Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Can an AI Browser Agent Create a Register-Style Family History Report From Research Notes?

I struggle to create a Register-Style family history report from all of my research notes.  I like to add a Narrative Report created by RootsMagic with Source Citations to my Person Notes for a Person profile page in RootsMagic in addition to my Research Notes (which may or may not have Source Citations)

I wondered if an AI Browser Agent like the FREE Perplexity's Comet could take my Person Notes for a RootsMagic profile and create a (New England Historical and Genealogical) Register-style family history report. Here is what I found:

1)  Here is the top of my Person Notes on the Person Screen in RootsMagic for Johann Nicolaus König (1707-1776) of Germany and Pennsylvania:


 And at the end of the RootsMagic Narrative Report (which did not have Event or Person Notes) are the sources created by RootsMagic from my input data and the start of the Research Notes for this person profile:


I copied the Person Notes into a Genea-Musings blog post, brought the blog post up on the screen in Perplexity Comet, and asked Perplexity Comet to "Please write a Register style family history report for the family in these notes, including source citations as endnotes":


2)  Without any editing, here is the Register-style report that Perplexity Comet created in seconds.

Johann Nicolaus König of Leinenweber and later York County, Pennsylvania, married three times and left four known children who accompanied him from the Palatinate to Pennsylvania and are treated here in Register style.[geneamusings]


1. Johann Nicolaus¹ König (1707–1776)

Johann Nicolaus¹ König was born 18 May 1707 in Leinenweber, Rheinland‑Pfalz, Germany, son of Hans Paulus König and Anna Catharina (—?). He was of the Reformed faith and spent his early life in the Palatinate, a region repeatedly ravaged by war and religious conflict in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, conditions that helped prompt his emigration. He is found in German records and later Pennsylvania records under several forms of his name, including Johann Nicolaus König, Nicholas König, Nicolaus Konig, and Nicholas Koenig/King.[geneamusings]

He married first, at Edenkoben, Rheinland‑Pfalz, on 20 January 1728, MARIA URSULA BOCHINGER, who was born about 1709, likely in Rheinland‑Pfalz, and died before 1735 at Niederhorbach, Rheinland‑Pfalz. They had two known sons, both baptized in the Palatinate, before Maria Ursula’s death.[geneamusings]

He married second, at Edenkoben, on 19 June 1735, MARIA MARGARETHA STUBER, daughter of Johann Jacob Stuber and Anna Catherina Mann, who was baptized 30 November 1702 at Herren‑Sulzbach, Rheinland‑Pfalz, and was living as late as the family’s move to York County but died there before 1771. She appears in later records as Maria Margaretha König, reflecting her married surname.[geneamusings]

Johann Nicolaus and Maria Margaretha emigrated from the Palatinate in 1752 with their blended family, leaving a war‑torn, religiously divided region for British North America. They traveled down the Rhine to Rotterdam, embarked on the ship Ketty (Capt. Theophilus Barnes), and sailed via Portsmouth, England, to Philadelphia, where they arrived in mid‑October 1752 and took the oath of allegiance on 16 October 1752. The Ketty passenger list names Johann Nicolaus König, age 45, wife Maria Margaretha, and children Gottfried, Johann Peter, Anna Elisabeth, Philipp Jacob, Johann Wilhelm, and Maria Barbara, and notes that they went on to Chester County.[geneamusings]

The family’s precise whereabouts between 1752 and 1760 are uncertain, though later ties of two König children to the Wilhelm family of Lancaster County suggest a possible residence in Lancaster or Berks County during that period. By 1760 Johann Nicolaus had settled in Manchester Township on the north side of the Codorus River in York County, where he purchased 200 acres of land for 600 pounds and, with his sons, established a home and farm. He became a naturalized British subject on 21 March 1762, and his sons Jacob and Godfrey were naturalized 9 September 1762, further anchoring the family in the region.[geneamusings]

Between 1764 and 1771 his second wife, Margaret (Maria Margaretha) King, died, and on 27 December 1764 his son Jacob bought the original 200‑acre tract for 600 pounds. On 22 August 1765 Nicholas King purchased another 200 acres, and on 19 November 1770 he acquired a house and lot on the east side of Beaver Street in the town of York from Andrew Rudisilly for 60 pounds.[geneamusings]

He married third, at the First Reformed (Trinity) Church in York, Pennsylvania Colony, 17 December 1771, SUSANNA VOGELE, who was born about 1705 in Germany and was living as late as 1776 in York County. She appears in records as Susanna or Susan Vogele and, after marriage, as Susanna King.[geneamusings]

On 9 March 1776, describing himself as “sick and weak in body, but of sound disposing mind,” Nicholas King made his will at York, signing by mark. In it he commended his soul to God, directed payment of his debts and funeral charges, provided that his wife Susanna should have a life residence in his dwelling house, a cash legacy of 20 pounds, and sufficient bedding, and devised the Beaver Street house and lot in York in fee to his daughter Anna Elizabeth Cronemiller. He ordered that his remaining personal estate be sold at public vendue and the proceeds divided equally among his four children: Godfrey, Anna Elizabeth Cronemiller, Philip Jacob King, and Barbara, wife of Adam Wilhelm of Lancaster County. He appointed his “loving daughter” Ann Elizabeth Cronemiller executrix.[geneamusings]

