Saturday, April 25, 2026

ABC Biography of the Jeremiah and Allethia (Pickrell) McKnew Family of Maryland and DC

Using the ABC method described in Using Artificial Intelligence In the Ancestor Biography Creation (ABC) Process -- Updated, enhanced by further developments, here is another ancestor couple biography using the Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 AI tool.

1) The genealogical sketch for the family of my wife's 2nd great-grandparents Jeremiah and Allethia (Pickrell) McKnew, including family members, record abstracts and sources, is in 

Genealogical Sketch of the Jeremiah McKnew (1804-????) and Frances Allethia Pickrell (1810-1845) Family of Maryland and District of Columbia.



(AI NotebookLM Infographic - Jeremiah and Allethia (Pickrell) McKnew Biography)

2) For the Claude AI biography, I attached a PDF of the genealogical sketch for the specific ancestors using the plus (+) icon, and then prompted the AI tool with:  "You are an expert genealogist and family historian. Please create a biography based on information in the attached file for the Jeremiah and Allethia (Pickrell) McKnew family. Include parents, siblings, spouses and children (with birth and death dates and places). Summarize life events, add historical events as appropriate, but do not add or embellish any extra genealogical details. Use section headings. Expand the information in each section to add more details. The tone should be engaging and suitable for family members."

3)  The Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 biography (lightly edited for accuracy) is: 

The McKnew Family of Maryland and Washington, D.C. -- A Family Biography

Jeremiah McKnew (c. 1804–after 1850) and Frances Allethia Pickrell (c. 1810–1845)

Introduction

This is the story of two families rooted in the rich soil of Prince George's County, Maryland, whose lives intertwined in Washington, D.C. in the spring of 1829. Jeremiah McKnew and Frances Allethia Pickrell were married on 26 March 1829 and went on to build a family of six children in the Maryland countryside. Their story unfolded against the backdrop of a young and growing nation—a time when Prince George's County was still largely agricultural, Washington, D.C. was a city still finding its footing, and ordinary families worked the land, raised their children, and faced hardship with resilience.

Though neither Jeremiah nor Allethia left behind diaries or letters that have survived to our day, the census records, vital records, marriage bonds, and—most poignantly—two tiny scraps of paper found in a family Bible tell us enough to reconstruct a picture of their lives and the family they created together.

Jeremiah McKnew: Origins and Early Life

Jeremiah McKnew was born around 1804 in Prince George's County, Maryland, into a family with deep roots in the region. He was the son of Nathan McKnew (1771–1834) and Nathan's first wife, Mary (c. 1780–c. 1806), who had married around 1800 in Prince George's County. The county at that time was a landscape of tobacco farms, small mills, and rural communities, and the McKnew family would have been part of this working agricultural world.

Tragically, Jeremiah's mother Mary died before 10 February 1806, when Jeremiah was still a toddler of about two years old. His father Nathan soon remarried—on 10 February 1806 in Montgomery County, Maryland—wedding Jennet "Jane" Prather, who would become stepmother to Jeremiah and his siblings. Growing up with both full and half-siblings, Jeremiah was part of a large and lively household.

Jeremiah's Siblings: Children of Nathan McKnew and Mary

Jeremiah had two full siblings, born of Nathan and his first wife Mary:
  • Samuel McKnew, born about 1802 in Prince George's, Maryland. Samuel married a woman named Mary before 1831 in Maryland, though further details of his life have not been found.
  • Basil McKnew, born about 1805 in Prince George's, Maryland. Basil married Caroline Duvall on 28 September 1831 in Washington, District of Columbia.
Half-Siblings: Children of Nathan McKnew and Jennet Prather

After remarrying, Nathan McKnew and his second wife Jennet (Prather) had a larger family. Jeremiah's half-siblings were:
  • Thomas McKnew, born before 5 June 1807 at Muirkirk, Prince George's, Maryland. Thomas married Martha Maria Wall on 23 November 1827 in Prince George's County. He died on 15 May 1856 in Beltsville, Prince George's County.
  • Charles McKnew, born about 1809 in Prince George's, Maryland. Charles married a woman named Sarah before 1830, and died before 1850 in Maryland.
  • Rachel McKnew, born about 1812 in Prince George's, Maryland. Rachel married Joseph King on 28 February 1835 in Baltimore, Maryland.
  • George McKnew, born about 1820 in Prince George's, Maryland. No further record of George has been found.
  • Nathan R. McKnew, born 30 October 1823 in Baltimore, Maryland. Nathan R. was married four times over the course of his life: first to Catherine Stevens on 12 April 1844; then to Milka Baker on 9 February 1845; then to Mary A. Wonn on 16 November 1847; and finally to Mary Ann Wilkerson Riggs on 2 September 1855, all in Baltimore. He died on 30 December 1890 in Baltimore—a long life of 67 years.
  • William McKnew, born about 1825 in Prince George's, Maryland. William died in October 1882 at the age of 57 in Prince George's County.
  • John Thomas McKnew, born about 1826 in Prince George's, Maryland. No further record has been found.
The Nathan McKnew family remained in Prince George's County, Maryland through at least 1834, the year of Nathan's death. Despite the size of the household and the passage of time, it is clear that Prince George's County was very much the McKnew heartland in these early decades of the nineteenth century.

