Friday, April 3, 2026

Added and Updated Ancestry.com Record Collections - Week of 28 March to 3 April 2026

 The following genealogy record collections were added to the Ancestry.com Card Catalog page by "Date Updated" during the period from 28 March to 3 April 2026.

The ADDED and Updated collections include:

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

By my count, there are 2 NEW record collections ADDED this past week, per the list above.  There are now 33,902 collections available as of  3 April, an INCREASE of 2 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:  

Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

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Genealogical Sketch of the Burgess and Jerusha (--?--) Metcalf Family of Massachusetts and New Hampshire

This is a genealogical sketch of the lives of the Burgess and Jerusha (--?--) Metcalf family of Massachusetts and New Hampshire. They are my 5th great-grandparents.  Burgess Metcalf was a Revolutionary War soldier.


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1) Burgess Metcalf (1741-1816) Early Years

Burgess Metcalf was born 28 August 1741 in Medway, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Bay Colony,[1-3] the 4th son and 7th child (of eight children) of Michael Metcalf (1706-1771) and Melatiah (Hamant) Metcalf (1704-1751), who married in 1728 in Medway. The Medway town records record the birth of Burgess Metcalf as:
"Burgess Metcalf son of Michael Metcalf & Melatiah his wife was born Aug. 28th 1741"
The Michael Metcalf family moved to Keene, Cheshire, New Hampshire in about 1750. Michael Metcalf and Melatiah Hamant had the following children:
  • Oliver Metcalf, born 6 June 1729, Medway, Suffolk, Massachusetts Bay Colony; married Sarah Hammond, 16 October 1759, Keene, Cheshire, New Hampshire Colony; died 29 March 1797, Keene, Cheshire, New Hampshire
  • Michael Metcalf, born 5 December 1730, Medway, Suffolk, Massachusetts Bay Colony; married Sarah Allen, February 1753, Medway, Suffolk, Massachusetts Bay Colony; married Hannah , about 1757, Medway, Suffolk, Massachusetts Bay Colony; died 16 August 1777, Bennington, Bennington, Vermont
  • Melatiah Metcalf, born 1 August 1732, Medway, Suffolk, Massachusetts Bay Colony, ; married Jonah French, 1750, Keene, Cheshire, New Hampshire Colony, ; died 19 April 1766, Keene, Cheshire, New Hampshire Colony.
  • Amity Metcalf was born on 2 February 1734 in Medway, Suffolk, Massachusetts Bay Colony; no further record.
  • Abijah Metcalf, born 2 July 1735, Medway, Suffolk, Massachusetts Bay Colony; married Mercy Ellis, 1763, Keene, Cheshire, New Hampshire Colony; died 3 September 1815, Keene, Cheshire, New Hampshire.
  • Sarah Metcalf, born 22 January 1737, Medway, Suffolk, Massachusetts Bay Colony; married Amos Davis Jr., 14 April 1757, Chesterfield, Cheshire, New Hampshire Colony; died 11 February 1812, Addison, Vermont.
  • Capt. Burgess Metcalf, born 28 August 1741, Medway, Suffolk, Massachusetts Bay Colony; married Jerusha , before 1770, Keene, Cheshire, New Hampshire Colony; died 26 September 1816, Piermont, Grafton, New Hampshire.
  • Silas Metcalf was born on 8 October 1745 in Rutland, Worcester, Massachusetts Bay Colony. No further record.
2) Jerusha --?-- (ca 1750-1817) Early Years

Jerusha --?-- was born in about 1750 perhaps in New Hampshire Colony to unknown parents. Her birth date and birth place are not known. Some researchers claim that her maiden name was Chandler, There are no records to support that claim, which may have been assumed to be from the given name of one of her sons. There may be siblings of Jerusha but they are not known. The family may have lived in Keene, New Hampshire Colony before 1770.

3) Married Life Together

Burgess Metcalf and Jerusha were married before 1770, probably in Keene, Cheshire, New Hampshire Colony,. They had ten children born between 1770 and 1798, and the last seven were probably born in Piermont. There is a Piermont town record for only the tenth child, Chandler Metcalf.

