Saturday, May 23, 2026

Saturday Night Genealogy Fun -- Describe An Ancestor's Occupation

  Calling all Genea-Musings Fans: 

 It's Saturday Night again - 

time for some more Genealogy Fun!!



Here is your assignment if you choose to play along (cue the Mission Impossible music, please!):


1)  Are there ancestor's occupations that you know nothing about?

2)  Pick a great-grandparent or earlier ancestor who held an unfamiliar job (cooper, cordwainer, hostler, etc.). Look it up and write a short description of what their daily work life might have been like. 

3)  Share your information about your ancestors' locations in your own blog post, writing a comment on this blog post, or put it in a Substack post, Facebook Note, or some other social media system.  Please leave a comment on this post so others can find it.

Thank you to Linda Stufflebean for this week's SNGF challenge!

Here's mine:

My second great-grandmother, Abigail A. (Vaux) Smith (1844-1931) was a Milliner.  I never knew what that was until recently.  

I asked OpenAI ChatGPT5 to tell me what a Milliner's job was, and what their daily work might have been like.  Here is the response:

A milliner was a maker and seller of women’s hats, bonnets, caps, veils, and fashionable accessories. In the 19th century, especially for women like your ancestor Abigail Smith (1844–1931), millinery was one of the few respectable skilled trades open to women. It combined sewing, design, business sense, customer service, and fashion awareness.

The word “milliner” originally came from “Milaner,” meaning someone dealing in fancy goods from Milan, Italy, but by Abigail’s time it specifically meant a hatmaker for women.

What Abigail Smith Probably Did

Abigail’s work would depend on whether she worked for another milliner shop, operated her own business, worked from home, or did seasonal piecework. Most milliners in small towns did a little of everything.

Her work likely included:

Designing and Making Hats

She would create bonnets, straw hats, silk hats, mourning hats, children’s caps, winter hoods,   decorative trims. Women’s hats in the Victorian period were elaborate and highly seasonal.

A milliner shaped and decorated straw, buckram, frames, felt, silk, velvet, lace, ribbon, feathers, artificial flowers, beads, jet ornaments, and sometimes bird wings or entire stuffed birds during the height of fashion in the 1880s-1890s.

Her Daily Work

A typical day might have looked like this:

  • Morning:  Open the shop or workroom;  Sweep floors and organize materials. Receive deliveries of ribbon, lace, feathers, or straw blanks; Meet customers wanting new hats or repairs.
  • Midday: Measure customers’ heads; Discuss styles, colors, and current fashions; Sew linings and trims by hand; Steam and shape hat frames; Attach decorations carefully with tiny stitches.
  • Much of the work required strong eyesight, nimble fingers, patience, and long hours bent over fine handwork.
  • Evening:  Finish stitching orders by lamplight; Prepare hats for display; Sometimes teach apprentices or daughters helping in the business.

During busy seasons — especially spring and Easter — she might work 12- to 14-hour days.

Millinery Was Fashion Work

Milliners had to keep up with changing styles from large cities like New York City,   Boston,   Philadelphia, and even Paris. Fashion magazines and paper patterns circulated widely by the late 1800s.

A successful milliner needed artistic taste, knowledge of fabrics, social skills, and practical business ability.

Social Status and Customers

Milliners served farm wives, town women, churchgoers, brides, widows needing mourning attire, and wealthier ladies wanting fashionable hats.

In many communities, a woman’s bonnet or hat was one of her most visible status symbols.

A good hat might be worn to church, social calls, weddings, funerals, fairs, political gatherings, or photographs.

The Work Could Be Physically Hard

Although considered “ladylike,” millinery was demanding.

Common difficulties included:

  • eye strain,

  • back pain,

  • poor lighting,

  • seasonal financial uncertainty,

  • and exposure to dust or dye chemicals.

Some hat materials were surprisingly unpleasant:

  • stiffeners used glue or shellac,

  • dyes could stain hands,

  • and feathers shed everywhere.

Milliners and Women’s Independence

Millinery gave many women rare economic opportunity in the 19th century.

An experienced milliner could own a shop, hire assistants, train apprentices, travel for supplies, and earn her own income before marriage or after widowhood.

For widowed or unmarried women, it could mean genuine independence.

That makes Abigail’s occupation especially interesting historically. She was not simply “sewing.” She was participating in commerce, fashion culture, skilled handcraft, and women’s entrepreneurship.

What Her Workplace Might Have Looked Like

A small-town millinery shop often included a front display room with mirrors and hat stands,   shelves of ribbons and flowers, sewing tables, dress forms, boxes stacked to the ceiling, and perhaps a back workroom heated by a stove.

Genealogical Clues You Might Look For

Because Abigail was a milliner, you may find:

  • city directory listings (“milliner,” “dressmaker,” or “fancy goods”),

  • newspaper advertisements,

  • business cards,

  • tax records,

  • apprenticeship records,

  • or photographs showing hats she made.

Women in this trade sometimes worked alongside sisters, daughters, or widowed relatives, so a FAN-club approach may help.

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

Well now I know more than I ever knew about millinery.  ChatGPT also provided a number of historic photographs from the late 1800s to illustrate his response.  

I have only one photograph of Abbie Smith and her millinery shop in San Diego in about 1895.

(AI ChatGPT restoration of the original faded black and white photo)

Unfortunately, I don't recall seeing a photograph in my photograph collection of Abbie wearing a hat. 

You can read Abbie's life memories in Abigail A. (Vaux) Smith's Life Memories - An AI-Assisted Memoir based on my genealogical research and Anthropic Claude's historical fiction.  

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

The URL for this post is: 

Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

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ABC Biography of the Rudolf and Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler Family of York, Pennsylvania (1738-1835)

 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 sketches for my 4th great-grandparents Rudolf and Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler of Pennsylvania, including family members, record abstracts and sources, are in 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks - Week 84: #100 Rudolf Spengler (1738-1811) and 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks - Week 85: #101 Maria Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler (1748-1835). Rudolf Spangler was a Revolutionary War soldier.


(AI NotebookLM Infographic - Rudolf and Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler 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 Rudolf and Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler 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: 



A Family History of the
Rudolf & Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler Family
of York, Pennsylvania (1738–1835)

Introduction

The story of Rudolf and Dorothea Spangler is one of industry, patriotism, and deep community roots in the borough of York, Pennsylvania. Rudolf, a craftsman of rare skill, rose from silversmith and clockmaker to soldier, politician, and respected civic leader during the founding decades of the American republic. Dorothea, born across the Atlantic in Strasbourg, France, brought with her the heritage of a family that had already made its mark in Pennsylvania colonial life. Together, they built a household of eleven children and left a legacy that would endure for generations in York County and beyond.

