Tuesday, September 16, 2025

Mary Ann (Underhill) Vaux's Life Memories - An AI-Assisted Memoir

 I wrote a genealogical sketch for my 3rd great-grandmother, Mary Ann (Underhill) Vaux (1815-1882) in  52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks - Week 48: #55, Mary Ann (Underhill) Vaux (1815-1882), based on the recordsfound that document her life.

(AI ChatGPT5 image of Samuel Vaux  family in Wisconsin in 1860)

1)  Based on the genealogical sketch, I requested Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4 to create a memoir written by Anna (Row) Auble talking about her life in 1860.  The prompt was:  "Please write a memoir for Mary Ann (Underhill) Vaux, based on the attached genealogical sketch, as she might tell to her grandchildren in January 1882."

The AI Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4 memoir (lightly edited for accuracy) is:

My Story: A Memoir by Mary Ann (Underhill) Vaux

As told to my grandchildren in January 1882

Come sit close to me, my dear ones, and let me tell you about the life I've lived—a life that began when your great-grandfather was still alive to remember the very founding of this great nation. At sixty-six years, I've seen this country grow from scattered settlements to a land of railroads and telegraphs, and I want you to know the story of how we came to be here together.

The Beginning: My Childhood in Aurora

I was born on the fifth day of March, 1815, in Aurora, Erie County, New York, to parents who had already seen the turn of the century and the birth of a new nation. My father, Amos Underhill, was born in 1772—imagine that! He was already a grown man when President Washington was still leading our country. My dear mother, Mary Metcalf, married him in 1801, and together they carved out a life in New Hampshire where they had a farm, and moved to Aurora in western New York 1812, still considered frontier country, just as the War of 1812 was starting.

I was the fourth of five children, right in the middle of our little tribe. My older brothers, Cyrus and James, were always getting into some mischief or another, while my sister Almeda and I tried to keep up with them. Poor little Frederick, born when I was five, didn't live to grow up with us—the Lord called him home when he was only ten years old. Such losses were common then, children, though no less heartbreaking for their frequency.

Our farm in Aurora was a place of endless work and simple pleasures. I learned early to churn butter, tend the garden, preserve fruits for winter, and help my mother with the never-ending tasks of keeping house. Father grew wheat and corn, and we had cows, pigs, and chickens. I can still remember the sound of my mother's spinning wheel in the evenings, and how we children would gather around while she worked, listening to stories or helping card wool.

The winters in New York were fierce—snow that reached the windowsills and cold that would freeze the water in our washbasins overnight. But oh, how beautiful the world looked covered in white! We children would slide down the hills on wooden sleds Father made, and in summer we'd wade in the creek and pick wild berries until our fingers were stained purple.

Meeting Your Grandfather Samuel

When I was twenty-one years old, in 1836, I met a young man who would change the course of my life forever. Samuel Vaux had come to our area from England—all the way from a place called South Petherton in Somerset. He was just twenty years old, with dark hair and kind eyes, and he carried himself with the quiet determination of someone who had crossed an ocean to build a new life.

Samuel's journey to America with his parents, James and Mary Vaux, and everything familiar to seek opportunities in this new land. When he told me stories of the green countryside of England, with its ancient stone walls and centuries-old villages, I could barely imagine such a place. But he said America held more promise for a young man willing to work hard.

We courted for nearly a year, walking together after church services and sitting on the porch while my parents kept watchful eyes on us. Samuel was learning American farming methods and working for neighbors to earn his way. He had such dreams of owning his own land and building something lasting.

We married in 1837—though we never found the time or money for fancy wedding portraits or elaborate ceremonies. Such things seemed less important then than they do now. What mattered was that we loved each other and were ready to build a life together. I was twenty-two, and Samuel was twenty-one—so young, but we felt ready to take on the world.

Building Our Family

Our first child, Mary Almeda, arrived in 1839, not quite two years after our wedding. Oh, how my heart swelled when I first held her! She was so perfect, so small, with tiny fingers that would grasp mine so tightly. Being a mother was everything I had dreamed it would be, and more frightening than I had ever imagined.

Then came Celia Ann in 1842—May 23rd, to be exact. She was a spirited little thing from the moment she drew breath, always into everything, always curious. Where Mary Almeda was gentle and careful, Celia was bold and adventurous.

Abigail—our dear Abbie—came along in 1844 on October 28th. Even as a baby, she had such a caring nature. She seemed to understand when the younger children needed comfort, and she grew into the most helpful daughter a mother could ask for.

James Pierce was our first son, born January 8th, 1847. How Samuel beamed with pride! To have a son to carry on the family name and help with the heavier farm work—it meant everything to a man trying to build something in this new country.

Elizabeth followed in 1849, born on August first. She was our summer baby, born during the busiest time of year on the farm, but somehow she fit right into the rhythm of our busy household.

And finally, little Amos came to us in 1854. By then I was thirty-nine years old and thought my childbearing days might be over, but the Lord blessed us with one more sweet baby. He was such a joy, our youngest, and all his older siblings doted on him.