Nathan McKnew's Will and Its Impact on Jeremiah

Nathan McKnew died on 27 March 1834 in Prince George's County. In his 1832 will, he made plain his feelings about the sons of his first marriage: Jeremiah, Samuel, and Basil each received a bequest of exactly five dollars—"and no more," as the will stated. The property, both real and personal, passed to the children of his second marriage. It is a stark reminder that blended family dynamics were as complex in the nineteenth century as they are today. Perhaps the three sons by the first marriage had been given a portion of the estate before Nathan’s death.

Yet even as he was excluded from his father's estate, Jeremiah appears in the estate account as a creditor: he was paid twenty dollars for house rent his deceased father had owed him. This small detail tells us that by 1834, Jeremiah was already an established householder in his own right—a man who rented property and kept accounts, even if he had little to show from his inheritance.

Frances Allethia Pickrell: Origins and Early Life

Frances Allethia Pickrell was born around 1810, probably in Prince George's County, Maryland, into the Pickrell and Prather families, both of which had roots in the region. She was the daughter of Benjamin Pickrell (c. 1780–c. 1845) and Allethia Prather (c. 1786–1841), who had married around 1802 in Prince George's County.

The family had strong connections to Washington, D.C. from at least 1804, the year Allethia's older sister Catharine was born in the capital. It appears the Pickrell family was among the early residents of the young city, perhaps drawn by the opportunities of a rapidly growing federal town. Benjamin and Allethia's family was a small one, with only two known children reaching adulthood.

Allethia's Sibling
  • Catharine Pickrell, born 1804 in Washington, District of Columbia. Catharine married Elijah Ourand on 20 November 1823 in Washington, D.C., and lived a long life, dying on 17 October 1888 in Washington, D.C., at about 84 years of age.
It is notable that Allethia's mother shared her name—both mother and daughter were named Allethia—a practice of honoring family names that was common in this era. This shared name has occasionally caused confusion in genealogical research, but it also speaks to the closeness and tradition within the Pickrell-Prather family.

A remarkable family connection: Allethia Prather, Allethia's mother, was the daughter (or close relative) of the Prather family—the same family as Jennet Prather, who had married Jeremiah's father Nathan McKnew. This suggests that Jeremiah and Allethia may have grown up in overlapping family circles, and their 1829 marriage may have been as much a union of neighboring families as it was a romance between two young people.

Marriage and Life Together

On 26 March 1829, Jeremiah McKnew and Frances Allethia Pickrell were married in Washington, District of Columbia. Jeremiah was about 25 years old; Allethia was about 19. The marriage record survives today in the District of Columbia marriage registers, a testament to the careful record-keeping of the young capital's courts.

The couple made their home in Prince George's County, Maryland, likely in the rural areas where Jeremiah had grown up. In the 1830s and 1840s, Prince George's County was a working agricultural county north and east of Washington—a land of farms, unpaved roads, and tight-knit communities. Jeremiah appears in the 1850 census as a laborer, suggesting the family worked hard for their living, likely on the land or in service to nearby farms and estates.

Together, Jeremiah and Allethia had six children over the course of fourteen years, from 1831 to about 1842. Their household, as glimpsed in the 1840 U.S. Federal Census, was a full and lively one.

The 1840 Census Household

The 1840 United States Federal Census records "Jerry" McKnew's household in Prince George's County, Maryland. At that time, the family included:
  • One male aged 30–40 (Jeremiah himself, then about 36 years old)
  • One female aged 20–30 (Allethia, then about 30 years old)
  • One male aged 5–10 (likely their eldest son, Jeremiah Jr., then about 9)
  • Two females aged 5–10 (likely daughters Catherine and Elizabeth)
  • Three males under age 5 (likely including son Elijah, born in 1836, and two younger children, perhaps not sons of Jeremiah and Allethia)
The household was clearly busy with young children—five or six children aged ten and under—and Allethia, still in her twenties, was at the heart of it all.

