I wondered if the FREE AI tools could provide me with information about a teenage girl's life in Prince Edward County, Canada West in 1845. My 3rd great-grandmother, Miranda Wade (1804-1850) was age 14 in 1818. The ABC Biography for Miranda Wade is in ABC Biography of #45 Miranda (Wade) White (1804-1850) of Rhode Island and Connecticut.
My Prompt for Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 was: "Please describe the life of 14-year-old Miranda Wade in Foster, Providence County, Rhode Island in 1818, based on the attached biography. Consider family, work, education, community activities, entertainment, fun?"
Here is the Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 response:
Miranda Wade at Age 14: A Day in the Life
Foster, Rhode Island, 1818
Her Family and Household
In 1818, Miranda was one of six children still living under her parents' roof on the Wade family farm in Foster. She was surrounded by her mother Phebe, her father Simon, younger brothers Fenner (11) and little Lawton (just 4), and her sister Olive (16), who was close to her in age and probably her most constant companion. Her older brother James (age 27) had married and had his own home, her older sisters Catharine and Sarah probably died young, and her older brother Arnold (age 18) was still at home.
By 1820, Foster had grown to a population of approximately 2,900 people — a tightly knit rural world where nearly everyone knew everyone else, and where the Wades would have been a well-established family. Foster was a largely homogenous town, white and native-born, with several sects of Baptists whose small white churches dotted the pastoral landscape. The Wade family almost certainly belonged to one of these Baptist congregations, making their faith not just a spiritual matter but a cornerstone of their entire social world.
The farmhouse itself would have been a busy, noisy place — one or two main rooms heated by a large fireplace, with sleeping quarters above, and outbuildings close by for livestock, tools, and storage. There was no privacy as we know it today. Miranda would have shared a sleeping space with her sisters, rising before dawn and rarely sitting idle until after dark.
Chores and Daily Work
At 14, Miranda would have been considered nearly a woman, fully capable of handling most of the household's domestic labor alongside her mother and Olive. Her days would have begun early and ended late, shaped entirely by the seasons.
In the kitchen, Miranda's mornings likely started at the hearth, stoking the fire and helping prepare the family's breakfast. The dairy house — where milk was processed into butter and cheese — was very much the domain of the housewife and her daughters. Milk had to be strained into shallow pans to allow the cream to rise, then skimmed off and churned into butter or made into cheese. Miranda would have helped with this almost every morning.
In the kitchen, children helped out by churning butter, pounding sugar, sifting flour, and stoning raisins. Bread was baked regularly in the brick bake oven, preserves and pickles were put up in summer, and meat was salted and smoked for winter. Every meal required real labor from start to finish.
In the garden, Miranda would have tended the kitchen plot through spring and summer — planting, weeding, watering, and harvesting vegetables and herbs. Knowing which plants were for eating, which were medicinal, and which had other uses was a valuable lesson passed from mother to daughter.
With the animals, she would have fed and watered the chickens, collected eggs, and helped with the milking. Girls tended the family livestock including chickens, ducks, and geese — feeding them, collecting eggs, and sometimes killing and plucking them for the pot.
At the spinning wheel and loom, Miranda would have spent many hours, particularly in the cooler months. To sew, the women needed thread, so they would first shear the sheep to get their wool. Spinning, weaving, and sewing were not optional accomplishments — they were economic necessities. Every shirt on her brothers' backs, every blanket on the beds, likely passed through the hands of the Wade women.
As a caregiver, Miranda would have borne significant responsibility for little Lawton, only four years old. One of the most important chores for children in large families of the 19th century was watching their younger siblings, since many mothers had children over a 20-year span. With her mother managing a full household, Miranda would have been Lawton's near-constant shadow.
A large family of the era might burn forty-four cords of wood in a single year to keep their fireplaces and bake oven going. Keeping that wood supply stocked, dry, and ready was a year-round family effort that Miranda would have contributed to alongside her brothers.
Education
Miranda's formal schooling would have been modest by any modern standard. Foster lacked the strong waterways needed to power industry, so it remained a farming community — and rural farming communities in Rhode Island had limited school resources. Children typically attended a local district school for only a few months each year, generally in winter when farm work slowed and children could be spared.
At such a school, Miranda would have learned to read, to write a plain hand, and to do basic sums. The Bible was often the primary reading text, and memorization of scripture and catechism formed a significant part of what passed for curriculum. Girls were rarely encouraged toward academic ambition — their education was understood to be preparation for running a household, not a career or profession.
