Sunday, July 19, 2026

Best of the Genea-Blogs- Week of 12 to 18 July 2026

 Scores of genealogy and family history bloggers write hundreds of posts every week about their research, their families, and their interests. I appreciate each one of them and their efforts.


My criteria for "Best of ..." are pretty simple - I pick posts that advance knowledge about genealogy and family history, address current genealogy issues, provide personal family history, are funny or are poignant. I don't list posts destined for most daily blog prompts or meme submissions (but I do include summaries of them), or my own posts.

Here are my picks for great reads from the genealogy blogs for this past week:








Here are pick posts by other geneabloggers this week:

* The Chiddicks Observer Edition 63 [13 July 2026] by Paul Chiddicks on Stories Behind the Records..

* Friday’s Family History Finds [17 July 2026] by Linda Stufflebean on Empty Branches on the Family Tree.

* This week’s crème de la crème -- July 18, 2026 by Gail Dever on Genealogy a la Carte.

* GenStack [18 July 2026] by Robin Stewart on Genealogy Matters.


Readers are encouraged to go to the blogs listed above and read their articles, and add the blogs to your Favorites, Feedly, another RSS feed, or email if you like what you read. Please make a comment to them also - all bloggers appreciate feedback on what they write.

Did I miss a great genealogy blog post? Tell me! I currently am reading posts from over 900 genealogy bloggers using Feedly, but I still miss quite a few it seems.

Read past Best of the Genea-Blogs posts here.

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Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

The URL for this post is:  

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Betty and Fred’s Story: Building a Life Together – Ed’s Family Visits Chula Vista, July 1944 (Part 1)

Here is the latest chapter in the story of the married life and times of my parents, Fred and Betty (Carringer) Seaver, who married in July 1942. 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 early July 1944, two years plus into World War II, and Fred's brother Ed's family from Massachusetts arrives on the train to visit. Janet and Peter will stay at the Chamberlains until Ed sails off in August.


                (AI NotebookLM Infographic - Betty and Fred's Story, Ed's Family Visits, July 1944)

Based on the biographies and the earlier stories, I asked Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 to tell another story - what happened next (I offered some suggestions!)?  Here is Part 1 the next story (edited for more detail and accuracy):               


Betty and Fred’s Story: Building a Life Together

 – Ed’s Family Visits Chula Vista, July 1944

 (Part 1)


The Drive to Chula Vista

Ed had asked Marshall for the car on Saturday evening, with the straightforward directness that characterized most of his requests.

"Of course," Marshall had said. "Take it as long as you need it."

So on Sunday morning, after church — the Chamberlain's Episcopal church, which Ed and Janet had attended out of courtesy and general inclination, Peter conducting himself through the service with the restless dignity of a not-quite-two-year-old doing his best — Ed loaded Janet and Peter into the Chamberlain sedan and drove south toward Chula Vista, following Fred's directions with the careful attention of a man navigating unfamiliar streets.

"I want to see where you live," he'd told Fred on the telephone. "I want to see the whole thing. The house, the neighborhood, all of it."

"There's not much to see," Fred had said.

"There's everything to see," Ed said. "I want to see your life, Fred."

So they came — Ed driving, Janet beside him with a map she didn't entirely need since Fred's directions had been thorough, Peter in the back seat narrating the passing scenery in his own developing commentary.

They found Twin Oaks Avenue at twelve noon, the small houses with their modest yards, the ordinary decency of a wartime neighborhood built for the families of men who worked at the shipyards and the aircraft plants. Fred was on the porch when they pulled up, having been watching for the car for the better part of twenty minutes.

Ed got out and looked at the house — at the small barren front yard, the beginnings of the garden bed on the south side that Fred had been discussing with Lyle for weeks, the porch, the whole compact fact of it.

"This is good, Fred," he said. "This is really good."

"It's small," Fred said.

"It's yours," Ed said. "That's not small. That's the opposite of small."

Betty met them at the door with Randy on her hip, and there was a flurry of greetings — Janet embracing Betty like the friend she'd already become, Peter making immediately for the yard because a new yard was, to Peter, an irresistible invitation, Ed catching him by the shirt collar before he'd gotten more than six feet.

"We're going inside first," Ed told his son. "The yard will still be there."

Peter considered the wisdom of this and, apparently, accepted it, allowing himself to be redirected through the front door.