Their lives spanned one of the most consequential eras in American history. Rudolf was born when Pennsylvania was still a British colony, served in the Revolutionary War, and lived to see the new nation establish its institutions. Dorothea outlived her husband by nearly twenty-four years, dying in 1835 at the remarkable age of eighty-seven—a testament to her remarkable fortitude. This family biography draws on the genealogical sketch compiled by Randall J. Seaver, as well as contemporaneous sources including census records, probate documents, and period newspapers.

Rudolf Spangler: Origins and Early Life

Rudolf Spengler (the family name was also spelled “Spangler” interchangeably in colonial records) was born in 1738 in York, York County, Pennsylvania Colony. He was the son of Johann Baltzer “Baltzer” Spangler (1706–1770) and Maria Magdalena Ritter (1706–1784), who had married in 1732 in Baden-Württemberg, Germany, before emigrating to the Pennsylvania Colony. Baltzer Spangler was among the wave of German-speaking immigrants who shaped the character of York County in the early eighteenth century, bringing with them their trades, their Reformed faith, and their family traditions.

Rudolf grew up as one of eight children in the Spengler household. York was a young but growing town—it had been laid out in 1741 and incorporated as a borough in 1787—and the Spangler family were woven into the fabric of its social and commercial life from the very beginning. His father Baltzer, who died in 1770, appears to have established the family firmly in York, where multiple generations would remain for over a century.

Rudolf’s Parents

Rudolf’s parents, Johann Baltzer Spangler and Maria Magdalena Ritter, married in 1732 in Baden-Württemberg before settling in York, Pennsylvania Colony, where they raised their family. Baltzer died in 1770 and Magdalena in 1784.

Rudolf’s Siblings

Rudolf was the fifth of eight children born to Baltzer and Magdalena Spangler:
  • George Spengler (born 20 March 1732, Weiler, Rheinland-Pfalz; died 2 October 1810, York). He married Anna Maria Schultz about 1755 in York.
  • Maria Juliana Spengler (born 25 October 1734, York; died 1770, York). She married Johann Frantz Wilhelm Bickle on 12 December 1757 in York.
  • Johann Baltzer Spengler (born 16 April 1735, York; died 1 August 1798, York). He married Christina Messerschmidt before 1761 in York.
  • Michael Spengler (born about 1737, York; died August 1793, York). He married Margaret Dinkel—notably a member of the same Dinkel family into which Rudolf himself would marry.
  • Rudolf Spengler (born 1738, York) – the subject of this biography.
  • Elizabeth Spengler (born 1740, York; died 25 November 1825, York). She married Francis Koontz on 5 November 1764 in Lancaster.
  • Daniel Spengler (born about 1742, York; died about 1777, York). He married Maria Elisabetha Leightner on 29 December 1765 in York.
  • John Spengler (born 29 June 1747, York; died 11 October 1796, York). He married Margaret Barth in 1777 in York.
Interestingly, the Spengler and Dinkel families were already intertwined before Rudolf and Dorothea’s marriage: Rudolf’s brother Michael married a Margaret Dinkel, and Dorothea’s sister Margaret Salome Dinkel married a Philip Caspar Spengler. These overlapping family ties were common in tight-knit German immigrant communities where a relatively small group of families formed the social and commercial core of a community.

Dorothea Dinkel: Origins and Early Life

Maria Dorothea Dinkel was born about 1748 in Strasbourg, Alsace, France—a city at the crossroads of French and German culture situated on the Rhine River at the border of modern France and Germany. She was the daughter of Johann Daniel Dunckel (1713–1755) and Maria Ursula Hornuss (1713–1793), who had married in 1735. The family emigrated from Strasbourg, likely during the 1740s or early 1750s, joining the large flow of German-speaking Alsatian and Palatine immigrants who settled in Pennsylvania—a journey of several weeks by ship across the Atlantic followed by travel inland to York County.

Dorothea’s father, Daniel, died in 1755 when she was just a young child, leaving her mother Ursula to raise the family. Ursula Hornuss Dinkel lived to 1793, long enough to see her children established in Pennsylvania society. The Dinkel family settled in York, where Dorothea grew up alongside her siblings in the same German Reformed community that the Spanglers called home.

Dorothea’s Parents

Dorothea’s father, Johann Daniel Dunckel, was born in 1713 and died in 1755 at the age of only forty-two, leaving her mother Maria Ursula Hornuss (1713–1793) to raise the children. Ursula lived to eighty years of age.

Dorothea’s Siblings

Dorothea was the youngest of six children born to Daniel and Ursula Dinkel in Strasbourg before the family emigrated to Pennsylvania:
  • Margaret Salome Dinkel (born 6 April 1736, Strasbourg; died 29 June 1813, York). She married Philip Caspar Spengler about 1752 in York—another member of the Spengler family, drawing the two families into close kinship.
  • Anna Maria Dinkel (born about 1738, Strasbourg; died 23 February 1797, York). She married Philip Albright about 1760 in York.
  • Johann Daniel Dinkel (born 17 June 1741, Strasbourg; died 1812, Bridgewater, Rockingham, Virginia). He married Anna Margaret Ruhl before 1758 in York, before later moving to Virginia.
  • Peter Dinkel (born 11 July 1742, Strasbourg; died 22 December 1827, York). He married Anna Elizabeth Wolfe on 15 February 1767 in York, just two weeks after Dorothea’s own wedding.
  • Maria Catherina Dinkel (born 22 June 1746, Strasbourg; died 22 March 1831, York). She married David Candler on 30 October 1763 in York.
  • Maria Dorothea Dinkel (born about 1748, Strasbourg) – the subject of this biography.
Marriage and Life Together in York

Captain Rudolf Spengler and Maria Dorothea Dinkel were married on 1 January 1767 at Trinity Reformed Church in York, Pennsylvania Colony. Rudolf was approximately twenty-eight years old and Dorothea was about eighteen. The marriage record appears in the church’s register, where their names are recorded as “Rudolph Spengeler” and “Dorothea Duenckel.”

The wedding day itself is immortalized in a charming anecdote: on the morning of his wedding, Rudolf went with his gun and deer hounds to Baumgardner’s Woods, a mile southeast of York, where he shot a deer to provide venison for his own nuptial dinner. The story speaks volumes about the man—self-reliant, vigorous, and thoroughly at home in the Pennsylvania countryside.

The couple settled in York, where they would spend the rest of their lives. It was a propitious time to build a life in York County: the borough was growing steadily, trade was flourishing, and the German-speaking community was well established. Rudolf’s craft skills, civic ambitions, and military service would place the Spangler name among the most respected in the region.

