Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Life Memoir of Joseph Champlin (1757-1850) of Rhode Island, a Revolutionary War Soldier

 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. 

(AI Google NotebookLM Infographic for Joseph Champlin's life memoir)

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:   


The Life and Times of Joseph Champlin
As Told to His Grandchildren

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

================================

3)  The Video Overview of Joseph Champlin's 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 Joseph Champlin might have told his grandchildren in 1848.  

==============================================

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

The URL for this post is: 

Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post. Share it on Twitter, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below. Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com. Please note that all comments are moderated, and may not appear immediately.

Subscribe to receive a free daily email from Genea-Musings using www.Blogtrottr.com.


Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Genealogy News Bytes - Week of 4 to 10 March 2026

 Welcome to Genealogy News Bytes, posted on Tuesday afternoon for the past week, where we try to highlight the most important genealogy and family history news  items that came across our desktop since the last issue.    


1)  Genealogy and Family History News Articles:
2)  IGG/DNA-Related News Articles

4)  New or Updated Genealogy Digital Record Collections:

5)  Did you miss the last post in this series?  See Genealogy News Bytes - Week of 25 February to 3 March 2026.


                          =========================================


Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post.  Share it on Twitter, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below.  Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.  
Note that all comments are moderated, and may not appear immediately.

Subscribe to receive a free daily email from Genea-Musings using www.Blogtrottr.com. 

Slide Show for the Norman and Sarah (Read) Seaver Family of Massachusetts

After writing the ABC Biography of Norman Seaver (1734-1787) of Massachusetts, I used the Slide Deck created by AI Google NotebookLM to create a Google Slides show with narration by Google Vids to summarize their lives.  I added a front slide, an Infographic slide, and a back slide to the NotebookLM Slide Deck to create this slide show.

Here is the Infographic created by Google NotebookLM for Norman Seaver's biography:

Here is the Slide Show for the Norman and Sarah (Read) Seaver family of Massachusetts:

Norman and Sarah (Read) Seaver are my 5th great-grandparents. Norman Seaver (1734-1787) is one of my ancestral Revolutionary War soldiers.

This slide show is about 4 minutes long, yet it describes their lives and achievements succinctly.  There may be minor spelling or content errors on the slides, and the AI tool doesn't do maps perfectly.  I expect that later versions of this tool will be better, and can use my voice for the narration.

Creating this slide show from the NotebookLM Slide Deck, including creating the front and back pages, takes only about 30 minutes of time once the user masters the process using the slide deck, Google Slides, and Google Vids. 

==============================================

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

The URL for this post is:  https://www.geneamusings.com/2026/03/slide-show-for-norman-and-sarah-read.html

Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post. Share it on Twitter, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below. Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com. Please note that all comments are moderated, and may not appear immediately.

Subscribe to receive a free daily email from Genea-Musings using www.Blogtrottr.com.

Ask AI: Describe Sarah (Read) Seaver's Years of Widowhood, 1787-1808

The Artificial Intelligence tools (like ChatGPT, Claude, CoPilot, Gemini, Grok, Meta, and Perplexity) can provide much useful and nearly instant information about subjects in a concise format, especially when they have been pre-trained on a large volume of information about the subjects.

I wondered if the FREE AI tools could provide me with a story about about the widowhood of my 5th great-grandmother, Sarah (Read) Seaver (1736-1808) of Westminster, Massachusetts.

 My genealogical sketch for Sarah (Read) Seaver is 52 Ancestors - Week 106: #129 Sarah (Read) Seaver (1736-1808), based on my genealogical research.

(AI NotebookLM Infographic of the widowhood of Sarah (Read) Seaver)

1)  My Prompt to free Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 was:  "Please describe the years of Sarah (Read) Seaver's widowhood from 1787 to 1808."

2)  The AI tool responded with this story (yes, it is historical fiction, but the way it might have been): 


Widow Sarah (Read) Seaver’s Years, 1787-1808



July 31, 1787

Sarah Seaver was probably doing ordinary household work that summer afternoon when someone came running with the news. There had been an accident at the meetinghouse raising. Her husband Norman had fallen. He was badly hurt.