They toured the house — it did not take long, being a small house, but Betty walked them through it with the particular pride of a woman showing off a home she has built with real care. The front room with the good chair by the window where she read and sketched. The kitchen, still smelling faintly of the morning's coffee. Randy's room, with the mobile Fred had hung above the crib still turning gently in the cross-breeze from the open window.

Janet stood in the doorway of Randy's room for a moment, looking at the small space — the crib, the changing table, the neat stack of diapers, the single framed photograph of Fred and Betty's wedding on the wall.

"It's a good room," she said. "It has the right feeling."

"What feeling is that?" Betty asked.

"Like someone thought about every corner of it," Janet said. "Like it was made on purpose."

Betty looked around the small room — at the mobile, at the changing table Fred had built himself in April with lumber from the hardware store and instructions from a magazine, at the window that caught the morning light just right.

"It was," she said.

The Backyard and the Memories

They settled in the backyard eventually, in the modest shade of the young lemon tree, chairs pulled from the kitchen, near the small backyard table, and arranged in a loose circle on the not-so-green grass. Betty had made lemonade and put out a plate of the shortbread cookies she'd been experimenting with, rationing being what it was, and the whole arrangement had the unhurried quality of a Sunday afternoon with nowhere else to be.

Peter and Randy were deposited on a blanket at the center of the gathering, which had become, by mutual family consent, their appointed territory.

Randy was crawling now — properly crawling, a development that had arrived with startling suddenness in the last three weeks and had transformed him overnight from a stationary observer of the world into an active participant in it. He crawled with considerable speed and complete confidence, a small determined engine covering ground with a directness that Betty had learned to respect and monitor in equal measure.

Peter, delighted to discover that his cousin was now mobile, treated this development as an invitation to a shared enterprise. He crawled alongside Randy for a stretch — a twenty-two-month-old voluntarily reverting to crawling out of what appeared to be pure collegial solidarity — and the two of them made a circuit of the blanket together before Peter stood up again, having apparently made his point.

"He's showing him how it's done," Ed observed. "The next stage. Peter's the advance scout."

"Randy's catching up fast," Betty said, watching her son execute a neat turn around a dropped block. "He'll be walking by Christmas, I think."

"God help you," Ed said, with real feeling, echoing what Fred had said back in June. "Once they're upright there's no stopping them. Peter took his first steps at ten months and at twelve months he'd reorganized our entire house through sheer force of investigation."

"I remember when we were like that," Fred said. "Except it was different terrain."

"The brook," Ed said immediately, as though he'd been waiting for the opening.

"The brook," Fred agreed.

Betty and Janet exchanged a glance — the look of two women who recognize the specific quality of brothers about to begin a well-worn routine.

"Our father was the supervisor of a machine shop making combs and hairpins out of cellulose," Fred began, settling back in his chair, "on the brook next to the house on Central Street in Leominster. It was a two story building with workers on the ground floor and his office on the second level. He could watch the ground floor from his office, and he had a secretary."

"And it was right on the brook," Ed picked up, "which meant that all of the waste water and cellulose from the manufacturing went into the brook. It really stunk in the summertime. We didn’t swim in the brook much, but we played upstream along the brook, catching fish and frogs and bugs. We loved exploring that brook.”

Fred finished. "We spent half our boyhood along that brook especially when it rained. It ran up into New Hampshire."

"Massachusetts," Ed corrected.

"Leominster's in Massachusetts?"

"You grew up there and you don't know what state it's in?"

"I know what state it's in," Fred said. "I was testing you."

Betty laughed. "How old were you two?"

"Young enough that Dad should have known better than to let us into the shop," Ed said. "He let us putter in the shop's woodshop to keep us busy. Old enough that we thought we were being very useful."

"We were being useful," Fred said. "Occasionally. There was the summer we actually built something."

"The birdhouse," Ed said.

"The birdhouse," Fred confirmed, with satisfaction.

"It fell apart within a week," Ed told Betty and Janet. "Structurally unsound from the very first nail. But Dad hung it in the tree anyway and told everyone his sons had built it, and when it finally collapsed in a wind storm he acted personally offended, like the wind had insulted his own workmanship."

"He was proud of it," Fred said. "Even knowing it was terrible."

"That's fathers," Ed said.