Rudolf’s Trades and Crafts

Rudolf Spengler was a silversmith and clockmaker by trade—skilled crafts that required both artistic talent and technical precision. As a silversmith he worked with precious metals, fashioning decorative and functional objects for the wealthier families of York. As a clockmaker, he crafted timepieces of lasting quality. When the historian Edward W. Spangler was researching his 1896 book The Annals of the Families of Caspar, Henry, Baltzer and George Spengler, he discovered three tall “grandfather’s clocks” still in existence that Rudolf had made, each bearing the inscription “Rudy Spengler, York town” on its dial. These surviving artifacts are remarkable testaments to his craft. By 1773 he had expanded his activities and was assessed as a merchant in York—a sign of growing prosperity and commercial ambition.

Revolutionary War Service

When war with Britain broke out in 1775, Rudolf Spangler did not hesitate. He became a member of Captain George Eichelberger’s Company in 1775 and was shortly afterward elected Captain of the Sixth Company of the York County Militia. This unit was part of the five York County battalions that marched to eastern New Jersey in 1776 to form the famous “Flying Camp”—a mobile reserve force of some ten thousand troops assembled by Congress to defend the Middle Colonies.

The Flying Camp saw significant action during the critical New York and New Jersey campaigns of 1776, a period of severe hardship for the Continental cause. Rudolf’s willingness to lead men into this dangerous theater of the war earned him the honorific title “Captain,” by which he was known for the rest of his life. This title was engraved on his gravestone, a mark of enduring honor.

Property and Civic Affairs

The U.S. Census of 1790 shows the Rudolph Spangler household in York Township with one adult male, eight males under the age of sixteen, and three females—a lively and full household reflecting his large family. By 1798, the Direct Tax List documents his substantial property holdings: he owned at least two houses (one a two-story brick house on West Market Street, the other unfinished), a stable, a barn, and a brick kitchen, as well as land parcels in York Township. The larger house was assessed at $1,750 and the second at $400—meaningful sums at the time.

Rudolf served as County Treasurer from 1801 to 1805. He was a State Senator and Burgess of York in 1803, and a member of the General Assembly of Pennsylvania in 1810—the year before his death. By 1805 he had patented lands in what is now Springgarden Township, and his property holdings extended across multiple lots on East Market, South Queen, King, and High Streets in York. His civic career, by any measure, was one of remarkable distinction for a man who had arrived in the world as the son of a German immigrant craftsman.

Their Children

Rudolf and Dorothea raised eleven children together in York, Pennsylvania. The family was a central part of York’s German Reformed community, and their children married into many of the county’s most prominent families.
  • General John Jacob Spengler (born 28 November 1767, York; died 17 June 1843, York). Married (1) Susannah Hay on 5 May 1791 in York, seven children; married (2) Catherine Allen Hamilton on 23 May 1820 in Harrisburg, five children. He achieved the rank of General, continuing the family’s military tradition.
  • Maria Catherine Spengler (born 1 January 1770, York; died 27 December 1824, York). Married George Augustus Barnitz in 1792 in York, seven children.
  • Elizabeth Spengler (born 23 February 1773, York; died 14 April 1844, York). Married William Nes before 1793 in York, five children.
  • Margaret “Recky” Spengler (born 14 March 1773, York; died 15 April 1852, Winchester, Frederick, Virginia). Married Joseph Slagle on 22 September 1807 in York, six children. She outlived her siblings, dying at age seventy-nine in Virginia.
  • Jesse Spengler (born 5 July 1775, York; died 12 September 1860, York). Married Mary D. Heckert before 1798 in York, nine children. Jesse lived to the extraordinary age of eighty-five.
  • Johannes Spengler (born 22 May 1777, York). No further records are noted for Johannes.
  • Anna Maria Spengler (born about 1779, York; died 11 April 1816, York). Married Peter Schmahl on 27 April 1797 in York, four children. Anna Maria died relatively young at around age thirty-seven.
  • Daniel Spangler (born 9 October 1781, York; died 19 July 1851, Georgetown, Beaver, Pennsylvania). Married Elizabeth King on 12 March 1815 in York, ten children. Daniel relocated to western Pennsylvania.
  • Mary Margaret Spengler (born about 1783, York; died 1841, York). Married Martin Kieffer in 1804 in York, no children.
  • Peter Spengler (born 16 May 1786, York; died 22 May 1823, York). Married Sarah Gardner on 15 October 1812 in York, four children. Peter died young at age thirty-seven, just eleven days after his birthday.
  • Helen Dorothea Spengler (born 24 June 1789, York; died 15 May 1842, York). Married Charles Frederick Fisher on 2 October 1808 in York, four children.
Rudolf’s will, written around 1807 and proved on 26 August 1811, named four sons—Jacob, Jesse, Daniel, and Peter—and five daughters—Catherine (wife of George Barnitz), Elizabeth (wife of William Nes), Mary (wife of Peter Small), Margaret (wife of Joseph Slagle), and Magdalena (wife of Charles Fisher). Note that the will uses the given name “Magdalena” for what family records call Helen Dorothea—a reminder that informal names and legal names did not always agree in this era. The will left all of Rudolf’s estate to Dorothea for her lifetime, with the remainder to be divided equally among the children after her death. The document is a model of clarity and fairness, characteristic of the man himself.

Rudolf’s Final Years and Death

By the time of the 1810 Census—just a year before his death—Rudolf’s household had grown smaller. Most of his children had married and established their own homes. The census records show one man over forty-five, a younger man between sixteen and twenty-six, a younger woman in the same age range, and an older woman—likely Dorothea—still at home.

Rudolf Spengler died on 5 August 1811 in York, at approximately seventy-three years of age. His obituary, published in The York Recorder on August 10, 1811, captured the esteem in which he was held:
“Died, in this borough, at an advanced age, on Thursday last, Rudolf Spangler, Esq. The confidence reposed in the deceased by his fellow citizens in choosing him to serve in the State Senate and House of Representatives, are sufficient testimonials that in private and public life he was the honored and upright man. His remains were yesterday deposited in the German Reformed burying ground, attended by a long train of mourning relatives and friends.”
He was initially interred in the German Reformed burying ground, and was later buried alongside his wife at Prospect Hill Cemetery in York, where their shared gravestone still stands today.

Dorothea’s Long Widowhood and Death

When Rudolf died in 1811, Dorothea was approximately sixty-three years old. She would spend nearly a quarter-century more as his widow, living to the remarkable age of eighty-seven. Around 1815, a left-profile sketch of Dorothea was drawn, which was later preserved in a Spangler family history book—a rare and touching memento of a woman who had lived through the entire founding era of the American republic.

In 1834, at approximately eighty-six years of age, Dorothea penned her last will and testament entirely in her own hand and entirely in German—the language of her Strasbourg childhood and her York community. The will was authenticated in court after her death by local citizens who could verify her signature, a testament to the respect she commanded in the community.

