I wrote an AI-assisted ABC biography for the family of my 4th great-grandparents Rudolf and Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler in ABC Biography of the Rudolf and Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler Family of York, Pennsylvania (1738-1835) based on my genealogical research over 38 years.
I wondered what Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler might have told her grandchildren in a life memoir in 1834.
1) I requested Anthropic Claude Sonnet 5 to "Please write a life memoir for Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler based on the attached biography, as she might tell his grandchildren in 1834."
2) The AI Anthropic Claude Sonnet 5 memoir (edited for accuracy and completeness) is:
I am Dorothea Dinkel Spangler — your grandmother, your Grossmutter — and though I have lived nearly my whole life in York, Pennsylvania, I was not born here. I was born across the ocean, in a city called Strasbourg, in a land where the French and German tongues mix together in the same mouth, on the same street, in the same family. I do not remember Strasbourg myself — I was too small when we left — but the name of it has followed me my whole life like a shadow that is also, somehow, a comfort.
This year I have done something I have never done before. I sat down with pen and paper and wrote out my last will and testament entirely in my own hand, in German, the language of my childhood prayers. It took me the better part of an afternoon, and my hand ached for two days after, but I would not have another do it for me. A woman ought to have the last word on what becomes of what she leaves behind, written in her own hand, in her own words. I tell you this so you will understand something about your grandmother: I have always preferred to do things myself, even when it would have been easier to let someone else do them.
Now. The fire is low but it will hold a while yet. Let me tell you where I came from, and how I came to be the old woman scolding you all so lovingly tonight.
Strasbourg, and a Father I Barely Knew
My father was named Johann Daniel Dunckel, and my mother was Maria Ursula Hornuss. They were married in Strasbourg in 1735, and I was the youngest of six children they raised there — Margaret Salome, Anna Maria, Johann Daniel, Peter, Maria Catherina, and then myself, born about 1748.
I have almost no memory of my father. He died in 1755, when I was perhaps seven years old, and what I know of him I know only from my mother’s stories and my older brothers’ and sisters’ recollections, which they told me so many times over the years that I have come to feel as though I remember him myself, though I know I do not, not truly. That is a strange trick memory plays on the young — it borrows what it needs from those around it, and after enough years you cannot tell any longer what you actually witnessed and what you were simply told so often that it became your own.
My mother, Ursula, was left with six children and a household to manage in a foreign land she had not been born to either — for Strasbourg itself sits on the border between France and Germany, and its people speak both tongues and belong fully to neither crown. She did not remarry, so far as I know. She simply carried on, as women of strong character are so often required to do, and she lived to be eighty years old herself, dying in 1793, long after we had all crossed the ocean and settled in this new country. I think of my mother often now that I have reached such an age myself. I understand her now in ways I could not understand her as a girl.
We left Strasbourg for Pennsylvania sometime when I was quite young — I could not tell you the exact year, and there is no one left alive to ask. I remember nothing of the crossing itself, though I have heard enough stories from others who made such journeys to know it must have been terrible: weeks upon weeks on a wooden ship, crowded together with strangers, sickness moving through the decks like a hungry thing, and no certainty at all of what waited on the other side of that grey water. My mother brought six children across that ocean. I did not fully appreciate what that meant until I had children of my own and could not imagine surviving even a difficult carriage ride to Philadelphia with all of them, let alone an ocean.
Growing Up Among the Dinkels of York
We settled here in York, among a community of Germans and French Alsatians who had made much the same journey we had, for much the same reasons — land, and safety, and the chance to build something that no war or prince could simply take away. My sisters and brother married and scattered their roots through this same soil: my sister Margaret Salome married a Spengler — Philip Caspar Spengler — years before I ever thought of marrying into that family myself. My sister Anna Maria married Philip Albright. My brother Daniel went so far as Virginia in his later years, though he began here in York same as the rest of us. My sister Maria Catherina married David Candler, and my brother Peter married Anna Elizabeth Wolfe just two weeks after my own wedding — I remember teasing him that he could not bear to let me be married first for very long.
I grew up, then, in a household of women largely — my mother, and my sisters, until they married off one by one — in the German Reformed faith, speaking German at home and increasingly English in the streets and shops of York as the town grew around us. I learned to read and write, to keep a household, to sew and spin and cook, and to say my catechism without stumbling, which was considered more important than any of the rest in those days, at least by the elders who tested us on it.