Children of Jeremiah McKnew and Frances Allethia Pickrell


Jeremiah and Allethia's six known children were born between 1831 and about 1842. Several of their descendants went on to live fascinating lives spanning from Maryland to California.
  • Jeremiah McKnew (February 1831 – 27 March 1860):  Their eldest son, named for his father, was born in February 1831 in Prince George's County. He married Rosalie B. Taylor on 29 October 1852 in Washington, D.C., and the couple had two children. Jeremiah Jr. died young, on 27 March 1860 in Washington, D.C., at only 29 years of age. It is worth noting that some family trees have incorrectly attributed his 1860 death date to his father; the records make clear they are two distinct individuals.
  • Catherine Louisa McKnew (18 October 1832 – 2 October 1910): Catherine Louisa was born on 18 October 1832, probably in Prince George's County, Maryland. She married Elias Thomas on 9 December 1852 in Powhatan, Baltimore County, Maryland, and together they raised a large family of nine children. Catherine lived a long and full life, dying on 2 October 1910 in Pikesville, Baltimore County, Maryland, just two weeks short of her 78th birthday.
  • Elizabeth Jane McKnew (1835 – 1901): Elizabeth Jane was born in 1835, probably in Prince George's County. She married Andrew Aitcheson on 25 August 1853 in Laurel, Prince George's County, Maryland, and the couple had eleven children. Elizabeth Jane died in 1901 in Alexandria, Virginia—one of several McKnew children who eventually settled in the Northern Virginia and Alexandria area.
  • Elijah Pickrell McKnew (29 March 1836 – 4 April 1912): Born on 29 March 1836 in Prince George's County, Elijah Pickrell McKnew bears his mother's maiden name as his middle name—a touching tribute to the Pickrell family. Elijah's life took the most dramatic turn of all the siblings: he traveled west to California, where he married Jane Whittle on 12 November 1865 in Tuolumne County, California. The couple had eleven children. He died on 4 April 1912 in San Francisco, having lived nearly 76 years—well into the twentieth century.  Elijah's migration to California was almost certainly part of the great Gold Rush era movement of the late 1840s and 1850s. Whether he went to seek his fortune in the goldfields or arrived after the rush had peaked, his decision to settle permanently in California made him the most geographically adventurous of the McKnew children.
  • Benjamin Pickrell McKnew (25 December 1840 – 14 October 1905): Benjamin Pickrell McKnew was born on Christmas Day, 25 December 1840, in Prince George's County, Maryland, and like his brother Elijah, carries the Pickrell surname as a middle name. Benjamin stayed closer to home: he married Diana Houston Aitcheson on 30 November 1865 in Prince George's County—the same county where he had been born. The couple had six children. Benjamin died on 14 October 1905, also in Prince George's County, at 64 years of age. He is the only one of the children to have remained in his birthplace throughout his life.
  • Maria Louise McKnew (c. 1842 – 14 February 1885):  Maria Louise was born around 1842, probably in Prince George's County, the youngest of Jeremiah and Allethia's children. She married Peter Aitcheson on 25 December 1866 in Prince George's County, Maryland—notably, the Aitcheson family also appears in the marriages of her siblings Elizabeth Jane and Benjamin's wife Diana, suggesting the McKnew and Aitcheson families were closely linked in their community. Maria and Peter had five children. Maria Louise died on 14 February 1885 in Alexandria, Virginia, at about 43 years of age.
The Death of Frances Allethia McKnew

Frances Allethia (Pickrell) McKnew died on 3 May 1845 in Prince George's County, Maryland. She was about 35 years old. Her youngest child, Maria Louise, was only about three years old; her eldest, Jeremiah Jr., was just 14. The loss of a young mother to a household of six children was a devastating blow—as it was to so many families in an era before modern medicine, when childbirth complications, infections, and illness claimed women's lives with heartbreaking frequency.

What makes Allethia's death date and her parentage known to us today is a remarkable survival story. During a visit to the home of Louise and Elizabeth Marshall—cousins in the McKnew line—in Alexandria, Virginia in 1998, family researcher Randy Seaver was reviewing family papers and an old family Bible. As he turned the pages, two tiny scraps of paper—each roughly one inch by two inches—fluttered to the floor. He picked them up and read, in handwriting from the nineteenth century:
"Allethia MacNew the daughter of Benjamin & Allethia Pickerell deceased May 3d 1845."

"Elizabeth Barnes the mother of Benjamin Pickerell deceased June 2d 1825."
These two small scraps of paper are the only source we have for Allethia's death date and her parentage. The careful hand that wrote them—possibly a family member recording the deaths for posterity—preserved information that might otherwise have been lost entirely. The scraps were placed back in the Bible, and no photograph was taken of them. Their existence is a vivid reminder of how fragile our connection to the past can be, and how much family history is preserved in the most unexpected places.

Jeremiah McKnew: Later Life and Second Marriage

Widowed with six children in 1845—the youngest barely a toddler—Jeremiah McKnew eventually remarried. By 1848, he had wed a woman named Sarah (last name unknown), whose maiden name and parentage remain unknown. The marriage likely took place in Prince George's County, Maryland.