Maria Dorothea Spangler died on 12 June 1835 in York, Pennsylvania. Her obituary, published in The York Gazette on June 18, 1835, remembered her with warmth and reverence:
“In memory of Dorothea Spangler, relict of Rudolf Spangler, deceased… How few they that arrive at that period of life, blessed with a happy temperament of mind. She led the life of a pure and upright Christian. Relatives and friends revere and cherish her memory.”
She was laid to rest beside her husband at Prospect Hill Cemetery in York. Their shared gravestone bears an inscription that is as simple and dignified as their lives:

Rudolf Spangler Born 1738 Died Aug. 5 1811 Capt. 1775

Dorothea Spangler Born 1748 Died June 12, 1835

Legacy and Historical Significance

The story of Rudolf and Dorothea Spangler is, in many ways, the story of early America itself. Rudolf’s father crossed the Atlantic as part of the great German migration that transformed colonial Pennsylvania; Rudolf himself fought in the Revolution and helped build the new nation’s institutions; and his children spread across Pennsylvania and beyond as the young country expanded. Dorothea brought a distinctly European heritage—born in Alsace, raised amid the French and German cultures of the Rhine borderlands—and grafted it onto the deeply rooted German-American community of York.

Their eleven children—who married into families named Barnitz, Nes, Slagle, Heckert, Schmahl, King, Kieffer, Gardner, and Fisher—wove the Spangler family into the very fabric of York County society. Son General John Jacob Spengler continued the military tradition his father had begun, rising to the rank of general. Son Jesse lived to eighty-five, long enough to see the Civil War threaten the union his grandfather had helped create.

The three grandfather clocks bearing the inscription “Rudy Spengler, York town” that still survived into the 1890s when genealogist Edward W. Spangler found them are perhaps the most evocative symbol of Rudolf’s life: handmade objects of lasting beauty and utility, built by a man who measured time carefully and used it well.

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

4) An Audio Overview (essentially a podcast) created by the Google NotebookLM AI tool) describing and celebrating the lives of the Rudolf and Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler family can be heard here (click on "Play" for the "Audio Overview").

5)  The Video Overview discussing the Rudolf and Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler 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.

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Friday, May 22, 2026

Added and Updated FamilySearch Record Collections - Week of 16 to 22 May 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 22 May 2026, there are now 6,666 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 22 May 2026, there are now 24,684 browsable (some indexed, none transcribed) image collections on FamilySearch Images this week, a decrease of 2 from last week. There are over 6.031 BILLION images in these collections.  There are 2,101 collections from the United States, 6,917 from Europe and 219 from Canada.  It is not possible to see which collections are new.
  


3)  As of 22 May 2026, there are 3,436 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 ---

Indiana, World War II Draft Registration Cards, 1940-1947 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2852766); 899,405 indexed records with 898,302 record images, DELETED
Kentucky, World War II Draft Registration Cards, 1940-1947 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2857274); 735,551 indexed records with 733,388 record images, DELETED
Rhode Island, World War II Draft Registration Cards, 1940-1947 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/3047821); 184,603 indexed records with 184,465 record images, DELETED

--- Collections Added ---

Philippines, Calabarzon, Church Records 1710-1983 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/5000323); 1,478,024 indexed records with 236,829 record images, ADDED 12-Mar-2026
Philippines, Central Luzon, Church Records, 1682-1972 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/5000340); 1,817,769 indexed records with 215,480 record images, ADDED 12-Mar-2026
Philippines, Metro Manila, Church Records, 1723-1982 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/5000337); 362,559 indexed records with 167,613 record images, ADDED 12-Mar-2026
Philippines, Mimaropa, Church Records, 1821-1937
(https://familysearch.org/search/collection/5000339); 69,724 indexed records with 31,989 record images, ADDED 11-Mar-2026

--- Collections Updated ---

Alaska Naturalization Records, 1884-1992 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2513103); 81,596 indexed records with 71,944 record images (was 81,550 records with 71,937 images), UPDATED 19-May-2026
Belgium, West Flanders, Civil Registration, 1582-1950 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2139860); 596,937 indexed records with 2,612,466 record images (was 596,932 records with 2,612,466 images), UPDATED 18-May-2026
California, Honor Roll of Californians who served in WWI, 1914-1918 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/3029261); 9,280 indexed records with 9,231 record images (was 9,256 records with 9,229 images), UPDATED 19-May-2026
Colombia, Migration Records, 1885-2014 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/5000159); 6,739,551 indexed records with 6,511,777 record images (was 6,739,469 records with 6,507,487 images), UPDATED 21-May-2026
Honduras, Civil Registration, 1841-1968 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2135627); 12,403,202 indexed records with 337,976 record images (was 12,424,489 records with 337,976 images), UPDATED 22-May-2026

Indiana, Naturalization Records and Indexes, 1848-1993 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2137708); 145,747 indexed records with 102,461 record images (was 144,805 records with 102,461 images), UPDATED 18-May-2026
Mexico, Aguascalientes, Catholic Church Records, 1601-1962 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1502404); 954,902 indexed records with 618,532 record images (was 950,575 records with 618,532 images), UPDATED 15-May-2026
Mexico, Chiapas, Catholic Church Records, 1557-1978 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1616412); 1,442,313 indexed records with 968,865 record images (was 1,394,705 records with 968,865 images), UPDATED 15-May-2026
Mexico, Chihuahua, Catholic Church Records, 1632-2005 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1521780); 1,134,092 indexed records with 378,612 record images (was 1,095,155 records with 378,612 images), UPDATED 15-May-2026
Mexico, Colima, Catholic Church Records, 1707-1969 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1508604); 361,275 indexed records with 228,566 record images (was 360,894 records with 228,566 images), UPDATED 15-May-2026

Mexico, Durango, Catholic Church Records, 1604-1985 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1554576); 1,554,977 indexed records with 504,812 record images (was 1,517,303 records with 504,812 images), UPDATED 15-May-2026
Mexico, Guanajuato, Catholic Church Records, 1519-1984 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1860831); 12,301,590 indexed records with 4,584,983 record images (was 10,992,905 records with 4,584,983 images), UPDATED 17-May-2026
Mexico, Guerrero, Catholic Church Records, 1576-1979 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1823323); 2,559,828 indexed records with 1,584,621 record images (was 2,402,102 records with 1,584,621 images), UPDATED 16-May-2026
Mexico, Hidalgo, Catholic Church Records, 1546-1971 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1804358); 5,088,537 indexed records with 1,750,627 record images (was 4,882,088 records with 1,750,627 images), UPDATED 16-May-2026
Mexico, Jalisco, Catholic Church Records, 1590-2022 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1874591); 9,682,007 indexed records with 5,797,486 record images (was 8,526,576 records with 5,797,486 images), UPDATED 17-May-2026