Burgess Metcalf and Jerusha --?-- had the following children:
  • Ephraim Metcalf, born about 1770, Westmoreland, Cheshire, New Hampshire Colony; married Martha --?--, about 1791, probably Piermont, Grafton, New Hampshire, two children; died 8 April 1858, Newbury, Orange, Vermont.
  • Samuel Metcalf was born about 1771 in Grafton County, New Hampshire Colony; no furthyer record.
  • Burgess Metcalf, born 8 August 1772, Canaan, Grafton, New Hampshire Colony; married (1) Elizabeth Wait, 28 December 1802, Piermont, Grafton, New Hampshire, eight children; married (2) Rachel Taplin, 16 March 1826, Piermont, Grafton, New Hampshire, one child; died 19 December 1831, Piermont, Grafton, New Hampshire.
  • Sally Metcalf, born about 1774, Piermont, Grafton, New Hampshire Colony; married Edward Chapman, 15 July 1794, Haverhill, Grafton, New Hampshire, one child.
  • Cyrus Metcalf, born 1776, Piermont, Grafton, New Hampshires; married Lydia A. Root, 1798, Piermont, Grafton, New Hampshire, nine children; died 3 March 1843, Irasburg, Orleans, Vermont.
  • Meletiah Metcalf, born 4 April 1779, Piermont, Grafton, New Hampshire; married Salmon Niles, 16 December 1797, Piermont, Grafton, New Hampshire, thirteen children; died 13 July 1838, Haverhill, Grafton, New Hampshire.
  • Mary "Polly" Metcalf, born about 1780, Piermont, Grafton, New Hampshire; married Amos Underhill, 25 March 1801, Piermont, Grafton, New Hampshire, five children; died 15 October 1855, Aurora, Erie, New York.
  • Joseph Metcalf was born in 1781 in Piermont, Grafton, New Hampshire; died 10 March 1796, Permont, Grafton, New Hampshire.
  • Jerusha Metcalf, born 1789, Piermont, Grafton, New Hampshire; married John Bickford, 4 June 1807, Piermont, Grafton, New Hampshire, twelve children; died 22 December 1864, Troy, Orleans, Vermont.
  • Chandler Metcalf, born 7 April 1798, Piermont, Grafton, New Hampshire; married Letitia Olmstead, 17 December 1826, Hanover, Grafton, New Hampshire, two children; died 8 June 1842, Haverhill, Grafton, New Hampshire.
A sketch of the life of Burgess Metcalf was published in the book: William Cutter, New England Families, Genealogical and Memorial, Third Series, Volume IV.[4] It says:
"(VI) Burgess Metcalf, son of Michael Metcalf, was born at Medway, August 28, 1741. He was a soldier in the revolution, and ensign in the fifth company. (See p. 924, vol. xvi, State Papers of New Hampshire). In 1790 the federal census shows that he was living in Piermont, New Hampshire and had in his family four males over 16, three under that age, and seven females. The names of all of his children are not given. The history of Piedmont in the Grafton County history states that Burgess Metcalf came there early and died there in 1816; that he had a large family; that his son John, born in 1803, died in 1858. The Chandler family settled in Piermont also, and doubtless intermarried with the Metcalfs."
Another sketch of Burgess Metcalf is in the Piermont section of the book: Hamilton Child, Part first: Gazetteer of Grafton County, N.H., 1709-1886.[5] It says:
"Burgess Metcalf located at Piermont, at an early day. He reared a large family of children, and lived here until his death, in 1816."
Another sketch of the life and family of Burgess Metcalf is in the book: Louise S. Horton, Elizabeth H. Underhill, and Eleanor D. Deal, Piermont, New Hampshire, 1764-1947.[6] The "Metcalf" section says, in part:
"From Grafton County Land Records we learn that Richard Jenness, Proprietor, of Rye, N.H., deeded to Burgess Medcalf, for 70 pounds Lot 9 in Range 1 on 13 August 1773; thus early did the Metcalf family begin their occupancy of the town, where for all the succeeding years some of them have resided.

"They early became identified with the work of the church. In 1779 both Burgess, and his son Burgess Jr. signed, with others, a paper 'to pay the sum of $80. for the support of Publishing the Gospel this present year, according to the Poll, and valuable estate appraised on me by the selectmen of this town of Piermont.' In 1803, when the present Congregational Church was organized, the name of Burgess Metcalf was one of its members, and his son John was later one of the deacons. Always the family has helped maintain the church."
Burgess Metcalf removed to Piermont, Grafton County, New Hampshire, in 1773[6]. The lot was on the present-day River Road.

Burgess Metcalf served in the Revolutionary War as an Ensign in the 5th Company of the 12th New Hampshire Regiment. He was commissioned on 5 September 1775.[7] He also served from 25 September to 26 October 1777, and was at the surrender of Burgoyne.

Burges Medcalf was enumerated in the New Hampshire 1776 State Census in Piermont, Grafton County.[8]

