I wrote an AI-assisted ABC biography for my wife's great-grandparents Nicholas Brocke (1855-1938) and Anna Greiser (1859-1936) in ABC Biography of John Nicholas Brocke (1855-1938) and Anna Grieser (1859-1936) Family of Idaho based on my genealogical research over 38 years.
I wondered what Nicholas Brocke might say in a life memoir told to his grandchildren in 1937.
1) I requested Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 to create a memoir told by John Kemp about his life in 1794. The prompt was: "Please write a life memoir for Nicholas Brocke based on the attached biography, as he might tell to his grandchildren in 1937."
2) The AI Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 memoir (edited for accuracy and completeness) is:
My Story: As Told by Nicholas Brocke to His
Grandchildren
A Memoir Shared in Kendrick, Idaho - 1937
Well now, gather 'round children, and let me tell you about the life I've lived. I'm an old man now—eighty-two years old—and your grandmother Anna passed last year, God rest her soul. But I've got stories enough to fill a book, and I want you to know where you come from before I join her.
The Early Days: A Michigan Boy
I was born on January 24, 1855, in Michigan. Now, I know that sounds like ancient history to you young ones, but that's how it was. My parents—your great-grandparents—were Johann Heinrich Brocke, though everyone called him Peter, and Christina Webber. They weren't born Americans like you. No sir, they came all the way from Herbede, Prussia—that's in Germany—back in 1849, before I was even thought of.
They landed in Baltimore, Maryland, both of them young and single, not knowing a soul in this country. Can you imagine that kind of courage? They met there, fell in love, and married around 1850. My father, he was a worker, I'll tell you that. First, he worked three years for the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad—hard, dangerous work laying tracks and keeping the trains running. Then he spent three years up in the Lake Superior copper mines. That was brutal work, going deep into the earth every day, but it paid better than most jobs.
I had brothers and sisters, of course. My older sister Catharine was born in 1851 in Wheeling, Virginia right on the Ohio River. Then came me in 1855. After me came Franklin, then Charles—your Uncle Charles who's still here in Idaho with us—and finally little Mary, though we lost her at an early age.
Nebraska Territory: Growing Up on the Frontier
When I was just a little boy, maybe three years old, Pa decided we'd had enough of mines and cities. We moved to Iowa first, then in 1858—I would've been three—we pushed on to northwestern Nebraska. Now, children, when I say Nebraska, you need to understand it wasn't even a state yet. It was Nebraska Territory, wild and wide open. We settled in Cedar County, in a place that got named St. James, and later they named the whole precinct after us—Brocke Precinct. Made Pa proud, that did.
I remember that 1860 census taker coming around. I was just five years old, but I remember because it was such a fuss. They wrote our name down as "Brookes" and listed me as "Nickolas." My sister Catharine was twelve by then, and baby Charles was only one. The census man asked Pa all sorts of questions—how much property he owned, where we were born. Pa told him he had $700 in personal property. Doesn't sound like much now, but for a farmer starting out on the frontier, that was something.
By 1870, when I was fifteen, I was already working on the farm alongside Pa. The census that year shows we had built up quite a bit—Pa had $2,500 in real estate and $2,390 in personal property. That's what hard work and good land will do for you. I was getting my education in the public schools when I could, but farm work came first. That's just how it was.
Meeting Your Grandmother
Now here's where the story gets interesting for you children, because this is where your grandmother enters the picture.
Anna Grieser—oh, she was something special. She was born November 17, 1859, in St. Louis, Missouri. Her parents, Ignatius and Katherine Grieser, were German immigrants too, from Baden-Württemberg. Ignatius was a skilled carpenter, and they did well in St. Louis. Anna was the oldest of what would eventually be seven children, so she learned early how to take care of little ones—good practice for our own brood, as it turned out!
The Grieser family moved to Cedar County, Nebraska, sometime in the 1870s. I don't recall exactly when I first laid eyes on Anna, but I knew pretty quick she was the girl for me. She was smart, strong, and had that quiet determination you need to make it on the frontier. Her father died in 1879, poor soul, but by then Anna and I were already married.
We got married on April 24, 1877, right there in Cedar County. I was twenty-two years old, and Anna was just seventeen. I know that seems young to you modern folks, but out on the frontier, you didn't wait around. You needed a partner to build a life with, and Anna was the best partner a man could ask for.