The will was proved 29 March 1776 in York County, after testimony by witnesses Henry Wolff and George Lewis Leffler that Nicholas King had executed the instrument as his last will while of sound mind. He died between 9 and 29 March 1776 at York, York County, Pennsylvania, but no burial place has been identified for him or any of his wives.[geneamusings]

Children of Johann Nicolaus¹ König by his first wife, Maria Ursula Bochinger, all born in the Palatinate:

  1. i. JOHANN GOTTFRIED² KÖNIG, b. before 24 Oct. 1728, Edenkoben, Rheinland‑Pfalz; m. about 1761, York Co., Pa., ANNA CHRISTINA ZIEGLER; d. 19 Oct. 1805, Manchester Twp., York Co., Pa.[geneamusings]

  2. ii. JOHANN PETER² KÖNIG, b. Dec. 1730, Edenkoben; d. 1793, Hatfield, Montgomery Co., Pa.[geneamusings]

Children of Johann Nicolaus¹ König by his second wife, Maria Margaretha Stuber, all born in the Palatinate:[geneamusings]

  1. iii. ANNA ELISABETHA² KÖNIG, b. before 6 Mar. 1737, Edenkoben; m. 20 June 1756, Lancaster, Lancaster Co., Pa., JOHANN MARTIN CRONEMILLER; living 1776 in Manchester Twp., York Co., Pa.; d. after 1776.[geneamusings]

  2. iv. PHILIP JACOB² KÖNIG, b. 15 Feb. 1738, Niederhorbach, Rheinland‑Pfalz; m. (1) 1 Apr. 1763, Lancaster, Lancaster Co., Pa., MARIA BARBARA WILHELM; m. (2) about 1779, York, York Co., Pa., MARIA CATHERINA ZIEGLER; d. before 25 Feb. 1792, Manchester Twp., York Co., Pa.[geneamusings]

  3. v. JOHAN WILHELM² KÖNIG, b. about 1745, Edenkoben; further life not traced.[geneamusings]

  4. vi. MARIA BARBARA² KÖNIG, b. before 11 Feb. 1750, Edenkoben; m. about 1770, probably in Pennsylvania, JOHANN ADAM WILHELM; living 1776.[geneamusings]

No children are known by the third wife, Susanna Vogele.[geneamusings]


Endnotes

  1. Richard Shue, The Kings of York County: Pioneers, Patriots and Papermakers (York, Penn.: the author, n.d.), Part I, p. 23, sketch of Johann Nicholas Konig.[geneamusings]

  2. Konig‑King research material (letters and family group sheets), 1973–1980; Historical Society of York County, Pennsylvania; Alfred Kuby letter, 23 June 1980, Johann Nicholas Konig birth and baptism record.[geneamusings]

  3. Konig‑King research material (letters and family group sheets), 1973–1980; Historical Society of York County, Pennsylvania; family group sheet, Johann Nicholas Konig and Maria Ursula Bochinger marriage record.[geneamusings]

  4. Konig‑King research material (letters and family group sheets), 1973–1980; Historical Society of York County, Pennsylvania; Karl Scherer letter, 29 March 1973, Johann Nicholas Konig and Margaretha Stuber marriage record.[geneamusings]

  5. Konig‑King research material, Alfred Kuby letter, 23 June 1980, birth and baptism of Johann Nicholas Konig, 18 May 1707, Leinenweber, Rheinland‑Pfalz.[geneamusings]

  6. Richard Shue, Kings of York County, Part I, p. 25, Nicholas King probate.[geneamusings]

  7. “Pennsylvania, Probate Records, 1683–1994,” digital images, FamilySearch (http://familysearch.org), York Co., “Will books, 1749–1882; General index to wills, 1749–1940,” Wills v. A–D 1749–1779, vol. C, pp. 342–44, will and probate of Nicholas King, 1776; also on FHL microfilm US/CAN 22,131.[geneamusings]

  8. “York County, Pennsylvania, 1745–1800: First Reformed (Trinity) Church,” indexed database, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com), marriage of Nicolaus Konig and Susan Vogele.[geneamusings]

  9. “Pennsylvania and New Jersey, Church and Town Records, 1669–2013,” digital images, Ancestry.com, PA – York > York > United Church of Christ > Trinity United Church of Christ, AD 1771, image 132 of 502, marriage of Nicholas Konig and Susanna Vogele.[geneamusings]

  10. “Deutschland Heiraten, 1558–1929,” database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org), entry for Nicklaus Koenig and Maria Ursula Bechingers, 20 Jan. 1728, Evangelisch, Kapellen‑Drusweiler, Pfalz, Bavaria; FHL microfilm 193,930.[geneamusings]

