Thursday, March 12, 2026

Ask AI: Describe Lucretia Smith's Life in 1841 At Age 12 in Massachusetts

 The Artificial Intelligence tools (like ChatGPT, Claude, CoPilot, Gemini, Grok, Meta, and Perplexity) can provide much useful and nearly instant information about subjects in a concise format, especially when they have been pre-trained on a large volume of information about the subjects.

I wondered if the FREE AI tools could provide me with a story about about the effect of the death of my 3rd great-grandfather Alpheus Smith (1802-1840) on his daughter, my 2nd great-grandmother, Lucretia Smith (1828-1884) of Medfield, Massachusetts. 

 My genealogical sketch for Alpheus B. Smith and his family is 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks - Week 27: #34 Alpheus B. Smith (1802-1840), based on my genealogical research.

(AI NotebookLM Infographic of the life of Luicretia Smith at age 12 in 1841)

1)  My Prompt to free Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 was:  "Please write a story about daughter Lucretia at age 12 a year after her father's death - her feelings, her family life, her education, her entertainment and fun."

2)  The AI tool responded with this story (yes, it is historical fiction, but the way it might have been): 


The Year After: Lucretia Smith's Story

Winter's Shadow

Lucretia Townsend Smith pressed her forehead against the cold window glass, watching snowflakes drift past the small panes. Outside, the world looked the same as it had a year ago—the same bare trees lining High Street, the same stone walls dividing the neighbors' properties, the same distant steeple of the meetinghouse rising above Medfield's rooftops. But everything felt different now.

It was January 1841, just over a year since Papa had died. Lucretia was twelve years old, though sometimes she felt much older. The house seemed quieter these days, even with Mama moving about downstairs and eight-year-old James playing with his wooden soldiers by the hearth. There was a Papa-shaped absence in every room, in every conversation, in every meal they shared.

The Morning Routine

"Lucretia! Come help me with breakfast, dear," her mother called from the kitchen.

Lucretia sighed and left her perch by the window. She smoothed her simple cotton dress—one of two she owned now, since the probate had settled and money was tighter than before. Her fingers automatically went to the small locket at her throat, a precious keepsake that had belonged to her grandmother. Inside was a tiny lock of dark hair that Mama had clipped from Papa's head before the burial. Lucretia touched it every morning, a private ritual that connected her to the father she missed so desperately.

In the kitchen, Mama stood over the fire, stirring a pot of cornmeal mush. Elizabeth (Dill) Smith was fifty now, and the past year had added new lines around her eyes. But she remained strong, determined to keep her small family together and fed. The modest widow's portion from Alpheus's estate—no more than $115—had to stretch far, and Elizabeth was skilled at making do.

"Set the table, please," Mama said with a tired smile. "And check that your brother has washed his hands and face. You know how he is."

Lucretia nodded and went to find James, who was predictably covered in ash from sitting too close to the fireplace. "You're a mess," she said, not unkindly, and dampened a cloth to wipe his face. He squirmed and protested, but she persisted with the stubborn patience of an older sister who had taken on more responsibilities this past year.

Lessons and Learning

After breakfast, Lucretia gathered her slate, her McGuffey Reader, and her small arithmetic book. Three mornings a week, she walked the quarter-mile to the South School-house—the very building near which her family had once lived, before Papa sold their homestead to Simeon Richardson. They were still living in their house because Uncle James Dill, Mama's brother, had purchased Papa's land when the estate was settled. At least they had not had to move their home.

The schoolroom was a simple one-room building heated by a single stove. Miss Abigail Warren, a spinster of perhaps thirty years, taught children of all ages together. The younger ones practiced their letters on slates while the older students worked on composition and ciphering. Lucretia sat on a hard wooden bench between Hannah Fuller, her best friend, and Sarah Richardson, the cooper's daughter.

"Have you finished your recitation piece?" Hannah whispered as Miss Warren wrote arithmetic problems on the board.

Lucretia nodded. For the upcoming Friday exhibition—when parents would visit to hear students recite poetry and demonstrate their learning—she was memorizing a piece by William Cullen Bryant called "Thanatopsis." Miss Warren had suggested it, perhaps thinking the meditation on death would be meaningful to Lucretia. The poem spoke of nature's comfort and the great equality of the grave, where "the powerful of the earth, the wise, the good" all rested together.

So live, that when thy summons comes to join
The innumerable caravan, which moves
To that mysterious realm, where each shall take
His chamber in the silent halls of death,
Thou go not, like the quarry-slave at night,
Scourged to his dungeon, but, sustained and soothed
By an unfaltering trust...

The words gave Lucretia an odd comfort. Papa had gone to that "mysterious realm," but he had lived well and honestly. His gravestone said he wished to share his portion in heaven. She liked to imagine him there, free from whatever illness had taken him, watching over them from some peaceful place.

The Weight of Guardianship

At midday, the students were dismissed for dinner—the main meal, which most children took at home. Lucretia and James walked home together, James running ahead to chase a neighbor's dog while Lucretia carried both their school things.

