I wrote an AI-assisted ABC biography for the family of my 5th great-grandparents Peter Victorse Putman and Sarah Kinnan in ABC Biography of Peter Victorse Putman (1760-1835) and Sarah Kinnan (1761-1841) Family of New Jersey and New York based on my genealogical research over 38 years. Peter was a Revolutionary War soldier.
I wondered what Peter Victorse Putman might have told his grandchildren in a life memoir in 1834.
(AI Google NotebookLM Infographic for Peter Putman's life memoir)
1) I requested Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 to create a memoir told by Peter Putman about his life in 1834. The prompt was: "Please write a life memoir for Peter Victorse Putman based on the attached biography, as he might tell to his grandchildren in 1834."
2) The AI Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 memoir (edited for accuracy and completeness) is:
The Life and Times of Peter Victorse Putman
As Told to His Grandchildren in the Year 1834
My dear grandchildren,
You've asked me many times to tell you about my life, and now that I've reached the age of seventy-four years, I reckon it's time I set down my story proper-like. Your grandmother Sarah and I have lived through times that you young ones can scarcely imagine—we've seen this nation born in blood and fire, and we've watched it grow into something your great-grandparents could never have dreamed possible. So settle in, and I'll tell you how it was.
My Earliest Days
I was born in 1760 in Wantage, Sussex County, New Jersey, back when it was still a colony under King George. My father was Victor Davidse Putman, and my mother was Margaret Weis. I was the third son and sixth and last child —had three older sisters named Maria, Elisabetha, and Saertje, an older brother David, and a brother Johannes who came before me.
Those were hard times on the frontier, children. The French and Indian War was raging when I was born, and the wilderness was a dangerous place. Indians allied with the French would raid settlements, and folks lived in constant fear. But we Putmans were tough stock, and we made do.
The hardest blow of my young life came when I was just five years old. Both my father and mother died in 1765. I don't remember much about them now—it's been near seventy years—but I remember my mother's voice singing, and I remember my father's strong hands. After they passed, we children were scattered among relatives and neighbors. That's how it was done back then—folks looked after their own, and the community raised us up as best they could.
Growing up without parents teaches you to be independent, to work hard, and not to complain about your lot. Those lessons served me well in the years to come.
The Gathering Storm
As I grew into my teenage years, the troubles with England were getting worse. You have to understand, children, we didn't start out wanting independence. Most folks just wanted fair treatment from the Crown. But King George kept pushing and pushing—taxes without representation, soldiers quartered in our homes, our ships seized, our goods confiscated.
I remember sitting around the tavern in Wantage, listening to the men talk about the Stamp Act, the Tea Act, the Intolerable Acts. Tempers were running high. Some men were Loyalists, still faithful to the King. Others were calling for rebellion. Families were split down the middle. It was brother against brother, father against son.
When the news came in 1775 that blood had been shed at Lexington and Concord up in Massachusetts, we knew there was no turning back. War was coming to New Jersey.
Joining the Fight
By 1778, I was eighteen years old and the war had been going on for three years. The Continental Army needed men, and I felt it was my duty to serve. On March 5, 1778, I enlisted as a private in Captain Holmes' Company of the 3rd Regiment of the New Jersey Continental Line, under Colonel Elias Dayton. I signed up for two years.
Some men enlisted for the bounty money or the promise of land. I won't lie—those things were part of it. But mostly, I believed in what we were fighting for. I believed that men should be free, that government should serve the people, not the other way around. Those ideas were worth fighting for. Worth dying for, if need be.
When I left Wantage that March day, I didn't know if I'd ever come home. My brother Johannes clasped my hand and wished me Godspeed. The local folks gave us a send-off, and we marched away to join Washington's army.
Valley Forge
My first taste of military life came at Valley Forge in Pennsylvania. Now, you've all heard the stories about Valley Forge—the terrible winter, the suffering, the men with bloody footprints in the snow because they had no shoes. By the time I arrived in March of '78, the worst of the winter was over, but you could still see the marks it had left on the men.