I was, I am told, a lively girl — quick to laugh, quicker still to argue a point I believed in, which my mother said would either serve me well or land me in a great deal of trouble, depending entirely on the man I eventually married. As it happened, I married a man who found my quickness charming rather than troublesome, which I have always considered the single luckiest turn of my whole life, luckier even than surviving the ocean crossing as a small child.
Rudolf, and Our Wedding Morning
He is gone now these twenty-three years, but I will tell you about him as though he had only just stepped out to the shop, because that is how he still feels to me most days.
Rudolf Spengler was ten years older than I, a silversmith and clockmaker of considerable local reputation, from a large Spengler family that had, as I have already told you, already tangled itself up with my own family through my sister’s marriage. I knew him first as a young woman knows any respectable tradesman of the town — by reputation, by sight at church, by the occasional word exchanged when our families crossed paths. I will not pretend to you that I fell in love with him in some sudden dramatic instant. It was slower than that, and steadier, which I have come to believe is the better way for a love to arrive if it is meant to last a whole lifetime rather than merely a single glorious season.
We were married on the first day of January, in the year 1767, at Trinity Reformed Church. I was eighteen years old. Now — I know your grandfather already told some of you the story of that wedding morning, and I know precisely how he told it, because he told it the very same way for forty-four years and never once let the truth interfere with a good telling. Yes, he rose before dawn and went out with his gun and his hounds to Baumgardner’s Woods and shot a deer for our wedding dinner, on the very morning he was to marry me. I want you to know that I was not nearly so charmed by this at the time as he always claimed I secretly was. I stood in that church wondering whether my bridegroom would arrive covered in mud, and he very nearly did. But he arrived, and he had the deer, and I ate the venison, and here we all are, so I suppose I cannot complain too bitterly about how it turned out.
We began our life together with very little — a small household, his trade, and whatever confidence young people have that the future will provide what the present cannot. It did provide, in time. It provided a great deal, in fact, though not without its own trials along the way, as I will tell you.
Eleven Children, and a War in the Middle of It All
We had eleven children together, and I want to say something plainly to you before I go any further, because it is a fact I have never taken for granted for one single day of my long life: every one of them lived to adulthood. Jacob, Catherine, Elizabeth, Margaret, Jesse, Johannes, Anna Maria, Daniel, Mary Margaret, Peter, and my last, my Helen Dorothea, born when I was already past forty and had thought myself finished with childbearing. Eleven children, and I buried none of them in their infancy, which is a mercy so many mothers I knew were never given. I have thanked God for this on my knees more times than I could count.
Bearing and raising eleven children while your grandfather built his trade and then, later, took up public offices, was the whole occupation of my adult life, and I do not say that with any bitterness — only with the plain honesty of an old woman who wants you to understand what her days actually consisted of. There was very little romance in it from day to day. There was cooking, and washing, and mending, and nursing fevers, and teaching catechism, and breaking up quarrels between brothers, and comforting daughters over their own small heartbreaks, from before sunrise until well after dark, for the better part of thirty years.
In the middle of all this, when Jacob and Catherine and Elizabeth were still quite small, your grandfather went off to war. He had joined the militia in 1775 and was elected Captain of the Sixth Company not long after, and in the summer of 1776 he marched with the York County men to New Jersey, to that force they called the Flying Camp. I will tell you honestly: I was terrified the whole time he was gone, though I did not say so to the children, because a mother’s terror has no business being handed to her babies. I managed the household and the shop alone for months, not knowing from week to week whether he was alive, whether he had been captured as so many York County men were at that terrible business at Fort Washington, or whether he would simply never come walking back through our door.
He did come back. I remember the moment he did more clearly than I remember almost anything else in my whole life — more clearly, even, than our wedding day. I did not weep, and I did not make a scene of it in front of the children. I only told him to wash his hands and come to supper, because that was the only thing that felt safe to say, and because supper was, in fact, ready. He has told that story back to me many times over the years as though it were the funniest thing I ever said. I have never entirely convinced him it was not a joke at all. It was the only sentence I trusted myself to speak without falling apart.
The Years of His Public Life, and What I Learned From Watching
After the war your grandfather’s reputation only grew — County Treasurer, Burgess, State Senator, a member of the General Assembly in his last years. I sat through more public dinners and listened to more speeches than I ever expected a silversmith’s wife to endure, and I will confess to you now, so many years later, that I found most of it tedious beyond words. Rudolf himself often agreed with me privately, though he would never have said so publicly — he used to complain that a legislature could argue for a full day and accomplish less than he could accomplish at his workbench in a single hour.