When they reached home, they found Mr. Stephen Turner waiting in the front room with Mama. Mr. Turner was their court-appointed guardian, responsible for overseeing the small inheritance Papa had left for his children. He visited monthly to ensure all was well and to discuss financial matters with Mama.

"Ah, Miss Lucretia," he said with a kind smile, rising from his chair. "Growing taller every time I see you. And young Master James—I trust you're minding your studies?"

James nodded solemnly, suddenly shy in the presence of this important adult who held some mysterious authority over their futures.

Mr. Turner and Mama spoke in low voices about matters Lucretia didn't entirely understand—something about the remaining funds, about when James might be apprenticed to learn a trade, about whether there would be enough for Lucretia's education to continue beyond the common school. She tried not to listen, but she couldn't help absorbing the worried tone in her mother's voice.

After Mr. Turner left, Mama seemed more tired than usual. "Come, children," she said. "Let's have our dinner."

They ate boiled salt pork with potatoes and turnips, accompanied by brown bread that Mama had baked two days earlier. It was plain fare, but filling. Before Papa died, there had sometimes been butter for the bread, or a bit of maple sugar for sweetening. Now such luxuries appeared only on special occasions.

Afternoons of Work and Play

After dinner, Lucretia had her daily chores. While James returned to school for the afternoon session, she stayed home to help Mama. There was always spinning to be done, or mending, or preparing vegetables for supper, or feeding the chickens they kept in the small yard behind the house.

Today was Wednesday, so Lucretia helped with the ironing. Mama heated the heavy flatirons on the hearth, and together they pressed their few linens and clothes, working methodically through the basket. As they worked, Mama sometimes told stories of her childhood in Eastham, on Cape Cod, where the wind always smelled of salt and the dunes shifted like living things.

"Did you love it there, Mama?" Lucretia asked.

"I did," Elizabeth said, testing an iron's heat with a dampened finger that sizzled against the metal. "But I love Medfield too. This is where I became a schoolteacher, met your father, where you and James were born. Home is where your people are, Lucretia. Remember that."

By late afternoon, when her chores were complete, Lucretia had a precious hour to herself before James came home and supper preparations began. In summer, she might have run outside to play graces with Hannah or to pick wildflowers in the meadow. But in January's cold, she stayed indoors with her favorite pastime: reading.

The Fuller family next door had a small lending library—perhaps twenty books that neighbors could borrow. Lucretia was currently reading The Swiss Family Robinson, an adventure story about a family shipwrecked on a deserted island. She loved escaping into the exotic world of the Robinson family, with their resourcefulness and their exciting encounters with wild animals and tropical storms. In that imaginary world, fathers didn't die young of mysterious illnesses. Families stayed intact, working together to build tree houses and tame zebras.

Evening Entertainments

When James returned from school, the evening routine began. There was supper to prepare—tonight, a simple soup made from yesterday's bones and whatever vegetables Mama had on hand. After they ate, Mama would read aloud from the Bible while James and Lucretia sat by the fire. Then James would practice his letters on his slate while Lucretia worked on her sampler, slowly stitching the alphabet and a simple verse about virtue and industry.

But tonight was special. Uncle James was coming for supper. Uncle James Dill, Esquire—Mama's brother—was a successful man, a lawyer who lived in a fine house and wore a proper coat with brass buttons. He lived in Plymouth, had married in 1819 and had two teenage children, but he had business in several towns, and visited on occasion. He treated Lucretia and young James with the affection of someone who knew what they needed and he helped Elizabeth with house chores that she needed done.

When Uncle James arrived, he brought excitement with him. He had been to Boston just last week and had stories of the city—the new railroad depot, the shops full of goods from around the world, the crowds of people hurrying through the streets.

"And I brought you both something," he announced, reaching into his satchel.

For James, there was a small wooden top painted with bright stripes. For Lucretia, a book—a real book of her own, not borrowed. Poems for Young Ladies, the title read, with gilt lettering on green cloth covers.

"Oh, Uncle James!" Lucretia clutched the book to her chest, hardly believing it was hers to keep. Books were expensive, precious things.

"A bright girl needs to keep reading," Uncle James said, patting her head. "Your father would have wanted you to be educated."

At the mention of Papa, the room grew quiet for a moment. Then Mama bustled about, serving Uncle James an extra helping of soup, and the conversation moved on to other topics—the upcoming town meeting, the cold winter, the news from Boston that President Harrison had taken ill just weeks after his inauguration.

After supper, Uncle James taught them a new game with cards—a simple matching game that even James could play. They laughed as young James got confused and matched the wrong suits, and for a little while, the house felt warm and full again, almost like it used to be.

The Comfort of Friendship

The next day at school, Lucretia showed her new book to Hannah Fuller during their brief recess. The girls stood in the schoolyard, their breath making clouds in the cold air, while Hannah carefully turned the pages.