  11. Ibid., duplicate entry cited in compiled notes.[geneamusings]

  12. Konig‑King research material, family group sheet, Johann Nicholas Konig and Maria Ursula Bochinger marriage record.[geneamusings]

  13. “Deutschland Heiraten, 1558–1929,” FamilySearch, Nicklaus Koenig–Maria Ursula Bechingers marriage, 20 Jan. 1728.[geneamusings]

  14. Konig‑King research material, family group sheet, Johann Peter Konig baptism record, Dec. 1730, Edenkoben.[geneamusings]

  15. “Deutschland Geburten und Taufen, 1558–1898,” indexed database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org), entry for Philipps Jacob Koenig, b. 15 Feb. 1738; citing FHL microfilm 193,822.[geneamusings]

  16. Konig‑King research material, Karl Scherer letter, 29 March 1973, Johann Nicholas Konig–Margaretha Stuber marriage, 19 June 1735, Edenkoben.[geneamusings]

  17. “Germany, Marriages, 1558–1929,” indexed database, FamilySearch (http://familysearch.org), entry for Nicolaus Koenig and Maria Margaretha Stuber.[geneamusings]

  18. Richard Shue, Kings of York County, Part I, p. 23, data on Maria Margaretha (Stuber) König.[geneamusings]

  19. “Deutschland Geburten und Taufen, 1558–1898,” FamilySearch, entry for Maria Margaretha Stuber, bapt. 30 Nov. 1702, Herren‑Sulzbach.[geneamusings]

  20. “Germany, Marriages, 1558–1929,” FamilySearch, entry for Nicolaus Koenig and Maria Margaretha Stuber.[geneamusings]

  21. “Deutschland Geburten und Taufen, 1558–1898,” FamilySearch, baptism of Maria Margaretha Stuber, Herren‑Sulzbach.[geneamusings]

  22. Ibid., same baptismal entry as note 21.[geneamusings]

  23. Richard Shue, Kings of York County, Part I, p. 23, death of Maria Margaretha (Stuber) König before 1771.[geneamusings]

  24. Richard Shue, Kings of York County, Part I, p. 23, use of married form Maria Margaretha Konig.[geneamusings]

  25. Richard Shue, Kings of York County, Part I, p. 23, third marriage of Johann Nicholas Konig to Susanna Vogele.[geneamusings]

  26. “York County, Pennsylvania, 1745–1800: First Reformed (Trinity) Church,” Ancestry.com, marriage of Nicolaus Konig and Susan Vogele, 17 Dec. 1771.[geneamusings]

  27. “Pennsylvania, Church and Town Records, 1669–2013,” Ancestry.com, PA – York > York > United Church of Christ > Trinity United Church of Christ, AD 1771, image 132, marriage of Nicholas Konig and Susanna Vogele.[geneamusings]

  28. “York County, Pennsylvania, 1745–1800: First Reformed (Trinity) Church,” Ancestry.com, entry referring to Susan/Susanna Vogele.[geneamusings]

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

3)  That is a much more readable and engaging Register-style report than RootsMagic can produce in my humble opinion, perhaps because Perplexity can access Internet information for historical event and social history.  The Comet report summarized the events in the RootsMagic Narrative Report and my Research Notes and wove it into a concise Register-style report.  I asked Perplexity Comet to add more "context and social history" to the report and it added another 950 words to the overall report (not shown above).  

NOTE:  I have Sources for birth, marriage, death and other events of all of the children of this man, but the RootsMagic Narrative Report does not list them for some reason.  The above report would be more complete if  the RootsMagic Narrative Report without Person Notes was better formatted. 

4)  Other Options:
  • I could also use a Narrative Report created in Family Tree Maker, Legacy Family Tree, or other genealogy software to do this Perplexity Comet task of creating a Register-style family  history report.  
  • Instead of a blog post, I could copy a Narrative Report into a Word processing document and save it as a PDF and ask Perplexity to do the task (not Comet which is the AI Browser Agent that works on a web page). 
  • I asked the AI Google Gemini's Browser Agent to do this same task with the same web page and the result was similar for the facts but it lacked all of the event context and social history in the top paragraphs above.
5)  Of course, the researcher needs to have the names, relationships, events, dates, places, notes and sources in their genealogy software program to produce a useful Register-style report.

I should have asked for Perplexity Comet to translate the sources into Evidence Explained quality sources -- what I have for sources for this person is 15 years old.

6)  I'm pretty sure that Perpexity Comet can also create a Modified Register Report (the NGSQ style) but haven't tried that yet.  

7)  What about a multi-generatinal Descendants or Ancestor Report?  I'm sure that the paid versions of the AI tools could do that but I'm doubt that the Free AI tools can do it.

8)  So the ANSWER to the ttle question is:  YES!!!  Cool.  Faster!  My problem is the RootsMagic Narrative Report source problem.    

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

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 Twitter, 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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Emily and Lyle’s Story: Lyle Carringer Starts Work at the PX

Here is the latest chapter in the story of the courtship and early married life and times of my maternal grandparents, Emily Auble and Lyle Carringer, who married in June 1918. The background information and the list of chapters of their life together are listed at the end of this post.  This is historical fiction with real people and real events, and is how it might have been.

And now we are up to the week that Lyle reported for duty in the Post Exachange at the U.S. Marines Boot Camp.

I asked my AI Assistant Anthropic Claude to tell the story of Emily and Lyle in August 1917 when he started work as a Private at the U.S. Marines Base.  Here is the next chapter of Emily and Lyle's story: 

(AI Google NotebookLM Infographic:  Lyle's First Day at the PX) 


Behind the Counter: Lyle's First Days at the Post Exchange, August 1917

Sunday, August 6, 1917 — First Day of Duty

The bugle at the Marine Barracks in Balboa Park sounded at five-thirty as always, but this particular morning Lyle was already awake. He'd been awake since four, lying on his bunk in the half-dark, watching the ceiling lighten by degrees and thinking about what the day would bring. Boot camp was behind him now. This was real service.

He dressed carefully, checked his uniform in the small mirror above his footlocker, and made his way to the mess hall for breakfast while the first fingers of August light touched the Spanish Colonial rooftops of the park buildings. Over powdered eggs and strong coffee, he reviewed everything he knew about his assignment. Post Exchange, commonly called the PX. The store that served the base's enlisted men, officers, and civilian staff—selling the things a military man needed day to day, the small comforts that made barracks life bearable.

It was, Lyle thought with a certain private amusement, not entirely unlike Marston's Department Store. Smaller, less refined, considerably louder, and with a clientele that was less interested in courtesy than in getting what they needed and moving on. But a store nonetheless.

His supervisor, Corporal Raymond Briggs, was waiting for him when he arrived at the PX at six forty-five. Briggs was a compact, efficient man of thirty with a veteran's economy of motion, a pencil perpetually behind his ear, and the look of someone who had long since stopped being surprised by anything.

"Carringer," he said, without preamble. "Auditor background. I read your file."

"Yes, Corporal."

"Good. I've had privates behind this counter who couldn't add two and two with a pencil and paper. Don't be one of those." He gestured around the long, wood-paneled room. "You know what a PX is?"

"I've been briefed, Corporal."

"Being briefed and understanding are different things. Walk with me."

The Post Exchange occupied a solid building near the northwest end of the barracks compound. Briggs walked Lyle through it at a pace that suggested this tour would happen once and only once. Along the right-hand wall ran a long wooden counter with three cash registers—actual mechanical registers, not the central cashier system Lyle remembered from his earliest days at Marston's. Behind the counter, shelves reached to the ceiling, organized with military precision. Tobacco products—Lucky Strike cigarettes, Bull Durham rolling tobacco, cigars in three grades—occupied the top shelves. Below them sat shaving supplies: Gillette razors, Williams shaving soap, Mennen's talc, witch hazel. Then candy—Hershey bars, hard candies in glass jars, chewing gum. Then stationery, stamps, writing paper, envelopes, pencils.

Along the left wall, a separate section handled official needs: uniform replacement items, insignia, boot polish, brass cleaner, regulation notebooks. At the far end, a short soda counter offered Coca-Cola, ginger ale, and a lemon phosphate that Briggs said was popular with the officers.

"Money orders are behind the main counter," Briggs continued. "We issue those from eight to six only—no exceptions, even for officers who claim urgency. If an officer gives you trouble about that, refer him to me." He paused. "Actually, refer any trouble to me. Your job for the first week is the register and restocking. After that, we'll see about the books."

"I understand, Corporal."

"The morning shift runs seven to three, afternoon one to nine. You're on afternoons until further notice. Sundays are your busiest day—recruits who've earned liberty spend it here before they go into town. Officers come in before church. Everyone wants tobacco. You will run out of Lucky Strikes by noon and it will not be your fault, but someone will blame you for it anyway."

Lyle absorbed all of this with the attention he'd developed at Marston's—the part of his mind that filed details automatically, cross-referencing them against what he already knew.

"One more thing," Briggs said, stopping at the cash register and fixing Lyle with a level look. "Your drawer opens with thirty dollars in change. It closes at the end of your shift with the same thirty dollars plus whatever you've taken in. I reconcile every drawer, every shift, against the sales slips. If your count is off, I want to know why. If your count is off more than once, I want to know a great deal more than why."

"It won't be off, Corporal."

"Good." Briggs almost smiled. "Private Hennessey will show you the ropes until noon, then you're on your own."

Private First Class Hennessey turned out to be a red-haired Californian from Sacramento who'd worked in a hardware store before enlisting and had a gift for rapid, cheerful service that Lyle immediately recognized as genuine retail talent. He moved behind the counter with practiced ease, called out product locations without looking, and kept the line moving with a brisk cordiality that never tipped into familiarity.

"Watch for the old sergeants," Hennessey murmured to Lyle between customers. "They know the stock better than we do and they'll tell you if you shortchange them. Watch for the new recruits—they're nervous and they'll try to buy everything at once with money they haven't got. And watch for the officers who come in during the evening. After a long day, some of them aren't at their most patient."

"Noted," Lyle said.