Mexico, Morelos, Catholic Church Records, 1598-1994 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1837907); 916,379 indexed records with 531,787 record images (was 916,379 records with 531,787 images), UPDATED 16-May-2026
Mexico, México, Catholic Church Records, 1567-1970 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1837908); 9,260,695 indexed records with 4,823,124 record images (was 8,662,920 records with 4,823,124 images), UPDATED 17-May-2026
Mexico, Nayarit, Catholic Church Records, 1596-1967 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1883377); 805,878 indexed records with 499,694 record images (was 737,848 records with 499,694 images), UPDATED 17-May-2026
Mexico, Oaxaca, Catholic Church Records, 1559-2022 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1909191); 6,850,610 indexed records with 3,458,764 record images (was 6,036,813 records with 3,458,764 images), UPDATED 18-May-2026
Mexico, Puebla, Catholic Church Records, 1545-2009 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1837906); 7,113,969 indexed records with 6,124,553 record images (was 6,419,452 records with 6,124,553 images), UPDATED 16-May-2026

Mexico, Querétaro, Catholic Church Records, 1590-1970 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1881200); 2,731,619 indexed records with 1,380,077 record images (was 2,531,105 records with 1,380,077 images), UPDATED 17-May-2026
Mexico, San Luis Potosí, Catholic Church Records, 1586-1977 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1860864); 4,941,900 indexed records with 2,162,812 record images (was 4,555,586 records with 2,162,812 images), UPDATED 17-May-2026
Mexico, Sinaloa, Catholic Church Records, 1671-1968 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1473206); 906,504 indexed records with 521,512 record images (was 906,141 records with 521,512 images), UPDATED 15-May-2026
Mexico, Tabasco, Catholic Church Records, 1803-1970 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1909106); 121,251 indexed records with 121,509 record images (was 116,767 records with 121,509 images), UPDATED 18-May-2026
Mexico, Tamaulipas, Catholic Church Records, 1703-1964 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1790934); 808,916 indexed records with 199,328 record images (was 805,637 records with 199,328 images), UPDATED 15-May-2026

Mexico, Tlaxcala, Catholic Church Records, 1576-1994 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1837905); 1,810,128 indexed records with 1,012,693 record images (was 1,719,101 records with 1,012,693 images), UPDATED 16-May-2026
Mexico, Veracruz, Catholic Church Records, 1590-1978 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1883382); 4,008,971 indexed records with 2,563,917 record images (was 3,844,032 records with 2,563,917 images), UPDATED 18-May-2026
Mexico, Yucatán, Catholic Church Records, 1543-1977 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1909116); 3,048,878 indexed records with 1,234,534 record images (was 2,956,281 records with 1,234,534 images), UPDATED 18-May-2026
Mexico, Zacatecas, Catholic Church Records, 1605-1980 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1804458); 3,118,149 indexed records with 1,663,800 record images (was 2,868,998 records with 1,663,800 images), UPDATED 16-May-2026
New Zealand, Civil Records Indexes, 1800-1966 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2697870); 2,276,966 indexed records with 2 record images (was 1,758,729 records with 1,737,473 images), UPDATED 21-May-2026

Philippines, Bicol, Church Records, 1738-1989 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/5000336); 575,888 indexed records with 156,090 record images (was 543,963 records with 151,112 images), UPDATED 19-May-2026
Philippines, Bicol, Civil Registration, 1783-2008 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/5000343); 20,169 indexed records with 816,539 record images (was 20,169 records with 699,601 images), UPDATED 20-May-2026
Philippines, Catholic Church Records, 1520-2014 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2861657); 12,300,078 indexed records with 3,051,289 record images (was 12,300,078 records with 3,050,822 images), UPDATED 19-May-2026
Philippines, Central Luzon, Civil Registration, 1852-2010 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/5000349); 126,942 indexed records with 856,617 record images (was 126,942 records with 797,469 images), UPDATED 20-May-2026
Philippines, Central Visayas, Civil Registration, 1914-1996 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/5000194); 125,825 indexed records with 663,770 record images (was 125,825 records with 580,569 images), UPDATED 19-May-2026

Philippines, Western Visayas, Church Records, 1712-2006 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/5000338); 681,180 indexed records with 348,784 record images (was 673,700 records with 347,364 images), UPDATED 21-May-2026
Texas, Daughters of the Republic of Texas, Membership Applications, 1892-2010 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1918480); Browse 386,880 Images only, no index (was 0 records with 386,880 images), UPDATED 18-May-2026

--- Collections with new images ---

Argentina, Buenos Aires, Civil Registration, 1861-2018 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/5000041); 1 indexed records with 111,710 record images (was 1 records with 111,708 images), last updated 07-Jun-2024
Argentina, Military Records, 1911-1936 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/5000280); 2,929,239 indexed records with 2,929,262 record images (was 2,929,239 records with 2,929,261 images), last updated 03-Apr-2026
Brazil, Alagoas, Civil Registration, 1876-2023 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/4469403); 1 indexed records with 454,219 record images (was 1 records with 454,205 images), last updated 07-Jun-2024
Brazil, Maranhão, Civil Registration, 1827-2022 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/4469402); 1 indexed records with 906,190 record images (was 1 records with 906,167 images), last updated 07-Jun-2024

--- Collections with images removed ---

England Marriages, 1538–1973 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1473015); 10,303,917 indexed records with 12,511,919 record images (was 10,303,917 records with 12,554,364 images), last updated 06-Feb-2026
Philippines, Eastern Visayas, Church Records, 1716-2014 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/5000329); 737,166 indexed records with 398,278 record images (was 737,166 records with 423,658 images), last updated 11-Mar-2026
Philippines, Ilocos, Church Records, 1718-2007 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/5000330); 2,021,539 indexed records with 448,585 record images (was 2,021,539 records with 459,316 images), last updated 12-Mar-2026

--- Collections with new records ---

Mexico, Nuevo León, Catholic Church Records, 1544-1982 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1473204); 1,149,728 indexed records with 447,381 record images (was 1,149,073 records with 447,381 images), last updated 15-May-2026

--- Collections with records removed ---
United States, Public Records, 1970-2009 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2199956); Index only (875,600,615 records), no images (was 875,600,617 records with 0 images), last updated 23-Dec-2025
United States, Residence Database, 1970-2024 (https://familysearch.org/search/collection/5000290); Index only (413,858,331 records), no images (was 413,858,332 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:

  • 3,436 Historical Record Collection entries
  • 3 removed entries
  • 4  added entries 
  • 39 updated entries
  • 7 entries with more or fewer images 
  • 3 entries with more or fewer records
Marshsll's list shows 3,436 Historical Record Collections this week, an increase of 1 collections. The image above shows 3,436 collections, so the Image number is in sync with Marshall's list number.