She would have dropped whatever she was doing and rushed to the site, her heart pounding. The new meetinghouse frame stood partially erected, a skeletal structure of heavy timbers. Men clustered around something on the ground. As Sarah pushed through the crowd, she would have seen Norman lying there, possibly already unconscious, grievously injured from his fall from the frame.

There was nothing to be done. Norman died almost immediately from his injuries, leaving Sarah a widow at approximately 53 years old. In an instant, everything changed.

They had been married for thirty-two years. Sarah had borne thirteen children for Norman. Together they had moved from Sudbury to Shrewsbury to Westminster, building farms and raising their family. Norman had served in the Revolution, rising to the rank of lieutenant, and had come home safely from the war. They had survived so much together. And now, in a moment of terrible chance, he was gone.

The First Days

In the days following Norman’s death, Sarah would have been surrounded by family and neighbors. In close-knit communities like Westminster, death brought people together. Women would have come to help prepare Norman’s body for burial, to cook meals, to sit with Sarah. Her older daughters -- Eunice (now 32 and married to Elisha Whitney), Benjamin‘s wife Martha, and Sally (28, not yet married), would have been there to support their mother.

But Sarah also had five children still living at home: Relief, age 12; Asahel, 11; Faitha, 9; and Lucinda, just 7 years old. These children had just lost their father, and Sarah had to be strong for them even as she was drowning in her own grief.

Norman was buried in Woodside Cemetery with military honors befitting a Revolutionary War officer. The slate gravestone read simply: “In memory Cap. Norman Seaver who Deceased July 31st 1787 in the 53rd year of his age.” Sarah stood at the grave with her children around her, facing an uncertain future.

Taking Charge of the Estate

Norman had died intestate -- without a will. Whether this was an oversight or simply because he never expected to die so suddenly at age 52, we don’t know. But it meant Sarah had to navigate the probate process to settle his estate and ensure her family was provided for.

On September 25, 1787, less than two months after Norman’s death, Sarah was appointed administratrix of the estate. William Edgell and Josiah Puffer served as sureties for a bond of 2,000 pounds, a substantial sum that indicated the estate’s value. This was a serious responsibility. As administratrix, Sarah would have to inventory all of Norman’s property, settle any debts, and eventually distribute the estate to the heirs according to law.

The inventory, when it was finally recorded in 1791, showed that Norman had left them reasonably well-off. The real estate was valued at 215 pounds and included the 106-acre house lot with buildings worth 212 pounds, plus a 3-acre piece of land held in common with Timothy Heywood, Samuel Miller, and William Murdock. The personal estate, livestock, tools, household goods, and other movable property, was valued at 159 pounds, 19 shillings, and 9 pence.

But Sarah didn’t just inherit property, she also inherited responsibility. As a widow with minor children, she had decisions to make about the farm, about her children’s futures, about how to manage on her own.

Managing the Farm

The 106-acre farm was Sarah’s home and her livelihood. Under the law of dower, she had a one-third life interest in Norman’s real estate, which meant she could live on the property and use it for her support as long as she lived. The remaining two-thirds would eventually be divided among the children, with eldest son Benjamin receiving a double portion.

But who would actually work the land? Sarah was in her fifties, and while colonial women were certainly capable of hard physical labor, running a 106-acre farm was not something she could do alone. Her older sons would have been essential. Benjamin was 30 and married with his own household, but he lived nearby and undoubtedly helped his mother. Isaac, 24, may have been living on the family property and doing much of the actual farm work. Ethan was 22, Daniel 20, Heman 18. These young men would have stepped up to help their mother maintain the farm.

Luther, age 16 in 1787, was old enough to do a man’s work and probably lived at home helping his mother. The younger boys, Asahel at 11 would have done what they could, learning farming as they grew. Sarah herself would have managed the household, the garden, the dairy work, the preservation of food, and the countless other tasks that kept a colonial farm running.