The Journey West to Idaho
Not long after we married, we made the biggest decision of our lives. Anna's parents Ignatz and Katherine and all Anna's brothers and sisters—all six of them—decided to head west to Idaho Territory. It was 1878, and Idaho was about as wild as you could get. We talked it over, Anna and I, and decided we'd go too. Why not? We were young, strong, and ready for adventure.
We packed everything we owned onto an immigrant train. Can you picture it? All of us—me and Anna, her parents, her brothers Frank, Adolph, and Charles, her sisters Amelia, Katherine, and Lizzie—all heading into the unknown together. The train ride itself was an adventure, I'll tell you. Days and days of rattling along, sleeping sitting up, eating whatever we'd packed or could buy at stops along the way.
When we finally got to Idaho and made our way to what would become Kendrick, it was beautiful country. Mountains, forests, rich soil—but wild. There were hardly any people, just a few settlers scattered here and there. I staked a claim for 160 acres of land. That's what the government allowed—160 acres if you'd work it and improve it. And work it we did!
Building Our Farm
Those first years were hard, children. Harder than any of you have ever known. We had to clear the land, build a cabin, get crops in the ground—and your grandmother was pregnant with our son John that whole first year. He was born February 6, 1878, right here in Kendrick. First of our eight children, born in Idaho Territory before it was even a state!
At first, we settled on land about nine miles south of Moscow. I farmed it for ten years, getting better at it every year, learning what crops worked in this soil, what the weather would do. We grew grains, we tried fruit trees, and I discovered white navy beans grew real well. Those beans were worth their weight in gold to us—I could trade them at the local stores for whatever we needed. Money was scarce, but beans? We had plenty of those!
In 1888, I made a decision that proved to be a good one. I sold that first farm and bought 160 acres three and a half miles west of Kendrick. That's where we've been ever since, and that's the farm you children know. That June, I entered my claim officially, and I set about making it into something special.
A Modern Farm
Now, I wasn't content to just do things the old way. I wanted to make our farm as modern and efficient as possible. I built us a good, solid house—not fancy, but comfortable and well-built. I put up large barns for the animals and equipment. But here's what I was really proud of: I installed a pumping outfit.
You children take water for granted, but back then, most farms relied on wells you had to pump by hand or streams you had to carry water from. Not me. I got a pumping system that brought water right to the house and could pump it all over the farm wherever we needed it for irrigation. The neighbors thought I was crazy, spending money on such a contraption, but it paid for itself many times over. Those irrigated fields produced crops like you wouldn't believe!
I grew both grain and fruit, and I made sure everything on the place looked neat and well-kept. A man's farm tells you what kind of man he is, and I wanted people to see that Nicholas Brocke was practical, progressive, and took pride in his work.
Our Family Grows
Your grandmother and I, we were blessed with eight children. Eight! And every single one of them survived to adulthood, which is a miracle when you think about how many families lost little ones back then.
After John came Frank in 1879, born right there in Genesee. Then Etta in 1881—she was born in Oregon, of all places. I think we were visiting and I was looking at some land there, I can't quite recall now. Then came Caroline in 1883, and Amelia in 1884. Both Idaho girls. Joseph came along in 1888, then Charles in 1892, and finally Nicholas—we named him after me—in 1894.
We raised all of them in the Catholic faith. Every Saturday night we'd get cleaned up and on Sunday morning go to Mass, and we had the children baptized proper. We taught them to work hard, respect others, and do their duty. And they've all turned out fine, every one of them. Started their own families, worked hard, made us proud.
Your mothers and fathers—John, Frank, Etta, Caroline, Amelia, Joseph, Charles, and Nicholas—they all helped build this farm when they were young. Even the little ones had chores. We all worked together, and that's how we made it.
Being Part of the Community
I never believed a man should just keep to himself. We're all in this together, building communities and making life better for everyone. So I got involved in local affairs.
I served as school trustee here in Kendrick, making sure the local children had a decent school to attend and good teachers to learn from. I also served as highway commissioner, which meant making sure the roads were passable—and believe me, that was no small task in the early days! Roads would turn to mud in spring, get rutted in summer, freeze in winter. Keeping them in decent shape took real work.