"That's Dad," Fred said. Something quieter passed between the brothers — the specific weight of a father two thousand miles away, lying in his grave in Leominster.

"Mother played piano every night," Fred said, after a moment, moving the memory forward. "Every single night, without fail. Chopin, always Chopin. After supper, before bed. It didn't matter what kind of day it had been."

"She still does," Ed said. "Janet, tell them — she still does."

"She does," Janet confirmed. "I hear it every time I visit. Same hour, near enough. She says it settles the house."

"She used to play us to sleep when we were very small," Fred said. "And later, when we were older and pretending we didn't need to be sung to sleep anymore, she'd still play, and we'd still listen, from our rooms, pretending we weren't listening."

"I could hum you the whole repertoire," Ed said. "Note for note. It's permanently installed." He tapped his temple.

"She played the same six or seven pieces for twenty years," Fred said, to Betty. "Never seemed to tire of them. Or of us, for that matter, which was more remarkable given what we put her through."

"What did you put her through?" Betty asked, though she suspected she already knew the shape of the answer.

"Marion, Evelyn and Ruth," Ed said, with relish. "Our older sisters. They each had a string of suitors through their high school years, and Fred and I considered it our sacred duty as younger brothers to make every single one of their visits as difficult as possible."

"We were very thorough about it," Fred said.

"There was the fellow — what was his name, the one with the car —"

"Chester Wynn."

"Chester Wynn," Ed repeated, delighted at the recovered name. "Chester Wynn came to pick Evelyn up for a dance, very nervous, very starched, and Fred and I had rigged a bucket of water over the porch door."

"That was your idea," Fred said.

"It was our collaborative execution," Ed said. "I take partial credit."

"Chester Wynn got soaked to the skin," Fred told Betty and Janet, "on his way to pick up our sister for a school dance, in front of her and our mother and, unfortunately for us, our father, who had just come home."

"What happened?" Janet asked, already laughing.

"We were confined to the house for two weeks," Ed said. "Which felt like a fair trade at the time, given the quality of the soaking."

"Evelyn didn't speak to us for a month," Fred added.

"She married someone else eventually," Ed said. "Not Chester Wynn – Walter Wood. I've always privately felt we did her a service."

"You did not," Fred said. "She told you directly, more than once, that you had cost her the only interesting boy in Leominster."

"She was being dramatic," Ed said. "There were at least two interesting boys in Leominster."

Betty and Janet were both laughing now, the specific helpless laughter of hearing family history delivered with the confident overlapping rhythm of two people who have told these stories to each other a hundred times and have refined them into a kind of performance.

"You were both in the church choir," Janet said, when the laughter subsided. "Weren't you? Ed's mentioned it."

"We were," Fred said, with a certain resignation.

"Under considerable duress," Ed clarified. "Our mother's idea. She was the organist, and thought that the choir needed young voices, and her sons needed supervision during church. She had a good voice herself and seemed to believe, against all available evidence, that this was hereditary."

"It was not," Fred said.

"It was decidedly not," Ed agreed. "I sang bass, or attempted to, and Fred sang whatever was required of him, and then occasionally falsetto, and the honest truth, Betty, since you're now family and deserve to know it, is that we were both terrible."

"We were not terrible," Fred said. "We were adequate. Our voices were changing. I was tall as a teenager, and so, logically, I wore the shortest choir robe – it came down to my belt. Ed wore the longest choir robe and it dragged on the floor."

"Reverend Whitcomb used to position us at the far end of the choir loft," Ed said. "Strategically. Behind the pillar. He told us at the time that this was for acoustic reasons. I have since revised my understanding."

"He was protecting the congregation," Fred admitted.

"He was protecting the congregation," Ed confirmed, solemnly.

To be continued in Part 2...

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Here is the Google NotebookLM Video Overview about this event in Betty, Fred and Randy's life in July 1944:  


This story is historical fiction based on real people -- my parents and me -- and a real event in a real place. I don't know the full story of these events -- but this is how it might have been. I hope that it was at least this good! Claude is such a good storywriter! I added some details and corrected some errors in Claude's initial version.

Stay tuned for the next chapter in this family story.

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The AI-assisted ABC Biography of my mother, Betty Virginia (Carringer) Seaver, is in ABC Biography of #3 Betty Virginia (Carringer) Seaver (1919-2002) of San Diego, California. I also  wrote Betty's Story: The First-Year Art Teacher about the start of her teaching career.