The first hour was manageable. A steady trickle of men—mostly enlisted, a few sergeants, one lieutenant who wanted a specific brand of pipe tobacco that turned out to be on the second shelf behind the cigars. By mid-morning the trickle became a stream. Sunday meant the recruits who'd earned liberty were coming through before heading into San Diego proper, and they came with lists: cigarettes, writing paper, stamps, a candy bar or two, sometimes a money order to send home. They came in their good uniforms, still awkward in them, their faces showing that particular mix of pride and uncertainty that Lyle recognized from his own boot camp experience just weeks before.

"First week?" he asked one particularly young-looking private who was buying a pad of stationery and three stamps with the careful deliberation of a man counting every penny.

"Yes, sir," the boy said, then caught himself. "Private, I mean."

"Don't worry about it." Lyle bagged his purchase. "Get a letter home soon. Your family wants to hear from you."

"Yes sir—Private." The boy grinned and moved on.

By noon the line was constant, and Lyle found his rhythm. The movements became automatic—greet the customer, locate the items, work the register, count back the change, next man, next man, next man. His hands moved with the confident precision of someone who had handled money and customers for over a decade. Briggs watched from a distance during the early afternoon and said nothing, which Lyle recognized as approval.

The soda counter saw its heaviest traffic in the late afternoon, when officers stopped in after training sessions. Two lieutenants and a captain occupied the three stools for forty minutes, discussing aircraft they'd seen demonstrated at Rockwell Field across the bay on North Island. Lyle caught fragments while restocking tobacco—Jenny biplanes, a new training program, pilot candidates arriving from across the country.

By seven o'clock, the evening rush was in full swing. This was when the men who hadn't gone on liberty spent their Sunday evening at the PX—buying cigarettes, reading the newspapers tacked to the wall, nursing sodas at the counter, exchanging the informal currency of gossip and complaint that lubricates life in any institution.

At eight-thirty, Lyle began his end-of-shift reconciliation. He cleared his register methodically, sorted the bills and coins, counted twice, checked his sales slips against his totals, and prepared his report. When Briggs came to check, Lyle's count was exactly correct—not off by a cent.

Briggs counted it himself without comment, then made a notation in his ledger. "Tomorrow you start at one," he said. "Get some sleep."

"Yes, Corporal." Lyle began restocking the candy display, which had been decimated by the evening traffic.

"Carringer." Briggs paused in the doorway. "Good first shift."

Lyle allowed himself a small smile at the shelf of candy bars. High praise, from Corporal Briggs.


Sunday Evening — The Letter

Back in the barracks, Lyle sat on his bunk and opened his writing kit. The noise of the barracks filled the air around him—conversation, laughter, the occasional argument—but he'd learned to write through all of it.

He dated the letter and began:

My Darling Emily,

My first day at the PX is behind me and I'm pleased to report that no one went without their tobacco on my account, and my cash drawer was precisely correct to the penny at the end of shift. I believe Corporal Briggs found this almost disappointing — I think he expected a new man to make at least one error he could document.

My next day off is Thursday. I'll be at your door by nine o'clock if that suits. I want to hear everything about your week — the customers, the weather, what your mother has been cooking. Tell her I'm hoping for gingerbread.

I love you more than a Sunday evening in these barracks can diminish. Which is saying something.

Forever yours,
Lyle

To be continued...

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

Here is the Video Overview of this post by Google NotebookLM:  

This is historical fiction based on the facts that are available for the life and family of my maternal grandparents, Lyle and Emily(Auble) Carringer.  It is based on my research, social history and society norms at the time and place, and it is likely realistic. It might have happened this way.

Stay tuned for the next chapters in this family story.

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

The AI-assisted biography of my maternal grandmother is in ABC Biography of #7 Emily Kemp (Auble) Carringer (1899-1977) of Illinois and California. I wrote a story about her life in 1916 in Ask AI: Describe Emily Auble's Life After the Death of Her Father In 1916.

The AI-assisted biography of my maternal grandfather is in ABC Biography of #6 Lyle Lawrence Carringer (1891-1976) of San Diego, California. I wrote a story about Lyle being a young working man in 1916 being teased about being boring in Lyle's Story: Finding Courage in 1916-1917.

Then I wrote seven more chapters of their life together:                   
==============================================

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

Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

The URL for this post is:  

Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post.  Share it on X, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below.  Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.  Note that all comments are moderated, so they may not appear immediately.

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Monday, June 8, 2026

Randy's Genealogy Pot-Pourri - Week Ending 7 June 2026

 Here are the highlights of my family history and genealogy related activities over the past week (ending Sunday, 7 June 2026). 

1)  Attended the Chula Vista Genealogical Society (CVGS)  Board Meeting on Wednesday and reported on the newsletter, Research Group and Family History Roundtable. Wrote, edited and published the June 2026 Newsletter.