"Your uncle is so generous," Hannah said with genuine admiration. "My father says Mr. Dill is the finest lawyer in Plymouth County."

"He's kind to us," Lucretia agreed. "Especially since Papa..."

She didn't finish the sentence. Hannah squeezed her hand in understanding. Hannah's own grandmother had died just last month, so grief was something both girls understood.

"Do you still feel sad all the time?" Hannah asked quietly.

Lucretia thought about this. "Not all the time anymore," she admitted. "Sometimes I'll be reading or playing with James, and I'll forget for a while. Then I'll remember and feel guilty for forgetting."

"My mama says that's natural," Hannah offered. "She says the sadness becomes part of you, but it doesn't fill you up completely like it does at first. There's room for other things too."

This made sense to Lucretia. A year ago, in the terrible weeks right after Papa's death, she had cried every night, soaking her pillow with tears. She had felt hollow, as if something essential had been carved out of her. Now the grief was still there—she suspected it always would be—but it had settled into a quieter place. She could laugh at James's antics, enjoy her new book, take pleasure in mastering a difficult arithmetic problem. Life continued, even though Papa wasn't here to see it.

A Visit to Vine Lake Cemetery

On Saturday afternoon, Mama announced they would visit Papa's grave. They bundled up in their warmest clothes—Lucretia in her heavy cloak and knitted mittens, James in the coat that was getting too small for his growing frame.

The walk to Vine Lake Cemetery took about twenty minutes. The graveyard sat on a gentle hillside, with old stones dating back to Medfield's earliest days standing beside newer monuments. Snow covered the ground, making everything look clean and peaceful.

Papa's stone was easy to find. Mama had seen to it that a proper marker was erected, despite the expense. The inscription was exactly as Lucretia remembered:

In memory of
ALPHEUS B. SMITH
who died
Jan. 12, 1840:
aged 37 years.
Farewell my wife & Children too,
I can no longer stay with you;
My portion in heaven I wish to share,
Prepare for death & follow me there.

Mama had recently learned that the stonemason had completed the final line, which had been illegible for months. "Prepare for death & follow me there." Solemn words, but typical of New England gravestone poetry.

Mama stood silently for a long moment, her lips moving in private prayer. Young James fidgeted, uncomfortable with the solemnity. But Lucretia stood still, reading the words again and again, trying to feel some connection to the father who rested beneath the frozen ground.

"Do you think he knows we're here?" she asked quietly.

Mama put an arm around her shoulders. "I believe he does, sweetheart. I believe he watches over us still."

"I'm trying to be good, Papa," Lucretia whispered, speaking to the stone and to whatever part of her father might linger nearby. "I'm helping Mama, and I'm studying hard, and I'm teaching James his letters. I'm trying to make you proud."

The wind picked up, sending snow swirling around the gravestones. Mama shivered and said it was time to go. As they walked back down the hill toward home, Lucretia looked back once at Papa's grave, a dark stone against white snow.

Dreams and Hopes

That night, tucked into the bed she shared with James (they slept in the same small room now, to save on heating), Lucretia thought about her future. She was twelve years old, which meant in just a few more years she would be considered old enough to work as a hired girl in someone else's home, helping with housework and childcare. Or perhaps she could become a teacher like her mother, if she continued her education and proved herself capable.

Mama had been thirty-five when she married Papa. Lucretia tried to imagine herself at that age—twenty-three years from now, in the impossibly distant year of 1865. Would she marry? Would she have children of her own? Would she still live in Medfield, or would she venture to Boston, or even farther afield?

She thought of the Swiss Family Robinson, making their new life on an unknown island. Life felt a bit like that sometimes—navigating unknown territory, building something new from the wreckage of what had been lost.

Beside her, James muttered in his sleep, something about his wooden top. Lucretia smiled in the darkness. James barely remembered Papa now; he had only been seven when their father died. For him, this was normal—a household of three, with Mama in charge and Uncle James visiting occasionally and Mr. Turner watching over their small inheritance.

But Lucretia remembered. She remembered Papa's laugh, the way he smelled of earth and hay when he came in from the fields. She remembered him tossing her in the air when she was small, teaching her to count using dried beans, telling her stories about his own childhood. Those memories were precious, and she guarded them carefully, afraid they might fade.

Sunday Observance

Sunday brought its own rhythms. The Smith family, like virtually everyone in Medfield, attended the Congregational meetinghouse for both morning and afternoon services. Lucretia wore her best dress—a brown wool that Mama had carefully altered from one of her own old gowns—and tied her hair back with a ribbon.

The meetinghouse was cold, despite the box stove that struggled to heat the large space. Reverend Nathaniel Howe preached about perseverance in trials and God's mysterious purposes. Lucretia tried to pay attention, but her mind wandered. She counted the panes in the tall windows, studied the grain in the wooden pew in front of her, and discreetly watched the other families.