It wouldn’t have been easy. Sarah had to make decisions about crops, about when to plant and harvest, about buying and selling. She had to manage finances, something Norman had always handled. She had to deal with merchants, with neighbors, with town officials, all as a woman in a man’s world. But she had learned a lot in thirty-two years of marriage to a farmer and carpenter, and she had raised thirteen children. If anyone could manage, it was Sarah.

Raising the Youngest Four

While Sarah’s adult children could help with the farm, her youngest four children needed her in different ways. Relief, Asahel, Faitha, and Lucinda had all lost their father while they were still children, and Sarah had to be both mother and father to them.

Relief, at 12 when her father died, was old enough to remember him clearly and to help her mother with household work. By age 15, she would have been a capable young woman, skilled in all the domestic arts. Perhaps Sarah had hopes of seeing Relief well married to a good man from Westminster.

On January 3, 1792, when the estate was finally distributed, Sarah was appointed guardian for daughters Feathe (Faitha) and Lucenden (Lucinda), while Samuel Gerrish was appointed guardian for Asahel and Relief. This legal arrangement would have helped ensure the younger children’s inheritance was protected and used appropriately for their upbringing and education.

Sarah would have taught her daughters everything they needed to know to run a household: spinning, weaving, sewing, cooking, preserving food, making soap and candles, managing servants if they had any, treating minor ailments. Asahel, as the youngest son still at home, would have learned farming from his older brothers but also needed his mother’s guidance as he grew into manhood.

August 20, 1795: A Mother's Worst Grief

On August 20, 1795, eight years after Norman’s death, Sarah suffered a loss that surely rivaled her grief for her husband. Her daughter Relief died at the age of 20.

We don’t know what took Relief’s life. Disease was ever-present in the 18th century -- typhoid, smallpox, consumption, childbed fever, or any number of ailments that are now treatable but were then often fatal. Relief was just entering the prime of her life, old enough to marry and have children of her own. Instead, she was buried in Woodside Cemetery.

For Sarah, this must have been devastating. She had already buried her husband. Now she was burying a child. Any parent will tell you there is no greater pain than losing a child, no matter the child’s age. Relief had been just 12 years old when Norman died; Sarah had raised her through those difficult years alone, and now Relief was gone.

But Sarah had to go on. She still had other children who needed her, grandchildren who were being born, a farm to manage. Grief was a luxury she couldn’t afford for long.

Weddings and Grandchildren

Even as Sarah dealt with loss, she also experienced the joy of seeing her children marry and start families of their own. These weddings must have been bittersweet occasions -- joyful for the new unions, but tinged with sadness that Norman wasn’t there to see them.

Sally married Josiah Cutter on March 17, 1789 -- less than two years after her father’s death. Sarah would have helped her daughter prepare for the wedding, perhaps sewing her a new dress, certainly offering the wisdom of her own long marriage.

Faitha married Isaac Brooks on December 1, 1795 -- just a few months after Relief’s death. One wonders if the wedding was tinged with extra poignancy, coming so soon after burying Relief. Sarah was giving away another daughter, but at least this time to a husband and a future, not to the grave.

Lucinda, the baby of the family, married Samuel Frost around 1800. She had been just seven years old when her father died -- she probably barely remembered him. But she had her mother, and Sarah had successfully raised her to adulthood and seen her well married.

Asahel married Hannah Gager on May 7, 1801. As the youngest son, Asahel had been only 11 when Norman died, and Sarah had raised him to manhood alone. Seeing him marry and establish his own household must have been deeply satisfying, proof that she had succeeded in her duty to her late husband and their children.

And with the marriages came grandchildren. By the 1790s and early 1800s, Sarah was becoming a grandmother many times over. Her older children -- Eunice, Benjamin, Sally, Isaac, Ethan, Daniel, Heman -- were all having children of their own. Sarah would have welcomed these babies, perhaps helped care for them, passed on the knowledge she had gained raising thirteen children. The farmhouse in Westminster may have echoed with the sounds of visiting grandchildren, bringing life and noise and joy back to rooms that had been too quiet after Norman’s death.

