Saturday, April 11, 2026

ABC Biography of John Charles and Maria (Beamish) Paul of Ireland and San Francisco

Using the ABC method described in Using Artificial Intelligence In the Ancestor Biography Creation (ABC) Process, 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 John Charles and Maria (Beamish) Paul, including family members, record abstracts and sources, is in Genealogical Sketch of the John Charles and Maria (Beamish) Paul Family of Ireland and San Francisco.  

(AI NotebookLM Infographic - John and Maria Paul 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 John Charles and Maria (Beamish) Paul 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: 



A Family History

John Charles Paul & Maria Beamish

1823–1909 · From Ireland and Newfoundland to San Francisco


Introduction

This is the story of two immigrants who found each other in the bustling port city of New Bedford, Massachusetts, and together built a family that spanned a continent. John Charles Paul, a cooper's son from the rocky shores of Newfoundland, and Maria T. Beamish, a young woman who had crossed the Atlantic from Ireland, married in 1852 and spent the next three decades forging a life together — first in New Bedford, then in Chicago, and finally amid the dramatic hills of San Francisco. Their journey mirrors one of the great American stories of the nineteenth century: ordinary working people, shaped by hardship and hope, planting roots in the New World.

The nineteenth century was one of the most turbulent and transformative periods in American history. During the years John and Maria were raising their family, the nation fought a devastating Civil War, completed its first transcontinental railroad, and watched its cities explode with immigrant energy. San Francisco — the city where the Pauls finally settled — grew from a small trading post into one of the most cosmopolitan cities in the world in a single generation. To read the story of John and Maria is to glimpse that larger history through the eyes of one family.

John Charles Paul (1823–1879)

Origins in Newfoundland

John Charles Paul was born in October 1823 in St. John's, Newfoundland — a rugged, fog-draped town perched on the edge of the North Atlantic and one of the oldest European settlements in North America. At the time of his birth, St. John's was a thriving British colonial port whose economy revolved almost entirely around the cod fishery. The docks were loud with the sounds of coopering, sail-mending, and fish-salting; the streets crowded with Irish and West Country English families who had followed the fishing fleets across the ocean.

John was the second child of John Paul (1792–1838) and Mary Quirk (1800–1866), who had married around 1820, probably in Newfoundland itself. The family appears to have been of Irish extraction, a background that would have been entirely unremarkable in St. John's, where Irish Catholic immigrants made up the majority of the working population. The household John grew up in included four children:
  • Oliver Paul — born before 14 November 1822 in St. John's, the eldest child.
  • John Charles Paul — born October 1823, the subject of this biography.
  • Thomas Paul — born February 1829 in Lowell, Massachusetts, suggesting the family had already begun their move south by that time.
  • Robert Havlin Paul — born 12 June 1830 in Lowell, Massachusetts.
The Move to New England

Sometime in the mid-to-late 1820s, the Paul family left Newfoundland and resettled in Lowell, Massachusetts — a booming industrial city that had recently reinvented itself as one of America's first planned manufacturing centers, famous for its textile mills and its canals. It was a common destination for Newfoundland and Maritime families seeking steadier wages than the unpredictable fishery could provide. From Lowell, the family later moved again to New Bedford, Bristol County, Massachusetts, where John would spend his early adult years.

New Bedford in the 1840s and 1850s was the whaling capital of the world. Its harbour bristled with the masts of hundreds of ships, and its streets smelled of rendered whale oil. The city was also home to a large and diverse community of maritime workers — sailors, riggers, coopers, and tradesmen of every background. It is possible that the young John Paul, who would later be described as a cooper by trade, worked in the whale oil industry in some capacity, perhaps making the barrels in which that precious oil was stored. Some records also hint that he may have sailed as a whaler before his marriage, though this cannot be confirmed with certainty.

Maria T. Beamish (1827–1909) 

From Ireland to Massachusetts

Maria T. Beamish was born on 27 August 1827, most likely in Ireland, though her precise birthplace has not been established. Her parents were Thomas Beamish and Catherine Beamish (maiden name unknown), both of Ireland. Whether Maria had brothers or sisters, and whether her parents ever emigrated to America, remains unknown — she may have made the crossing to the New World entirely on her own, as thousands of young Irish women did during and after the devastating Great Famine of the 1840s.