There was Sarah Richardson with her parents and four siblings, all healthy and intact. There were the Fullers, Hannah's large family taking up an entire pew. There were the Clarks, the Hamants, the Morses—all the families that made up Medfield's close-knit community, and some of them were her cousins.

And there was the Smith family: Mama, Lucretia, and James, with an invisible gap where Papa should have been.

After the service, the congregation mingled in the churchyard, catching up on news and gossip. Several ladies approached Mama to ask after her health and Miss Warren praised James's recent good behavior in school. Mrs. Fuller invited them for Sunday dinner, an offer Mama gratefully accepted.

At the Fuller house, there was roast chicken—a luxury—and conversation and laughter. Lucretia and Hannah played quietly with Hannah's china doll while the adults talked about politics and the price of grain and whether the new minister in the neighboring town was sound in his doctrine.

For those few hours, surrounded by the warmth and bustle of the Fuller family, Lucretia felt almost normal again. Almost like any other twelve-year-old girl, with her whole life ahead of her and no weight of loss pressing on her heart.

Finding Joy Again

As winter slowly gave way toward spring, Lucretia found that happiness, when it came, no longer felt like a betrayal of Papa's memory. Mama had told her that grief and joy could exist together, that loving someone who had died didn't mean you couldn't also love your life.

She took pleasure in small things: mastering a difficult passage in her reading, helping Mama successfully bake a loaf of bread that rose perfectly, winning a spelling competition at school, playing Fox and Geese in the snow with Hannah and the other girls during recess.

She still missed Papa terribly. Sometimes a scent or a sound would trigger a memory so sharp it took her breath away. Sometimes she would see a father and daughter together in town and feel a stab of jealousy and loss. Sometimes, on difficult days, the unfairness of it all would overwhelm her—why had Papa died when other men lived to be seventy or eighty? Why had their family been broken when others remained whole?

But gradually, imperceptibly, life was becoming something more than just surviving Papa's absence. It was becoming its own thing—a new shape, a different pattern, but still valuable, still worth living fully.

The Turning Seasons

By late March, when the snow finally began to melt and the first hints of green appeared on the willow branches, Lucretia stood once more at her bedroom window. This time, instead of seeing sameness, she saw change. Spring was coming. Another year was beginning.

She was almost thirteen now, growing taller and more capable. Mama relied on her more, treated her more like a young woman than a child. James was learning to read simple books, and Lucretia felt proud of her role as his patient teacher.

Uncle James had hinted that if she continued to excel in her studies, he might help fund further education for her—perhaps at a female academy, where young women learned not just reading and writing but also history, geography, natural philosophy, and the ornamental arts.

The thought excited her. Education meant possibilities. It meant maybe, someday, she could be more than just someone who had survived tragedy. She could be a teacher, respected in her community. She could support herself, help Mama, ensure James got a good start in life.

"Lucretia!" Mama called from downstairs. "Come help me with the garden planning. I want to plant earlier this year."

"Coming, Mama!"

Lucretia took one last look out the window at the changing season, then turned from the glass and headed downstairs. There was work to be done, lessons to learn, a life to build. Papa would want her to live it well.

And she would. For him, for Mama, for James, but also for herself.

She was Lucretia Townsend Smith, twelve years old, daughter of Alpheus B. Smith and Elizabeth Horton Dill. She had survived the worst year of her young life, and she was still here, still standing, still hoping.

That had to count for something.


Author's Note: This story is based on the historical facts available about Lucretia Townsend Smith and her family, but the specific emotional details, daily activities, and dialogue are imagined to reflect what life might have been like for a twelve-year-old girl in 1841 Medfield, Massachusetts. Details about education, household routines, religious observance, and children's entertainment are drawn from historical records of the period.


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3)  Here is the Video Overview of this post by Google NotebookLM. 

4)  This is historical fiction based on the facts that are available for the Alpheus and Elizabeth (Dill) Smith family.  It is historical fiction based on social history and society norms at the time and place, so it is likely realistic. It might have happened this way.

5)  I had to tell this story. Each ancestor faces challenges in their life, and telling stories about them helps our descendants understand their parents lives and their own lives. 

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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 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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Treasure Chest Thursday -- 1673 Baptism Record of Henry Rawlins in Staverton, Wiltshire

 It's Treasure Chest Thursday - an opportunity to look in my digital image files to see what treasures I can find for my family history research and genealogy musings.

The treasure today is the 1673 Baptism record of Henry Rawlins in the Staverton, Wiltshire Church of England parish records.

The baptism entry for Henry Rawlins is the third record for 1673 baptism on the page scrap:


The transcription of this record is:

"[1673] Henry y'e son of Henry Rawlins & wife was Baptized Febr 1"

The source citation is:

Staverton, Wiltshire, Church of England records, Henry Rawlins baptism entry, 1 February 1673, son of Henry Rawlins and wife;  imaged, "Wiltshire, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriage and Burials, 1531-1812," Ancestry.com  (https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/61187/records/993446 : accessed 11 March 2026), Staverton > Parish Registers > 1673-1812, image 7 of 106; Original records in Original data in Wiltshire Church of England Parish Registers, Wiltshire and Swindon History Centre, Chippenham, Wiltshire, England.