The Rhythm of Widowhood

What was Sarah’s daily life like during these years? We can piece together a picture from what we know about widows in late 18th-century New England.

She would have risen early, as farm life demanded. There was always work to be done: cooking, cleaning, washing, mending. In summer, there was a large garden to tend, produce to preserve. In fall, preparations for winter. In winter, spinning and weaving, mending and making clothes. Spring brought planting and the cycle began again.

As a widow, Sarah would have worn dark, somber colors -- mourning dress was expected for a year or more after a spouse’s death, and many widows continued to wear darker, more subdued clothing for the rest of their lives. She probably wore a cap that marked her as a widow and matron.

She would have attended church regularly. The meetinghouse where Norman had died would have been finished and dedicated, and Sarah would have sat in the family pew -- Pew No. 2 on the lower floor near the wall, which Norman had owned and which had cost between $31 and $66. Each Sunday she would have been reminded of the building that had taken her husband’s life, but also of the community that sustained her.

Sarah would have had friendships with other women in Westminster -- neighbors, fellow church members, other widows who understood what she was going through. These relationships would have been essential for both practical help and emotional support. Women shared work, shared knowledge, shared their lives in ways that helped them all survive.

Watching Them Go

As the years passed, Sarah watched her children spread out across New England and beyond. This was the natural order of things -- children grew up and left to make their own way, but it must have been hard to see them go, especially for a widow without a husband to share the empty nest.

Eunice and her husband Elisha Whitney eventually moved to Peru, Vermont. Daniel moved to Maryland, New York, and later to Schenevus in Otsego County, New York, where he would die in 1851. Lucinda and Samuel Frost ended up in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, a long way from Westminster. These children Sarah might rarely see once they moved so far away. Letters would have been the main connection, and letters were expensive and uncertain in their delivery.

But some children stayed closer. Benjamin remained in Westminster all his life, dying there in 1816. Asahel also stayed in Westminster, where he would live until 1849. Isaac occupied the family’s Westminster land on lots 76 and 122 for many years, the same land Norman had purchased back in 1773. Having these children nearby must have been a great comfort to Sarah in her later years.

The Last Years

As Sarah moved through her sixties and into her seventies, she would have slowed down. The endless work of running a household and farm would have become harder. Perhaps she lived with one of her children in her final years, or perhaps she remained in the Westminster farmhouse with children and grandchildren checking on her regularly.

She would have seen her grandchildren growing up, perhaps even great-grandchildren being born. She had lived through the Revolution, seen her husband and sons serve in the Continental Army, witnessed the birth of the United States as an independent nation. She had survived the death of a husband and a daughter, raised thirteen children largely on her own after Norman died, and managed a substantial farm property for two decades.

By 1808, Sarah was approximately 73 years old. She had lived more than twice as long as a widow as many women lived in total. That year, fifty-three years after marrying Norman in Sudbury and twenty-one years after his death in Westminster, Sarah died.

We don’t know exactly when or how she died, or where she was buried. The records don’t tell us those details. But we can imagine her children and grandchildren gathered around her at the end, grateful for the woman who had held the family together through so much loss and change.

Sarah's Legacy

Sarah (Read) Seaver’s life spanned some of the most momentous years in American history. Born in the 1730s when Massachusetts was still a British colony, she lived to see the Revolution, the founding of the nation, and the early years of the Republic. She married at probably 18 or 19, bore thirteen children over twenty-five years, moved her family multiple times as Norman sought better opportunities, endured his absences during the war, and then, after thirty-two years of marriage, became a widow with five children still at home.

Those twenty-one years of widowhood were not just years of survival, though Sarah certainly did survive. They were years of strength, competence, and dignity. Sarah managed a substantial estate, raised her youngest children to adulthood, saw them well married, welcomed grandchildren and great-grandchildren, and maintained her place in the Westminster community.

