I wondered if the FREE AI tools could provide me with a story about about the life of my great-grandmother Abbey Ardelle "Della" Smith in 1876 at age 14 in Concordia, Kansas.
My genealogical sketch for Della Smith is ABC Biography of #13 Abbey Ardelle "Della" (Smith) Carringer (1862-1944) of Wisconsin, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, and California, based on my genealogical research.
1) My Prompt to free Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 was: "Please describe the life of Della Smith at age 14 in 1876 in Concordia, Kansas."
2) The AI tool responded with this description (yes, it is historical fiction, but the way it might have been), based on family records and social history resources:
The Devier Smith Family in Cloud County
In 1876, fourteen-year-old Abbey Ardelle "Della" Smith lived with her family in Lincoln township, Cloud County, Kansas, in the bustling frontier town of Concordia. The Smith family had arrived in Kansas from Missouri just a year or two earlier, part of the great wave of settlers transforming the prairie into farms, ranches, and towns.
The household was headed by Della's father, Devier James Lamphier Smith, a 37-year-old entrepreneur who had already lived several lifetimes' worth of experiences. Born in New York in 1839, Devier had pursued various occupations as the family moved westward -- from farming and horses in Wisconsin and land speculation in Iowa to running businesses in Kansas. By 1876, he operated a livery and sale stable in the Concordia area, one of the most important businesses in any frontier community.
Della's mother, Abigail A. "Abbie" Vaux Smith, was 32 years old and working as a milliner -- a skilled artisan who created fashionable hats for the women of Cloud County. Abbie was born in New York to an English-immigrant father, Samuel Vaux, and a New England mother, Mary Ann Vaux. She was an independent, enterprising woman who contributed substantially to the family's income through her trade.
The Smith children in 1876 included Della (age 14), her brother David D. "Devier" (age 12), and her younger sister Mary A. "Matie" (age 10), all born in Wisconsin during the family's earlier frontier days, before the move to Iowa and then Missouri and then to Kansas, where their baby brother, Lucian “Lutie” Smith was born in June 1875.
The Family Business: Smith's Livery Stable
Devier Smith's livery and sale stable was the economic foundation of the family's life in Concordia. A livery stable was far more than just a place to board horses -- it was a vital commercial hub where the frontier met commerce. The stable provided:
- Horse and wagon rentals for farmers, travelers, and townspeople who needed transportation
- Boarding services for horses whose owners were staying in town
- Buying and selling of horses and equipment
- A gathering place for men to exchange news, gossip, and conduct business deals
For young Della, the livery stable was part of her daily world. She would have known the regular customers, heard the constant talk of horses and land deals, smelled the familiar scents of hay and leather, and witnessed her father's skill at negotiating and managing his enterprise. The stable taught her about business, money management, and the importance of providing reliable service -- lessons she would use throughout her life.
Mother's Millinery Shop
Abbie Smith's work as a milliner represented both artistry and entrepreneurship. In an era when every respectable woman wore a hat in public, a skilled milliner was essential to any growing town. Abbie's work involved:
- Creating fashionable hats using fabric, ribbons, feathers, flowers, and other decorative elements
- Keeping up with fashion trends from the East through magazines and pattern books
- Maintaining inventory of supplies and materials
- Managing customers and taking custom orders
For Della, watching her mother work was an education in female independence and creativity. She saw that a woman with skills and ambition could earn her own money and contribute equally to family prosperity while managing a household with children. The artistic nature of millinery - combining colors, textures, and shapes -- may have influenced Della's own artistic interests in music, painting, and design.
Education on the Frontier
Formal education in Cloud County in 1876 was rudimentary compared to more established areas. Most rural schools operated only a few months a year, typically when children weren't needed for farm work. A single teacher often taught all grades in a one-room schoolhouse, and students ranged from young children learning their ABCs to teenagers finishing their basic education.
By age 14, Della had likely completed most of the formal schooling available locally -- reading, writing, arithmetic, basic geography, and history. However, her real education was happening in specialized areas that would define her future:
Musical Education
Both Della and her sister Matie would become music teachers, which means they were receiving significant musical instruction during these years. This education likely included:
- Piano lessons -- the primary parlor instrument and essential for any music teacher
- Music theory -- learning to read notation, understand harmony, and compose
- Vocal training -- singing was an important social and performance skill
- Practice, practice, practice -- hours at the keyboard developing technique
Practical Education
Beyond academics and music, Della was learning the practical skills expected of every young woman:
- Household management -- cooking, cleaning, laundry, preserving food, child care
- Sewing and needlework -- making and mending clothing, decorative work
- Bookkeeping -- managing household accounts and budgets
- Social graces -- proper etiquette, conversation, entertaining guests
A typical day for 14-year-old Della in 1876 would have included a mix of responsibilities and learning:
- Morning: Rise early (frontier families started at dawn), help prepare breakfast, feed animals, tend to household chores. If the weather was suitable and there was school in session, she might walk to the schoolhouse with her siblings.
