seemed to help.

“How far to the Cape?” Alexander asked him one afternoon.

The doctor considered. “At this rate? Three weeks, perhaps four. We need wind.” He looked at the slack sails through the open hatch. “We’ll get it. We always get it. The question is when.”

The wind came back on the fourth day, a fresh south-easterly that filled the sails and set the Brothers plunging forward again, and the between-decks lifted immediately in mood. The hatches caught the breeze. The children ran up on deck. Mrs. Critchley baked something in the coppers that smelled, implausibly, like a cake.

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

On the twenty-eighth of November, with the ship somewhere off the western coast of Africa and the Southern Cross just visible above the horizon on clear nights, the trouble began.

The passengers in the between-decks heard it before they knew what it was: a commotion on deck, raised voices, the sound of boots on the planking above their heads. Alexander was at the table whittling; Rachel was nursing Elizabeth to sleep in the berth. He heard the voices sharpen and then heard the captain’s voice — crisp, authoritative, brooking no argument — and then more voices, some of them angry.

“What is it?” Rachel said, from the berth.

“I’ll find out,” he said.

He went up the companionway and came out into the darkness. The watch was gathered amidships, a knot of sailors in the lamp-shadows, and Captain Greyburne was standing before them with two of his officers. A big sailor named Blandford — a man the passengers had noticed for his swagger and his loud opinions at the mess tables — was being manhandled toward the stocks.

The other sailors were refusing to help. They stood with their arms folded and their faces set, and when the captain turned and called on the starboard watch to assist, they shook their heads or looked away. Blandford was shouting something about the women’s quarters, and several of his messmates were saying the captain had no right, and for a moment Alexander could not tell which way it would go.

He took a step forward. The captain’s eye found him in the dimness.

“Stand off, Mr. Whittle,” Greyburne said quietly. “Back below, if you please.”

A sailor at his shoulder added: “Go back down, mate. This isn’t your business.” The voice was not unfriendly but it was firm.

He went back down.

“Well?” Rachel said.

“Trouble with some of the crew. The captain has it in hand.”

By the time the ship was quiet again it was nearly midnight. Blandford was in irons — there were no stocks, as it turned out — and the watch were back at their posts, still resentful but doing their duty. The passengers lay in their berths listening to the creak of the rigging and the sound of the sea, and the between-decks was very quiet.

“Are we safe?” Mrs. Critchley asked in the darkness.

“Yes,” several voices said, from different berths, with the firmness of people who were not entirely sure.

To be continued...

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

A Note to the Reader

This is a work of fiction, imagined around documented historical facts. The Brothers was a real ship that sailed from Liverpool on 14 September 1840, carrying 278 bounty immigrants including Alexander and Rachel Whittle and their infant daughter Elizabeth. The ship arrived at Port Jackson on 11 March 1841, having stopped at the Cape of Good Hope on 24 December 1840. A mutiny occurred among the crew at the Cape on 6 January 1841, the details of which are drawn from the trial reported in the Australian Chronicle of 15 April 1841. The captain’s name — Thomas Greyburne — is taken from the trial record. The descriptions of steerage life, weather, and the route are drawn from period accounts. All dialogue, characters beyond the Whittle family, and interior scenes are invented.

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

The AI Google NotebookLM Video Overview of this story is in:  

This is historical fiction based on known events in the lives of my wife's ancestors -- it might have been this way. Alexander and Rachel (Morley) Whittle are my wife's 2nd great-grandparents, and I have significant information about this family from the available records, but I know nothing about their day-to-day lives. 

As always, I am amazed at what life was like in any place over 180 years ago. This description of their adventure form England to Australia is interesting and so different from our current daily activities.

After I read these types of social history summaries, I wish that I could be a time traveler for one day to visit this Whittle family in 1840 abosard the Brothers and witness their daily lives.  I'm glad that the general lifestyles and occupations are known from historical records and witness accounts. Fortunately, there are records and articles about this voyage -- see Mutiny on the Sailing Ship, Brothers. 1841.

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

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 X, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below.  Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.  Note that all comments are moderated, so they may not appear immediately.

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