Henry Rawlins was born before 1 February 1673 in Staverton, Wiltshire, the son of Henry Rawlins and Elizabeth --?--.   He married Jane Andrews (1681-1757) on 28 January 1705 in Wilsford, Wiltshire.  Henry died before 19 August 1744 when he was buried in Wootten Rivers, Wiltshire.

Henry and Jane (Andrews) Rawlins are my 6th great-grandparents, through their daughter Elizabeth Rawlings (1714-1770) who married Joseph Richman (1710-1761) in 1731 in Whaddon, Wiltshire.

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Disclosure:  I have a paid All-Access subscription to Ancestry.com now.  Ancestry.com has provided a complimentary subscription and material considerations for travel expenses to meetings, and has hosted events and meals that I have attended in Salt Lake City, in past years.


Copyright (c) 2025, 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.  All comments are moderated, and may not appear immediately after posting.

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

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Genealogy Education Bytes - Week of 5 to 11 March 2026

  Welcome to Genealogy Education Bytes, posted on Wednesday afternoon for the past week, where we try to highlight some of the most important genealogy and family history education items that came across my desktop since the last issue.


1) Upcoming Conferences and  Institutes 

Conference Keeper Calendar - has many links to register for and/or view seminars, conferences and institutes.

*  Root Cellar Spring Seminar, featuring Drew Smith, MA, MS, MS ($$, In-person, in Sacramento California) - 18 April 2026.


 'Navigating the Future' - Guild of One-Name Studies Conference 2026 ($$, In-person, Portsmouth, England) - 24 to 26 April 2026.

*  National Genealogical Society 2026 Family History Conference ($$, In-person and virtual, in Fort Wayne, Indiana) - 27 to 30 May 2026.

2 ) Upcoming Webinars and Online Classes (times are US Pacific):

Conference Keeper Calendar - has many links to register for and/or view seminars, webinars and classes.

*  FamilySearch MonthlyWebinars (Free)

*  Legacy Family Tree Webinar - Wednesday, 11 March 2026, 11 a.m.:  Leveraging Freedom of Information Laws to Procure Novel Records by Alec Ferretti.

*  Legacy Family Tree Webinar - Wednesday, 11 March 2026, 5 p.m.:  From Research to Data with AI 1 of 5: From Records to Raw Data—Extracting with AI by Andrew Redfern.

*  Legacy Family Tree Webinar - Friday, 13 March 2026, 11 a.m.:  Researching in Northumberland & Durham by Paul Milner.

*  Legacy Family Tree Webinar - Tuesday, 17 March 2026, 5 p.m.: Patterns from the Past: Using Visuals to Showcase Correlation and Analysis by Kelly Connor Lear.

*  Legacy Family Tree Webinar - Wednesday, 18 March 2026, 11 a.m.: Advanced Topics in DNA 2 of 5: Digging Deep into the Science of Autosomal DNA by Blaine Bettinger.

*  Legacy Family Tree Webinar - Friday, 20 March 2026, 11 a.m.: The Largest Diocese: History and Records of the Archivo Histórico del Arquidiócesis of Guadalajara by Lisa Medina.

3) Recent Podcasts: 



*  Journey Through the Generations:  Interview with André Kearns, CEO of Black Ancestries


4) Recent YouTube Videos 




*  Carole McCulloch Geneablogger:   Use AI to Build Your Genealogical Research Plan Step-by-Step
*  Carole McCulloch Geneablogger:   Ghost in the Machine: Using Prompt Cowboy to Map 1881 London



*  DearMYRTLE's Archive:  Boston Tea Party (lineage society & museum.
*  DearMYRTLE's Archive:  Lori Olson White - RootsTech 2026
*  DearMYRTLE's Archive:  Kelvin Meyers at RootsTech 2026
*  DearMYRTLE's Archive:  Debbie Ostler at RootsTech 2026
*  DearMYRTLE's Archive:  DearMYRTLE at RootsTech 2026
*  DearMYRTLE's Archive: DearMYRTLE at RootsTech 2026 - Last Day

*  Ellen Thompson-Jennings - Family History Hound: I Tested MyHeritage’s New Scribe AI on an Old Family Photo




*  FamilySearch: Welcome to RootsTech by FamilySearch 2026






*  Marcia Philbrick:  Crawford Military Timeline
*  Marcia Philbrick: From Soldier to Settler




*  Randy Seaver, Geneaholic:  Betty and Freds Story: February to April 1943

* Trace Your New England Roots: 


5) Did you miss the last post in this series - Genealogy Education Bytes -  Week of 26 February to 4 March 2026?


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NOTE:  If  I missed an upcoming conference or webinar, or a useful podcast or video, in this time period, please let me know in a comment or an email. 

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 your comment 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. 