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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 16 to 22 May 2026

 The following genealogy record collections were added to the Ancestry.com Card Catalog page by "Date Updated" during the period from 16 to 22 May 2026:  

The ADDED and Updated collections include:
  • Virginia, U.S., Death Records, 1912-2014; 11,182,317 indexed records with record images, Updated 5/21/2026. Get the story on your ancestor’s demise in this index of details extracted from Virginia death records.
  • Edinburgh, Scotland, WWI Roll of Honour, 1914-1919; 11,064 indexed records with record images, ADDED 5/21/2026. This collection contains a roll of honour for people associated with the University of Edinburgh in Scotland who served in the British armed forces during the First World War.
  • Virginia, U.S., Marriage Records, 1936-2014; 19,425,489 indexed records with record images, Updated 5/21/2026. These Virginia marriage records include parents’ names along with bride and groom.
  • Carmarthenshire, Wales, Crew Lists, 1863-1914; 61,374 indexed records with record images, ADDED 5/21/2026. This collection contains crew lists filed at the port of Carmarthenshire, Wales, between 1863 and 1914. The crew lists contain personal information about sailors and their records on the ships.
  • U.S., Korean War Era Draft Cards, 1948-1959; 10,110,498 indexed records without record images, Updated 5/19/2026. This collection contains military draft cards submitted to the Selective Service System between 1948 and 1959. Young men were required to submit a draft card when they became eligible for military service.
  • Netherlands, Baptism Index, 1557-1903; 25,430,843 indexed records without record images, Updated 5/19/2026. This collection contains baptismal records from the Netherlands between 1557 and 1902.
  • Netherlands, Birth Index, 1784-1923; 44,093.502 indexed records without record images, Updated 5/19/2026. This collection contains birth records from the Netherlands between 1784-1921. All records are transcribed in Dutch, but some original records may have been written in Latin. 
  • Netherlands, Population Registers Index, 1720-1945; 35,313,192 indexed records without record images, Updated 5/19/2026. This collection consists of an index to population registers (censuses) from the Netherlands between 1720 and 1944.
  • Netherlands, Burial Index, 1540-1969; 2,395,808 indexed records without record images, Updated 5/19/2026. This collection is an index of burial records from the Netherlands dated from 1540 to 1967.
  • Netherlands, Death Index, 1796-1973; 44,170,767 indexed records with record images, Updated 5/19/2026. This collection consists of an index to death records held at various archives throughout the Netherlands.
  • Netherlands, Civil Marriage Index, 1795-1949; 29,975,014 indexed records without record images, Updated 5/19/2026. This collection contains church records for individuals who were married between 1795 and 1949 in the Netherlands.
  • Netherlands, Marriage Index, 1524-1899; 4,817,183 indexed records without record images, Updated 5/19/2026. This collection contains an index of marriages that were recorded in church records in the Netherlands from 1524-1899.
  • Worcestershire, England, Militia Records, 1604-1914; 8,385 indexed records with record images, ADDED  5/18/2026. This collection contains militia records from Worcestershire dated between 1750 and 1824. Record types vary and include militia quarter sessions, order books, and payroll ledgers. 

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

By my count, there are 3 NEW record collections ADDED this past week, per the list above. There are now 33,937 collections available as of 22 May, an INCREASE of  3 from last week.

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

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/2026/05/added-and-updated-ancestrycom-record_0836859199.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.

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

Ask AI: "Describe The Courtship and Marriage of James and Hannah (Rich) Richman of Hilperton, Wiltshire in 1845"

I wondered if my AI Assistant Anthropic Claude could provide me with information about the courtship of my  2nd great-grandparents, James and Hannah (Rich) Richman in Wiltshire in the 1840s. The biography of  James Richman is in ABC Biography of #20 James Richman/Richmond (1821-1912) of Wiltshire and New England annd for Hannah is in ABC Biography of #21 Hannah (Rich) Richman/Richmond (1824-1911) of Wiltshire and New England.

(AI NotebookLM Infographic -- James and Hannah (Rich) Richman Courtship and Marriage in  Wiltshire)

I asked Claude to describe James and Hannah (Rich) Richman'scourtship and early marriage years in the 1840s, based on the biography and social history. 

The second part of the Claude Sonnet 4.6 response was:

The Weaver's Daughter: A Story of James Richman and Hannah Rich

Part One: The Village

Hilperton, Wiltshire — Spring, 1843

The morning mist still clung to the water meadows along the Avon when James Richman set out from Marsh Lane with his father's old haversack over one shoulder and the smell of bread his mother had pressed into his hands still warm against his palm. He was twenty-two years old, lean and broad-shouldered from years of agricultural labor, with hands that were already roughened well beyond his age. The road to the fields took him past the row of weavers' cottages on the south side of the lane, and he had learned, in recent months, to slow his pace just slightly as he drew level with the third cottage from the end.

He was not entirely sure when he had begun to notice Hannah Rich. She had been part of the village his whole life, the way the church tower was part of the village, or the sound of the canal barges moving through the early morning quiet. She was three years his junior, the daughter of John Rich the weaver, a quiet and capable man whose loom could be heard clicking steadily through the open window of the cottage from first light until the shadows grew long in the afternoon. Hannah had grown up at her mother Rebecca's side, learning to card and spin before she was tall enough to reach the loom comfortably, and by the time she was eighteen she was considered one of the most accomplished weavers among the younger women of Hilperton.

It was at the Sunday School that James first spoke to her properly. He had been attending for several years by then, not because anyone required it of him at his age, but because the Sunday School represented something rare and precious in his life — the chance to learn. He had come to his letters late, borrowing a hand-copied alphabet from his friend Will Saunders, tracing the shapes by firelight in the evenings after his father and brothers were asleep. By twenty he could read well enough to make his way through a newspaper, and he was hungry for more. The Sunday School's small lending shelf of religious texts and improving pamphlets was not much, but it was something.

Hannah came with her younger sister on the first Sunday of April, and they took seats near the window where the light fell cleanly across the pages. James noticed that she read without moving her lips, which he had come to understand was the mark of a truly practiced reader — and then caught himself staring and looked quickly back at his own page.

Afterward, in the yard, he summoned the courage to speak.

"You're John Rich's daughter," he said, which was not the most inspired opening, but it was honest.

She looked at him with grey eyes that were entirely calm. "I am. And you're one of the Richmans from further up the lane."

"James," he said. "The second son."