I joined the Knights of Pythias fraternity and the Woodmen of the World too. Those organizations did good work helping members when times were tough, and they were a way for men to socialize and support each other. Many's the meeting I attended, and later, when I got older and couldn't farm as hard anymore, I worked as the janitor at the lodge hall. Kept me busy and useful.
Politically, I've always been a Democrat. Always believed the Democratic party stood for the working man, the farmer, the immigrant trying to make good. Some folks around here are Republicans, and that's fine—we can disagree and still be neighbors. That's what makes America great.
The Later Years
By 1910, I'd paid off the mortgage on the farm. That was a proud day, let me tell you. Owning your land free and clear—that's real security. The census taker that year noted it down: "owns farm free of mortgage." Those words meant everything to us.
As I got older, I couldn't work the fields like I used to. My back wasn't what it was, my hands got stiff, my energy wasn't the same. So I took easier work—that janitor job at the lodge hall I mentioned. It wasn't much, but it kept me active and around people. Your grandmother and I, we lived comfortably. By 1930, our house was worth $2,500, and we had everything we needed.
Losing My Anna
Last year—1936—was the hardest year of my life. Your grandmother Anna was forgetful and took sick with influenza. She was seventy-six years old, and her body just couldn't fight it off. She passed away on March 19, right here in Kendrick.
Fifty-nine years we were married. Fifty-nine years! She was my partner in everything—building the farm, raising the children, making a life here in Idaho. She was only seventeen when I married her, just a girl really, but she grew into the strongest woman I ever knew. She never complained, even when things were hard. She worked alongside me, kept the house, raised eight children, tended the garden, cooked endless meals, nursed us through sicknesses—she did it all.
When I had to give information for her death certificate, I could barely speak. They asked me her age, her birthplace, the cause of death. The words stuck in my throat. They buried her in American Ridge Cemetery in Juliaetta, and part of me went into that grave with her.
What I've Learned
So here I am, eighty-two years old, sitting here in Kendrick, Idaho, telling you children my story. I've lived through things you can barely imagine. I was born before the Civil War. I remember when Idaho was still a territory. I've seen the railroad come through, the telephone wires go up, the automobile replace the horse and wagon. The world has changed beyond recognition.
But some things don't change. Hard work still matters. Family still matters. Doing your duty and being true to your word still matters. Your grandmother and I came here with nothing but our youth and our determination. We built a farm from raw land. We raised eight children to be good people. We helped build a community where there was only wilderness.
I'm a self-made man—that's what they wrote about me in a book back in 1899, and I suppose it's true. But I didn't do it alone. I had your grandmother beside me every step of the way, and I had good neighbors, good friends, and most important of all, faith in God and in the future.
You children have it easier than we did, and that's good—that's how it should be. Every generation should have it a little better than the last. But don't forget where you came from. You come from people who weren't afraid of hard work, who crossed oceans and continents to make a better life, who turned wilderness into farmland, who built something from nothing.
Remember your great-grandparents from Prussia who had the courage to come to America. Remember your grandmother Anna, who came west on an immigrant train when she was barely eighteen. Remember that you're part of a family that doesn't give up, that works hard, that takes care of each other.
And remember me, old Nicholas Brocke, who planted apple trees he knew he might not live to see bear fruit, who dug irrigation ditches that would water fields for generations, who built a farm that will feed your children and your children's children.
That's my story, children. That's where you come from. Make me proud. Make your grandmother proud. Work hard, be kind, and when you're my age, you'll have your own stories to tell your grandchildren.
Now, who wants to help old Grandpa walk out to look at the fields one more time? These old legs aren't what they used to be, but I can still appreciate a good stand of wheat when I see one.
Nicholas Brocke passed away on December 14, 1938, in Lewiston, Idaho, just sixteen months after sharing these memories. He was laid to rest beside his beloved Anna in American Ridge Cemetery, where they remain together still.
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3) The Video Overview of Nicholas Brocke's memoir, created by the Google NotebookLM AI tool, is:
Links to my blog posts about using Artificial Intelligence are on my Randy's AI and Genealogy page. Links to AI information and articles about Artificial Intelligence in Genealogy by other genealogists are on my AI and Genealogy Compendium page.
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