2)  Curated genealogy-related articles to keep myself and my readers updated on the genealogy world in:

8)  Wrote an AI-assisted poem and song (using Claude, Suno and Canva) to describe and cdelebrate the lives of my 9th great-grandparents Robert and Elizabeth (Ballard) Seaver in:
9)  Updated my Randy's AI and Genealogy page. Added a number of the recent Google NotebookLM Videos and Slide Shows to my YouTube channel at https://www.youtube.com/@RandySeaver

10)  Compiled all of my AI-assisted material into a blog post for the research and writing I've done for my wife's Leland family back through 2nd great-grandparents in:
11)  Searched for more records of ancestral families on Ancestry, FamilySearch and MyHeritage, downloaded record images to my digital file folders, and added research notes, events and sources to RootsMagic profiles.  My RootsMagic family tree now has 75,086 profiles (up 17 from last week)  and 148,052 source citations (up 3).  

12)  My AncestryDNA test now has 51,977 DNA matches (up 49 from 31 May) with 2,199 XXXX  "close" matches (20 cM or more) today (up 1 XX), with three XXX New ThruLines.  Added Notes to no Matches, and added no new DNA match lines to RootsMagic. MyHeritageDNA test now has 14,543 DNA matches (up 10 from 31 May) for me.  

13) Wrote 23 Genea-Musings blog posts last week (Sunday through Saturday), of which two were a press release. The most viewed post last week was Betty and Fred’s Story: Building a Life Together -- January and February 1944 with 364 views.  Genea-Musings had about 538,000 page views last week and over 2,468,000 views over the past month (lots of bots I think). 

14)  Real life events:  Visited Linda several days this past week at her memory care facility.  Went to the grocery store on Monday and Friday. Went to the church Men's Bible Study breakfast on Saturday. Still reading The Wall by John Lescroart. Watched the Padres games - they were 1-5 this past week (ouch!) and are 33-31 on the season.  

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

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.  Please note that all comments are moderated and may not appear immediately. 

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

Ask AI: "Describe the Life of the Nicholas Brocke Family of Kendrick, Idaho in 1905" – Part 3

 I wondered if my AI Assistant Anthropic Claude could provide me with information about my wife's ancestral family's life in 1905 in Kendrick, Idaho.  My wife's great-grandparents Nicholas Brocke (1855-1938) and Anna Grieser (1859-1936) had moved to Kendrick, Idaho in 1877 and had eight children.  I posted an ABC Biography for them in ABC Biography of John Nicholas Brocke (1855-1938) and Anna Grieser (1859-1936) Family of Nebraska and Idaho.

I asked Anthropic Claude to create a description of the Nicholas Brocke family life and work in Kendrick, Idaho in 1905, based on the biography and social history.  Part 1 was posted in Ask AI: "Describe the Life of the Nicholas Brocke Family in Kendrick, Idaho in 1905" -- Part 1; Part 2 is in Ask AI: "Describe The Life of the Nicholas Brocke Family of Kendrick, Idaho in 1905" – Part 2.

(AI NotebookLM Infographic -- Nicholas Brocke Family Life in 1905 in Idaho)

The Claude Sonnet 4.6 response was (this is Part 3 of 3): 

The Nicholas Brocke Family of Kendrick, Idaho

A Year in Their Lives in 1905 – Part 3

September: Harvest

September brought harvest, and the farm became a scene of organized intensity. Nicholas hired three extra hands from Kendrick, and Frank was there every day. Even John came out on weekends to help—the harvest was the one time when everyone pulled together.

Joseph worked from dawn to dusk without complaint, doing a full man's share. Charles, twelve, hauled water and ran errands and spelled the men on lighter tasks. Even young Nicholas, ten years old, had his role—keeping track of the filled grain sacks as they piled up, running tallies that his father reviewed approvingly.

"You counted right," Nicholas told him at the end of the first day. "Every sack accounted for."

"Of course," the boy said, as if any other result were inconceivable.

The Turkey Red wheat came off the north twenty acres first, and the yield was immediately impressive—plump, heavy kernels that ran through the threshing machine in a satisfying stream of gold.

"What did I tell you?" Frank said, not quite keeping the satisfaction out of his voice.

"You told me twenty percent increase. Let's wait and see what the numbers say before you gloat," Nicholas replied.

The numbers said twenty-two percent. Nicholas didn't let on how pleased he was until he was alone with Anna that evening.

"Frank was right about the wheat," he said, sitting down to take off his boots.

"He usually is," Anna said. "He has your instincts."

"He has better instincts than me," Nicholas said, surprising himself with the admission. "He thinks further ahead."

Anna smiled. "That's what sons are for."

By the end of September, the harvest was in. Nicholas sat at the kitchen table with his account book, adding up columns of figures with the careful attention of a man who'd learned the hard way that every penny mattered. When he finished, he set down his pen.

"Best harvest we've had," he told Anna. "Maybe the best since we've been here."

Anna crossed herself. "Thanks be to God."

"And to Frank's Turkey Red wheat," Nicholas added, and Anna laughed.

October: The Latah County Fair and Community Affairs

October brought the Latah County Fair in Moscow—a major event that the Brocke family attended in force. Nicholas loaded the wagon with his best wheat samples and several varieties of apple from the orchard. Anna packed her prize-winning preserves and a beautiful quilt she'd been working on since January.