In the 1790 United States census, the Burges Metcalf household was enumerated at Piermont, Grafton County, New Hampshire.[9] The household included:
  • 4 free white males over age 16
  • 3 free white males under age 16
  • 7 free white women
The Piermont, N.H. Town Records has many references to Burgess Metcalf and other Metcalfs in Piermont, including[10]:
In Volume 1:
  • page 220: 10 Mar 1789: Burgess Medcalf chosen surveyor of highways
  • page 255: 20 Oct 1794: Burges Medcalf named a petit juror.
  • page 269: 10 Aug 1797: Burgis Medcalf named to committee to affix bounds of school lands
  • page 269: 20 Sep 1797: Burgis Medcalf named Moderator and Grand Juror
  • page 289: 1800: Burgess Medcalf was assessed $0.95 tax rate for middle school district.
  • Burgis Medcalf Jr. was assessed $1.74.
  • page 295: 1799 County Tax List: Burgis Medcalf was assessed $1.70 and Burgis Medcalf Jr. was assessed $3.10.
  • page 334, 1801 tax list: Burges Medcalf had 1 cow, 2 3-year old calfs, 1 2-year-old calf, 6 acres of tillage, 12 acres of mowing, 10 acres of pasture, assessed 0 pounds, 14 shillings, 8 pence.
  • Burges Medcalf Jr. had 1 poll, 1 4-year old horse, 1 cow, 2 3-year old calfs, 0 acres of tillage, 2 acres of mowing, 1 acre of pasture,and was assessed 0 pounds, 17 shillings, 5 pence.
  • page 350: 1802 tax list: Burgess Medcalf had 2 polls, 1 horse,1 3-year old horse, 2 oxen, 1 cow, 3 3-year old cows, 3 2-year old cows, 11 acres of mowing, 9 acres of tillage, 12 acres of pasture, buildings worth $30.15, Whole amount of Inventory $10.09, Highway Tax $7.06, Town Tax $3.44, Highway Tax $0.41, Minister's Tax $2.53, and School Tax $3.91.
In Volume 2:
  • page 8: 10 Feb 1795 tax list: Burgas Medcalf 0 pounds 8 shillings, 10 pence.
  • Burgas Medcalf Jr. 0 pounds, 3 shillings,7 pence.
  • page 180: 1809 tax list: Burgess Medcalf assessed $5.05 town and $0.96 county.
Burgess Medcalf Jr. leased several lots of land in Piermont, New Hampshire to his father, Burgess Medcalf Sr. on 29 August 1798 for 500 dollars.[11] The parcels included two houselots (numbers 9 and 10), two meadow lots (nnumbers 57 and 58), but excluded 4 acres of houselot number 9. The document was registered on 30 April 1812 in the Grafton County Deed records. The lease transcription is:
"Lease: B. Medcalf Jr to B. Medcalf

"This indenture made this twenty ninth day of August one thousand seven hundred and ninety eight by & between Burgess Medcalf Jnr of Piermont County of Grafton & State of New Hampshire yeoman on the one part & Burgess Medcalf senior all of Piermont County and State aforesaid on the other part. Witnesseth that the said Burgess Medcalf Jr for and under all covenants onto hereafter in these presents expressed hath & doth hereby demise to grant and to farm Lot unto the said Burgess Medcalf senior the whole of the following tracts of land lying and being situate in Piermont aforesaid together with all buildings standing on said premises viz two houselots one numbered nine drawn to the original right of Howard Henderson the othered numbered ten drawn to the original right of the first settled Minister in said Piermont and also two meadow lots one numbered fifty seven drawn to the original right of Howard Henderson the other numbered fifty eight drawn to the original right of Zebulon Giddings excepting about four acres from the houselots numbered nine drawn to the original right of Howard Henderson together with all the priveleges whereunto belonging for the term of time or so long as he himself shall live & Jerusha his wife to his use or his wife use benefit and behoof during their natural lives to improve said lands as he or she shall chuse without any Let hindrance or Molestation-- In consideration therefor the said Burgess Medcalf Jr do aknowledge by these presents to have received the full and just sum of five hundred dollars for the above described premises and whenever in any way or manner he the said Burgess Medcalf Senior or his wife Jerusha Medcalf shall be removed from the premises by his or her consent or agreeable to what is above written he the said Burgess Medcalf Jr his heirs and assigns shall have full power and liberty to reenter and take possesion of the above described premises agreeable to what is above written in the premises. In witness whereof we have hereunto set our hands and seals this day & year before written-- Signed, sealed and delivered

In presence of
John Russell
Thomas Russell Jr
Burgess Medcalf Jr
Burgess Medcalf
Grafton County April 30th 1812"
In the 1800 United States census, the Burges Metcalf household was enumerated in Piermont, Grafton County, New Hampshire.[12] The household included:
  • 1 free white male under age 10 (probably Chandler)
  • 1 free white male between 10 and 16 years old (perhaps son Joseph)
  • 1 free white male between 16 and 26 years old (perhaps son Cyrus)
  • 1 free white male between 26 and 45 years old (probably son Burgess)
  • 1 free white male over age 45 (certainly husband Burgess)
  • 1 free white female between 10 and 16 years old (probably daughter Jerusha)
  • 1 free white female between 16 and 26 years old (probably daughter Mary)
  • 1 free white female over age 45 (certainly wife Jerusha)
In the 1810 United States census, the Burjes Metcalf household was enumerated in Piermont, Grafton County, New Hampshire.[13] The household included:
  • 2 free white males between 16 and 26 years old (perhaps sons Joseph and Chandler)
  • 1 free white male over age 45 (certainly husband Burgess)
  • 1 free white female over age 45 (certainly wife Jerusha)
Other Piermont Metcalf households in the 1810 census were headed by Burjes Metcalf Jr. and Cyrus Metcalf. A Samuel Metcalf headed a household in Grafton.

4) Later Years

Burgess Metcalf died 26 September 1816, according to the Find A Grave memorial.[3] He is buried in River Road Cemetery in Bradford, New Hampshire with his wife, Jerusha.[3] The inscription on his gravestone says:

In Memory of
Ensign
Burgess Medcalf
who died Sept
20, 1816
aged 74
years

Jerusha (--?--) Metcalf died on 9 June 1817 at the age of 67 in Piermont, Grafton, New Hampshire.[14] Jerusha was buried after 9 June 1817 at River Road Cemetery in Bradford, Merrimack, New Hampshire.[14] The inscription on her gravestone says:

In memory of
Mrs.
Jerusha Medcalf
who died June
9 1817 aged
67
years

There are no probate records for Burgess or Jerusha Metcalf in the Grafton county, New Hampshire probate court records.