Her true education, however, was thoroughly practical and impressively broad. By 14, Miranda would have known how to preserve food, compound simple herbal remedies for illness, manage a dairy, cut and sew clothing, and oversee younger children. The production of textiles was one of the central skills passed from mother to daughter, and Miranda would have been well along in mastering spinning, weaving, and needlework. These were not small accomplishments — they were the skills on which a family's comfort and even survival depended.
Community Life
Religion played a large part in the family life of rural Rhode Island. Sunday was largely spent in church and was a day of rest. For the Wade family, the local Baptist meetinghouse would have been the center of community life — the place where neighbors gathered not only to worship but to exchange news, observe milestones of birth, marriage, and death, and feel the reassurance of belonging to something larger than their individual farms.
Foster's first church was a Calvinist Baptist congregation, followed shortly by Six Principle Baptist and Free Will Baptist congregations — so Miranda's world offered more than one flavor of Baptist worship. Whichever congregation the Wades belonged to, Sunday services would have been long by modern standards, and attendance was not optional.
Beyond Sunday worship, community life in Foster revolved around cooperative labor. Work parties of the period included barn raisings, harvestings, and huskings in addition to quilting parties. These gatherings were the social highlights of the rural calendar, and Miranda would have looked forward to them eagerly.
At a husking bee, men gathered in the barn to husk the harvest while women prepared a fall feast. There were contests among the men, and a young man who found a red ear of corn could claim a kiss from a girl. At 14, Miranda would have been old enough to participate fully in these lively autumn gatherings, helping cook and serving alongside her mother while stealing glances across the barn.
At quilting bees, women exchanged news, shared recipes, offered home remedies, swapped fabric scraps, discussed personal issues, and taught their daughters new techniques. For Miranda, these gatherings were a kind of informal school in the skills and wisdom of womanhood — a space where she absorbed knowledge from older women while building friendships with girls her own age.
Entertainment and Fun
Life was not all work, even in rural Foster in 1818. In rural communities, socializing was tied to the rhythms of domestic and agricultural life — work culminated in a feast, and sometimes an impromptu dance, with others joining in. Husking parties saw neighbors gathering to husk corn for the winter, with songs sung and games played until the work was done.
In winter, frozen ponds and streams invited ice skating — a simple, joyful pleasure that cost nothing and required only a pair of iron-bladed skates strapped to one's boots. Sledding down Foster's many hills on wooden sleds would have been another winter delight for Miranda and her siblings.
In summer, berry picking in the woods — blueberries, raspberries, wild strawberries — offered a rare excuse to wander freely from the farmstead, filling a basket while enjoying the outdoors with friends or sisters. According to Old Sturbridge Village historians, most rural New England children had far fewer toys than a modern child, and most would have been homemade. But Miranda, at 14, was past the age of toys. Her pleasures were more social — conversation, singing, and the company of her peers.
Music was woven into everyday life. Hymns were sung at church, and folk songs and ballads were sung at home around the fire in the evenings. If a neighbor or family member played the fiddle, dancing might break out at community gatherings, a joy that even the most devout Baptist communities generally permitted.
Needlework — embroidery, knitting, and sampler-making — occupied winter evenings by firelight and was considered both useful and creative. A girl's sampler, stitched with letters, numbers, and small decorative motifs, was one of the few personal artistic expressions available to her. Miranda may well have bent her head over such a piece of work on many a long winter evening, her needle moving by the light of a tallow candle.
On the Horizon
As 1818 drew to a close, Miranda Wade was a girl poised on the edge of womanhood, deeply embedded in the rhythms of her family and her community. She could not have known that within two years her mother would be gone, leaving her to carry far more of the household's weight. She could not have known that within five years she would be married, beginning her own family in nearby Glocester. What she did know was the texture of her world — the smell of woodsmoke and fresh bread, the sound of the river and the Sunday hymns, the warmth of her sister Olive beside her, and the endless turning of the seasons on the Rhode Island hills.
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3) The Google NotebookLM Video Overview of this post is below.
4) As genealogists, we can usually find the 17th to 19th century town records, and the later census and civil records, for New England families, and we may find occupation, military, land and probate records. In addition, there are books and websites about the daily lives of people in those times. The AI tools have been pre-trained on historical events, social history, geography, literature and other disciplines so they can provide information for questions like this one, and by 2025 they have the ability to search the Internet.
5) After I read these types of social history summaries, I wish that I could be a time traveler for one day to visit the Wade family in Rhode Island 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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