By 1850, Maria had settled in New Bedford. The United States Census of that year records her in the household of Samuel W. Rodman — one of New Bedford's prominent merchant families — where she is listed as a 23-year-old woman born in Ireland, without a stated occupation. It was common for young immigrant Irish women to live in the households of prosperous families as domestic servants, and this is almost certainly the capacity in which Maria found herself in the Rodman home. It was a respectable if demanding situation, and it placed her squarely in the heart of one of New England's most dynamic communities.

Marriage: New Bedford, 1852

John Charles Paul and Maria T. Beamish were married on 29 April 1852 at a Roman Catholic parish in New Bedford, Massachusetts, the ceremony performed by Father Thomas McNulty. Their marriage record paints a vivid small portrait of two young immigrants: John was 28 years old, listed by trade as a cooper, born in St. John's; Maria was 23, born in the same city according to the record (though this may reflect a misunderstanding or clerical error, as all other evidence places her birth in Ireland).

Their union was a meeting of two worlds typical of mid-nineteenth century Catholic immigrant America. Both came from Irish backgrounds, both had made their way to one of New England's most prosperous and cosmopolitan port cities, and both belonged to the Catholic faith — a bond that would have been deeply meaningful at a time when Irish Catholics in America sometimes faced significant social discrimination. The couple settled in New Bedford to begin their married life.

Their Children

John and Maria had at least seven children over roughly fourteen years, born across three different states as the family moved westward. Their children were:
  • Mary Ann Paul — born November 1854, Massachusetts. She married Herman Schaffner before 1876 in San Francisco and had three children. She died 16 February 1908 in San Francisco.
  • Rebecca M. Paul — born November 1856 in Chicago, Illinois. She married Charles Henry Small before 1880 in San Francisco and had one child. She died 21 October 1914 in San Francisco.
  • Robert Paul — born about 1859 in Chicago, Illinois. He died before 1862, aged approximately 3 years, probably in Chicago.
  • Abbie C. Paul — born September 1861 in Chicago, Illinois. She died 11 November 1894, aged 33, in San Francisco.
  • Robert Henry Paul — born about 1864 in San Francisco. He died 14 September 1902, aged 38, in Acapulco, Mexico.
  • Thomas E. Paul — born December 1868 in San Francisco.
  • John Charles Paul (Jr.) — born December 1868 in San Francisco. He died 22 September 1889, aged 20, in San Francisco.
The loss of young Robert in childhood and the early deaths of Abbie (at 33) and John Jr. (at 20) remind us that nineteenth-century family life was shadowed by grief in ways that are difficult for us to imagine today. Maria buried two of her children while John was still alive, and outlived several more in her long widowhood. The family was close-knit, however, and the 1880 census finds a full and busy household gathered around Maria even a year after John's death.

Life on the Move: New Bedford, Chicago, and San Francisco

The Chicago Years, c. 1856–1862

By around 1856, John and Maria had left New Bedford and relocated to Chicago, Illinois — then a city in the midst of a spectacular and almost unimaginable boom. Chicago had become the rail hub of mid-continent America, and workers of every trade were needed. The Pauls' second daughter, Rebecca, was born there in November 1856, and their next two children — Robert (c. 1859) and Abbie (1861) — were also born in the city. The 1860 census finds the family living in Chicago's Ward 8, with John listed as a cooper and the household also including a 16-year-old servant from Newfoundland named Julia Taylor.

Arrival in San Francisco

Sometime around 1862, the Paul family made their most dramatic move: to San Francisco, California. The city was then in the midst of the extraordinary transformation set off by the Gold Rush of 1849. Though the initial frenzy had subsided, San Francisco had emerged as the financial and commercial metropolis of the American West — a city of breathtaking energy and diversity, where immigrants from Ireland, China, Germany, Italy, and Latin America lived side by side in its crowded neighborhoods.