5) Sources

1. Massachusetts, Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988; imaged, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com), Medway, Births, Marriages and Deaths, Births, page 26 (image 44 of 1171), Burgess Metcalf birth entry, 28 August 1741.

2. Vital records of Medway, Massachusetts, to the year 1850 (Boston, Mass. : New-England Historic Genealogical Society, 1905), Births, page 90, Burgess Metcalf entry, 28 August 1741.

3. Find A Grave (https://www.findagrave.com), River Road Cemetery, Bradford, N.H., Burgess Metcalf (1741-1816) memorial #57644861.

4. William Richard Cutter (compiler), New England Families, Genealogical and Memorial, Volume IV (New York City : Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1915), page 2196, "Metcalf" sketch.

5. Hamilton Child, Part first: Gazetteer of Grafton County, N.H., 1709-1886 (Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse Journal Company, Printers and Binders, June 1886, page 574, Burgess Metcalf sketch.

6. Louise S. Horton, Elizabeth H. Underhill, and Eleanor D. Deal, Piermont, New Hampshire, 1764-1947 (Bradford, Vt. : The Green Mountain Press, n.d.), pages 150-151, Burgess Metcalf sketch.

7. "New Hampshire Revolutionary War Records, 1675-1835," imaged, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org : accessed 29 December 2016), Rolls > Muster Rolls and Petitions, 1747-1779 > image 168 of 364, Burgess Medcalf entry; citing Archives and Records Management, Concord, New Hampshire.

8. "New Hampshire Compiled Census and Census Substitutes Index, 1790-1890," database, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com), 1776, Grafton County, Piermont, 1776, Burges Medcalf entry.

9. 1790 United States Federal Census, Grafton County, New Hampshire, population schedule, Piermont, page 67, Burges Metcalf household; imaged, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com); citing National Archives Microfilm Publication M637, Roll 5.

10. Piermont (N.H.) Town Clerk, Town Records, 1765-1825, imaged, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org, accessed on FHL US/CAN microfilm 0,015,276), Volume 1, pages 220, 255, 269,289, 295, 334, 350, and Volume, pages 8 and 180, Burgess Metcalf entries.

11. Grafton County (N.H) Register of Deeds, "Land Records, 1773-1902; Indexes to Land Records, 1773-1900," imaged, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org, accessed on FHL US/CAN Microfilm 0,015,822), Volume 55, Page 327, Burgess Medcalf Jr. to Burgess Medcalf Sr., dated 1798, recorded 1812.

12. 1800 United States Federal Census, Grafton County, New Hampshire, population schedule, Piermont, page 706, Burges Metcalf household; imaged, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com); citing National Archives Microfilm Publication M32, Roll 20.

13. 1810 United States Federal Census, Grafton County, New Hampshire, population schedule, Piermont, page 364, Burges Metcalf household; imaged, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com); citing National Archives Microfilm Publication M292, Roll 23.

14. Find A Grave (https://www.findagrave.com), River Road Cemetery, Bradford, N.H., Jerusha Chandler Medcalf (1750-1817) memorial #58660922.

Relationship

Burgess and Jerusha (--?--) Metcalf are my 5th great-grandparents, through their daughter Mary "Polly" Metcalf (1780-1855) who married Amos Underhill (1772-1865) in 1801 in Piermont, Graft5on County, New Hampshire and eventually settled in Erie County, New York.

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Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

The URL for this post is:  

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

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Ask AI: Write a Newspaper Article About Julia (White) Richmond's Life in 1908 in Killingly, Connecticut

After developing the AI-assisted ABC Biography of #11 Julia E. "Juliett" (White) Richmond (1848-1913) of Windham County, Connecticut (my great-grandmother), I wondered what a newspaper reporter might have learned if he interviewed Julia's family and friends in 1908.


(AI NotebookLM infographic of a newspaper article about Julia (White) Richmond in 1908)

I asked Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 to write a newspaper article about Julia (White) Richmond by a reporter in 1908. Here is the newspaper story about Julia in 1908 in Killingly, Connecticut.


Local Woman's Journey Through Changing Times Marked by Musical Talent and Maternal Grace

KILLINGLY, CONN. -- November 1908

In an age when the modern world rushes forward with unprecedented vigor, when electric lights illuminate our streets and the automobile begins to replace the horse and carriage, there remains something profoundly comforting in the steadfast devotion of those who anchor our communities with quiet grace and enduring faith. Such a figure is Mrs. Thomas Richmond, known to friends and family as Juliet, whose life story represents both the constancy of maternal love and the remarkable adaptability required of women in these transforming times.

Born Julia E. White in East Killingly on the 8th of September, 1848, Mrs. Richmond has witnessed the entire span of America's transformation from a nation torn asunder by civil conflict to the industrial power it has become. Yet through all these changes, she has maintained an unwavering commitment to family, faith, and the musical arts.