The facts we have about Sarah are mostly dry legal records, probate documents, guardianship appointments, land records. But between the lines we can see a remarkable woman. She didn’t just endure hardship; she overcame it. She didn’t just survive; she prevailed.

When we visit Woodside Cemetery in Westminster today and see Norman’s grave with its Revolutionary War marker, we should remember that the story doesn’t end with his death in 1787. Sarah lived on for twenty-one more years. She kept the family together, maintained the farm, raised the children, and created a legacy that extended far beyond her own lifetime.

Twelve of her thirteen children survived to adulthood and had families of their own. Those families spread across New England, New York, and even into Canada. By the time Sarah died in 1808, she had dozens of descendants. Today, Norman and Sarah Seaver have thousands of descendants scattered across the world.

And all of them owe their existence not just to Norman, the Revolutionary War lieutenant who has the gravestone and the military honors, but equally to Sarah, the widow who lived quietly and without fanfare for twenty-one years after his death, holding everything together with strength, determination, and love.

That is Sarah’s legacy. And it is worth remembering.

Historical Notes

Documentary Evidence

The documented facts about Sarah’s widowhood come from probate records, vital records, and published genealogies. We know Norman died on July 31, 1787, and that Sarah was appointed administratrix of his estate on September 25, 1787. The probate records detail the inventory, distribution to heirs, and guardianship appointments. We know Sarah died in 1808, making her a widow for approximately 21 years. We have the dates of her children’s marriages and the death date of Relief in 1795.

Widowhood in 18th-Century New England

The daily life details and emotional experiences described in this narrative are based on historical research about widowhood in colonial and early Republic New England. Widows faced particular legal and economic challenges, but also had more autonomy than married women in some ways. The dower right (one-third life interest in the husband’s real estate) was standard law. Widows commonly served as administratrixes of their husbands’ estates and as guardians for minor children.

The specifics of Sarah’s daily activities, thoughts, and feelings are reasonably imagined based on what we know about women’s lives in this period, but they are not documented in surviving records.

What We Don't Know

We don’t have records of when or how Sarah died in 1808, or where she was buried. We don’t know if she remained on the farm or lived with children in her final years. We don’t have letters or diaries that might reveal her thoughts and feelings. We can only infer from the legal records and from general knowledge about the period what her life might have been like.

What we do know with certainty is that Sarah Read Seaver lived from approximately 1736 to 1808, married Norman Seaver in 1755, bore thirteen children, was widowed in 1787, managed Norman’s estate, raised her younger children to adulthood, and lived as a widow for twenty-one years before her death. The strength and resilience that would have required is beyond question.

==============================

3)  Here is the Video Overview of this post by Google NotebookLM. 

4)  This is historical fiction based on the facts that are available for Norman and Sarah (Read) Seaver's lives and the lives of their children.  It is historical fiction based on social history and society norms at the time and place, so it is likely realistic. It might have happened this way.

5)  When I read this for the first time, I wept --several passages moved me to tears. What a capable, strong and resilient person my 5th great-grandmother was.  She is in my pantheon of ancestral heroes. I had to tell her story. Each ancestor faces challenges in their life -- telling stories about them helps our descendants understand their parents lives and their own lives. 

==============================================

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


Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post.  Share it on Twitter, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below.  Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.  Note that all comments are moderated, so they may not appear immediately.

Subscribe to receive a free daily email from Genea-Musings using www.Blogtrottr.com. 

Monday, March 9, 2026

Randy's Genealogy Pot-Pourri - Week Ending 8 March 2026

 Here are the highlights of my family history and genealogy related activities over the past week (ending Sunday, 1 March 2026). 

1)  Attended the Chula Vista Genealogical Society Board Meeting on Wednesday and reported on the newsletter, Research Group and Family History Roundtable meetings. Wrote, edited and published the March 2026 edition of the CVGS newsletter.