City directories place John at several San Francisco addresses over the years, including 335 Green Street (1864), 9 Clara Street (1869), and 28 Clara Street (where he would die). His occupations shifted over time — from cooper (1862) to laborer (1865), then janitor (1869–1878) and watchman (1872–1876). This occupational decline, from a skilled trade to service and watchman work, may reflect the physical toll of aging and manual labor, the changing San Francisco economy, or simply the difficulties facing working-class immigrants in the competitive city. The 1870 census lists him, with some apparent confusion, as a 'car conductor' born in England — likely a census enumerator's error on both counts.

John's civic standing is documented in the San Francisco Great Register of Voters. In his 1867 registration he noted he was 'not naturalized'; by his 1876 registration he claimed citizenship 'by naturalization of father' — suggesting that his father John Paul Sr. had at some point become a naturalized American citizen, a status that could be inherited by minor children under the laws of the time.

The Death of John Charles Paul, 1879

John Charles Paul died on 31 May 1879 in San Francisco. He was 55 years old. The cause of death was recorded as dropsy — a historical term for what we would today call edema, an abnormal accumulation of fluid in the body that was commonly associated with heart, kidney, or liver disease. A death notice appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle on 3 June 1879, inviting friends and acquaintances to attend his funeral from his home at 28 Clara Street.

John was originally buried in Mount Calvary Cemetery in San Francisco, one of the city's principal Catholic burial grounds. In 1940 — more than sixty years after his death — his remains were moved to Holy Cross Catholic Cemetery in Colma, San Mateo County, as part of a broader relocation of San Francisco's historic cemeteries. Colma, which famously came to have more dead residents than living, became the final resting place for hundreds of thousands of San Franciscans. There is no individual gravestone for John at Holy Cross; he rests in a general reburial area alongside four others from the same transfer.

Maria Paul's Long Widowhood, 1879–1909

Maria was left a widow at 51, with several children still at home. The 1880 census captures the household at 773 Acheson Street in San Francisco: Maria at the head, daughters Mary Ann and Rebecca (both now married), youngest daughter Abbie, and sons Robert Henry (14) and the twins John (12) and Thomas (12), still at school. Living with them was also Maria's son-in-law Herman Schaffner, a bookbinder from New York of Hessian parentage, and his infant son Paul — Maria's first grandchild.

The years that followed brought more loss. Abbie died in 1894 at only 33. John Jr. had already died in 1889 at just 20. Robert Henry died in 1902 in Acapulco, Mexico, far from home, at 38. Mary Ann, her eldest, died in 1908, just a year before Maria herself. Only Rebecca Small and Thomas survived their mother.

By 1900, Maria was living at 408 Natoma Street in San Francisco, renting rooms to lodgers — a common way for widows to support themselves. The census records her as 72 years old, able to read, write, and speak English, a widow of 3 surviving children from at least 3 born. She noted she had immigrated in 1830, having lived in the United States for 70 years by that point (perhaps the enumerator misunderstood).

Maria Beamish Paul died on 9 December 1909 in San Francisco. She was 82 years old, and her cause of death was listed as senility. She died at the Home of the Aged — a care institution — and her funeral notice in the San Francisco Examiner announced that her remains would lie at the parlors of Theodor Dierks & Co. before a private interment. She was buried beside her husband in Holy Cross Catholic Cemetery in Colma, though like John, her grave in Section M lacks a marker.

A Legacy

John Charles Paul lived only 55 years, but they were years packed with movement, labor, and change. From the salt-scented docks of St. John's to the fog-wrapped streets of San Francisco, he followed the great westward tide of nineteenth-century America. Maria outlived him by thirty years, raising their children, welcoming grandchildren, and witnessing San Francisco grow into a great metropolis — until the city was nearly destroyed by the earthquake and fire of 1906, just three years before her own death.

The graves of John and Maria at Holy Cross Cemetery in Colma bear no markers today, but this account, assembled from census records, city directories, newspaper notices, and vital records, is its own kind of monument — a remembrance of two people who crossed oceans, endured losses, worked hard, and loved their family. They deserve to be remembered.


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4) An Audio Overview (essentially a podcast) created by the Google NotebookLM AI tool) describing and celebrating the lives of John Charles and Maria (Beamish) Paul can be heard here (click on "Audio Overview" and wait for it to load).

5)  The Video Overview discussing the John Charles and Maria (Beamish) Paul 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.

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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.

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