The AI-assisted ABC Biography of my father, Frederick Walton Seaver, is in ABC Biography of #2 Frederick Walton Seaver Jr. (1911-1983) of Massachusetts and San Diego, California.  I also wrote Fred's Story: The Three-Day Cross-Country Escape  and Fred's Story: "I Need A Girl" about him coming to San Diego, and wanting a girlfriend.

Here are the previous chapters in this story:

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

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

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Saturday, July 18, 2026

Saturday Night Genealogy Fun -- Your Farthest Flung Ancestor

 Calling all Genea-Musings Fans: 

 It's Saturday Night again - 

time for some more Genealogy Fun!!



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


1) Our family trees contain historical persons who came from places all over the world.  Each of our ancestral lines came from somewhere.

2)  Can you identify your Farthest-Flung Ancestor (FFA)?  Who in your ancestral tree came from the most geographically distant place from where you live now? What brought them (or their descendants) to where your family ended up?

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

Thank you to Linda Stufflebean for this idea.

Here's mine:

I don't know exactly who my Farthest Flung Ancestor is.  I live in Chula Vista, California, USA (near San Diego), and my ancestry is 100% European to my knowledge (although I may have an indigenous North American if my DNA ethnicity estimates are correct, but that's closer than Europe).  I have identified ancestors who were born in the British Isles, France, Germany, Netherlands and Switzerland.  Some of my candidates:
  • Jacob Spengler (1618-1664) of Schoftland, Switzerland, about 9,300 km from Chula Vista 
  • Georg Dietrich Geringer (1645-1722) of Edenkoben, Rheinland-Pfalz, about 9,400 km from Chula Vista
  • Theodorus Friednreich Houx (1725-1802) of Pflummern, Rheinland-Pfalz, about 9,300 km from Chula Vista.
The British Isles, France and Netherlands are all closer to Chula Vista that those German and Swiss towns.  

My wife Linda's Farthest Flung Ancestor is undoubtedly Jane (Whittle) McKnew (1847-1921) who was born in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, about 12,100 km from Chula Vista.

I used Google Search to tell me the distances "as the crow flies."  


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The URL for this post is: https://www.geneamusings.com/2026/07/saturday-night-genealogy-fun-your.html

Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

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

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Ask AI: "How Can I Pass On My Genealogy Research?" – ChatGPT5 Response

 One of the requests for information at thye Chula Vista Genealogical Society Family History Roundtable meeting (monbthly on the 3rd Wednesday at 12 noon PDT) last month was to discuss this topic at a future3 meeting. 

I've been thinking about this topic for more than ten years, but have not progressed to completion of my still-tentative plans -- I need a Round Tuit! I decided to ask five of the freely available Artificial Intelligence tools (OpenAI ChatGPT, Anthorpic Claude, Google Gemini, X Grok, and Perplexity) to summarize what I should do.  Each AI tool gave me somewhat different answers, but I think the ChatGPT response was a good start.

1)  I wrote a long prompt trying to explain my problems and issues in:  

Many genealogists have a wealth of family photographs, family letters, home movies, record images, research articles, ancestor biographical sketches or notes, etc. Some researchers have these in physical form, or in digital form, or in a mix of physical and digital. The information extracted from all of this information is included in a family tree software program or an online family tree as names, relationships, events, dates, places, sources, research or biographical notes, with links to digitized record or photo images.

As an example, I have over 75,000 profiles in my family tree (in RootsMagic, in an Ancestry Member Tree, and MyHeritage family tree), I have several thousand family photos (most digitized), some family letters (mostly digitized), some home movies (digitized now), over 500 ancestor genealogical sketches with sources (digitized), a StoryWorth book about my own life experiences, over 500 AI-assisted biographies, memoirs, and stories about 100 ancestors, some PDF files of ancestor reports (from me back 12 generations), and descendants reports (from one ancestor to later generations), a genealogy blog with almost 20,000 posts that cover all phases of my genealogy work, and about 60 linear feet of paper in folders, binders, bookcases, file cabinets and piles, collected and developed over 38 years.


Too many genealogists don't think about what happens to all of the material when they die. I have been thinking about all of that and at age 82 with health concerns, I need to do something about it.

