Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Genealogy News Bytes - Week of 17 to 23 December 2025

 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)  DNA/IGG-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 10 to 16 December 2025.


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


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.  
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Ask AI: "Please Describe Amelia Leland's Life in 1920 in San Francisco, California"

The Artificial Intelligence tools (like ChatGPT, Claude, CoPilot, Gemini, Grok, Meta, Grok, 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 tool Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 could provide me with information about the life of a wife and mother, Amelia Anna (Brocke) Leland (1884-1975) in 1920.  I attached Genealogical Sketch of the Severt Oliver and Amelia Anna (Brocke) Leland Family of Wisconsin, Montana, Idaho and California. to provide information to the AI tool. 

(AI NotebookLM Infographic of Amelia Leland's Life in 1920)

1)  The prompt was:  "Please describe Severt Leland’s life in 1920 in San Franciusco, California."

2)   The Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 response was: 


Amelia Leland: Wife and Mother in 1920 San Francisco

Managing the Household at 182 Chattanooga Street

In 1920, thirty-five-year-old Amelia Anna Leland was the heart and manager of a complex household at 182 Chattanooga Street in San Francisco. As wife to Severt and mother to five children, plus hostess to two adult male relatives, her days were filled with the demanding work of maintaining a home for seven people in an urban environment.

The Daily Routine of a Homemaker

The 1920 census lists Amelia's occupation as "none," which was typical for married women of her era and social class. However, this designation belied the reality of her exhausting daily workload.

Early Morning (5:30-7:00 AM):

  • Rising before the household to prepare breakfast

  • Lighting the kitchen stove and getting coffee started

  • Laying out school clothes for the children

  • Preparing lunches for Severt to take to work and the older children for school

  • Cooking a substantial breakfast (eggs, oatmeal, toast, possibly bacon or sausage)

  • Getting five children fed, washed, and dressed

  • Ensuring the two teenage girls looked presentable for school

  • Making sure the boys had completed any homework

Morning Work (7:00 AM-12:00 PM): After seeing Severt off to work and the four older children off to school:

  • Dressing and supervising five-year-old Alda

  • Clearing breakfast dishes and washing them by hand

  • Making beds for seven people

  • Sweeping and dusting

  • Starting laundry (a major, exhausting task in 1920)

  • Shopping at local markets for fresh food

  • Preparing ingredients for the midday and evening meals

Afternoon Activities (12:00-5:00 PM):

  • Preparing and serving lunch for herself, Alda, and possibly the younger boys when they returned from school

  • Continuing laundry, hanging clothes to dry, or bringing them in

  • Ironing (using heavy irons heated on the stove)

  • Mending and sewing clothes for the family

  • Supervising children's homework and activities

  • Beginning dinner preparations

  • Managing household accounts and expenses

Evening Hours (5:00-9:00 PM):

  • Serving dinner to the family of seven

  • Cleaning up after dinner

  • Supervising baths and bedtime routines for younger children

  • Helping with homework or school projects

  • Possibly doing more mending or handwork

  • Brief time with Severt to discuss household matters

  • Preparing for the next day

The Physical Labor of Housework

Unlike modern homemakers, Amelia had few labor-saving devices:

Laundry: Without a washing machine, laundry day was grueling:

  • Heating water on the stove in large pots

  • Scrubbing clothes on a washboard

  • Wringing clothes by hand

  • Hanging everything to dry (indoors in San Francisco's fog, or outdoors when sunny)

  • Ironing with heavy flat irons heated on the stove

  • With seven people, including two active boys, laundry was nearly constant

Cooking:

  • No refrigerator, just an icebox requiring regular ice delivery

  • Shopping had to be done frequently as food spoiled quickly

  • Everything cooked from scratch on a gas stove

  • Baking bread, preparing vegetables, cooking meat

  • Preserving and canning when possible

  • Planning meals around budget and season

Cleaning:

  • No vacuum cleaner—sweeping with brooms, beating rugs

  • Washing floors on hands and knees

  • Dusting all surfaces

  • Cleaning windows

  • Cleaning the stove

  • Maintaining order in a home with five children

Managing the Extended Household

Beyond her immediate family, Amelia served as hostess to her brother Nicholas Francis Brocke (23) and Severt's brother Frank L. Leland (32). This added:

  • Two more people to cook and clean for

  • Diplomacy in managing adult relatives while maintaining her household authority

  • Additional laundry and housekeeping

  • Perhaps collecting rent or board from working relatives

  • Mediating between different generations and personalities

Motherhood Across Multiple Stages

Amelia's unique challenge in 1920 was mothering children at vastly different developmental stages:

Teenage Daughters: Juanita (15) and Evelyn (14)

These years were particularly delicate for mothers and daughters. The 1920s brought revolutionary changes in young women's roles, and Amelia had to navigate:

Guiding Them into Womanhood:

  • Teaching practical skills: cooking, sewing, housekeeping, budgeting

  • Discussing proper behavior and reputation

  • Chaperoning social activities and monitoring friendships

  • Helping them understand their changing bodies and approaching adulthood

  • Preparing them for eventual marriage or work outside the home

Education and Aspirations:

  • Encouraging them to stay in school (both had attended and were literate)

  • Discussing whether they should pursue business school or secretarial training

  • Balancing traditional expectations with new opportunities for women

  • By 1930, Juanita would be a bank clerk—evidence that Amelia supported her daughters' independence

Fashion and Appearance:

  • Helping them dress appropriately for school and social occasions

  • Sewing or altering clothes to keep them presentable

  • Navigating the tension between new fashions (shorter skirts, bobbed hair) and respectability

  • Teaching grooming and personal hygiene

Social Life:

  • Monitoring their friendships with other girls

  • Chaperoning interactions with boys

  • Teaching them about courtship and proper behavior with young men

  • Attending school events and performances

Pre-Adolescent and Younger Sons: Harold (11), Lee (8)

The boys required different attention:

Harold (11):

  • On the cusp of adolescence, beginning to need guidance on becoming a man

  • Monitoring school performance and behavior

  • Ensuring he helped with appropriate chores

  • Beginning conversations about responsibility and work ethic

  • Coordinating with Severt on father-son activities and discipline

Lee (8):

  • Still very much a child, needing supervision and nurturing

  • Helping with homework and school projects

  • Treating childhood illnesses and injuries

  • Ensuring he played well with siblings and neighborhood children

  • Teaching basic manners and hygiene

Little Alda (5)

The baby of the family received special attention:

  • Constant supervision (no kindergarten yet, home all day)

  • Teaching basic skills: letters, numbers, colors

  • Playing with her and reading stories

  • Preparing her for eventual school entry

  • Perhaps some indulgence as the youngest

Sibling Dynamics

Amelia had to manage:

  • Rivalry and conflicts between siblings

  • Ensuring older children didn't pick on younger ones

  • Delegating age-appropriate chores fairly

  • Creating family harmony and cooperation

  • Teaching children to look out for and help each other

Social Life and Community Connections

While Amelia's census listing shows "no occupation," her social role was crucial to the family's standing and her own wellbeing.

Women's Networks and Friendships

In an era before women commonly worked outside the home, social networks were vital:

Neighborhood Women:

  • Daily interactions with neighbors while shopping or hanging laundry

  • Coffee visits in each other's homes

  • Sharing recipes, parenting advice, and household tips

  • Mutual aid when children were sick or help was needed

  • Gossip and news exchange

Church Community: The church was central to women's social lives:

  • Sunday services provided weekly social contact

  • Ladies Aid societies organized charitable work

  • Church potlucks and social events

  • Mission circles for women to study and fundraise

  • Holiday preparations and celebrations

  • A space to maintain both spiritual life and social connections

School Connections: With four children in school:

  • Attending parent-teacher meetings

  • School performances and programs

  • Knowing other mothers through their children's friendships

  • Participating in school fundraisers or events

Extended Family Relationships

Maintaining Connections:

  • Letter writing to family in Idaho (her parents, siblings)

  • Hosting relatives passing through San Francisco

  • Having Nicholas living with them kept her connected to the Brocke family

  • Correspondence with Severt's family in Washington state

  • Managing family news and maintaining relationships across distance

The Brocke Family: By 1920, Amelia's family situation included:

  • Her parents still living in Idaho

  • Siblings spread across Idaho and other locations

  • Keeping track of nieces, nephews, and family news

  • Sending letters and perhaps photographs of her children

Norwegian-American Community

Though Amelia was born in Idaho to parents of German extraction born in West Virginia and Missouri, marriage to Severt connected her to the Norwegian-American community:

  • Attending Norwegian Lutheran church services

  • Participating in Norwegian cultural events

  • Learning Norwegian recipes and traditions

  • Helping her children understand their father's heritage

  • Social events with other Norwegian immigrant families

Idaho Heritage

Amelia maintained her own identity as an Idaho native:

  • Pride in her frontier childhood and German family traditions

  • Stories of growing up in Kendrick and Latah County

  • Different perspective from Severt's Norwegian-Midwestern background

  • Connection to Western pioneer traditions

Entertainment and Personal Time

Amelia's leisure time was limited, but 1920s urban life offered new possibilities for women's entertainment and personal enrichment.