The camp was a sea of log huts on the hillsides. Mud everywhere. The smell of woodsmoke and unwashed bodies. Men wrapped in rags because their uniforms had fallen apart. Some were sick with fever. Others were recovering from frostbite or gangrene. But there was also something else—a feeling of determination, of brotherhood. These men had survived the worst winter imaginable, and they hadn't quit. They hadn't deserted. They were still here, still ready to fight.
And we were being trained like we'd never been trained before. A Prussian officer named Baron von Steuben had come to camp and was drilling us in proper military tactics. Every day, we'd be out on the parade ground learning to march in formation, wheel and turn as a unit, load and fire our muskets in proper order.
"Shoulder arms! Present arms! Load in nine times!" Von Steuben would shout (though he spoke through an interpreter since his English was poor). We'd practice until our shoulders ached from the musket drills and our legs burned from marching. Load your musket in nineteen motions—pour powder, ram ball, prime pan, cock hammer, present, fire. Do it again. And again. And again.
At first, I thought it was foolishness. Why spend so much time drilling? But the old soldiers told us: "When the shooting starts and the smoke gets thick and men are falling all around you, you'll be glad your hands know what to do without thinking."
They were right.
The rations at Valley Forge were poor—firecake (flour and water baked on a stone), a bit of meat when we were lucky. But compared to what the men had endured that winter, it seemed like plenty. And there was hope in the air. News had come of the French alliance. France was coming to our aid! That meant ships, soldiers, money, supplies. Maybe we could actually win this war.
General Washington himself would ride through the camp sometimes. He was a tall man, sat a horse like he was born to it. When he passed, men would straighten up, stand a bit taller. He had a presence about him—you felt like he was carrying the weight of the whole Revolution on his shoulders, but he'd never let it break him. We'd follow that man anywhere.
The Battle of Monmouth
On June 28, 1778, I fought in the Battle of Monmouth in New Jersey. Children, that was the day I became a soldier. Before that, I was just a boy in uniform. After Monmouth, I knew what war really was.
The British had evacuated Philadelphia and were marching across New Jersey toward New York. General Washington decided to strike at their rear guard. We marched through the Jersey countryside in weather so hot it could kill a man. And it did kill men—I saw soldiers fall from heatstroke before we even reached the battlefield.
The morning of the 28th was already blazing hot when we formed up. Word came that General Lee's division had engaged the British but was falling back in confusion. Then General Washington himself came riding up, and I'll never forget the sight. He was furious—I'd never seen the General so angry. He rallied Lee's men and began forming a defensive line.
Our regiment was ordered into position on the right. We moved quick and smart, just like we'd practiced at Valley Forge. Formed our lines, dressed our ranks, checked our muskets. The man on my right was a farmer named Jacobus from Morris County. On my left was a blacksmith from Newark named Thomas. We were all Jersey boys, and we were ready.
Then the British came.
They advanced in perfect formation, red coats bright in the sun, drums beating, colors flying. They looked invincible. My mouth went dry. My heart was pounding so hard I thought everyone could hear it. But I stood my ground, musket at the ready.
"Make ready! Take aim! Fire!"
The whole line exploded in smoke and thunder. My musket slammed back against my shoulder. Through the smoke, I saw British soldiers falling. But they kept coming.
"Load!"
My hands moved through the motions—bite the cartridge, pour powder, ram ball, prime pan, cock hammer. All around me, men were doing the same. Jacobus took a ball in the shoulder and went down screaming. Someone stepped up to fill the gap.
"Fire!"
Another volley. The British were firing back now, and musket balls were buzzing through the air like hornets. A ball clipped my hat. Another hit the ground at my feet.
The heat was unbearable. It must have been near 100 degrees, and my wool uniform was soaked through with sweat. The powder smoke hung in the still air, choking us. Men started falling from the heat as much as from British bullets. I saw a man just collapse where he stood, his face gray, his eyes rolled back.
Women were moving through the ranks with buckets of water. "Water! Water!" they cried. When one came past me, I grabbed a ladle and drank like I'd been in the desert for a week. One of those women—folks later called her Molly Pitcher, though I never knew her real name—was carrying water to the artillery. When her husband fell at his gun, she took his place, swabbing and loading that cannon under fire. Bravest thing I ever saw.