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MyHeritage @ RootsTech 2026 Recap

 I received this information from Daniel Horowitz of MyHeritage today:

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I can’t believe that RootsTech is already behind us! It was a pleasure seeing those of you who were there in person – it was great to catch up!

Myko Clelland, our Director of Content in Europe, presented our annual keynote, which was chock full of exciting announcements, including new features, sneak previews of what’s to come, and of course some of the milestones from the past year. Here’s a quick recap:

New Features
  • Scribe AI, which transcribes, translates, and extracts insights from historical documents, letters, photos, gravestones, and even family crests — adding valuable context to treasured family artifacts. Heads up: this feature is highly addictive and genealogists are already hooked! Try it today at myheritage.com/scribe-ai
  • Country coding for family trees, a new feature that adds flags to family tree profiles so you can instantly visualize where your ancestors were born and trace your family’s global journey.
Coming Soon
  • GAIA, our Genealogy AI Assistant that will allow users to ask questions about their family tree and receive guided research assistance instantly.
  • Family Infographics transforms family tree data into a beautiful visual biography.
Recent Milestones
  • 6.6 billion historical records from dozens of countries in Europe, the Americas, and beyond.
  • OldNews.com has grown to 438 million newspaper pages, including unique Names & Stories collections from Spanish and Dutch newspapers.
  • MyHeritage is now available in 50 languages!
  • All MyHeritage DNA kits were upgraded to Whole Genome Sequencing
  • Introduction of MyHeritage DNA Traits
I hope those of you who attended had a fantastic time, and I’m already counting down to next year!



Read more in our blog post, which has more photographs and RootsTech descriptions.  Try Scribe AI and Country Coding on your own tree.

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Disclosure: I receive a complimentary subscription to MyHeritage, and have received other material consideration in past years. I uploaded my autosomal DNA raw data to their DNA product. This does not affect my objective analysis of MyHeritage products. I am a paid subscriber to Family Tree Webinars and love it.

The URL for this post is: https://www.geneamusings.com/2026/03/myheritage-rootstech-2026-recap.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 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.

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

Life Memoir of Joseph Champlin (1757-1850) of Rhode Island, a Revolutionary War Soldier

 I wrote an AI-assisted ABC biography for the family of my fourth great-grandparents Joseph Champlin and Nancy Kenyon in ABC Biography of the Joseph Champlin (1757-1850) and Nancy Kenyon (1765-1833) Family of Rhode Island based on my genealogical research over 38 years.

I wondered what Joseph Champlin might have said in a life memoir told to his grandchildren in 1848. 

(AI Google NotebookLM Infographic for Joseph Champlin's life memoir)

1)  I requested Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 to create a memoir told by Joseph Champlin about his life in 1848.  The prompt was:  "Please write a life memoir for Joseph Champlin based on the attached biography, as he might tell to his grandchildren in 1848."

2)  The AI Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 memoir (edited for accuracy and completeness) is:   


The Life and Times of Joseph Champlin
As Told to His Grandchildren

South Kingstown, Rhode Island, 1848

Now gather round, children, and let your old grandfather tell you about the days when this country was young, and men like me had to fight for the very freedoms you enjoy today. I'm near ninety years old now, and my memory ain't what it used to be, but some things a man never forgets. The smell of gunpowder. The cold waters of the Atlantic trying to pull you under. The sound of the fife and drum calling you to muster. These things stay with you.

My Early Days in Rhode Island

I was born in 1757 in Charlestown, right here in Rhode Island. My father was Elijah Champlin, and my mother was Phoebe Card -- good Rhode Island stock, both of them. We were farmers, as our people had been for generations. Father worked the land hard, and we children worked alongside him soon as we were big enough to be useful.

Those were different times, children. We didn't have much, but we had enough. The soil was good, the sea was close by for fish, and a man could make his way if he worked hard and kept his wits about him. But trouble was brewing even then. I remember hearing the men talk in low voices about the taxes the King was putting on us, about how we weren't being treated fairly. I was just a boy, but I could feel the tension in the air like a coming storm.

The Revolution Comes

When the war started in 1775, I was just a young man of seventeen years. News came of fighting at Lexington and Concord up in Massachusetts, and the whole countryside was stirred up like a hornet's nest. Captain Samuel Segar was raising a company, and I signed up for a month's service. My first taste of military life, it was.

Now, I won't lie to you children -- being a soldier wasn't the grand adventure some folks make it out to be. We drilled and marched and stood guard, mostly. The food was poor, the weather was hot, and we slept on the ground more often than not. But we were doing something important, something that mattered. We were standing up for our rights as Englishmen -- or what we thought were our rights, anyway. Before long, we realized we weren't Englishmen at all anymore. We were something new. We were Americans.

Five Times I Answered the Call

That first month passed, and I came home to help with the harvest. But the war didn't end -- it just got bigger and meaner. In 1776, I enlisted again, this time for two months under Captain Samuel Potter. We were militia, you understand, not regular army. We'd serve our time, then go home to tend the farm, then muster again when needed.