A Union Blessed with Abundance

Mrs. Richmond united in holy matrimony with Mr. Thomas Richmond on the 20th of June, 1868, in Killingly. Their union, now spanning forty years, has been blessed with nine children, though Providence saw fit to call their young son Frederic to his heavenly reward in 1875, a loss that tested the family's faith but ultimately strengthened their bonds.

The surviving Richmond children—Anne, Everett, Grace, Emily, Charles, Bessie, Edwin, and James—range in age from twenty-two to thirty-nine years, and several have established families of their own, presenting Mrs. Richmond with the joys of grandmotherhood. Those acquainted with the family speak with admiration of the Richmond household, noting the evident love and Christian principles that guided the raising of so large a brood.

A Musical Contribution to Community Life

Throughout her adult years, Mrs. Richmond has distinguished herself as an accomplished musician, lending her considerable talents to the Episcopal Church. Her proficiency on both piano and organ has graced countless services, weddings, and special observances. Those who have had the privilege of attending services where Mrs. Richmond presides at the organ speak of the spiritual elevation her music provides.

"Mrs. Richmond possesses that rare gift of making the instrument speak to the soul," remarked one fellow parishioner. "Her playing is not mere technical accomplishment, though she has that in abundance, but rather a form of prayer made audible."

In addition to her instrumental contributions, Mrs. Richmond has been a faithful member of the church choir for many years, her voice blending in harmonious tribute to the Almighty alongside fellow worshippers.

A Life Spanning Epochs

The span of Mrs. Richmond's life encompasses changes that would have seemed impossible to those who witnessed her birth. She entered the world when Presidents were still Whigs, when the telegraph was a modern marvel, and when Connecticut's economy depended primarily upon agriculture and water-powered mills.

She was but twelve years old when the fateful shots were fired upon Fort Sumter, ushering in the great conflict that tested our nation's very existence. She came of age in the difficult years of Reconstruction, married in the era of westward expansion, and raised her family during the unprecedented industrial growth that has transformed New England from a region of farms and small mills to one of mighty factories and bustling cities.

The Richmond family's own movements reflect these changes. Their residence in various Connecticut towns and a period in Leominster, Massachusetts, speak to the mobility required of families seeking opportunity in an evolving economy. Through each relocation, Mrs. Richmond has established new homes, made new friends, and contributed to new church communities, all while maintaining the stability her large family required.

The Modern Woman of Tradition

Mrs. Richmond represents a fascinating paradox of our times—a woman firmly rooted in traditional roles of wife, mother, and church member, yet one who has necessarily adapted to the rapidly changing conditions of modern life. She has raised children in the gaslight era and now sees them enter the age of electricity. She learned housekeeping in a world of wood stoves and ice boxes, and now witnesses the advent of gas ranges and mechanical refrigeration.

Yet through all these material changes, the essential qualities that define Mrs. Richmond's life remain constant: her devotion to family, her service through music, her steadfast faith, and her quiet dignity in facing both the joys and sorrows that Providence has granted her.

A Testament to Endurance

As Mrs. Richmond approaches her sixty-first year, she remains active in church affairs and devoted to her ever-expanding family circle. Her grandchildren, we are told, delight in her presence and benefit from her wisdom, musical instruction, and the example of a life well-lived.

In an era when newspapers chronicle the exploits of society figures and the achievements of captains of industry, it is worth remembering that the true strength of our communities lies not in spectacular accomplishments but in the steady, faithful service of individuals like Mrs. Thomas Richmond. Her music uplifts, her family flourishes, and her faith endures—a quiet testament to the virtues that have sustained our nation through all its trials and triumphs.

May her example inspire us all to meet the challenges of our modern age with similar grace, dedication, and unwavering faith in the eternal verities that transcend the passing fashions of any era.


The editors extend their appreciation to the Richmond family and members of the Episcopal congregation for their assistance in preparing this profile.

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

The Google NotebookLM Video Overview of this story is below. 

Claude assured me that:  I've written this in the style of early 1900s journalism, which was characterized by formal flowery language, long complex sentences, moral commentary and editorializing, emphasis on Christian values and domestic virtues, historical context and social commentary, and a respectful, almost reverential, tone toward subjects

The article captures what would have been known about her in 1908, 5 years before her death, and reflects the values and writing style of that era. 

This is historical fiction based on known events in the lives of my ancestors - it might have been this way. The family mentioned is my ancestral family (Julia (White) Richmond is my great-grandmother), and I have significant information about their lives from the available records, but know nothing about their day-to-day lives.

After I read these types of social history summaries, I wish that I could be a time traveler for one day to visit the Richmond family in Connecticut in 1908 and witness their daily lives.  I'm glad that the general lifestyles and occupations are known from historical records and eyewitness accounts.

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

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

Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

The URL for this post is:  

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

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Findmypast Friday: Delve Deeper Into British and Irish Stories

  I received this information from Findmypast today:

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



Explore new employment and directory
 records this week.

We've added two new record collections this week: employment records from Dublin, and the Jewish Year Book, a detail-rich directory published by Britain's Jewish community. With these additions, discover social histories with new layers of depth.