John and Etta May came with their daughter, and Frank and Julia were there, Carrie and Harland made it a real family outing. Even Charles and young Nicholas came, their eyes wide at the fairground excitement.

Only Joseph stayed home—he was seventeen and had been given charge of the farm for the day, a responsibility Nicholas trusted him with completely.

The fairgrounds were their own world: livestock competitions, produce displays, machinery exhibitions, horse races, and all manner of food and entertainment. Nicholas walked the agricultural exhibits with Frank, studying new equipment, collecting pamphlets, talking with other farmers.

There was a display of a new type of combine harvester that caught Nicholas's attention. He studied it for a long time.

"Still think it's too expensive," Frank said beside him.

"It is too expensive," Nicholas agreed. "Right now. But you're right—in ten years, everyone will have one." He paused. "Make sure we're ready when that time comes."

Nicholas won first prize for his apples and second for his wheat—the Turkey Red variety had performed well in the competition too, which Nicholas pointed out to Frank with a straight face.

"Second place wheat, Pa," Frank said dryly. "Very impressive."

"Better than third."

Anna won first prize for her strawberry preserves and second for her quilt, which delighted her. They celebrated with pie from one of the fair vendors, sitting together at a picnic table in the October sunshine.

"Look at us," Carrie said, gesturing around the table at her parents, her brothers, her sister-in-law Julia. "A proper family outing."

"Missing a few," Nicholas said quietly, and they all knew he meant Etta in Spokane and Amelia in Gardiner, Montana.

"I'll write to them both this week and tell them about the fair," Anna promised. "Every detail."

Late October brought the school board meeting focused on the upcoming winter term. Nicholas advocated for a new set of arithmetic books—the ones currently in use were ten years old and falling apart. It took three meetings and considerable persuasion before the board approved the expenditure.

"Education costs money," Nicholas said at the final meeting, with some exasperation. "That's the price of having an educated community. Pay it."

November: Thanksgiving and Reflection

November brought the first hard frosts and the satisfying work of putting the farm to bed for winter—draining the irrigation pipes, banking the foundations of the farm buildings, getting in the last of the root vegetables, ensuring the animals were well set up for the cold months ahead.

A letter arrived from Etta in Spokane with a photograph enclosed. Little Frederick was two years old now, a serious-looking boy in a stiff collar. The baby Thelma was four months old in her mother’s arms. Nicholas propped the photograph on the mantelpiece where he could see it from his chair.

Another letter came from Amelia. Juanita at seventeen months was well, and baby Evelyn at 5 months was thriving, she wrote, both growing fast and strong. She was finding her footing in Gardiner—had made some good friends, was active in the Catholic parish there. She hoped to bring the children to Kendrick for a visit next summer, if travel permitted.

Nicholas wrote back himself—a long letter by his standards, two full pages. He described the harvest in detail, knowing Amelia would want to know about the farm. He told her about young Nicholas winning second at the county competition and vowing to win first next year. He told her the farm looked well, that Frank's Turkey Red wheat idea had proved out, that her mother was already planning the garden for next spring. And he told her that her old room was waiting, whenever she could come.

Thanksgiving brought the nearby family together at the farm. John and Etta May, Frank and Julia, Carrie and Harland. Joseph, Charles, and young Nicholas. It was a fine, full table—nine adults and several children around it, the house warm with cooking smells and conversation.

Before the meal, Nicholas stood to give thanks. He thought about the letters from Etta and Amelia, the photographs on the mantelpiece, the new granddaughters in Montana he hadn't yet met.

"Lord," he said, "we are grateful for this food and this harvest—the best we've had. We are grateful for this family around this table. We hold in our hearts today those who couldn't be with us—Etta and her family in Spokane, and Amelia and her family in Gardiner, and our new granddaughter Evelyn who we haven't yet had the pleasure of holding. We ask your blessing on all of them, wherever they may be. Amen."

"Amen," echoed around the table.

Anna served the turkey, passing plates down the table with the ease of a woman who'd been feeding large groups for thirty years. The conversation flowed—farm news, town gossip, plans for winter.

After dinner, while the women cleared up and the younger boys escaped outside, Nicholas sat with John, Frank, and Harland in the parlor. The men talked quietly—crops and prices and community affairs—but eventually the conversation turned, as it often did between men of different generations, to the future.

"What do you make of the automobile situation?" John asked. "Seeing more of them in Kendrick every month."

"They're coming whether we like it or not," Nicholas said. "Same as the railroad, same as the telephone. New things come. The question is whether you're ready for them."

"Are we ready?" Frank asked.

Nicholas considered this seriously. "We're in good shape. Good land, good equipment, no debt. The irrigation system gives us an advantage most farms don't have. If we keep improving, keep paying attention, keep working hard—" he looked at his sons and son-in-law— "we'll be all right. Better than all right."

December: Christmas and Year's End

December brought snow and cold and the pleasant preparations for Christmas. Anna baked for days—pfeffernüsse, strudel, and the German Christmas cookies she'd learned from her own mother, recipes that had traveled from Baden-Württemberg to St. Louis to Nebraska to Idaho. The smell of cinnamon and anise filled the farmhouse.

Nicholas went to town and bought gifts with more thought than people might have expected from him. For Joseph, a new hunting knife he'd been admiring. For Charles, a proper woodworking set—the boy had shown interest in carpentry. For young Nicholas, a set of mathematical puzzles and a new arithmetic book that went beyond anything his school offered.

For Anna, he'd been planning since October. He'd seen her admire a particular shawl in the dry goods store window in Moscow at the fair—deep blue wool, finely made. He'd gone back to Moscow quietly and bought it. He was rather proud of himself.

He also sent packages to Etta in Spokane and Amelia in Gardiner—candy for the children, warm socks and small practical luxuries for the women, a good pipe tobacco for their husbands. The packages went off two weeks before Christmas to allow for delivery.

On Christmas Eve, the family attended midnight Mass at St. Mary's. The church was beautiful with its evergreen decorations and candles, and the choir—which included Carrie—sang magnificently. Father O'Brien's sermon was about the importance of family, of holding those close whom God had given us, and of remembering those from whom we were separated by distance but not by love.

Nicholas thought about Etta's family in Spokane and Amelia's family in Gardiner. He hoped the packages had arrived. He hoped they were warm and safe and happy.

Christmas Day was the nearby family again—John and Etta, Frank and Julia with son George, Carrie and Harland and their daughter Margaret and baby Harland, the boys at home. The presents were exchanged with ceremony. Young Nicholas immediately opened his mathematics puzzles and was absorbed in them within minutes, which made everyone laugh.

Anna unwrapped the blue shawl and went still.

"Nicholas," she said.

"You looked at it twice at the fair," he said gruffly. "I have eyes."

She put it around her shoulders and reached up to kiss his cheek. The boys made sounds of mock disgust, and everyone laughed.

In the afternoon, letters arrived by special holiday delivery—one from Etta, one from Amelia. Anna read them aloud, her voice warm with feeling. Etta described Christmas morning in Spokane, the children's excitement, August's good humor. Amelia described little Juanita’s second and baby Evelyn’s first Christmas, how she'd grabbed at the ribbons on the packages, how Severt had laughed until he cried.

"Next summer," Anna said, folding the letters. "We'll go to Spokane. And Amelia will come here with her girls. I've already decided."

Nicholas looked at her with mock sternness. "You've already decided?"

"Yes," Anna said serenely. "I have."

On New Year's Eve, the house was quiet. The boys were in bed. Nicholas sat in his chair by the fire with his pipe, Anna in her chair with her knitting, the blue shawl around her shoulders. The clock on the mantel ticked steadily toward midnight.

Nicholas looked at the photograph of Etta's children on the mantelpiece. He thought about Amelia's babies in Montana. Now there were seven grandchildren who'd grow up in Kendrick, close by or far way.

He thought about 1905—the best harvest in years, the family growing and prospering, the community solid and improving, his farm as productive as it had ever been.

"Good year," he said.

"Very good year," Anna agreed without looking up from her knitting.

"Next year will be better," he said. It wasn't wishful thinking. It was simply what he believed—what he'd always believed, from the moment he'd staked that first claim in Idaho. Things could always be better if you worked for it.

Outside, the snow fell quietly over the dark fields. The farm was sleeping, gathering itself. In a few months, the cycle would begin again—the plowing, the planting, the growing, the harvest. The eternal rhythm that had shaped every year of Nicholas Brocke's adult life.

He was fifty years old, in the prime of his life, his farm in excellent condition, his family growing in all directions. He had sons working beside him, sons and daughters making their ways across the West, grandchildren arriving, a community that valued him.

He didn't know what was ahead—the joys and losses that were coming, the world changes that would transform life in Idaho as everywhere else. He just knew this moment, this fire, this woman knitting beside him with his Christmas shawl around her shoulders.

The clock struck midnight.

"Happy New Year, Anna."

"Happy New Year, Nicholas."

Outside, somewhere in town, someone fired a rifle into the air—the traditional Kendrick salute to the new year. Nicholas smiled at the familiar sound.

1906 was beginning. And Nicholas Brocke was ready for it.


The family would continue to grow through 1906 and beyond—and mny more grandchildren would be born over the years. Amelia's girls thriving in Montana, Etta's family putting down deeper roots in Spokane. Nicholas and Anna would make that long-planned trip to visit their scattered children, and Amelia would indeed bring her babies to Kendrick that summer, giving Anna the grandchildren reunion she had been planning since the day Amelia's first letter arrived from Gardiner.

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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 ancestors -- it might have been this way. Nicholas and Anna (Grieser) Brocke  are my wife's great-grandparents, and I have significant information about this family from the available records, but I know nothing about their day-to-day lives.

As always, I am amazed at what life was like in any place over 120 years ago. This description of their family life in Idaho 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 Brocke family in 1905 Idaho 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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