But I watched him carry those responsibilities the same way he carried everything else — honestly, carefully, without excessive pride in the honor of it. And I learned something from watching him that I want to pass to you now: a good reputation is not built in the moment everyone is watching. It is built in the thousand small moments when no one is watching at all — in an honest measure of silver, in a fair price given to a neighbor who could not afford the going rate, in a promise kept on a wedding morning even if it meant rising before dawn to hunt a deer. Your grandfather’s public honors came, in the end, from a whole life of small private honesties. I do not think there is any other way honor is actually built, whatever the men in the legislature might tell you.
Losing Him, and the Long Years Since
He died on the fifth of August, in the year 1811. I was sixty-three years old, and I had been his wife for forty-four years, and I will tell you truthfully that I did not know, in the days after, how a person continues to exist once the other half of so long a life has simply stopped. But a person does continue. That is perhaps the strangest lesson grief ever taught me — that the body and the days go on whether or not you believe they should.
His will left everything to me, to manage and dispose of as I saw fit for the rest of my life, with the remainder to be divided evenly among all our children after I was gone — four sons and five daughters, share and share alike, no favoritism toward the eldest, no unfairness toward the daughters. I want you to understand what an unusual kindness that was for a man of his generation to have written. Many husbands left everything to their eldest sons and let their widows depend entirely on the goodwill of their own children. Rudolf trusted me instead — trusted my judgment, my capability, my right to manage what we had built together for as long as I lived. I have tried, every year since, to prove that trust was not misplaced.
It has now been twenty-three years since I buried him beside where I too will soon lie, at Prospect Hill. I have managed our property, settled our affairs, watched our children marry and have children and, in some sorrowful cases, grandchildren of their own already grown. I have watched the little borough of York become a town of real consequence. I have grown very old, far older than I ever expected, and in this year of 1834 I finally sat down and wrote my own will, in my own hand, in German, so that when my own time comes there will be no confusion about my wishes, and no need for anyone else to speak for me.
What an Old Woman Knows
You are all so young still, sitting here around me. Some of you are barely older than I was when I crossed an ocean I cannot even remember. I do not know how many more evenings I will have to tell you things, so let me tell you now what eighty-six years have actually taught me, stripped of all the decoration.
Grief does not end, but it does change its shape. I have carried the loss of my husband for twenty-three years, and it has never once left me entirely, but it no longer sits on my chest the way it did in that first terrible winter. It has become something quieter — more like a long, familiar ache than an open wound. If any of you ever carry such a loss yourselves, believe me when I tell you it will change its shape too, in time, though it may not feel possible while you are still standing in the middle of it.
Do the work yourself when you can. I have managed my own household, my own widowhood, my own final will, because I have always believed a person’s judgment about her own life belongs to her and to no one else, however well-meaning. Do not let others speak for you simply because it would be easier to let them.
Marry, if you marry, someone whose company genuinely delights you, not merely someone convenient or respectable. I have had forty-four years of a marriage I would choose again without a moment’s hesitation, and I have watched enough other marriages in my long life to know how rare and precious that particular fortune actually is.
Fairness matters more than tradition. Your grandfather divided his estate equally among sons and daughters alike, against the old custom, and I have tried to carry that same fairness into everything I have managed since. Whatever you inherit — property, or reputation, or simply a family story — try to pass it on as fairly as it was given to you.
And finally: remember that you come from women who crossed oceans and buried husbands and outlived nearly everyone they loved, and still, in the end, found reason to call their lives happy ones. I have been asked more than once, in my old age, whether I count my life a fortunate one, given all it has required me to bear. I always answer the same way. Yes. Entirely. I would live it again, every difficult and joyful hour of it, without changing very much at all.
The candle is very low now, and I expect several of you are fighting sleep out of politeness rather than genuine wakefulness, which is its own kind of love, and I thank you for it.
I am Dorothea Dinkel Spangler of Strasbourg and of York, Pennsylvania. Daughter of Daniel and Ursula. Wife, for forty-four years, of Captain Rudolf Spangler. Mother of eleven children, every one of whom lived. Widow now for twenty-three years, and soon, I expect, to be something else again — a memory, a name on a stone, a story told at a fireside very much like this one.
I have tried tonight to give you the truth of my life rather than only its polished surface, because I think you are old enough now to want the truth, and because I will not always be here to give it to you myself. Keep it. Pass it on, when your own time comes to sit by a fire and tell it.
Now go to your homes and go to bed, all of you. And when you tell your own grandchildren about the deer someday, tell them I said the venison was excellent, whatever else I may have said about the morning it arrived.
— Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler, York, Pennsylvania, 1834
3) The Video Overview of Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler's life 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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