"I know," she said simply, and went to find her sister.


Summer, 1843

The village of Hilperton was small enough that two young people who wished to encounter one another could arrange it without great difficulty, provided they were willing to be patient and observe the proprieties. James was patient by nature — a quality his mother attributed to his temperament and his father attributed to stubbornness — and he was scrupulous about proprieties because he understood that Hannah's reputation was worth more than any fleeting satisfaction he might gain by being careless with it.

He found occasions to speak with her at church, where the congregation mingled briefly in the yard before and after services. He helped her father carry a heavy bolt of finished cloth to the canal wharf one afternoon when he happened to be passing and John Rich was struggling with the weight of it. He took pains to be courteous to her mother Rebecca, who watched him with the careful assessment of a woman who had raised a daughter she intended to see well settled.

Hannah, for her part, gave nothing away easily. She was not cold — there was warmth in her, James could see it in the way she was with the younger children of the village, and in the quiet humor that occasionally surfaced when she spoke — but she was measured, as though she had decided early in life that her words and her feelings were her own to give or withhold as she saw fit, and she would not be hurried.

What drew James to her most deeply, he thought, was not her face, though her face was pleasant enough, nor her skill at her work, though that was evident. It was something harder to name — a quality of steadiness, of being fully present in whatever she was doing, that made him feel, when she turned her attention on him, that he was being genuinely seen.

By harvest time, he had determined that he wished to marry her. The question was whether she would have him, and whether her father would consider him a suitable prospect.


Autumn, 1843 — Winter, 1844

James spent the autumn thinking carefully about his position. He was a laborer — honest work, steady enough, but not distinguished. His father John was working doing coal hauling along the canal, which paid a little better than general farm work but was brutally hard on a man's body, and James was able to find work there. His older brother John Junior had married and was already struggling to keep his young family fed. The prospects for a man of James's class were not, objectively speaking, impressive.

What he had, he told himself, was his willingness to work, his ability to read, his determination to improve himself, and whatever Hannah Rich might see in him that he could not entirely see himself. It would have to be enough.

He spoke first to his mother, Ann Richman, who listened without interrupting — a quality he deeply valued in her — and then said: "She's a sensible girl from a decent family. Her mother's people are steady. If you mean to have her, you'd best speak to her father before someone else has the same idea."

He spoke to John Rich on a Thursday evening in November, sitting in the front room of the weaver's cottage with the smell of lanolin and wool dust in the air and the cold pressing at the small window. John Rich heard him out, asked him three or four direct questions about his earnings and his intentions, and said he would speak with his daughter.

James walked home in the dark not knowing what to hope.

A week later, Hannah's mother stopped him in the lane and said that her husband had no objection, and that Hannah had said she would be willing to hear what James had to say for himself. The formality of it might have been comic, but James understood that it was the form through which serious things were accomplished, and he was grateful for it.

He and Hannah walked together along the towpath of the Avon and Kennett Canal on a Sunday afternoon in late November, the water grey and cold beside them and the bare willows trailing their fingers in the current. He told her honestly what he could offer and what he could not. He told her about his determination to better himself, though he admitted he was not entirely sure yet what that meant. He told her that he would not waste what she brought to a marriage, which he could already see was considerable.

She was quiet for a long moment, looking at the water.

"My mother can't read," she said finally. "She never learned. My father reads a little, for business." She paused. "I can read. I taught myself, mostly, from my father's order books. I don't intend to forget how."

"I wouldn't ask you to," James said.

She looked at him then, the full weight of her grey eyes steady on his face. "All right," she said. "I'll marry you, James Richman."


Part Two: The Banns and the Wedding

Summer and Early Autumn, 1845

The intervening months between that conversation on the towpath and their wedding day were occupied with the practical business of making a marriage possible. By the spring of 1845 James had been saving steadily for two years — going without small comforts, declining the ale at the inn on market days, setting aside a shilling here and sixpence there with the dogged arithmetic of a man who knew exactly what he was working toward.

Hannah's mother and her Aunt Lucia began assembling the household linens that would form the basis of their new home: two sets of bed sheets, rough but sound; a pair of wool blankets that Rebecca Rich had been adding to over several winters; a set of earthenware dishes; an iron pot that had been her own grandmother's. These were the bones of a household, and they were given with the seriousness appropriate to the transfer of practical wealth between women.

James, with the help of his brother John Junior and a neighbor who owed him a favor, acquired a table and two chairs, a wooden bedstead, and a narrow chest for storing clothes. He found a cottage available on Marsh Lane — two small rooms up, one down, with a kitchen lean-to added onto the back — and negotiated a weekly rent that was tight but manageable against his wages.

The banns were read in church on three consecutive Sundays in August, the curate announcing in his carrying voice that James Richman and Hannah Rich intended to marry, and that any person knowing of an impediment to this union should declare it. The congregation of Hilperton listened, as they always did, with the attentive interest of people who knew everyone involved personally, and no impediment was declared.


September 7, 1845

The wedding day arrived on a Sunday in early September, when the harvest was largely in and the village had the slightly relaxed quality of a community that had completed its most urgent work. The morning was cool and bright, with the particular clarity of early autumn light in Wiltshire, the kind of light that makes the limestone of the old buildings glow gold and throws long shadows across the churchyard grass.

Hannah dressed at her parents' cottage with her mother and her sisters Ann and Elizabeth in attendance. There was no elaborate wedding gown — such things were for people of quite different circumstances — but she had a good dress of dark blue wool that she had woven herself over the preceding winter, cut and sewn with care. Rebecca Rich pinned a small spray of late-summer flowers to her daughter's collar, the closest thing available to a bridal decoration. The women did not speak very much. There was a quality to the morning that seemed to discourage unnecessary words.

James arrived at the church with his father and his mother, his brother\s John, and his sisters Elizabeth and Sarah, who had pressed his coat the night before and made him sit still while she cut his hair. He stood at the front of the small church and watched the door, and when Hannah came through it with her father he felt something settle in his chest — some long-held anxiety releasing — as though the sight of her simply confirmed something he had already known.

William Talman, the officiating clergyman, read the service in the measured tones of a man who had performed it many times and understood its gravity. James's mother Ann served as one of the witnesses, standing with her back straight and her best cap on, watching her son with an expression that James could not quite read but which he thought was composed of equal parts pride and the particular sorrow that mothers seem to feel at the happiness of their children.

When James was required to sign the register he did so carefully, his letters clear and deliberate. When it was Hannah's turn, she took the pen, and then set it down, and made her mark — the cross that served in place of a signature. James did not look away, and she did not look down. It was simply what it was, a fact about the world they had both been born into, and they had already agreed between themselves that it would not remain true of their children.