The battle raged for hours. We stood in that line, loading and firing until my shoulder was bruised and my hands were black with powder. The British charged us with bayonets at one point, and we met them with our own steel. It came down to pushing and stabbing in the smoke. I thrust my bayonet at a British grenadier and felt it bite. He went down. I pulled it free and swung my musket butt at another redcoat. The madness of battle was upon us.
But we held. By God, we held that line. The British threw everything they had at us, and we didn't break. As the sun set, they withdrew. We'd won—or at least, we hadn't lost, which was almost the same thing.
That night, sitting on the battlefield with the cries of the wounded all around us, I understood what we'd accomplished. We'd faced British regulars in open battle and held our ground. The Continental Army wasn't a mob of farmers anymore. We were real soldiers, and we'd proven it.
Monmouth was the turning point, children. After that, everyone knew we could win this war.
The Long Years of Service
The months after Monmouth blur together now. We spent much of 1779 and 1780 operating in northern New Jersey, protecting the countryside from British and Loyalist raids. It was nasty business—not grand battles, but ambushes and skirmishes, neighbors fighting neighbors.
The British would come out of New York, burn farms, steal livestock, terrorize folks who supported our cause. We'd chase them, fight them when we could catch them, try to protect the innocent. I fought at Pompton Plains and a dozen other places whose names I've forgotten.
The winter of '79-'80 was brutal. Colder even than Valley Forge. Food was scarce. We hadn't been paid in months, and when we did get paid, the Continental currency was near worthless. Some regiments mutinied. Can't say I blamed them much—we'd been promised pay and supplies, and we got neither.
But the Jersey Line stayed loyal, and I stayed with them. We'd come too far to quit.
By the spring of 1780, I was worn down. Two years of hard service, poor food, little sleep, constant danger—it takes a toll on a body. I came down with a fever that wouldn't break. Shaking chills, burning hot, couldn't keep food down. Finally, they sent me to the military hospital in Princeton.
The Hospital and Discharge
Children, that hospital was almost worse than the battlefield. Men packed together, most of them sick or dying. The surgeons did what they could, but they didn't have much to work with. Disease swept through the wards—typhus, dysentery, pneumonia. Men who'd survived battle died in those hospital beds.
I lay there for weeks, drifting in and out of fever dreams. I thought I might die there. Many did. But your grandmother was praying for me back home (though I didn't know it at the time), and the Good Lord saw fit to spare me.
By October of 1780, I was well enough to be discharged. The surgeon signed my papers, Colonel Dayton authorized them, and I was free to go home. I'd served two and a half years in the Continental Army. I'd done my part.
I carefully folded those discharge papers and put them in my pack. They were proof of my service, and I figured I might need them someday. (Little did I know I'd lose those papers over the years, and forty-five years later I'd be trying to prove my service without them!)
Before I left Princeton, I did one more service for the army. I was drafted into the Sussex County Militia for six weeks under Captain Harker. It wasn't like Continental service—mostly local guard duty and patrols. But the war was still on, and Jersey still needed defending.
After those six weeks were up, I finally went home to Wantage.
Love and Marriage
Now here's where the story gets better, children, because this is where your grandmother comes into it.
I'd known Sarah Kinnan all my life. We grew up in Wantage, and our families knew each other. She was a pretty girl with dark eyes and a quick smile. But I didn't really see her—not the way a man sees a woman—until I came home from the war.
I was twenty years old, and Sarah was nineteen. We were married on March 20, 1780, in Wantage township. It was wartime still, and we didn't have much for a wedding. No fancy dress, no big celebration. Just a simple ceremony with our families and a few friends. But we didn't need fancy. We had each other, and that was enough.
Your grandmother has been by my side for fifty-four years now. She's raised our five boys, moved with me from Jersey to New York without complaint, stood by me through poverty and hardship, and loved me through it all. If I've done anything right in this life, it was marrying Sarah Kinnan.