The year 1777 was my longest stretch with the militia -- five months under Captain Potter again. By then, the war had been going on for more than two years, and everyone was tired. But we kept at it. What else could we do? Give up and let the British win? Let them tell us how to live our lives? No sir. We had started something, and we meant to see it through.

Now, I served five different times during the war, and each time was different. Sometimes it was drilling and guard duty. Other times -- well, other times it was something else entirely.

The Fight at Howland's Ferry

In August of 1778, I enlisted for a month in Captain Timothy Locke's company. We were part of Colonel Dyer's regiment, and we marched to join General Sullivan's forces. The British had taken Newport, you see, and General Sullivan aimed to take it back with help from the French fleet.

Well, things didn't go according to plan. The French fleet got scattered by a storm -- seems like storms were always causing me trouble during the war -- and General Sullivan decided we'd better pull back before the British could trap us on the island. That's when the real fighting started.

We fought at a place called Howland's Ferry Bridge, covering the retreat. The British came at us hard, trying to break through our lines before we could get across. I stood in line with the other men, loading and firing, loading and firing. The noise was incredible -- muskets cracking, cannons booming, men shouting orders. The smoke was so thick you could hardly see ten feet in front of you.

I saw a regiment of colored soldiers fighting alongside us -- brave men, every one of them. They held their ground when others might have run. War is a great equalizer, children. When the bullets are flying, a man's character matters more than the color of his skin.

We held the bridge long enough for the army to get across, then we pulled back ourselves. It wasn't a victory exactly, but it wasn't a defeat either. We'd done our job, and we'd bloodied the British nose in the process. I came out of that fight with nothing more than powder burns and ringing ears, but I'd seen the elephant, as they say. I'd been in a real battle, and I'd stood my ground.

The Time I Nearly Drowned

After one of my enlistments -- I believe it was in '78 or '79, the years run together now -- I was put on a vessel to sail down the coast. We were going to get supplies, I don't rightly remember which. What I do remember is the storm that caught us off the Virginia coast.

Lord have mercy, children, I've never been so scared in all my life as I was that night. The waves were as tall as a house, and the wind was howling like all the devils in hell were loose. The ship pitched and rolled something terrible. Men were praying and crying out, and I'll admit I said a few prayers myself. Then there was a terrible grinding sound, and the ship broke apart on a sandbar.

I found myself in the water, in the dark, with pieces of the ship floating all around me. I grabbed onto a plank and held on for dear life. The water was cold -- so cold it took your breath away -- and the waves kept washing over my head. I thought for sure I was done for. I thought I'd never see Rhode Island again, never see my family, never marry or have children of my own.

But the good Lord wasn't ready for me yet. The tide carried me and my plank toward shore, and when dawn broke, I found myself on a beach with several other men from the ship. We were cold, we were wet, we'd lost everything, but we were alive. Some of our shipmates weren't so lucky. We buried three men on that Virginia beach before we started walking north to find our way back to our homes.

That shipwreck taught me something important -- that life is precious and uncertain. You never know when the Lord might call you home, so you'd better live right and treat people decent while you have the chance.

Six Months in the Continental Army

My last and longest service came in 1780, when I enlisted for six months in Captain Daniel Dexter's company of the Continental Army -- Colonel Christopher Greene's regiment. This was different from the militia. When you signed up for the Continentals, you were a regular soldier, and they expected you to act like one.

Those six months were hard. We drilled constantly -- marching in formation, manual of arms, all of it. The officers were stricter than in the militia. But there was a pride in being a Continental soldier. We were part of General Washington's army, the main force fighting for independence. When we marched, we marched together. When we stood watch, we knew our brothers in arms would stand with us.

By 1780, everyone was tired of the war. We'd been fighting for five years. Men were deserting. The army was short of everything -- food, clothes, ammunition, pay. Some men hadn't been paid in months. But we kept going because we believed in what we were fighting for. We believed that our children and grandchildren -- you children sitting here now -- should grow up free, able to make your own way in the world without some king across the ocean telling you what to do.

When my six months were up in late 1780, I came home to South Kingstown. The war dragged on for another year, but I'd done my part. I'd served my country five times over. I'd been shipwrecked and nearly drowned. I'd stood in the line of battle. I'd done what needed doing, and I could hold my head high.

I Found My Nancy

After the war ended in 1783, I set about building a life. I'd spent enough time fighting. Now it was time for farming and family. I'd known Nancy Kenyon since we were young -- her father John Kenyon was a respected man in the community. Nancy was a good woman, strong and capable, the kind of woman who could manage a household and raise a family while her husband was in the fields.

We married before 1785, and our first child, your uncle Samuel, was born that December. After that, the children just kept coming. Phoebe in 1788, then Polly, then Joseph Junior in 1792. We had Nancy, Elizabeth, Amy, George, Frances, Abigail, John, and finally little Alice in 1808. Twelve children in all, each one a blessing, though I'll tell you raising that many youngsters was harder work than any soldiering I ever did!