Life on the Farm

Oh, children, how can I describe the endless work and endless love that filled those early years? Samuel would be up before dawn, tending to the animals and working the fields. I would rise with him to pack his dinner and start the bread for the day. By the time the children were stirring, I'd already have the fire going and breakfast started.

Every day brought its own tasks. Mondays were for washing—heating water in great kettles, scrubbing clothes on the washboard until my knuckles were raw, hanging everything on lines that stretched across our yard. Tuesdays for ironing with heavy irons heated on the stove. Wednesdays and Thursdays for mending, sewing new clothes as the children grew, piecing quilts for warmth.

Fridays were for baking bread for the week and cleaning the house thoroughly. Saturdays for preparing for Sunday—polishing shoes, laying out our best clothes, preparing food that wouldn't require work on the Sabbath. And Sundays, blessed Sundays, when we would all walk together to the little church in town, dressed in our finest, to give thanks for another week of life and health.

But it wasn't all work. We had corn husking bees where neighbors would gather to help each other, and the children would play games while we adults shared news and gossip. There were barn raisings when a neighbor needed help, and everyone would come together—the men to work, the women to cook great meals, and the children to run wild with excitement at having so many playmates.

In winter evenings, we'd gather around the fireplace. Samuel would read to us from the Bible or the few books we owned, while I mended or knitted. The children would play with corn husk dolls or wooden toys Samuel carved for them. Sometimes we'd pop corn in a covered pan over the fire, and what a treat that was!

The Call of the West

By 1853, we began hearing more and more about opportunities in the western territories. Wisconsin was advertising for settlers, offering good land at reasonable prices. Samuel had done well as a farmer — we had over a thousand dollars worth of property, which was substantial for the time. But he dreamed of more land, more opportunity for our growing family.

The decision to leave Aurora wasn't easy for me. It meant leaving everything familiar—the church where our children had been baptized, the graves of relatives, the friends who had become like family. But I trusted Samuel's judgment, and I could see how the older children were excited about the adventure.

We sold our fifty-three acres to Robert Bartlett for $1,500 in July of 1853. I remember packing our belongings into wagons, trying to decide what could come with us and what had to be left behind. Every pot, every quilt, every book had to earn its place in our limited space.

The journey to Wisconsin was both exciting and exhausting. The children saw it as a great adventure, but I worried constantly about their safety, about getting lost, about what we'd find when we arrived. Samuel drove one wagon while I managed the children and our household goods in another.

New Beginnings in Wisconsin

Dodge County, Wisconsin, was beautiful—rolling hills, good soil, and plenty of timber for building. We settled in Burnett township, where Samuel could continue farming and we could give our children room to grow. The air seemed cleaner there, and there was such a sense of possibility.

Our older children were growing up so fast. Mary Almeda was becoming a young lady, helping me with the younger ones and learning all the skills she'd need as a wife and mother. Celia Ann was still our little spitfire, always ready for any adventure. And James was becoming a real help to his father in the fields.

Wisconsin was where we really came into our own as a family. The children attended school when farm work allowed, and we became part of a community of families all trying to build something better for their children than what they'd had themselves.

In 1861, Mary Almeda married her James Woodward, Celia married her first husband, Milo Redfield, and Abbie wed her Devier Smith and started their own families nearby.

The Missouri Years

In 1869, when I was fifty-four years old, Samuel decided we should try our luck in Missouri. We bought forty acres in Andrew County, Missouri, from a couple named Munger for $2,000. It was good land, and the climate was milder than what we'd known in New York and Wisconsin. James was still with us, helping his father, and Elizabeth and young Amos were still at home.

Missouri gave us some of our happiest years. The farm prospered, and we had Mary Almeda and her family living with us for a time. What joy it was to have grandchildren running through the house again! Little Orpha and Mary Woodward brought such life to our home. Elizabeth married Samuel Crouch in 1871, and James married Mary Alice Patrick in 1877.

But Missouri also brought us our greatest heartbreak. In 1876, our youngest, Amos, caught typhoid fever. He was only twenty-two years old, just coming into his own as a man. For weeks, I nursed him, barely sleeping, praying constantly for his recovery. But on August 23rd, 1876, the Lord called him home.

I don't know if I've ever recovered from losing Amos. A mother isn't supposed to outlive her children, and to lose him when he was so young, so full of promise—it nearly broke my heart entirely. Samuel grieved deeply too, but he kept his sorrow more to himself, as men do.

Coming to Kansas

After Amos died, the Missouri farm held too many painful memories. In 1880, we sold the land to William Bulla and came here to Kansas to live with our dear Abbie and her family. At sixty-five, neither Samuel nor I felt up to starting over again on our own land. We no sooner moved to here in Concordia than Samuel died in October 1880, and I was very sad for a time, reliving our 43 years together.

Kansas has been good to me in these final years. Abbie takes such good care of me, and I've enjoyed watching her children—your parents—grow into fine young people. The country here is so different from the wooded hills where I grew up—these endless prairies that stretch to the horizon, the way the wind never stops blowing, the enormous sky that makes you feel so small and yet so connected to God's creation.