In my experience, public and private libraries and archives don't want the papers of non-famous persons like me. In many cases, the family of a genealogist rarely wants to deal with all of the papers and digital files -- they have lives to live. If a genealogist is lucky, they might have one or two cousins or grandchildren who might be interested to carry on the research.

What options do I have to pass this material on to not only my descendants and relatives, and also to other researchers? Please describe organizations, repositories, companies and websites (free or subscription) that might help me gather and save my research for posterity.

(AI GoogleNotebook Infographic -- A roadmap to permanent preservation)

2)  The OpenAI ChatGPT5 Response was:

Randy, you are asking one of the most important questions a serious genealogist can ask. What you have described is not just a hobby collection—it is the accumulated work of decades: original family materials, research, writing, analysis, and interpretation. If it is not organized and intentionally transferred, much of it could easily become inaccessible or be discarded after your lifetime.

The good news is that you do not have to find a single institution willing to take everything. In fact, the best preservation strategy is usually a distributed legacy plan: place different parts of the collection where they are most likely to survive and be useful.

First: Think of Your Collection as Four Separate Archives

1. The Family Tree Data -- Your RootsMagic database, Ancestry tree, and MyHeritage tree contain the structured information.

2. Digital Media -- Photos, letters, home movies, PDFs, biographies, reports, blog archives.

3. Physical Materials -- Paper files, binders, books, original photographs, correspondence.

4. Your Intellectual Work -- Biographies, proof arguments, stories, blog posts, memoirs, and research conclusions.

Each category may need a different destination.

Best Options for Preserving the Family Tree Itself

a)  RootsMagic:

  • Keep a current RootsMagic backup (.rmgb).
  • Export a GEDCOM periodically.
  • Store copies on:
  • An external hard drive
  • A second external drive kept in another location
  • A cloud service (Dropbox, OneDrive, Google Drive, etc.)
  • Create a simple text file named READ_ME_FIRST.txt explaining what the files are and how to open them.

b)  Ancestry

Your public or shared tree can continue to exist after your death if someone has access to the account. Consider:

  • Adding a trusted relative as a collaborator.
  • Leaving account access instructions with your estate documents.
  • Exporting a GEDCOM as an independent backup.

c)  MyHeritage

Similar approach:

  • Share the family site with trusted relatives.
  • Export a GEDCOM periodically.
  • Download important photos and documents in original resolution.

Free Long-Term Digital Preservation Options

a)  Internet Archive (https://archive.org)

This is one of the strongest options for preserving your written work. You can upload:

  • PDF ancestor sketches
  • Descendant reports
  • Family histories
  • Memoirs
  • StoryWorth book
  • Blog exports
  • Scanned letters
  • Home movies
Advantages:  Free; Publicly accessible; Searchable by Google; Widely used by researchers; 
Designed for long-term preservation

For someone with your volume of material, I would strongly recommend creating an Internet Archive collection such as:
  • Seaver Family History Collection
  • Genea-Musings Archive
  • Carringer and Allied Families Collection

b)  Preserving Your Blog

With nearly 20,000 posts, your blog is a major historical resource. Do this now:

  • Export the entire Blogger/WordPress blog.
  • Save the export file in multiple locations.
  • Create a PDF or HTML archive if possible.
  • Upload the archive to Internet Archive.
The Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine may already have copies, but you should not rely on that alone.

Organizations That May Accept Genealogical Collections

You are correct that many libraries decline large collections from private individuals. However, some repositories are interested if the material has regional or research value.

a)  Genealogical Societies.  Consider:

  • San Diego Genealogical Society
  • Chula Vista Genealogical Society
  • California Genealogical Society
  • New England Historic Genealogical Society
They may not take 60 linear feet of paper, but they might accept:
  • Published family histories
  • Research reports
  • Digital collections
  • Society newsletters
  • Lecture materials
c)  Local Historical Societies

Materials connected to specific places may be welcomed:
  • Chula Vista
  • San Diego
  • National City
  • Prince Edward County, Ontario
  • Mercer County, Pennsylvania
  • Louisa County, Iowa
  • Dodge County, Wisconsin
They are often more interested in photographs, local families, and community history than in generic genealogy files.

d)  FamilySearch

FamilySearch will not take your paper files, but you can contribute:

  • Memories (photos, documents, stories)
  • Source citations
  • Biographical sketches
  • Transcriptions
Because FamilySearch is a collaborative tree, your contributions can remain available to future researchers.

e)  Commercial and Subscription Platforms

  • Ancestry -- Good for sharing with relatives, but not ideal as the only preservation repository because access depends on the company and account status.
  • MyHeritage -- Similar strengths and limitations.
  • Forever.com -- A paid digital preservation service designed for long-term storage of photos, videos, and documents. Some genealogists use it as a “digital safe deposit box.”
  • Backblaze or iDrive -- Excellent for automatic cloud backup of your entire computer.