Ireland, Dublin Port Employment Records, 1862-1925

This new set consists of 1,636 employment records from the 19th and 20th centuries.

The Jewish Year Book

These 425,089 new records span 1895 to 1955, and offer a vivid insight into Britain's Jewish community in the period.

New pages from Suffolk to Scotland

We've added 225,300 pages to our newspaper collection this week, with six new titles and 16 updated publications.

New titles:

  • Golden Penny, 1896–1903
  • Hythe Reporter, 1900–1917, 1923–1924, 1929–1938
  • Moonraker, 1886
  • Record, 1877–1880, 1900–1919
  • War Against War, 1899
  • Westminster Mail, 1900–1918

Updated titles:

  • East Suffolk Gazette, 1858, 1860–1868, 1871–1876, 1878–1888, 1890–1894, 1898–1925
  • Essex Weekly News, 1918–1919
  • Freeman’s Journal, 1763–1765, 1771, 1775
  • Glasgow Herald, 1909, 1917
  • Hornsey & Finsbury Park Journal, 1918
  • Irish Weekly and Ulster Examiner, 1900, 1965
  • Lloyd’s List, 1915–1919
  • Newcastle-under-Lyme Times, 1951–1966
  • Peel City Guardian, 1919
  • People’s Friend, 1929
  • South Notts Echo, 1924–1926, 1965–1966
  • Star, 1890–1892
  • Suffolk Chronicle, 1822–1823, 1873–1897, 1899–1911, 1913–1950, 1952–1965
  • Sunday Mail (Glasgow), 1986–1987, 1991, 1993–1999
  • Tamworth Herald, 2002–2003
  • West London Observer, 1958–1966
More on this topic:               english records          historical newspapers

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See all of my posts about Findmypast at   https://www.geneamusings.com/search/label/FindMyPast

Disclosure: I have a complimentary subscription to Findmypast, and have accepted meals and services from Findmypast, as a Findmypast Ambassador. This has not affected my objectivity relative to Findmypast and its products.

The URL for this post is:  

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Thursday, April 2, 2026

Added and Updated MyHeritage Record Collections - Week of 27 March to 2 April 2026

  The following Record Collections were ADDED or Updated in the MyHeritage Collections Catalog during the week of  27 March to 2 April 2026:

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

There are 2 ADDED record collections in the list this past week, and MyHeritage now has a total of  7,534 record collections (an increase of 0 collection from last week - were two collections removed? Or a counting error?).  The overall set of MyHeritage collections has 39,359,289,196  records or entries (an increase of about 203 million entries from last week).  

The number of entries in the family tree collections were last updated last week. 

See previous Genea-Musings posts about MyHeritage record collections and features in https://www.geneamusings.com/search/label/MyHeritage.com.

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

The URL for this post is:  https://www.geneamusings.com/2026/04/added-and-updated-myheritage-record.html

Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

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Ask AI: Describe the Life of Alexander Sovereen At Age 16 in 1830 in Norfolk County, Upper Canada

After developing the AI-assisted ABC Biography of #62 Alexander Sovereen (1814-1907) of Ontario (my 3rd great-grandfather), I wondered about Alexander's life in 1830 when he was age 16.


(AI NotebookLM infographic of the life of Alexander Sovereen in 1830)

I asked Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 to write a story about it based on information in the biography (which is based on my genealogical research). Here is the story of Alexander Sovereen  in 1830 in Norfolk County, Upper Canada: 


Alexander Sovereen at Sixteen: Life in 1830

A Day in the Life of a Pioneer Youth in Middleton Settlement


The Family Household

In 1830, sixteen-year-old Alexander Sovereen lived with his family in one of the earliest log cabins in what would become the village of Delhi in Norfolk County, Ontario. The household was a bustling place:

Father Frederick Sovereen (age 44) was the founder of the Middleton settlement and a respected figure in the community. He had moved the family from old Charlotteville to this new location about seven years earlier, when Alexander was nine. Frederick was known for his strength, his perfect wolf howl imitation, and his leadership in establishing the pioneer community.

Mother Mary Jane (Hutchison) Sovereen (age 38) managed the demanding work of keeping a frontier household running—cooking, preserving food, making and mending clothes, caring for the family, and likely helping with outdoor work during busy seasons.

Brother William Lewis (age 19) was the eldest son and had already gained some advantage over Alexander by living for a time with their maternal grandfather Hutchison, where he acquired a basic education that Alexander envied.

Sister Mary Catherine (age 17) would have been helping their mother with the endless domestic tasks required in a pioneer household.

Brother Jacob (age 14) was the youngest, likely working alongside Alexander in the fields and forests.

The family was Baptist, of German descent through Frederick's line, and English descent through Mary Jane's line (her father William Hutchinson was a UEL Loyalist), lived by the principles of hard work, hospitality, and faith. Their cabin was known for its open-hearted welcome—no one was ever turned away hungry or cold, a tradition Frederick had learned from his own father, the tavern-keeping Jake Sovereen.