2)  Attended RootsTech 2026 online over three days, and summarized my activities in:

3)  Curated genealogy-related articles to keep myself and my readers updated on the genealogy world in:

9)  Updated my Randy's AI and Genealogy page. Added a number of the recent Google NotebookLM Videos and Slide Shows to my YouTube channel at   https://www.youtube.com/@RandySeaver

10)  Tried the new Scribe AI  tool on MyHeritage to transcribe, translate, describe and analyze a record or photograph in Trying Out the MyHeritage Scribe AI Tool To Transcribe, Translate, Interpret and Describe An Italian Birth Record.  It worked great!

11)  My AncestryDNA test now has 51,065 DNA matches (up 202 from 1 March) with 2,163 "close" matches (20 cM or more) today (up 8), with three new ThruLines.  Added Notes to three Matches, and added no new DNA match lines to RootsMagic.    MyHeritageDNA test now has 14,241 DNA matches (up 65 from 1 March) for me. 

12)  Searched for more records of ancestral families on Ancestry, FamilySearch and MyHeritage, downloaded record images to my digital file folders, and added research notes, events and sources to RootsMagic profiles.  My RootsMagic family tree now has 74,947 profiles (up 18 from last week)  and 147,973 source citations (up 2).  

13) Wrote 26 Genea-Musings blog posts last week (Sunday through Saturday), of which three were a press release. The most viewed post last week was Ask AI: "Describe Joseph Champlin's Revolutionary War Military Service" with over 370 views.  Genea-Musings had about  292,00page views last week and over 1,508,000 views over the past month (lots of bots I think). 

14)  Real life events:  Visited Linda several days this past week at her memory care facility.  Went to the grocery store on Monday and Friday. Ran the lawn mower through the hip-high backyard grass/weeds and trimmed the periphery, whew (they grew since last summer)! Had two crowns installed on Thursday by the dentist. Attended the Men's Bible Study on Saturday -- we started a Hebrews study book. Still reading Shock Wave by John Sandford.  The San Diego State Aztecs basketball team was 1-1 last week, so now are 20-10 on the season.   

                           =============================================

Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post. Share it on X, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below. Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.  Please note that all comments are moderated and may not appear immediately. 

Subscribe to receive a free daily email from Genea-Musings using www.Blogtrottr.com.

Randy’s Memories: Our May, 2004 East Coast Vacation

I wrote several Genea-Musings posts about our vacation travels all over the United States and some foreign countries, but they are all in my "Engineer-speak" and "Just-the-facts" writing style. 

One of our most memorable trips was to the East Coast in the spring of 2004.


I wondered if my AI-assistant Anthropic Claude could turn my "Engineer-speak" story into an engaging story about our 2004 vacation trip to the East Coast. 

Here is Claude's version of the story:


Chasing Ancestors and Creating Memories
A 2004 Journey Through Pennsylvania, New York, Ontario, and Maryland

The Southwest Airlines flight from San Diego descended toward Baltimore, and I felt the familiar tingle of anticipation. Ahead lay sixteen days in May, two thousand miles, and a dual mission that perfectly captured my twin passions: celebrating family in the present while pursuing the mysteries of family past. My wife Linda, who loves shopping and finding treasures, and I were about to embark on a journey that would take us from my cousin’s golden anniversary celebration to the spray of Niagara Falls, from dusty genealogy archives to the hallowed halls of baseball history.

I’d spent weeks preparing, posting requests on Rootsweb message boards, printing maps from Expedia, and organizing genealogy reports in my notebook. But as I would soon learn, even the best-laid plans leave room for surprise -- both the disappointing kind (locked cemetery gates) and the thrilling kind (unexpected documentary treasures).

A Golden Beginning in Easton

Our first stop was Easton, Pennsylvania, where my first cousin John Charles “Jack” Wood and his wife Joan were celebrating their 50th wedding anniversary. The party was everything such a milestone should be -- warm with laughter, rich with stories, and populated by generations of family and friends. We’d visited Jack and Joan at their home in Milford, New Jersey, back in 1998, and over the years we’d exchanged letters about our Seaver and Richmond family history. Seeing them surrounded by their children and grandchildren, all gathered to honor five decades of marriage, reminded me why genealogy mattered in the first place. We weren’t just names on a chart or dates in a record book. We were living connections in a chain that stretched backward and forward through time.