A Practical “Genealogical Executor” Plan

This is the part many researchers overlook.

Choose one or two people—perhaps a daughter, grandchild, cousin, or fellow genealogist—and formally designate them as your genealogical executor. Give them:

  • Passwords or a password manager emergency access
  • Locations of external drives
  • Instructions for RootsMagic
  • Instructions for blog export files
  • A list of what should be preserved publicly
  • A list of what may be discarded
Create a document titled:  Genealogical Legacy Instructions. Include:
  • Where the master tree is located
  • Where backups are stored
  • Which cloud accounts contain genealogy files
  • Which repositories should receive copies
  • Which relatives should receive family history books
  • What to do with paper files
What I Would Do If I Were in Your Situation

Given the scale of your collection, I would prioritize preservation over perfection.

a)  Priority 1 — Within the Next Month

  • Create fresh RootsMagic backup.
  • Export GEDCOM.
  • Back up all genealogy folders to two external drives.
  • Export your blog.
  • Write a one-page “What This Collection Contains” summary.
Priority 2 — Within Three Months
  • Upload your StoryWorth book to Internet Archive.
  • Upload the 500 ancestor sketches as PDFs.
  • Upload selected descendant reports.
  • Upload your AI-assisted biographies collection.
  • Upload important home movies.
Priority 3 — Within Six Months
  • Label physical boxes clearly.
  • Discard duplicate papers that have been digitized.
  • Create a simple inventory spreadsheet.
  • Identify one or two heirs interested in genealogy.
  • Share copies of key files with them now, not later.
One More Thought: Your Work Is Already More Valuable Than You Think

You wrote that libraries may not want the papers of a non-famous person. That is often true for unorganized paper collections. But historians and genealogists are rarely interested because someone was famous; they are interested because someone left behind organized, documented evidence about ordinary families. Your:
  • 500 sourced genealogical sketches
  • 500+ biographies and stories
  • digitized photographs
  • home movies
  • blog archive
  • proof arguments
  • descendant reports
…together form a substantial historical record of multiple American families across several states and generations.

The key is to make it easy for the next person to use. A well-organized digital archive with a clear inventory is far more likely to survive than 60 feet of unlabeled binders.

If you would like, I can also help you create a Genealogical Legacy Checklist and a one-page instruction sheet for your family that explains exactly what to do with your RootsMagic files, blog archive, photos, and research collection after your lifetime.

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

3)  A Google NotebookLM Video Overview of this post is in:  

4)  Is what I already have for the sketches, biographies, memoirs and stories "good enough?"  Frankly, I don't think so.  The genealogical sketches are not uniform in content and context.  The AI assisted ABC biographies, memoirs, and stories are not sourced and should be, are for individuals rather than couples, and have too much discussion material surrounding them.  Consequently, I have to do the biographies over again.

Is "Perfect" the enemy of the "Good or Fair" here?  My preference now is to write the biographies for the married couple, and include source citations to assertions. But that is more work!  The memoirs and stories can stand on their own.  

5)  I forgot to include the Google NotebookLM Video Overviews and Slide Shows in the discussion above, but they are available in my blog posts and on my YouTube channel.  They are OK where they are, but I should link them in the blog posts to the YouTube channel. 

6)  I have included many of my genealogical sketches as "Life Stories" in the FamilySearch Family Tree, but some may be out of date.  I may want to add the sourced biographies to FamilySearch Memories.  I could add the updated sourced biographies to my Ancestry and MyHeritage trees, along with links to memoirs, stories, transcriptions, etc.