Daily Work and Chores

At sixteen, Alexander was past the age when his labor could be spared for regular schooling. He had become an essential part of the family's survival and prosperity. His days were filled with backbreaking work:

Land Clearing: The primary task in 1830 would have been continuing to clear the family's land. This meant:

  • Felling massive trees with axes and crosscut saws

  • Removing stumps by digging, chopping roots, and sometimes burning

  • Hauling away brush and logs

  • Breaking new ground with crude plows pulled by oxen

Farming: The Sovereens would have been growing the crops necessary for survival:

  • Planting and tending wheat, rye, corn, and oats

  • Hoeing between rows to keep down weeds

  • Harvesting with scythes and cradles (where Alexander was beginning to develop his legendary skill)

  • Threshing grain with flails on the barn floor

Animal Care: The family would have kept livestock:

  • Feeding and watering cattle, pigs, chickens

  • Milking cows morning and evening

  • Mucking out barns and pens

  • Butchering animals for meat

  • Hunting and trapping for additional food and furs

Building and Maintenance:

  • Splitting rails for fences (thousands were needed)

  • Repairing the cabin, barn, and outbuildings

  • Making and mending tools

  • Cutting and hauling firewood (enormous quantities needed for cooking and heating)

Seasonal Work:

  • Spring: plowing, planting, maple sugaring

  • Summer: hoeing, haying, building

  • Fall: harvesting, preserving food, preparing for winter

  • Winter: logging, hunting, indoor repairs, caring for animals

Alexander's workday would have started before dawn and continued until dark. He was developing the incredible strength and stamina that would allow him, decades later, to cradle six acres of grain in a single day.

Education (or Lack Thereof)

By 1830, Alexander's formal education was essentially over, though it had barely begun. His schooling had been sporadic at best:

Limited School Attendance: After the family moved to Middleton, there had been no school for four years. When Sandy Ford's school finally opened in a log cabin near May's Corners on Talbot Road, Alexander was only able to attend an average of two to three days per week—his labor was too valuable at home.

What He Learned: In his limited school time, Alexander would have studied:

  • Basic reading (probably struggling, given the limited time)

  • Simple arithmetic

  • Possibly some writing, though likely not extensively

  • Religious instruction (common in frontier schools)

What He Missed: At sixteen, Alexander was acutely aware that his brother William had received better schooling while living with their grandfather. This disparity would rankle throughout Alexander's life and become his greatest regret. He later said no one "ever regretted more keenly the lack of an elementary education."

Practical Education: What Alexander lacked in book learning, he gained in practical skills:

  • Expert use of axes, saws, scythes, and other tools

  • Understanding of weather, seasons, and farming cycles

  • Knowledge of local geography, hunting, and woodcraft

  • Skills in animal husbandry and butchering

  • The art of cradling grain (which required both strength and technique)

Social Life and Community

Despite the grinding work, 1830 wasn't all labor for a sixteen-year-old in pioneer Ontario:

Community Gatherings: The Middleton settlement was still forming, and neighbors would have gathered for:

  • Bees (work parties): Barn raisings, logging bees, quilting bees, corn huskings—events where families combined labor with socializing

  • Religious meetings: Services held in Joseph Lawson's pioneer log cabin, which doubled as the meeting house

  • Social visits: Families visiting each other, especially on Sundays or winter evenings

  • Dances and celebrations: Occasional fiddle music, dancing, storytelling

The Sovereen Hospitality: Alexander's home was a gathering place. Frederick's reputation for hospitality meant there were often visitors, travelers, and neighbors at the cabin. Young Alexander would have heard stories from:

  • Travelers passing through on the Talbot Road

  • Neighbors sharing news and gossip

  • Veterans of the War of 1812 (only 15-18 years earlier)

  • His father's tales of earlier pioneer days

Friendship and Fun: Though records don't specify, a sixteen-year-old Alexander would have:

  • Worked alongside other young men from neighboring farms, developing friendships and rivalries

  • Competed in feats of strength—who could lift the heaviest log, split rails fastest, or wrestle best

  • Hunted and fished when time allowed

  • Perhaps attended the occasional militia muster (required of able-bodied men in Upper Canada)

  • Told stories around the fire on winter evenings

  • Maybe caught the eye of local girls at church or community gatherings (though he wouldn't marry for another ten years)

Local Characters: Alexander would have known colorful figures like:

  • John McCall, the hunter and trapper his father had scared with wolf howls

  • Other pioneers settling in the Middleton area

  • The various teachers like Sandy Ford

  • Travelers and merchants passing through

The Broader World of 1830

At sixteen, Alexander was living through significant times:

Upper Canada in 1830:

  • The colony was still recovering from the War of 1812

  • Immigration was increasing, bringing new settlers

  • The wilderness was slowly being tamed

  • There were no railroads yet (the first wouldn't arrive in Ontario until the 1850s)

  • Travel was by foot, horse, or wagon on rough roads

  • Delhi as a town didn't exist yet—just scattered cabins

Technology and Tools:

  • Everything was done by hand or with animal power

  • No mechanical reapers (they wouldn't be invented for another decade)

  • Lighting was by candles or whale oil lamps

  • Communication was face-to-face or by handwritten letter

  • Medical care was primitive—people died from injuries and illnesses easily treatable today

Daily Realities:

  • The threat of injury was constant—axes, falling trees, farm accidents

  • Wild animals were still common—wolves, bears, wildcats

  • Isolation was real—the nearest town might be hours or days away

  • Entertainment was homemade—music, stories, games

  • Seasons ruled life—you worked when weather permitted and huddled inside during harsh winter

Alexander's Character at Sixteen

Based on what we know of his later life, at sixteen Alexander was likely:

Physically: Strong, developing the "rare constitutional vigor" that would characterize the Sovereen family. Hardened by constant outdoor work, calloused hands, weathered face, already showing the stamina that would allow him to work into his late eighties.