- Midday: Help with dinner preparation (the main meal was at midday), assist her mother with millinery work, caring for her baby brother, help supervise younger siblings, practice piano or music lessons.
- Afternoon: More household work, possibly help at the livery stable with bookkeeping or customer service, keeping the vegetable garden, playing with friends and siblings, continue music practice, work on her scrapbook collection.
- Evening: Supper, family time, reading (the family clearly valued literacy), more music practice, preparing for the next day.
Entertainment and Social Life
Entertainment in a frontier town like Concordia in 1876 was community-created and often centered around institutions like churches, schools, and civic organizations. For a musically talented 14-year-old girl, social opportunities included:
Musical Performances
As an accomplished musician, Della likely performed at:
- Church services and programs -- providing music for worship and special events
- School recitals -- showcasing her skills and her teacher's instruction
- Community gatherings -- entertaining at social events and celebrations
- Home concerts -- the Smith parlor may have hosted musical evenings for friends and neighbors
Frontier and town social life revolved around events that brought the community together:
- Church socials and suppers -- major opportunities for families to socialize
- Box socials -- where young ladies prepared decorated boxes of food to be auctioned to young men
- Spelling bees and literary societies -- intellectual entertainment
- Holiday celebrations -- Fourth of July, Christmas, Thanksgiving brought special festivities
- Visiting -- formal and informal calls at neighbors' homes were primary social activity
The scrapbook Della kept during these years reveals much about her interests. She collected:
- Newspaper clippings about local and national events
- Her father's biography and family announcements
- Political news -- showing awareness of the wider world
- Advertisements and ephemera -- preserving the material culture of her time
Beyond organized entertainment, frontier teenagers found joy in:
- Walking on the prairie -- exploring the landscape
- Playing with friends and siblings -- at 14, Della was still young enough for play
- Working on creative projects -- her scrapbook, music composition, drawing
- Watching the world go by -- the livery stable provided a front-row seat to town life
- Seasonal activities -- swimming in summer, sledding in winter, harvesting in fall
Concordia in 1876 was a young but growing town. Founded in 1871, it was becoming the commercial and governmental center of Cloud County. The town featured:
- Wooden buildings along dirt streets that turned to mud in rain
- General stores supplying everything from fabric to farm equipment
- Saloons and hotels serving travelers and railroad workers
- Churches representing various denominations
- A newspaper keeping citizens informed
- The county courthouse -- symbol of civilization on the frontier
- The livery stables (including Devier's) - essential infrastructure
Challenges of Frontier Life
Life wasn't all social gatherings and music lessons. The Kansas frontier in 1876 presented real hardships:
- Weather extremes -- scorching summers, bitter winters, devastating storms
- Economic uncertainty -- businesses could fail, crops could fail, financial panics could ruin families
- Distance from extended family -- the Smiths had left relatives behind in the East
- Primitive amenities -- no running water, no electricity, outdoor privies
- Health risks -- disease could strike without warning, medical care was limited
- Social isolation -- despite community events, the prairie could feel very empty
A Girl Becoming a Woman
At 14 in 1876, Della stood at a threshold. In frontier society, girls married young -- often by 16 or 17. Yet Della's parents were investing in her education and musical training, suggesting they envisioned more for her than early marriage and immediate domesticity.
She was developing the qualities that would define her adult life:
- Independence -- learned from watching her entrepreneurial parents
- Artistic sensibility -- nurtured through music and exposure to her mother's creative work
- Business acumen -- absorbed by observing the family enterprises
- Adaptability -- essential after multiple family moves across the frontier
- Intellectual curiosity -- evident in her scrapbook and interests
- Resilience -- necessary for surviving and thriving on the frontier
Looking Forward
Della couldn't have known in 1876 that her family's time in Concordia was limited. Within a few years, they would move to Blue Rapids in Marshall County, then to McCook, Nebraska in 1885, and summer at her father’s ranch in Wano in Cheyenne County, Kansas -- where she would meet her future husband, Henry Austin Carringer, and perform on stage in frontier theater productions.
But in 1876, she was simply a 14-year-old girl learning to play piano, helping in her father's livery stable and her mother's millinery shop, collecting clippings for her scrapbook, and enjoying the simple pleasures of frontier community life. She was surrounded by family and friends, engaged in learning and growth, and developing the skills and character that would carry her through a long and remarkable life.
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3) Here is the Video Overview of this story by Google NotebookLM: not available at this time - NotebookLM won't do it for some reason.
4) This is historical fiction based on the facts that are available for the Devier J. Smith family and Della Smth's life. It is based on social history and society norms at the time and place, so it is likely realistic and might have happened this way. Abbey Ardelle "Della" Smith (1862-1944) married Henry Austin Carringer in 1887, had two children, and is my great-grandmother.
5) I had to tell this story. Each ancestor faces challenges and has successes in their life, and telling stories about them helps our descendants understand their ancestors' lives and their own lives. Della Smth is one of my favorite ancestors.
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