After the festivities, though, I was eager to get on the trail of some ancestors who’d proven far more elusive than Jack and Joan.

The Locked Gates of Newton

Newton, New Jersey, was home to my Knapp and Auble families from the 1820s through 1865. I knew that William and Sarah (Cutter) Knapp were buried in the Newton Cemetery, and I’d marked it carefully on my map. When we pulled up to the cemetery, my optimism deflated like a punctured tire. The older stones, they told us, were in the Old Newton Cemetery -- behind an auto dealership, accessible through a locked gate.

“Oh well,” I muttered, making a mental note that my planning hadn’t been quite as thorough as I’d thought. “On to the library.”

The Sussex County Public Library, northwest of Newton, more than made up for the cemetery disappointment. The genealogy section was a researcher’s dream: books, manuscripts, microfilm holdings all meticulously organized. I found a volume of cemetery inscriptions that gave me what the locked gate had denied. But my real treasure was an 1860 plat map showing the names and locations of Newton’s residents, including “W. Knapp.”

Then came the discovery that made the whole stop worthwhile: sixteen microfilms containing the research files of Francis Crawn. These vertical files included notes on an Abigail Knapp, born in Dutchess County, New York, in 1769, who married William Hill and lived near Newton before 1820. Crawn had hypothesized that William Knapp might be Abigail’s sibling or cousin. It wasn’t proof -- not yet -- but it was a lead, and in genealogy, a good lead is sometimes worth more than gold. [Alas, it didn't pan out!]

A Pilgrimage to Cooperstown

From Newton, we drove north to Cooperstown, where a very different kind of history waited. The Baseball Hall of Fame is a shrine to America’s pastime, and we spent a glorious morning wandering its galleries, cameras in hand. My friends know that I’ve been a San Diego Padres fan since my childhood. I lingered especially over the exhibits for Ted Williams -- a San Diego boy whose legend my mother had brushed against in her youth; Dave Winfield -- originally a Padre; and Tony Gwynn, Mr. San Diego Padre himself. There’s something about baseball history that mirrors genealogy: both are about connection, legacy, and the stories we tell to remember who we are and where we came from.


The Phantom Fireplace of Watertown

By evening we’d reached Watertown, New York, in Jefferson County. Here I hoped to find traces of Ranslow Smith (1805-1873), who lived in Henderson Township from 1830 to 1843, and the James Bell family (1777-1836), who settled there after 1812. Before I found out differently, they were my third great-grandparents – Ranslow and his wife Polly Bell adopted my second great-grandfather Devier James Smith in about 1840 (I found that out in 2011).

The Flower Library in downtown Watertown proved to be another goldmine. The public genealogy section opened first, where I pored over maps, and then at noon the closed section opened, revealing even more riches. Volunteers from the Jefferson County Genealogical Society brought out eight folders of Smith data and one of Bell materials. The folders overflowed with newspaper obituaries and correspondence from other researchers -- though sadly, none searching for my Ranslow Smith. Still, I scored a copy of an 1864 plat map for Henderson and some Bible records for a Lyman Smith family.

At the South Jefferson Historical Society in Adams, I found alphabetized surname listings for cemetery records and handwritten family group records gleaned from county histories. Everything was pointing me toward Henderson and the Ranslow Smith house, which supposedly bore the carving “R. Smith 1839” in its fireplace mantel.

I found the house. I took pictures. But nobody was home. The fireplace mantel with its carved date would have to wait for another trip, another day. In genealogy, as in life, you can’t win them all.


Above the Falls, Below the Spray

After Watertown, we crossed into Canada, driving southwest along Lake Ontario’s shore to Toronto. That evening, we dined high above the city in the CN Tower restaurant, watching the urban sprawl glitter below us as the sun set. 