After the ceremony the two families gathered in the yard, and Hannah's mother produced a pie and some cold meat and a quantity of cider that John Rich had been keeping for the occasion, and they ate together in the September sunshine with the sound of the church bells still in the air above them.


Part Three: Marsh Lane

Autumn, 1845

The cottage on Marsh Lane was twelve feet wide and not much longer, with walls of the local limestone that kept the interior cool in summer and held the damp in winter. The downstairs room served as kitchen and parlor both, anchored by a stone fireplace that burned coal — James could get it at a discount through his contacts along the canal — and heated poorly but adequately when the fire was well built. The upstairs had two chambers divided by a plank partition, and the lean-to kitchen at the back housed the water pump, which required persuasion on cold mornings.

Hannah set up their domestic life with the same methodical competence she brought to everything. The earthenware dishes went on the shelf above the fireplace. The iron pot was hung on the crane over the fire. The table and two chairs were positioned to catch the light from the front window during the day, and the tallow candle on its stick was placed where it would illuminate the table in the evenings. She arranged their small household with the precision of someone who understood that when you have little, the organization of what you have is not a luxury but a necessity.

In the evenings, after supper, they sat at the table together. James read when there was something to read — a newspaper borrowed from the pub, a pamphlet from the Sunday School, occasionally a letter from his brother John who had taken to the sea. Hannah listened when he read aloud, and he could see her absorbing it, filing it away in the organized interior of her mind. Sometimes she asked questions that showed she had understood more than he had expected.

He had found, in the months since their wedding, that Hannah's intelligence was of a kind that didn't announce itself. She arrived at conclusions quietly and then acted on them with a decisiveness that still occasionally surprised him. She kept their accounts in her head with perfect accuracy, tracking every penny against every need, and when she identified a way to save she implemented it without fanfare. She was not a woman who needed to be told she was clever.

James, for his part, was discovering that marriage was a more complex education than he had anticipated — not unpleasant, but demanding. He had lived all his life in a household run by his mother, and he had certain assumptions about how things were done that turned out to be assumptions about how Ann Richman specifically did things. Hannah had her own ways, learned from Rebecca Rich, and the first months of their life together involved a great deal of quiet negotiation between two people who were each accustomed to considering themselves competent.


Winter, 1845 — Spring, 1846

The first winter was cold. Coal was expensive despite James's connections, and they kept the fire banked low during the hours when they were both out — James at his work along the canal, Hannah taking in weaving that she completed at home on a small hand loom she had brought from her parents' house. The money she earned was modest but real, and she was insistent that it be entered into their household accounts as her contribution rather than his.

"It's ours," James said once, meaning to be generous.

"It's mine, that I'm putting toward ours," Hannah said, with the particular patience she reserved for moments when she thought he was being well-intentioned but imprecise. "The distinction matters."

He thought about that for several days and concluded she was right.

They attended church on Sundays, sitting in the pew that the Richmans had occupied for as long as anyone could remember, Hannah now part of the family arrangement where before she had sat with the Riches on the other side of the aisle. They called on both sets of parents regularly. James's mother had taken a quiet liking to Hannah that expressed itself in practical gifts — a jar of preserved plums, a piece of good soap, a cutting from her herb garden — and Hannah received these with the warmth they deserved.

The village turned through its seasons around them. The canal brought its traffic of barges loaded with coal and cloth and raw wool. The fields were ploughed and planted and harvested. The church recorded its baptisms and marriages and burials in the careful hand of successive curates. Hilperton was a small world, but it was a complete one, and James and Hannah were woven into it as thoroughly as the wool that passed through Hannah's loom.


June, 1848

When their first child arrived, he came in the early hours of the morning on the tenth of June, 1848, in the upstairs chamber of the Marsh Lane cottage, attended by a midwife from the village and by Hannah's mother, who had come to stay for the final weeks of the pregnancy. James was not present at the birth itself — men of his time and class were not — but he was downstairs by the fire, unable to sleep, listening to the sounds from above with a focused anxiety that he had no framework for managing.

When Rebecca Rich came down the stairs and told him he had a son, he sat very still for a moment before he trusted himself to speak.

They named the boy Thomas, after James's brother who had died just one year earlier at the age of twenty-one. It was an act of remembrance and of hope — the name given to a loss now bestowed on a new beginning.

James held his son for the first time with the careful grip of a man who has spent his life handling heavy and breakable things and understands the importance of knowing which category he is dealing with. Thomas was small and red-faced and entirely astonishing. Hannah, exhausted and composed in equal measure, watched James hold their son and said nothing, which was how James had come to understand she expressed her deepest feelings.


The Growing Family

James Junior followed in November of the following year, and with two young sons filling the Marsh Lane cottage with noise and appetite, James and Hannah settled into the rhythms of a working family. James's wages as a coal merchant laborer were sufficient but not comfortable, and Hannah continued her weaving around the demands of two small children, sometimes working at the loom with the baby asleep in a basket at her feet and Thomas playing quietly on the floor beside her with a wooden bobbin she had given him for a toy.

The cottage that had seemed adequate for two people was becoming genuinely cramped. The boys shared the smaller upstairs chamber, and James and Hannah had taken to sitting downstairs by the fire long after the children were asleep, not always talking, but finding comfort in each other's company in the brief quiet of the evening. It was in these hours that James most clearly felt what their marriage had become — not the careful negotiation of its beginning, but something more settled and more trusting, built from the shared labor of years.

He had not forgotten his ambitions for self-improvement. He still read whenever he could find material, still attended the Sunday School discussions when his work permitted, still turned things over in his mind during the long physical hours of canal work. But he was increasingly aware that the improvement he had once imagined as a personal project was now inseparable from something larger — the question of what kind of life he could make for Hannah and for Thomas and for young James and for whatever children came after.

England offered a partial answer. America, he was beginning to think, might offer a better one.

But that thought was still only a seed in the autumn of 1848, small and barely formed, waiting for the particular pressures that would eventually cause it to take root and grow.

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The story of what happened next — the false accusation, the legal ordeal, and the momentous decision to cross the Atlantic — is told in the full biography of James Richman, from Wiltshire weaver's village to Connecticut farm, from Richman to Richmond, from the old world to the new.

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This is a work of historical fiction based on documented genealogical records. All dialogue and interior scenes are imagined, but the key facts of dates, names, occupations, and events are drawn from parish records, census data, and family history research.

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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. The persons mentioned are my 2nd great-grandparents, and I have significant information about her life from the available records, but I know nothing about her day-to-day life.

As always, I am amazed at what life was like in any place over 170 years ago. This description of the family life in Wiltshire 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 Richman family in 1840s England and witness their daily lives.  I'm glad that the general lifestyles and occupations are known from historical records and witness accounts.

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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


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