7)  I have already done some of the recommended tasks (e.g., files on iDrive, GEDCOM file on Google Drive, StoryWorth book on Google Drive and Forever, photographs in Memories, videos on YouTube, some Genea-Musings posts on Wayback Machine). However, I still have ALL of the paper in bookcases, cabinets, binders and piles -- it will be a big bonfire and I'm feeling insecure about trashing 40 years of paper!

8)  I'm counting on Google/Blogger and FamilySearch to live "forever" without trashing my work, or at least until an archive of the body of work can be created and maintained.

9)  A genealogist's work seems to be never done - I just wish I knew who would carry it on!!

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

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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Ask AI: "Describe the Life of the Henry White Family in 1874 in East Killingly, Connecticut"

 I wondered if my AI Assistant Anthropic Claude could provide me with information about an ancestral family's life in 1874 in East Killingly, Connecticut.  My 2nd great-grandparents Henry and Amy (Oatley) White married in 1844, and had five living children in 1874, although Amy died in 1864. I posted an ABC Biography for Henry White in ABC Biography of #22 Henry Arnold White (1824-1885) of Rhode Island and Connecticut.

I asked Anthropic Claude to create a description of the Henry White family life and work in East Killingly, Connecticut in 1874, based on the biography and social history.

(AI NotebookLM infographic -- Life of the Henry White Family in 1874)

Here is the Anthropic Claude Sonnet 5 Medium response: 


Life of the Henry White Family in 1874 in East

 Killingly, Connecticut


Family Composition

By 1874, Henry Arnold White was approximately 50 years old, a man who had already lived through significant loss and reinvention. His first wife, Amy Frances (Oatley) White, had died in November 1864 of a strangulated hernia, leaving Henry a widower with five children ranging from about five to nineteen years old. Raising that many children alone for nearly two years, until his 1866 remarriage, would have required considerable support from extended family, older children, and the tight social fabric of the Baptist congregation.

His second wife, Almira Elizabeth (Taft) Winslow, brought her own history into the marriage. She was the daughter of Warren Taft and Almira O. Oatley—meaning Almira herself had Oatley family roots, connecting her by kinship to Henry's first wife's family. This wasn't unusual in small rural communities like Killingly, where the same surnames recur across generations of marriages within a limited geographic area. Almira had already been widowed once before marrying Henry; her first husband, George A. Winslow, died young (his gravestone dates indicate 1844-1864, meaning he died at only about twenty), leaving her with an infant son, George W. Winslow.

By 1874, Henry's household reflected a genuinely blended family: his own surviving children from his first marriage were largely grown and establishing independent lives, while Almira's son George (about 12) and Henry's youngest son from his first marriage, Frederick (about 14), remained at home. The household had just weathered the death of an infant son on 17 October 1873, born and died the same day—a loss that would have been especially painful for Almira, marking her second experience of infant or young death within her small family circle. Yet by December 1874, the household would welcome new life with Effie C. White's birth, offering some measure of renewal after successive losses.

Henry's older children, though no longer in the household, remained connected through the dense web of family visiting typical of the era. Ellen, married to William Henry Buck and living in Massachusetts by this point, represented the family's geographic spread beyond Killingly, likely tied to Buck's own economic opportunities. Julia (Richman) and Emily (Barstow) had married local men and probably remained within visiting distance, continuing to weave into the extended kinship network that defined rural New England social life—grandchildren beginning to arrive, holiday gatherings, and the mutual obligations of family that structured much of daily existence.

Work and Economic Context

Henry's occupational trajectory—from independent weaver in 1850, to "manufacturer" in 1860 (suggesting some position of authority or ownership within textile production), to cotton mill operative by 1870, and eventually carpenter by 1880—traces a broader pattern experienced by countless New England artisans during the nineteenth century. The rise of large-scale factory production increasingly displaced independent craftsmen, forcing skilled workers like Henry to either integrate into wage labor within the mills or shift trades entirely.

1874 fell within the difficult years following the Panic of 1873, a financial crisis that triggered a prolonged economic depression lasting into the late 1870s. Textile mills throughout New England, including those in Killingly, faced reduced demand, wage cuts, and periodic layoffs during this period. If Henry was still working in a cotton mill in 1874, his family would have felt the pressure of economic uncertainty—reduced hours, unstable wages, and the general anxiety that gripped industrial communities during this depression. This context may help explain his eventual shift to carpentry: skilled trade work sometimes offered more stability than factory employment during economic downturns, or he may have been forced out of mill work as operations contracted.