Building a Life in New Jersey
After the war ended in 1783, Sarah and I set about building a life together. We settled in Sandyston township in Sussex County, right along the Delaware River. I bought land—152 acres from a man named Henry Cuyler in 1800. Paid one pound per acre, which was fair money then.
Your fathers were all born in Jersey—Victor in 1782, John in 1785, Peter in 1788, David around 1790, and Isaac in 1796. Five strong boys, each one a blessing. We raised them to work hard, fear God, and stand up for what's right.
Farming that land along the Delaware was good work. The soil was rich, the river provided fish, and the forest provided game. We weren't rich, but we were getting by. I was respected in the community—folks called me Captain Putman because of my militia rank. Life was decent.
But by 1810, we started hearing about opportunities out west in New York. The government was opening up new lands, and Revolutionary War veterans were getting land grants. Many of our Sussex County neighbors were moving—Joseph Kinnan (Sarah's relative) among them. The young ones were restless for new opportunities.
So we sold our Jersey land and headed north.
The Move to New York
Moving to New York was a gamble, but sometimes you have to take chances in this life. We went first to Ulysses in Seneca County around 1810. The land was raw and unsettled, but it was ours for the taking.
The work was hard. Clearing land, building shelter, starting over from scratch. But we were younger then, and our sons were growing strong. They worked the lumber camps in winter and farmed in summer. That's how you made a living in those parts—diversify your income and work every season.
Around the time of the War of 1812, we moved to Wayne township in Steuben County, and eventually to Barrington in Yates County, where we've been ever since. Many other Revolutionary War veterans settled here too—it's like a reunion of the Continental Army sometimes, sitting around swapping stories with old comrades.
We helped found the Methodist Church here in Barrington back in 1810, your grandmother and I, along with the Kleyns and Martins. Faith has always been important to us. The church has been the center of our community life—baptisms, weddings, funerals, and fellowship every Sunday.
Your fathers all grew up here in New York. They've done well for themselves—married good women, had children of their own (you dear ones!), established themselves as solid citizens. Victor married Elizabeth Kleyn. John married Sarah Martin and has eight children. Peter married Margaret Saunders and has thirteen children—a baker's dozen! David never married. And Isaac married Charlotte Spillman and has five children.
I'm proud of all my boys. They're good men, hard workers, God-fearing. What more could a father ask?
The Hard Years
I won't sugarcoat it, children—these last years have been difficult. Your grandmother and I are old now, and age brings ailments. We both suffer from rheumatism something fierce. Some mornings, I can barely get out of bed, my joints are so stiff and painful. Your grandmother's hands are twisted with it, though she never complains.
And we're poor. There's no shame in admitting it—we're poor as church mice. I never did get rich, despite all my years of hard work. Sickness and misfortunes have reduced our circumstances considerably.
In 1825, I had to do something I never thought I'd do—I applied for a pension from the government. I'd always said I didn't want to be dependent on my country while I could work. But at sixty-five I couldn't work anymore. My body had given out.
I had to appear before the court in Steuben County and swear to my service. It was hard, because I'd lost my discharge papers years ago. Had to rely on the testimony of old comrades, but many of them were dead or too infirm to come testify. Moor Wilson was old and confined to bed. John Jolly was fifty-four miles away and too weak to make the journey.
I had to list all my property for the court. Let me tell you, children, it was a pitiful inventory. No real estate. One old cow (later died), some calves and pigs (killed for food), four sheep (sold for grain), an old feather bed that had been in use for thirty years, worn-out blankets, broken furniture, a few dishes and utensils. Everything we owned was old and worn and barely functional.
I owed money to various people for necessities—a plow, carding and fulling services, pork for provisions. More debt than assets.
But they granted me the pension—eight dollars a month. It's not much, but it keeps us from starving. Your grandmother and I live simply now. We depend on the kindness of your fathers, who take turns seeing to our needs. Sometimes we live with Victor, sometimes with David, sometimes with Peter. We're grateful for their care.
This isn't how I imagined ending my days, I'll admit. I thought a man who'd fought for his country, who'd worked hard all his life, would have something to show for it in old age. But life doesn't always work out like you plan.