Jeremiah and Sarah had one known child together:
  • Horace McKnew, born in 1848 in Prince George's County, Maryland. Tragically, Horace died before 5 December 1850 in Washington, D.C., still an infant.
The 1850 Census

By the time of the 1850 United States Federal Census, Jeremiah and Sarah had moved from Prince George's County to Washington, D.C., residing west of the 7th Street Turnpike. The census enumerator recorded the household as follows:
  • Jeremiah McNew – age 41, male, laborer, born Maryland; noted as over 20 years old and unable to read or write
  • Sarah McNew – age 26, female, born Maryland; noted as over 20 years old and unable to read or write
  • Benjamin McNew – age 9, male, born Maryland (his son by Allethia)
  • Maria McNew – age 8, female, born Maryland (his daughter by Allethia)
  • Horrace McNew – age 1 year and 8 months, male, born Maryland; annotated as deceased
The 1850 census offers a poignant snapshot of Jeremiah's life in his early forties: a working man, unable to read or write, with a young second wife, two of his children by Allethia still living at home, and the recent grief of an infant son's death. It also reveals that by 1850, at least four of his older children by Allethia—Jeremiah Jr., Catherine Louisa, Elizabeth Jane, and Elijah—were no longer in his household, suggesting they had found places in other homes or were already beginning to make their own way in the world.

Jeremiah's Death

Jeremiah McKnew died sometime after 1850 and most likely before the 1860 Federal Census was taken. No death certificate, burial record, or probate documentation has yet been found for either Jeremiah or his second wife Sarah. The exact circumstances of his final years, where he died, and where he is buried remain unknown. He was likely still in his forties or early fifties at the time of his death.

Legacy and Family Connections

Despite the hardships they faced—the early death of Allethia, the modest means of the household, the inability of both Jeremiah and his second wife Sarah to read or write—the children of Jeremiah and Allethia McKnew went on to build families of their own spanning four states and the continent from Maryland to California. Between just the six children, there were at least 44 known grandchildren for Jeremiah and Allethia.

Several of their children's families clustered in the Alexandria, Virginia and Prince George's County areas, keeping close to their roots. The Aitcheson family appears repeatedly—in the marriages of Elizabeth Jane, Benjamin, and Maria Louise—suggesting strong community bonds in mid-nineteenth century Prince George's County. Meanwhile, Elijah Pickrell McKnew's journey to California represents the restless westward energy of his generation, the same impulse that drew hundreds of thousands of Americans toward new lives in the 1840s and 1850s.

The McKnew family story is one that will resonate with many families who trace their roots to Maryland and the District of Columbia: working people, shaped by the land, bound together by community, and carrying their family names forward through generations of children who spread across an expanding nation.

Sources and Research Notes

The information in this biography is drawn from the following primary sources:
  • District of Columbia Marriages, 1811–1950, FamilySearch: marriage record of Jeremiah McNew and Allethia Pickrell, 26 March 1829.
  • 1840 United States Federal Census, Prince George's County, Maryland, Jerry McKnew household; National Archives Microfilm Publication M704, Roll 169.
  • Marshall Family Bible: two handwritten loose paper scraps transcribed in 1998 by Randy Seaver during a visit to the home of Louise and Elizabeth Marshall, Alexandria, Virginia.
  • 1850 United States Federal Census, Washington, D.C., Page 261A, Dwelling and Family #30, Jeremiah McKnew household; National Archives Microfilm Publication M432, Roll 57.

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

4) An Audio Overview (essentially a podcast) created by the Google NotebookLM AI tool) describing and celebrating the lives of the Jeremiah and Allethia (Pickrell) McKnew family can be heard here (click on "Audio Overview" and wait for it to load).

5)  The Video Overview discussing the Jeremiah and Allethia (Pickrell) McKnew family created by the Google NotebookLM AI tool is:  


6)  The Slide Deck produced by Google NotebookLM was incorporated into a Google Slides file, and the created Google Vids presentation is below:  


7)  I edited the Claude biography text to correct minor inconsistencies and errors. Every large language model (LLM) AI tool writes descriptive text much better than I can write. I was an aerospace engineer in my former life, and my research reports and genealogical sketches reflect "just the facts gleaned from my research." The AI tools are very perceptive, insightful and create readable text in seconds, including local and national historical events and social history detail when requested.

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

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

The URL for this post is:  

Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

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

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




Researchers are encouraged to seek out further records in the Prince George's County land and probate records, the Maryland State Archives, and Washington, D.C. vital records to fill the gaps that remain in this family story—particularly the death dates and burial locations of Jeremiah and Sarah McKnew, and the origins of Sarah herself.

— End of Family Biography —

No comments: