I wrote an AI-assisted ABC biography for the family of my fourth great-grandparents Joseph Champlin and Nancy Kenyon in ABC Biography of the Joseph Champlin (1757-1850) and Nancy Kenyon (1765-1833) Family of Rhode Island based on my genealogical research over 38 years.
I wondered what Joseph Champlin might have said in a life memoir told to his grandchildren in 1848.
1) I requested Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 to create a memoir told by Joseph Champlin about his life in 1848. The prompt was: "Please write a life memoir for Joseph Champlin based on the attached biography, as he might tell to his grandchildren in 1848."
2) The AI Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 memoir (edited for accuracy and completeness) is:
South Kingstown, Rhode Island, 1848
Now gather round, children, and let your old grandfather tell you about the days when this country was young, and men like me had to fight for the very freedoms you enjoy today. I'm near ninety years old now, and my memory ain't what it used to be, but some things a man never forgets. The smell of gunpowder. The cold waters of the Atlantic trying to pull you under. The sound of the fife and drum calling you to muster. These things stay with you.
My Early Days in Rhode Island
I was born in 1757 in Charlestown, right here in Rhode Island. My father was Elijah Champlin, and my mother was Phoebe Card -- good Rhode Island stock, both of them. We were farmers, as our people had been for generations. Father worked the land hard, and we children worked alongside him soon as we were big enough to be useful.
Those were different times, children. We didn't have much, but we had enough. The soil was good, the sea was close by for fish, and a man could make his way if he worked hard and kept his wits about him. But trouble was brewing even then. I remember hearing the men talk in low voices about the taxes the King was putting on us, about how we weren't being treated fairly. I was just a boy, but I could feel the tension in the air like a coming storm.
The Revolution Comes
When the war started in 1775, I was just a young man of seventeen years. News came of fighting at Lexington and Concord up in Massachusetts, and the whole countryside was stirred up like a hornet's nest. Captain Samuel Segar was raising a company, and I signed up for a month's service. My first taste of military life, it was.
Now, I won't lie to you children -- being a soldier wasn't the grand adventure some folks make it out to be. We drilled and marched and stood guard, mostly. The food was poor, the weather was hot, and we slept on the ground more often than not. But we were doing something important, something that mattered. We were standing up for our rights as Englishmen -- or what we thought were our rights, anyway. Before long, we realized we weren't Englishmen at all anymore. We were something new. We were Americans.
Five Times I Answered the Call
That first month passed, and I came home to help with the harvest. But the war didn't end -- it just got bigger and meaner. In 1776, I enlisted again, this time for two months under Captain Samuel Potter. We were militia, you understand, not regular army. We'd serve our time, then go home to tend the farm, then muster again when needed.
The year 1777 was my longest stretch with the militia -- five months under Captain Potter again. By then, the war had been going on for more than two years, and everyone was tired. But we kept at it. What else could we do? Give up and let the British win? Let them tell us how to live our lives? No sir. We had started something, and we meant to see it through.
Now, I served five different times during the war, and each time was different. Sometimes it was drilling and guard duty. Other times -- well, other times it was something else entirely.
The Fight at Howland's Ferry
In August of 1778, I enlisted for a month in Captain Timothy Locke's company. We were part of Colonel Dyer's regiment, and we marched to join General Sullivan's forces. The British had taken Newport, you see, and General Sullivan aimed to take it back with help from the French fleet.
Well, things didn't go according to plan. The French fleet got scattered by a storm -- seems like storms were always causing me trouble during the war -- and General Sullivan decided we'd better pull back before the British could trap us on the island. That's when the real fighting started.
We fought at a place called Howland's Ferry Bridge, covering the retreat. The British came at us hard, trying to break through our lines before we could get across. I stood in line with the other men, loading and firing, loading and firing. The noise was incredible -- muskets cracking, cannons booming, men shouting orders. The smoke was so thick you could hardly see ten feet in front of you.
I saw a regiment of colored soldiers fighting alongside us -- brave men, every one of them. They held their ground when others might have run. War is a great equalizer, children. When the bullets are flying, a man's character matters more than the color of his skin.
We held the bridge long enough for the army to get across, then we pulled back ourselves. It wasn't a victory exactly, but it wasn't a defeat either. We'd done our job, and we'd bloodied the British nose in the process. I came out of that fight with nothing more than powder burns and ringing ears, but I'd seen the elephant, as they say. I'd been in a real battle, and I'd stood my ground.
The Time I Nearly Drowned
After one of my enlistments -- I believe it was in '78 or '79, the years run together now -- I was put on a vessel to sail down the coast. We were going to get supplies, I don't rightly remember which. What I do remember is the storm that caught us off the Virginia coast.
Lord have mercy, children, I've never been so scared in all my life as I was that night. The waves were as tall as a house, and the wind was howling like all the devils in hell were loose. The ship pitched and rolled something terrible. Men were praying and crying out, and I'll admit I said a few prayers myself. Then there was a terrible grinding sound, and the ship broke apart on a sandbar.
I found myself in the water, in the dark, with pieces of the ship floating all around me. I grabbed onto a plank and held on for dear life. The water was cold -- so cold it took your breath away -- and the waves kept washing over my head. I thought for sure I was done for. I thought I'd never see Rhode Island again, never see my family, never marry or have children of my own.
But the good Lord wasn't ready for me yet. The tide carried me and my plank toward shore, and when dawn broke, I found myself on a beach with several other men from the ship. We were cold, we were wet, we'd lost everything, but we were alive. Some of our shipmates weren't so lucky. We buried three men on that Virginia beach before we started walking north to find our way back to our homes.
That shipwreck taught me something important -- that life is precious and uncertain. You never know when the Lord might call you home, so you'd better live right and treat people decent while you have the chance.
Six Months in the Continental Army
My last and longest service came in 1780, when I enlisted for six months in Captain Daniel Dexter's company of the Continental Army -- Colonel Christopher Greene's regiment. This was different from the militia. When you signed up for the Continentals, you were a regular soldier, and they expected you to act like one.
Those six months were hard. We drilled constantly -- marching in formation, manual of arms, all of it. The officers were stricter than in the militia. But there was a pride in being a Continental soldier. We were part of General Washington's army, the main force fighting for independence. When we marched, we marched together. When we stood watch, we knew our brothers in arms would stand with us.
By 1780, everyone was tired of the war. We'd been fighting for five years. Men were deserting. The army was short of everything -- food, clothes, ammunition, pay. Some men hadn't been paid in months. But we kept going because we believed in what we were fighting for. We believed that our children and grandchildren -- you children sitting here now -- should grow up free, able to make your own way in the world without some king across the ocean telling you what to do.
When my six months were up in late 1780, I came home to South Kingstown. The war dragged on for another year, but I'd done my part. I'd served my country five times over. I'd been shipwrecked and nearly drowned. I'd stood in the line of battle. I'd done what needed doing, and I could hold my head high.
I Found My Nancy
After the war ended in 1783, I set about building a life. I'd spent enough time fighting. Now it was time for farming and family. I'd known Nancy Kenyon since we were young -- her father John Kenyon was a respected man in the community. Nancy was a good woman, strong and capable, the kind of woman who could manage a household and raise a family while her husband was in the fields.
We married before 1785, and our first child, your uncle Samuel, was born that December. After that, the children just kept coming. Phoebe in 1788, then Polly, then Joseph Junior in 1792. We had Nancy, Elizabeth, Amy, George, Frances, Abigail, John, and finally little Alice in 1808. Twelve children in all, each one a blessing, though I'll tell you raising that many youngsters was harder work than any soldiering I ever did!
Your grandmother Nancy -- my Nancy -- she was the heart of our home. She could spin and weave, cook and preserve, tend the garden and the chickens, nurse sick children back to health, and still have energy left to help me with the ledgers. She bore twelve children and raised them all to be good, decent people. When she died in 1833, a light went out of my life. I've lived twelve years without her now, and I miss her every single day.
Working the Land
For most of my life, I've been a farmer. We had good land here in South Kingstown, and we worked it hard. In the spring, we'd plow and plant. Summer meant hoeing and weeding, tending the animals, cutting hay. Fall was harvest time -- bringing in the corn and vegetables, threshing the grain. Winter we'd repair tools, cut wood, care for the livestock.
It was a good life, honest work. When your children were small, they'd work alongside you in the fields. I taught your fathers and uncles everything I knew about farming -- when to plant, how to read the weather, how to care for the land so it would provide for us year after year. A farm is like a living thing, you see. You take care of it, and it takes care of you.
The house was always full of life -- children playing, Nancy cooking, babies crying, young folks courting on the porch. As the children grew and married, some stayed nearby and some moved away. Your uncle George went all the way to New York state. Your aunt Amy married a preacher and moved to Connecticut. But we stayed here in South Kingstown, in the house I built, on the land I've worked all these years.
The Government Remembers
In 1833, when I was seventy-five years old, the government passed a law giving pensions to old Revolutionary soldiers. I went down to South Kingstown and made my application. Had to tell the judge about all my service -- when I enlisted, under which captains, how long I served. My hand's been too shaky to write for years now, so I made my mark with an X. The judge approved my application, and they started paying me fifty dollars a year.
That pension money has been a blessing, I can tell you. When you're my age, you can't work the way you used to. That money helps keep me fed and clothed. But more than the money, it's the recognition. The government is saying, 'We remember what you did. We remember that you stood up when your country needed you.' That means something to an old soldier.
Some of the neighbors call me Revolutionary Joseph, on account of my service. I wear that name with pride. I'm one of the old fellows now, one of the few left who remembers the war. Most of my comrades are gone -- Samuel Potter, Timothy Locke, Daniel Dexter, all of them gone to their reward. Soon enough, I'll join them. But for now, I'm still here, still able to tell the stories, still able to pass on what I learned.
What I've Learned
Children, I've lived through times that would amaze you. I was born a British subject under King George. I fought in a war that created a new nation. I've seen this country grow from thirteen colonies to more than twenty states stretching all the way to Texas. I've heard about inventions that would have seemed like magic when I was young -- steamboats, railroads, telegraph wires. The world has changed so much in my lifetime.
But some things don't change. Family is still the most important thing. Working hard and living honest still matters. Standing up for what's right still takes courage. These are the things I want to pass on to you.
When you hear people complaining about how hard life is, you remind them that your grandfather fought in the Revolution. Remind them that men died so you could live free. Don't take your freedoms for granted, because they were bought with blood and sacrifice.
I don't know how much longer the good Lord will let me stay in this world. I'm past ninety now, and that's a good long run by anyone's measure. When my time comes, I'll go knowing that I did my duty -- to my country, to my family, to my God. I fought when fighting was needed. I worked when work was needed. I raised twelve good children with my Nancy, and they've given me more grandchildren than I can count.
A Final Word
So that's my story, children. That's the life of your old grandfather Joseph Champlin. I've been shipwrecked and nearly drowned. I've stood in the line of battle with bullets flying past my ears. I've buried loved ones and celebrated births. I've worked hard, loved deeply, and done my best to live right.
Remember these stories. Tell them to your own children someday. Let them know that they come from people who weren't afraid to fight for what was right, who worked hard and took care of their families, who helped build this nation with their own hands.
And when you think of me after I'm gone, don't be sad. I've had a good life, a full life. I've seen and done things I never imagined when I was a boy in Charlestown. I've loved and been loved. What more can a man ask for?
Now, it's getting late, and these old bones need their rest. You children run along now. But remember -- you're Champlins. You come from good stock. Make us proud.
-- Joseph Champlin, South Kingstown, Rhode Island, 1848
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3) The Video Overview of Joseph Champlin's 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.
Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver
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