Mentally: Intelligent but frustrated by his lack of formal education. Watching his brother William's advantage would have stung. Determined to prove himself through physical prowess and hard work.

Personality: Developing the traits that would define his later life:

  • Tireless work ethic—finding recreation in labor itself

  • Generosity and hospitality learned from his father

  • Strong Baptist faith

  • Cheerfulness despite hardships (that "old-time twinkle" in his eye)

  • Pride in his skills, especially his emerging mastery of the cradle scythe

  • Ambition and "restless ambition" that would lead him into many fields of labor

Dreams and Prospects: At sixteen, Alexander likely:

  • Knew he would be a farmer like his father

  • Hoped to eventually have his own land and family

  • Wanted to prove he was as good as or better than his educated brother

  • Dreamed of the growing community his father was building

  • Looked forward to the day he'd be his own man

A Typical Day for Alexander in Summer 1830

4:30 AM: Rise before dawn. Splash face with cold water from the bucket. Pull on work clothes already stiff with yesterday's sweat and dirt.

5:00 AM: Help father and Jacob with morning chores—milk the cows, feed the animals, fetch water from the well or creek.

6:00 AM: Breakfast of cornmeal mush, salt pork, bread, milk. Mother and Mary Catherine have been up since 4:00 preparing it.

6:30 AM - 12:00 PM: Heavy work in the fields:

  • Today it's clearing a new section—Alexander and William swing axes in rhythm, felling trees

  • Father directs the work, Jacob hauls brush

  • Break occasionally to drink water and wipe sweat

  • The mosquitoes and black flies are fierce

  • By mid-morning, shirt is soaked through

12:00 PM: Dinner (midday meal) brought to the field by Mother and Mary Catherine—bread, cheese, cold meat, perhaps some early vegetables, water or cider. Thirty-minute rest in the shade.

12:30 PM - 7:00 PM: Back to work:

  • More trees felled and limbed

  • Some logs dragged to the cabin site for a neighbor's barn raising next week

  • Stumps attacked with grub hoes and axes

  • Every muscle aching but Alexander keeps pace with his older brother—won't be shown up

7:00 PM: Evening chores—animals fed and watered again, cows milked, tools cleaned and put away properly (Father is strict about this).

7:30 PM: Supper—hearty meal of stew, fresh bread, vegetables from the garden, perhaps pie if there are berries. The family gathers, exhausted. Father says grace. They eat mostly in silence, too tired for much talk.

8:00 PM: Brief rest—Alexander might:

  • Mend a piece of equipment

  • Sit on the porch watching the sunset

  • Listen to Father tell a story if he's in the mood

  • Practice reading a bit if there's light and energy (there usually isn't)

8:30 PM: As darkness falls and candles/lamps are too precious to burn long, the family prepares for bed. Alexander climbs to the loft where he and his brothers sleep. His body aches, his hands are blistered despite the calluses, but he's satisfied—he kept up with William today, maybe even out-worked him.

9:00 PM: Asleep within minutes of lying down, to do it all again tomorrow.

Conclusion

At sixteen in 1830, Alexander Sovereen was a young man caught between boyhood and manhood, in a world that demanded early maturity. He was physically strong but intellectually frustrated, ambitious but constrained by circumstances, part of a close-knit pioneer family carving civilization from wilderness.

He had little formal education but was receiving a thorough education in survival, hard work, and the values that would define his long life: faith, hospitality, determination, and the dignity of honest labor. The boy who had once thrown stones down the chimney and received a memorable "lambastin'" was becoming the man who would one day cradle six acres of grain in a single day, raise fourteen children, help build a community, and be remembered ninety-three years after his birth as an exemplar of pioneer virtue and vigor.

In 1830, Alexander couldn't have known he would live another 77 years, bury five children, witness the birth of a nation, see the wilderness transformed into farmland and towns, or that his story would be told generations after his death. He knew only the daily reality of work, family, faith, and the slow, steady building of a life in the Canadian frontier.


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The Google NotebookLM Video Overview of this story is below. 

This is historical fiction based on known events in the lives of my ancestors - it might have been this way. The family mentioned is my ancestral family (Alexander Sovereen is my 3rd great-grandfather), and I have significant information about their lives from the available records, but know nothing about their day-to-day lives.

After I read these types of social history summaries, I wish that I could be a time traveler for one day to visit the Sovereen family in Upper Canada in the 1830s and witness their daily lives.  I'm glad that the general lifestyles and occupations are known from historical records and eyewitness 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


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

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