The next day brought us to Niagara Falls, where we experienced one of nature’s most magnificent spectacles. The day was cool and misty -- perfect waterfall weather. We photographed the cascades from above, feeling the rumble through the stone beneath our feet. Then we took a boat ride below the falls, where the spray soaked us (in rain coverings, of course) and the roar drowned out every other sound. It was, quite literally, a once-in-a-lifetime experience, the kind of moment that burns itself into memory and becomes part of your own family story.


Carringer Country in Mercer

From Niagara Falls, we drove south through Buffalo and Erie to Mercer, Pennsylvania, home to three generations of Carringer families, the Daniel Spangler family, and the Cornelius Feather family from 1800 to 1860. I’d identified two repositories: the Shenango Valley Public Library in Sharon and the Mercer County Historical Society.

The Sharon library surprised me with an entire rack of notebooks containing newspaper obituaries, one volume for each year since around 1950. I also found 1864 and 1878 plat maps that helped me identify the location of the Carringer homestead, established in 1795. After dinner, we drove out to Perry Township, though the houses at the old homestead location had been replaced by modern buildings. The past, it seemed, had been paved over.

But the Mercer County Historical Society more than compensated. For a small county, they maintained an excellent collection. The highlight for me was the floor to ceiling wall map of the County from the 1864 plat map –awesome! I reviewed manuscript and vertical files, discovering newspaper articles about the first settler, Martin Carringer, and the probate records for Cornelius Feather. These weren’t just names anymore -- they were people with property, possessions, lives that left traces in the historical record.

Georgetown’s Hidden Connection

Our journey south took us through Pittsburgh, Bedford, and Frederick, finally landing us at a hotel in Greenbelt, Maryland. We met up with friends -- Paul and Kathy, Paul's mother was part of our church community back in Chula Vista -- for dinner and catching up.

The next morning, I made my final research stop at the Prince Georges County Public Library in Hyattsville, just north of Washington, D.C. My wife’s McKnew and Pickrell families had lived in Prince Georges County and in the District itself. The library’s special history and genealogy room had no manuscripts or vertical files, but I worked through cemetery records, newspaper collections, and vital record books.

My small success came in the form of a revelation: Benjamin Pickrell had lived in Washington, D.C., from 1820 to 1830, along with several other Pickrell families. It struck me as funny that I’d never seriously considered D.C. for this family line -- though of course, Georgetown had been part of Prince Georges County before 1790. Sometimes the clues are hiding in plain sight, just waiting for us to shift our perspective slightly.

What We Found, What We Learned

The next day, we flew back to San Diego from Baltimore, our suitcases heavier with my photocopies and Linda’s angel treasures, our minds richer with discoveries. Had I made major research breakthroughs? Not exactly. But I’d gathered valuable material on several family lines, visited two ancestral homesteads, and learned important lessons about preparation and persistence.

More importantly, the trip reminded me that genealogy isn’t just about the past -- it’s about the present too. It’s about standing in Jack and Joan’s living room, surrounded by their descendants, understanding viscerally that we’re all part of an ongoing story. It’s about feeling the spray of Niagara Falls and knowing that my ancestors, too, once marveled at the natural world. It’s about the thrill of finding a Francis Crawn research file or an 1860 plat map and recognizing that someone else cared enough about these names to preserve their memory.

As for those locked cemetery gates and that elusive fireplace mantel? They’ll have to wait -- thankfully, there is Find A Grave! In genealogy, there’s always another trip, another archive, another mystery to solve. And that’s exactly how I like it.

=================================

  Here is the AI Google NotebookLM Video Overview of this story:  


Claude followed my blog post very well, and also added some interpretation and description to the narrative.  

==============================================

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

The URL for this post is:  https://www.geneamusings.com/2026/03/randys-memories-our-may-2004-east-coast.html

Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post. Share it on Twitter, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below. Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com. Please note that all comments are moderated, and may not appear immediately.

Subscribe to receive a free daily email from Genea-Musings using www.Blogtrottr.com.