Living with Abbie's family has given me the gift of truly knowing my grandchildren. In the busy years of raising my own children, I sometimes felt I barely had time to breathe, let alone sit and really talk with each child individually. Now I have that luxury with you dear ones.

Reflections on a Life Lived

As I sit here in January of 1882, looking back over nearly sixty-seven years of life, I'm amazed at how much our world has changed. When I was born, it took weeks to travel from New York to the western frontier. Now there are railroads that can carry you across the entire country in just days. When I was young, news traveled slowly, by horseback or letter. Now there are telegraph wires that can carry messages instantly across vast distances.

I've seen this nation struggle through difficult times—wars and economic troubles, disagreements about slavery and states' rights. But I've also seen it grow stronger and more prosperous than my parents could have ever imagined when they were young.

Most of all, I've learned that home isn't a place—it's the people you love and who love you back. We moved from New York to Wisconsin to Missouri to Kansas, but wherever Samuel and our children were, that was home. The house might be different, the landscape might change, but love travels with you and makes any place feel like home.

I want you children to remember that your heritage is one of courage and hard work and faith. Your great-grandfather Amos came to western New York when it was still frontier country. Your grandfather Samuel crossed an ocean to build a new life. Your parents and grandparents were willing to pack up everything they owned and move across the country when they thought it would give their children better opportunities.

You come from people who weren't afraid to take risks for the sake of family, who weren't afraid of hard work, and who always believed that tomorrow could be better than today if you were willing to work for it.

Words for the Future

My dear grandchildren, I may not live to see what you become or what wonders await in the years ahead, but I have such hope for your futures. This country offers opportunities that existed nowhere else in the world when I was young, and I believe those opportunities will only grow.

Remember always to be kind to each other, to work hard, and to trust in God's plan for your lives. Remember that every generation builds on what came before—my parents worked to give me opportunities they never had, Samuel and I worked to give our children more than we had, and now it's their turn to build something even better for you.

Take care of each other. Family is the most precious thing you'll ever have. Friends may come and go, fortunes may rise and fall, but family—true family—lasts forever. The love I've felt for each of my children and now for each of you has been the greatest joy of my life.

And when you're old like me, I hope you'll sit with your own grandchildren and tell them stories about their great-great-grandmother Mary Ann who crossed the country in covered wagons, who helped build communities in the wilderness, and who loved her family more than life itself.

That's the legacy I hope to leave—not money or property, but the knowledge that you are deeply loved and that you come from people who faced whatever challenges life brought with courage, faith, and love for each other.

Now come give your old grandmother a hug, and let's have some of that gingerbread I made this morning. There's nothing that makes me happier than having my family close around me, just like this.

[Mary Ann (Underhill) Vaux would pass away just ten months after telling this story, in November 1882, at her daughter Abbie's home in Concordia, Kansas.]

2)  Here is the Audio Overview for the memoir of Mary Ann (Underhill) Vaux's provided by Google NotebookLM.  

3) Here is the Video Overview provided by Google NotebookLM:  

4)  I think that these relatively short memoirs are poignant and will be interesting to her family members, especially to her descendants, and especially to me.

This format provides a different perspective than a biography, doesn't it?  It is historical fiction,  but many of the historical facts from the genealogical sketch are included and it rings true to me.  

I will write more of these AI-assisted memoirs or life memories as told by my ancestors as time goes on.  This is great genealogy fun for me!

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

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) 2025, 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.

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Seavers in the News -- 1985 Obituary of Jerrold C. Seaver of Capron, Illinois

Here is this week's edition of "Seavers in the News" - a weekly feature from the historical newspapers about persons with the surname Seaver that are interesting, useful, mysterious, fun, macabre, or add information to my family tree database.

This week's entry is from the Marengo [Ill.] Beacon/Republican-News newspaper dated Wednesday, 23 January 1985, Page 16, Column 4:


The transcription of the article is:

"JERROLD C. SEAVER 

"Jerrold C. Seaver, 81, of Capron, will be  buried, Friday at 1:30 p.m. from the Capron Lutheran Church. He died in St. Anthony Hospital, Rockford, Tuesday morning, Jan. 15, 1985.

"The son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Jon O. (Bertha Iverson) Seaver, he was born in Capron, Sept. 10, 1903.  Sept 6, 1928, in Capron, he was married to Emma McMullen. He was a retired farmer and the former owner of the Seaver Dairy.

"A member of the Capron Lutheran Church, he had also served on the church council and had been a Sunday school teacher. He was a member of the Capron Lions Club on the board of the Capron State Bank, a board member of KEEN Center, Belvidere, a former member and president of the North Boone School board and manager of Friendly Acres of the Boone County CROP program.

"Jerrold was the husband of Emma; the father of Ronald of Minneapolis, Minn.,; Robert of Huntley; Rev. and Mrs. Tenner (Roma) Thompson of Williston, N.D., and Rev. and Mrs. Richard (Dorothy) Gildseth of Wittenberg, Wis.  He had 11 grandchildren; two great-grandchildren, and was the brother of Raymond Seaver of LeSeuer, Minn. and Mrs. Lester (Dorothy) Becker of Rockford.  A sister, Terene Seaver has predeceased him.

"Friends called Thursday evening at the Saunders and Hoffman Funeral Home.

"The Rev. Stephen M. Sherer will officiate at the funeral and burial will be in Long Pariarie Cemetery, Capron. 

"An expression of sympathy may be made to either the Capron Lutheran Church or the Capron Rescue Squad."

The source citation is:

"Jerrold C. Seaver," Marengo [Ill.] Beacon/Republican-News newspaper, Wednesday, 23 January 1985, page 16, column 4, Jerrold C. Seaver obituary; imaged,  Newspapers.com    (https://www.newspapers.com : accessed 15 September 2025).

Jerrold Clement Seaver (1903-1985) was born 10 September 1903 in Capron, Illinois, the son of John Oscar and Bertha Christina (Iverson) Seaver.  He died 15 January 1985 in Rockford, Illinois.  He married Emma Elizabeth  McMullen (1905-2003) on 6 September 1928 in Capron.  They had four children:

*  Roma Rae Seaver (1930-2024), married 1956 Tenner Clarence Thompson (1924-2013)
*  Ronald Jerrold Seaver (1932-2012)
*  Robert R. Seaver (1934-????), married Susan Charlotte Knight (1937-????).
*  Dorothy Ruth Seaver (1937-2000), married (1) 1927 Lester Milton Becker (1904-1975), (2) Richard Gildseth. 

I am not related to Jerrold C. Seaver.  His grandfather was Knute Sjursen Qvarme Seaver (1826-1909) who was born in Voss, Norway and swettled in Boone County, Illinois by 1853.

You never know when a descendant or relative will find this blog post and learn something about their ancestors or relatives, or will provide more information about them to me.

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

Disclosure:  I have a paid subscription to Ancestry.com and Newspapers.com and have used it extensively to find articles about my ancestral and one-name families.


Copyright (c) 2025, 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.  Please note that all comments are moderated, and may not appear immediately.

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Monday, September 15, 2025

The Watchful House on 30th Street Remembers: "Feeding the Family"

 I  have many memories of the upstairs apartment in the two-story house at 2119 30th Street in San Diego where I grew up (from age 4 to 24).  

Did my house "watch" and "hear" and "feel" and "remember" my time living there?

I wrote a description of the layout of the 30th Street house as I recalled it.  I described each inhabitant (my father, my mother, me, my two brothers, but not the cats) and some of the daily events that happened in each room over my 20 years residing there, plus some memories of specific events. I created a PDF of that document and attached it to the AI tool to use.

(2115-2119 30th Street house in 1929, from family sources, colorized by MyHeritage)

1)  The first AI prompt that I used for the free AI tool Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4 was for story ideas, plus a short description of each idea:  "Please provide ten family history stories from my house's point of view, based on the information in the attached document."   

Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4 provided ten wonderful story ideas - here is one of them (lightly edited for accuracy, consistency, and detail).

2)  My second prompt was:  "Please write a short story about 'Feeding the Family'" and also provided some information about my mother's culinary ability and the food we ate.

Here is the Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4 story (lightly edited):

Feeding the Family

A story from the house at 2119 30th Street, Summer 1958

In my upstairs northeast corner kitchen, Betty had perfected the art of feeding a family of five with the precision of a military quartermaster and the love of a devoted mother. It was the summer of 1958—Randy was fourteen and eating everything in sight, Stan was eleven and not far behind, little Scott was two and discovering the joy of throwing food, and Fred needed sustenance for his long days managing his insurance route. Betty had learned that survival meant simplicity, and love was measured not in exotic ingredients but in the reliable rhythm of meals that appeared exactly when growing bodies needed them most.

I had watched Betty's cooking evolve over the decade since the family had moved into my walls. In the beginning, she'd attempted elaborate meals from the women's magazines that promised to make her the perfect 1950s housewife. But reality had a way of teaching practical lessons, and by 1957, Betty had discovered that the perfect meal wasn't the one that impressed dinner guests—it was the one that satisfied her hungry family without driving her to exhaustion.

My kitchen mornings began with the gentle percussion of Betty's breakfast routine. The coffee percolator would start its familiar burble at dawn, followed by the soft shuffle of her feet on the linoleum as she prepared for the daily feeding marathon. Weekday breakfasts were exercises in efficient nutrition: bananas sliced over bowls of Cheerios or Corn Flakes, toast with butter, glasses of cold milk that seemed to disappear as fast as she could pour them.

Randy, at fourteen, had become a human garbage disposal. I watched Betty's bemused expression as he'd finish his own breakfast and eye everyone else's portions with the calculating gaze of a growing teenager. "Mom, are you going to finish that toast?" became his morning catchphrase, usually asked before anyone else had taken their first bite.

Stan, approaching twelve, was developing his own impressive appetite but still maintained some semblance of table manners. He'd methodically work through his breakfast while making mental notes about lunch prospects and afternoon snack availability. Even at eleven, Stan understood logistics.

Two-year-old Scott presented entirely different challenges. His breakfast often became an abstract art project painted across my dining room walls and floor, with Cheerios serving as medium and milk as his preferred paint. Betty had learned to spread newspaper under his high chair—a practical innovation born of necessity and exhaustion.

Weekend mornings brought a different energy to my kitchen. The smell of pancake batter hitting the hot griddle, the sizzle of bacon in the cast iron pan, the sweet aroma of maple syrup warming in its little pitcher. These were Betty's small indulgences to herself and her family—slightly more elaborate meals that said "this day is special" without requiring hours of preparation.

But it was lunch that truly tested Betty's organizational skills. School days meant brown bag assembly lines that would have impressed any factory supervisor. Peanut butter sandwiches with butter — cut diagonally because that somehow made them taste better—wrapped in wax paper and tucked into paper bags alongside an apple, a handful of cookies, and occasionally a thermos of milk. When Randy hit growth spurts, Betty learned to pack extra sandwiches, knowing that one simply wouldn't sustain him through the afternoon.

Home lunches during summer vacation and weekends presented different challenges. Three boys with different tastes, different hunger levels, and the infinite capacity to complain about whatever appeared on their plates. Bologna sandwiches were generally accepted, especially when Betty remembered to remove the red skin that Stan despised but Randy didn't mind. Peanut butter sandwiches were safe territory, though arguments could erupt over smooth versus crunchy.

Afternoon snacks became strategic operations. Betty learned to hide portions of fruit, cookies, and potato chips to ensure equitable distribution throughout the day. Randy's teenage metabolism meant that anything left within his reach would disappear within hours, leaving his younger brothers snackless and cranky. The fruit bowl on my dining room table became a carefully managed resource, with oranges, grapes, peaches, tomatoes, and apples rationed to last until the next grocery trip.

But it was dinner where Betty's practical wisdom truly shone. My dining room table became the stage for meals that prioritized satisfaction over sophistication. Hamburger patties with mashed potatoes and corn. Meatloaf with green beans and baked potatoes loaded with butter. Ham with peas and carrots. Pork chops with cauliflower and more of those beloved buttered potatoes.

Chicken legs and thighs were family favorites—economical, filling, and impossible to ruin even when Betty got distracted by Scott's latest household adventure. The drumsticks always went to Randy and Stan, who had developed an elaborate system for determining fair distribution based on mysterious criteria that changed weekly but were defended with the passion of constitutional scholars. 

The vegetable negotiations were legendary. Stan would eat almost anything green, but Randy waged ongoing warfare against broccoli and asparagus. Scott, in his two-year-old wisdom, treated all vegetables with equal suspicion unless they could be hidden under enough butter to disguise their healthy intentions. Betty learned to serve small portions and enforce the "clean your plate" rule with the flexibility of a diplomat managing international negotiations.

Occasionally, special occasions called for steak—cooked well-done because that's how Fred liked it, served with baked potatoes and whatever vegetables Betty could convince everyone to eat. These meals felt like celebrations even when there was nothing particular to celebrate, which Betty understood was exactly the point of family dinners.

Spaghetti and meatball nights brought their own drama. Randy had perfected the art of twirling pasta while Stan preferred to cut his into manageable pieces—a technique that horrified his older brother but got the job done efficiently. Scott would grab handfuls and attempt to eat them like finger food, resulting in sauce-covered adventures that left my dining room looking like a crime scene.

But summer evenings brought the magic of outdoor cooking. The wood barbecue on the patio below my back porch transformed Fred from insurance agent into master fire-starter and suburban chef. I could smell the newspaper lighting, hear the wood kindling and the wood boards catching fire, and feel the anticipation building as smoke began to drift up past my windows.

Those barbecue nights were special in ways that had nothing to do with the food itself. Fred would tend the grill with the concentrated attention he usually reserved for his insurance calculations, turning hamburgers and hot dogs with the precision of a scientist conducting experiments. Betty would prepare sides in my kitchen—fruit salad, corn on the cob, macaroni and cheese, baked beans—while the boys hovered around the barbecue like moths around flame, ostensibly helping but mostly just absorbing the smoky atmosphere of summer evenings.

Grilled chicken was Fred's specialty, though "specialty" might have been generous. He approached it with the same methodical care he brought to everything else, resulting in chicken that was definitely cooked through, even if it occasionally resembled charcoal more than poultry. Nobody complained—outdoor cooking had its own magic that made even slightly burnt food taste like celebration.

The steaks were reserved for truly special occasions, and Fred grilled them until they could have been used as shoe leather. But served with baked potatoes loaded with butter, accompanied by corn on the cob dripping with more butter, they became feasts that made everyone feel prosperous and loved.

And then came the s'mores—the perfect ending to barbecue nights. Graham crackers, chocolate bars, and marshmallows transformed around the dying coals into sticky, sweet perfection. I watched through my kitchen window as the family gathered around the barbecue, poking marshmallows into the glowing embers, debating the perfect level of toastedness, laughing as someone's marshmallow caught fire and had to be blown out.

These were the moments when I understood that Betty's cooking wasn't about gourmet presentation or complex flavors. It was about reliability, comfort, and the deep satisfaction of knowing that no matter what challenges the day had brought, dinner would appear on the table at the appointed time, prepared with love and served with the expectation that family meals were sacred time.

Scott would doze off in his high chair, face sticky with marshmallow residue. Stan would help carry dishes upstairs to my kitchen, already planning tomorrow's breakfast. Randy would linger on the patio, approaching the age where family gatherings would compete with teenage social obligations but not quite there yet.

Betty tackled the mountain of dishes that every family meal generated. But I could sense her satisfaction as she worked—not in the complexity of what she'd prepared, but in the success of another day's mission accomplished. Five people fed, no one went hungry, everyone gathered around the table at least once, and the endless cycle of nourishment and love would begin again tomorrow morning with the familiar burble of the coffee percolator and the gentle chaos of breakfast preparation.

In my kitchen and dining room, Betty had created something more valuable than gourmet cuisine—she had established the rhythms of family life, where meals became the punctuation marks that divided each day into manageable segments, and where love was measured not in exotic ingredients but in the dependable appearance of food exactly when growing bodies needed it most.

The summer of 1958 was just one season in the long symphony of family feeding, but it captured the essence of what made Betty's cooking so perfect for her family: it was practical, reliable, and infused with the understanding that the best meals aren't necessarily the fanciest ones—they're the ones that bring people together around the table, day after day, year after year, creating memories seasoned with love and served with the quiet satisfaction of a job well done.

3) The Audio Overview, created by the Google Notebook AI tool is here.   (Note that a Blogger writer cannot provide an audio file.)

4) The Google NotebookLM Video Overview is below:

5) This AI material is historical fiction, since I don't have details of every day or every year in the lives of my own life or the lives of my ancestors. Does it matter that I am presenting these as seemingly real answers or conversations?  I don't think so - because my purpose is to enable my descendants to know who their ancestors were and to help them understand the lives of their ancestors.  The AI-generated responses are much more readable and creative than any response I have in my memory bank or that I can create.

6)  These events really happened over a period of time and the names and events mentioned are real.  We didn't know how lucky we boys were to have her as a mother, she was always there, prepared, patient, understanding and loving.

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

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) 2025, 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.  Please note that all comments are moderated, and may not appear immediately.

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Randy's Genealogy Pot-Pourri - Week Ending 14 September 2025

 Here are the highlights of my family history and genealogy related activities over the past week (ending Sunday, 31 August 2025).  

1)  Hosted the Chula Vista Genealogical Society (CVGS) Research Group Meeting.  Reported on the FamilySearch Full-Text Search, MyHeritage Cousin Dinder, Ancestry's handwriting recognition, the Genealogy Assistant extension, Webtember 2025, ECGGC, and Roberta Estes' Mitochondrial DNA post. 

2)  Worked on the presentation for the first CVGS Family History Roundtable, intended to help members deal with capturing and organizing their media and family stories, and passing them on to their descendants.

3)  Transcribed the 1811 Deed of Stephen Cutter Selling Land in Middlesex County, New Jersey to Richard Cutter for $1.  I transcribed it with the help of FamilySearch Full-Text Search.

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

5)  Wrote two "ABC Biographies" using my AI-assisted "Ancestor Biography Creation" process, one AI-assisted ancestor life Q&A, and one life memoir, and posted them on Genea-Musings and Substack, in:
6)  Requested free AI tools to tell me about these genealogy and family history subjects, and posted them on Genea-Musings and Substack:
7)  Posted one of the AI-assisted memories of my ancestral home in the home's voice, based on my own memories, on Genea-Musings and Substack - see The Watchful House on 30th Street Remembers: "Fred's Domain."

8)  Requested free AI tools to create a poem, song lyrics and a podcast about my 3rd great-grandfather, William Knapp (1775-1856) and had Suno.com create a song using the lyrics.  Posted the poem created by Claude Sonnet 4, the song lyrics created by X Grok 3, the Suno song link, and the ContentLM audio and video overview links in "William Knapp's Song" -- Family History Poem, Song, Audio Overview and Video Overview Created by Artificial Intelligence on Genea-Musings and Substack.

9)  Added a number of the recent NotebookLM Videos to my YouTube channel at https://www.youtube.com/@RandySeaver.  

10)  Downloaded and installed RootsMagic 11 and tried out the new AI Prompt Builder in RootsMagic 11 Is Here! Trying Out the AI Prompt Builder Feature.

11)  My AncestryDNA now has 49,839 DNA matches (up 31 from 7 September) with 2,112 "close" matches today (up 3), with two new ThruLines.  Added Notes to 2 Matches, and added no new DNA match lines to RootsMagic.  MyHeritageDNA now has 13,760 DNA matches (up 14 from 7 September) for me.  Reviewed the new DNA matches on AncestryDNA, MyHeritageDNA, FamilyTreeDNA and 23andMe.  

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 74,722 profiles (up 10 from last week)  and 147,867 source citations (up 6).  

13) Wrote 22 Genea-Musings blog posts last week (Sunday through Saturday), of which two were a press release. The most viewed post last week was ABC Biography of #55 Mary Ann (Underhill) Vaux (1815-1882) of New York, Wisconsin, Missouri and Kansas with over 256 views.  Genea-Musings had about 281,000 page views last week and over 1,008,000 views over the past month (lots of bots I fear). 

14)  Real life events:  Visited Linda several days at her memory care facility and we played Uno and catch the beach ball out on the patio. Went to the grocery store on Monday and Friday. Attrended the celebration of life for my friend Ben Smith on Saturday. Finished reading Capture or Kill by Vince Flynn and started Battle Mountain by C.J. Box.  The Padres season continues and I watched seven Padres games - they were 4-3 this past week (overall 82-68 now).  

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The URL for this post is:  https://www.geneamusings.com/2025/09/randys-genealogy-pot-pourri-week-ending_01649992523.html
 
Copyright (c) 2025, 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. 

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Amanuensis Monday -- 1811 Deed of Stephen Cutter Selling Land in Middlesex County, New Jersey to Richard Cutter

 This week's document for transcription is the 1811 Deed of Stephen Cutter selling 6.6 acres of   land in Middlesex County, New Jersey to Richard Cutter for $1.

*  Middlesex County, New Jersey, "Middlesex Deeds 1811-1813", page 161, image 94 of 577:

The transcription of this document is (aided by FamilySearch Full-Text Search using Artificial Intelligence):

[page 161, starting at the top of  the right-hand page of image 94 of 577]

Stephen Cutter   } This Indenture made this fifth day of of September in the year of our Lord one  to Robt. Cutter   }  thousand Eight hundred and eleven Between Stephen Cutter of the Township of Woodbridge in the County of Middlesex and State of New Jersey of the first part ; and Richard Cutter
the Township of Woodbridge in the County of Middlesex and State of New Jersey of the second part 
Witnesseth that the said party of the first part for and in consideration of the sum of one dollar 
lawful money of the United States of America , to him in hand well and truly paid by the said 
partty of the second part , at and before the sealing and delivery of these presents , the receipt where-
of is hereby acknowledged , and the Said party of the first part therewith fully satisfied content 
and paid , Have given , granted bargained , sold , aliened , enfeoffed , conveyed and confirmed , and 
by these presents do give , grant , bargain , sell , alien , enfeoff convey and confirm to the said 
partty of the second part , and to his heirs and assigns forever , all that Lot tract or parcel of land
and premises herein after particularly described situate , lying and being in the Township of Woodbridge in the County of Middlesex and State of New Jersey which is butted and bounded as follows Vizt Beginning at a White Oak tree which is a corner of a lot of Woodland belonging to Thomas Edgar's
 & from thence running along the line of said Edgar nearly a West course about ten chains to wood 
land belonging to Israel Thornal , thence along the line of said Thomas Thornal nearly a South course about eleven chains to the north west side of the Essex and Middlesex Turnpike Road , thence 
along the same about fourteen chains and forty links to land of said Thomas Edgar thence with 
his line nearly a north course about one cham and eighty links to the beginning tree containing 
six acres and Six tenths be the same more or less bounded northerly and Easterly by land of the said Thomas Edgar West by land of Israel Thomal and Southeasterly by the said turnpike , Together with 
all and Singular the profits privileges and advantages , with the appurtenances to the same belong-
ing or in any wise appertaining. Also , all the Estate , right title , interest , property , claim 
and demand whatsoever , of the said partty of the first part , of in and to the same , and of in 
and to every part and parcel thereof. To Have and To Hold all and Singular the above descr-
ibed tract or lot of land and premises , with the appurtenances unto the said partty of the
second part his heirs and assigns , to the only proper use , benefit and behoof of the said partty 
of the second part , his heirs and assigns forever -- and the said Stephen Cutter doth for himself 
his heirs Executors , and administrators covenant and grant to and with the said partty of the 
second part , his heirs and assigns that he the said Stephen Cutter is the the true lawful and 
right owner of all and Singular the above described land and premises , and of every part 
and parcel thereof with the appurtenances thereunto belonging ; and that the said land and pre-
mises , or any part thereof , at the time of Sealing and delivery of these presents , are not incum-
 bered by any mortgage Judgment or limitation , or by any incumbrance whatsoever by which 
the title of the said party of the second part , hereby made or intended to be made , for the above  described land and premises can or may be changed , charged , altered or defeated in any way whatever and also , that the said party of the first part , now , has good right full power , and lawful auth-
ority to grant , bargain , Sell , and convey the said land and premises , in manner aforesaid , also that he
will warrant Secure , and forever defend , the said land and premises , unto the said Richard Cutter 
his heirs and assigns forever , against the lawful claims and demands of all and every person and persons freely and clarly freed and discharged , of and from all manner of incumbrances whatsoever . In Witness whereof the said Stephen Cutter hath hereunto set his hand and seal the day and year first 
above written 1811.
Signed Sealed and delivered in the presence of                   }  
the word (West) in the fourteenth line being first interlined }      Stephen Cutter {seal}
Henry Potter     Ichabod Potter                                             }
 State of New Jersey }  Be it remembred that on this 9'th day of September A.D. 1811 personally 
Middlesex county     } appeared before me Ichabod Potter one of the Judges of the inferior
                                  } Court of common pleas for said county Stephen Cutter the Grantor in the
within deed & acknowledged that he signed sealed and delivered the within 
deed for the uses and purposes therein mentioned.                        Ichabod Potter 
                                                          Recd Sept'r 10th 1811 Recorded 
                                                   
The source citation for this Deed is:

Middlesex County (New Jersey) County Records, Stephen Cutter to Richard Cutter, deed dated 5 September 1811, recorded 10 September 1811; imaged, FamilySearch   (https://
www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSY4-F48J?view=fullText : Sep 13 2025), Image Group Number 008351782"Middlesex Deeds 1811-1813,"
page 161, image 94 of 577; original records in Middlesexn County (New Jersey). County Clerk, imaged, catalogued and transcribed by FamilySearch.

In this deed, Stephen Cutter sells 6.6 acres of land in Woodbridge, Middlesex County to Richard Cutter for $1.

Stephen Cutter (1745-1823) was born 10 February 1745 in Woodbridge, Middlesex County, New Jersey, the son of William and Mary (Kent) Cutter.  He married Tabitha Randolph (1752-1841) in about 1769 in Woodbridge.  They had 11 children, including a son Richard Cutter (1779-1820).

Stephen and Tabitha (Randolph) Cutter are my 4th great-grandparents, through their daughter Sarah Cutter (1785-1878) who married William Knapp (1775-1856) in about 1804 in Middlesex County, New Jersey.  

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Read other transcriptions of records of my relatives and ancestors at Amanuensis Monday Posts.

NOTE: Genea-blogger John Newmark (who writes the excellent TransylvanianDutch blog) started a Monday blog theme years ago called "Amanuensis Monday." John offers this definition for "amanuensis:"

"A person employed to write what another dictates or to copy what has been written by another."

The URL for this post is:  https://www.geneamusings.com/2025/09/amanuensis-monday-1811-deed-of-stephen.html

Copyright (c) 2025, 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 your comments 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 online immediately.

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Sunday, September 14, 2025

Best of the Genea-Blogs - Week of 7 to 13 September 2025

 Scores of genealogy and family history bloggers write hundreds of posts every week about their research, their families, and their interests. I appreciate each one of them and their efforts.


My criteria for "Best of ..." are pretty simple - I pick posts that advance knowledge about genealogy and family history, address current genealogy issues, provide personal family history, are funny or are poignant. I don't list posts destined for most daily blog prompts or meme submissions (but I do include summaries of them), or my own posts.

Here are my picks for great reads from the genealogy blogs for this past week: 

*  Experimenting with Gemini AI's New Image Editing Features by Melody Lassalle on Mel's Genealogy Research Journal.

*  Whats in My Genealogy Toolbox by Marcia Crawford Philbrick on Heartland Genealogy.

*  UGA Summit of Excellence 2025 Recap: A Fantastic Three Days of Genealogical Learning by Diane Henriks on Know Who Wears the Genes In Your Family.

*  FamilySearch’s Full-Text Search Exploration Revisited by Wayne Shepheard on Discover Genealogy.

*  How Have Ancestry DNA Results Changed Over Time? by Mercedes Brons on Who Are You Made Of?

*  How I complete genealogy research without expensive subscriptions by Denyse Allen on Chronicle Makers.

*  Genealogy and AI: Pros and Cons by Linda Stufflebean on Empty Branches On the Family Tree.

*  Exploring the Official Military Personnel File (OMPF) by Jennifer Holik on Soul Traveler.

*  Revisiting My Roots: My Basic Process by Cari Taplin on Genealogy Pants.

*  Bessie's Tea Cups by Anne Wendel on Anne's Substack.

*  5 Must-Do's for Building Your Family Tree from Vital Records by DiAnn Iamarino Ohama on Fortify Your Family Tree.

*  When Ancestry.com’s Pro Tools Fail: A Professional Genealogist’s Experience with Ancestry’s Tree Checker Part 2 by Lori Samuelson on GenealogyAtHeart.com.

*  A new rule of genealogy for 2025 by James Tanner on Genealogy's Star.

*  Fun Prompt Friday: Image Editing by Steve Little on AI Genealogy Insights.

Here are pick posts by other geneabloggers this week:

*  Friday’s Family History Finds [12 September 2025] by Linda Stufflebean on Empty Branches on the Family Tree.

*  This week’s crème de la crème -- September 13, 2025 by Gail Dever on Genealogy a la Carte.

*  GenStack [13 September 2025] by Robin Stewart on Genealogy Matters.

*  The Chiddicks Observer, Edition 26 [8 September 2025] by Paul Chiddicks on Paul Chiddicks.

Readers are encouraged to go to the blogs listed above and read their articles, and add the blogs to your Favorites, Feedly, another RSS feed, or email if you like what you read. Please make a comment to them also - all bloggers appreciate feedback on what they write.

Did I miss a great genealogy blog post? Tell me! I currently am reading posts from over 900 genealogy bloggers using Feedly, but I still miss quite a few it seems.

Read past Best of the Genea-Blogs posts here.


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Copyright (c) 2025, 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.

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