Lessons Learned
So what have I learned in seventy-four years, children? What wisdom can an old soldier pass on to the young ones?
First: Freedom isn't free. I know that's become a cliché, but it's true. We bought American independence with blood and suffering. Men died at Monmouth, at Valley Forge, in a hundred unnamed skirmishes so that you could grow up in a free country. Never take that for granted.
Second: Family is everything. Land and money come and go. Wealth can vanish overnight. But family—that's what endures. Your grandmother and I may be poor in worldly goods, but we're rich in family. We have five sons, dozens of grandchildren, and Lord willing, we'll live to see great-grandchildren. That's real wealth.
Third: Hard work and honesty will carry you through. I've worked hard all my life—as a soldier, a farmer, a lumberman. I've been honest in my dealings with others. I may not have much to show for it, but I can look any man in the eye and hold my head high. No one can say Peter Putman cheated them or shirked his duty.
Fourth: Faith matters. Your grandmother and I have relied on the Good Lord to see us through hard times. When I was sick in the Princeton hospital, when we were broke and hungry, when the future looked bleak—we prayed, and God answered. Maybe not always the way we wanted, but He answered. Keep your faith, children. It's a comfort in times of trouble.
Fifth: This nation we helped create—it's something special. I've watched America grow from thirteen quarrelsome colonies into a strong republic stretching from the Atlantic to beyond the Mississippi. We've had our troubles—almost tore ourselves apart during the War of 1812—but we've endured. This country has a great destiny ahead of it, I believe. You young ones will see things I can't even imagine.
Looking Back
When I think back over my life, what stands out isn't the battles or the hardships, though those were real enough. What stands out are the small moments—your grandmother's hand in mine on our wedding day. The first cry of each of my newborn sons. The smell of fresh-cut timber in the New York woods. The sound of hymns rising from the Barrington church on Sunday morning. The laughter of grandchildren playing in the yard.
I stood in the line at Monmouth when the Continental Army proved itself. I saw General Washington rally the troops. I did my part to win American independence. Those are things I'm proud of.
But I'm just as proud of raising five good sons with your grandmother. Of settling new territory in New York. Of helping establish a church. Of living my life honestly and doing right by my neighbors.
I'm not a famous man. I never will be. History books won't remember Peter Victorse Putman. But I've lived a full life, seen amazing things, and done my best. That's all any man can do.
The Future
Children, I'm seventy-four years old now. I don't expect I have many years left. My body is worn out from a lifetime of hard use. But I'm not afraid of death. I've faced it before—on the battlefield, in the hospital, in the wilderness. When my time comes, I'll go peacefully, knowing I've lived well and loved well.
Your grandmother and I will probably end our days here in Yates County, surrounded by family. We'll be buried in some simple grave, and life will go on without us. That's as it should be. The old make way for the young.
But I want you to remember us. Remember that your grandfather fought at Monmouth. Remember that your grandmother raised five sons in the wilderness. Remember that we helped build this nation, in our own small way.
And I want you to remember the values we've tried to pass on: courage in the face of danger, perseverance through hardship, honesty in all dealings, love of family, faith in God, and devotion to this great nation.
You're Americans, children. Never forget what that means. Never forget the price that was paid for your freedom. Never forget the generations of Putmans who came before you, who worked and suffered and endured so that you could have a better life.
Make us proud. Live well. Love your families. Serve your country if called upon. Be honest and true. And when you're old and gray like your grandmother and me, you'll be able to look back on your life with satisfaction, knowing you did your best.
That's all I have to say, children. The rest is up to you.
God bless you all, and God bless the United States of America.
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3) The Video Overview of Peter Putman's life memoir, created by the Google NotebookLM AI tool, is:
4) I edited the Claude memoir text to correct minor inconsistencies and errors. Every large language model (LLM) AI tool writes descriptive text much better than I can write. The AI tools are very perceptive, insightful and inspiring, creating engaging text in seconds, including local and national historical events and social history detail when requested.
5) This is historical fiction, based on my own genealogical research. It is what Peter Putman might have told his grandchildren in 1834.
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