Almira's domestic labor during this period would have been extensive and physically demanding, even setting aside the emotional weight of pregnancy and infant loss occurring within the same year. Managing a household with two adolescent boys, preparing for a new baby, and likely contributing to the family's income through activities like taking in sewing, laundry, or boarders—common supplemental income strategies for mill town wives—would have filled her days entirely.

Education

Connecticut had established one of the more advanced public education systems in New England by the 1870s, with increasing standardization following state education reforms of the 1850s and 1860s. Killingly's school district would have operated on a graded system by this point, moving away from the older one-room schoolhouse model of Henry's own childhood toward more structured age-based classrooms, particularly in the more populated mill village areas.

For Frederick and George, both approaching working age, education in 1874 existed in tension with economic necessity. Connecticut had begun implementing early compulsory education laws, but enforcement was inconsistent, and many working-class families still pulled children from school once they reached their early teens to contribute to household income—either through mill work or apprenticeships. Whether Frederick continued his education through 1874 or had already entered the workforce remains uncertain from available records, though his listing in the 1870 census as attending school suggests the family valued at least basic education for their children.

Community and Religious Life

The Baptist church remained the anchor of community life for families like the Whites, but the 1870s saw significant currents moving through American Protestant religious culture that would have touched Killingly's congregation. The temperance movement was gaining considerable momentum during this decade, with Baptist congregations often serving as centers of temperance advocacy. Women's involvement in these reform movements was expanding, giving Almira and other mill town wives avenues for social engagement and moral authority beyond the domestic sphere.

Killingly by 1874 had developed into a substantial mill village complex, with East Killingly representing one of several distinct textile communities within the town alongside Danielson and other villages along the Quinebaug and Five Mile Rivers. This concentration of mill work meant the community had a particular character—less purely agricultural than Henry's boyhood experience, more shaped by factory bells, shift schedules, and the shared rhythms of industrial labor. Irish and French-Canadian immigrant families were increasingly arriving in Connecticut mill towns during this period seeking textile work, gradually diversifying communities that had previously been more homogeneously Yankee Protestant. Whether this demographic shift had reached East Killingly specifically by 1874 is uncertain, but it represented the broader transformation occurring throughout Connecticut's Quinebaug Valley mill towns.

Entertainment and Fun

National context shaped local entertainment in subtle ways during 1874. This was the Reconstruction era, with newspapers carrying stories of political turmoil in the South, debates over Reconstruction policy, and the lingering aftermath of the Civil War, which would have been a mere decade in the past—recent enough that veterans and their families throughout Killingly still carried its memory. Reading circulating newspapers and discussing national politics likely formed part of adult social interaction, particularly for men gathering after church or during rare leisure moments.

For the White family specifically, 1874 entertainment would have been colored by the emotional rhythm of loss and expected birth. Community support during bereavement—visits, shared meals, prayer—would have been extended to the family after their October 1873 loss, drawing on the mutual aid networks that rural and mill communities relied upon. As Almira's pregnancy progressed through 1874 toward Effie's December birth, the family may have experienced both anxiety (given their recent loss) and anticipation.

Broader entertainment options for New England families by the mid-1870s included occasional traveling entertainments, agricultural fairs (Windham County held regional fairs celebrating farm produce and livestock, which mill families with rural roots like the Whites might still attend), and the growing availability of affordable printed material—story papers, almanacs, and religious tracts—that provided reading entertainment even for working-class households with limited leisure time.

The centennial anniversary of American independence was approaching in 1876, and by 1874 communities throughout New England, including likely Killingly, would have been beginning to anticipate and plan for centennial celebrations—a source of civic pride and communal activity that added a layer of forward-looking excitement to community life during this otherwise economically difficult period.

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A note on sources: The family composition, ages, and Henry's occupation are drawn directly from your genealogical sketch. The descriptions of work, schooling, church life, and social customs reflect well-documented general patterns of rural Connecticut life in the1870s, since no specific records of the White family's daily activities in 1874 survive in your file.

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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. Henry and Amy (Oatley) White are my 2nd great-grandparents through their daughter Julia E. White (1848-1912), 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 150 years ago. This description of their family life in 1874 Connecticut 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 White family in 1874 Connecticut 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


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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