Your grandmother Nancy -- my Nancy -- she was the heart of our home. She could spin and weave, cook and preserve, tend the garden and the chickens, nurse sick children back to health, and still have energy left to help me with the ledgers. She bore twelve children and raised them all to be good, decent people. When she died in 1833, a light went out of my life. I've lived twelve years without her now, and I miss her every single day.

Working the Land

For most of my life, I've been a farmer. We had good land here in South Kingstown, and we worked it hard. In the spring, we'd plow and plant. Summer meant hoeing and weeding, tending the animals, cutting hay. Fall was harvest time -- bringing in the corn and vegetables, threshing the grain. Winter we'd repair tools, cut wood, care for the livestock.

It was a good life, honest work. When your children were small, they'd work alongside you in the fields. I taught your fathers and uncles everything I knew about farming -- when to plant, how to read the weather, how to care for the land so it would provide for us year after year. A farm is like a living thing, you see. You take care of it, and it takes care of you.

The house was always full of life -- children playing, Nancy cooking, babies crying, young folks courting on the porch. As the children grew and married, some stayed nearby and some moved away. Your uncle George went all the way to New York state. Your aunt Amy married a preacher and moved to Connecticut. But we stayed here in South Kingstown, in the house I built, on the land I've worked all these years.

The Government Remembers

In 1833, when I was seventy-five years old, the government passed a law giving pensions to old Revolutionary soldiers. I went down to South Kingstown and made my application. Had to tell the judge about all my service -- when I enlisted, under which captains, how long I served. My hand's been too shaky to write for years now, so I made my mark with an X. The judge approved my application, and they started paying me fifty dollars a year.

That pension money has been a blessing, I can tell you. When you're my age, you can't work the way you used to. That money helps keep me fed and clothed. But more than the money, it's the recognition. The government is saying, 'We remember what you did. We remember that you stood up when your country needed you.' That means something to an old soldier.

Some of the neighbors call me Revolutionary Joseph, on account of my service. I wear that name with pride. I'm one of the old fellows now, one of the few left who remembers the war. Most of my comrades are gone -- Samuel Potter, Timothy Locke, Daniel Dexter, all of them gone to their reward. Soon enough, I'll join them. But for now, I'm still here, still able to tell the stories, still able to pass on what I learned.

What I've Learned

Children, I've lived through times that would amaze you. I was born a British subject under King George. I fought in a war that created a new nation. I've seen this country grow from thirteen colonies to more than twenty states stretching all the way to Texas. I've heard about inventions that would have seemed like magic when I was young -- steamboats, railroads, telegraph wires. The world has changed so much in my lifetime.

But some things don't change. Family is still the most important thing. Working hard and living honest still matters. Standing up for what's right still takes courage. These are the things I want to pass on to you.

When you hear people complaining about how hard life is, you remind them that your grandfather fought in the Revolution. Remind them that men died so you could live free. Don't take your freedoms for granted, because they were bought with blood and sacrifice.

I don't know how much longer the good Lord will let me stay in this world. I'm past ninety now, and that's a good long run by anyone's measure. When my time comes, I'll go knowing that I did my duty -- to my country, to my family, to my God. I fought when fighting was needed. I worked when work was needed. I raised twelve good children with my Nancy, and they've given me more grandchildren than I can count.

A Final Word

So that's my story, children. That's the life of your old grandfather Joseph Champlin. I've been shipwrecked and nearly drowned. I've stood in the line of battle with bullets flying past my ears. I've buried loved ones and celebrated births. I've worked hard, loved deeply, and done my best to live right.

Remember these stories. Tell them to your own children someday. Let them know that they come from people who weren't afraid to fight for what was right, who worked hard and took care of their families, who helped build this nation with their own hands.

And when you think of me after I'm gone, don't be sad. I've had a good life, a full life. I've seen and done things I never imagined when I was a boy in Charlestown. I've loved and been loved. What more can a man ask for?

Now, it's getting late, and these old bones need their rest. You children run along now. But remember -- you're Champlins. You come from good stock. Make us proud.

-- Joseph Champlin, South Kingstown, Rhode Island, 1848

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3)  The Video Overview of Joseph Champlin's memoir, created by the Google NotebookLM AI tool, is: 

4)  I edited the Claude memoir text to correct minor inconsistencies and errors. Every large language model (LLM) AI tool writes descriptive text much better than I can write. The AI tools are very perceptive, insightful and inspiring, creating engaging text in seconds, including local and national historical events and social history detail when requested.

5)  This is historical fiction, based on my own genealogical research. It is what Joseph Champlin might have told his grandchildren in 1848.  

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Links to my blog posts about using Artificial Intelligence are on my Randy's AI and Genealogy page. Links to AI information and articles about Artificial Intelligence in Genealogy by other genealogists are on my AI and Genealogy Compendium page.

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