At-Home Pastimes

Handwork: Women's hands were rarely idle:

  • Embroidery and needlework

  • Knitting sweaters, socks, and scarves

  • Crocheting doilies and decorative items

  • Quilting (often in groups with other women)

  • These activities were both productive and social

Reading:

  • Women's magazines: Ladies' Home Journal, Good Housekeeping, McCall's

  • Serialized stories in magazines

  • Library books (San Francisco had an excellent public library system)

  • Recipe clippings and household hints

  • Newspapers for news and serialized novels

Music:

  • Singing while doing housework

  • Teaching children songs

  • If they had a piano, playing or encouraging children to practice

  • Listening to children perform

Out-of-Home Activities

Shopping as Entertainment: Urban shopping was different from frontier life:

  • Department stores like Emporium, City of Paris, White House

  • Window shopping downtown

  • Special trips to buy fabric, patterns, notions

  • Taking daughters shopping, teaching them to be discerning consumers

Movies: Silent films were affordable entertainment for women:

  • Afternoon matinees while children were in school

  • Taking the younger children to appropriate films

  • Family outings to see movies together

  • Following favorite stars like Mary Pickford, Lillian Gish

  • Movie fan magazines

Parks and Recreation:

  • Taking children to neighborhood parks

  • Special family outings to Golden Gate Park

  • Beach trips on warm days

  • Sunday afternoon walks

Church and Community Events:

  • Ladies' luncheons and teas

  • Bazaars and fundraisers

  • Holiday celebrations and programs

  • Social events providing rare opportunities to dress up and socialize

Personal Care and Appearance

Even with limited time, women maintained standards:

  • Weekly hair washing and styling

  • Maintaining a respectable wardrobe (though limited)

  • Caring for hands worn from housework

  • Taking pride in appearance when going out

  • Teaching daughters about grooming and presentation

The Invisible Labor of Emotional Work

Beyond physical housework, Amelia provided crucial emotional labor:

Family Mediator:

  • Smoothing conflicts between siblings

  • Supporting Severt after difficult work days

  • Listening to children's problems and fears

  • Maintaining family morale and harmony

Household Manager:

  • Budgeting and stretching Severt's paycheck

  • Planning meals around availability and cost

  • Deciding what needed repair or replacement

  • Managing relationships with landlord and tradespeople

Health Care Provider:

  • Nursing sick children through illnesses

  • Home remedies for common ailments

  • Deciding when to call a doctor (expensive)

  • Maintaining family health and hygiene

Memory Keeper:

  • Maintaining family traditions

  • Remembering birthdays and anniversaries

  • Telling stories about grandparents and family history

  • Creating sense of family identity and connection

Moral Guide:

  • Teaching children right from wrong

  • Instilling values and character

  • Religious and spiritual instruction

  • Modeling behavior and attitudes

The Challenge of Modern Motherhood

Amelia was raising children in a transitional era. Born in frontier Idaho in 1884, she was now a San Francisco mother in the Jazz Age. This created unique tensions:

Old Ways vs. New:

  • Her own upbringing in rural Idaho vs. raising urban children

  • Traditional gender roles vs. new opportunities for her daughters

  • Conservative values vs. the loosening morals of the 1920s

  • Pioneer simplicity vs. urban consumer culture

Generational Differences:

  • Her teenage daughters wanted bobbed hair and short skirts

  • Movies and popular culture influenced children's attitudes

  • Education opened new possibilities beyond domestic life

  • Urban environment provided freedoms unknown in frontier childhood

Economic Pressure:

  • Renting rather than owning

  • Making do with limited resources

  • Supporting seven people on one salary

  • Helping extended family while managing own needs

Women's Suffrage and Changing Times

In August 1920, the 19th Amendment granted women the right to vote. At 35, Amelia would participate in this historic change. While not everyone embraced women's suffrage, the era brought new awareness:

Political Awareness:

  • Discussing current events with other women

  • Possibly attending meetings or events

  • Thinking about issues affecting families

  • Having opinions that now mattered at the ballot box

Changing Expectations:

  • Recognition that women had contributions beyond home

  • Discussion of women working outside home

  • Daughter's future possibilities expanding

  • Slow shift in women's roles and authority

The Strength Behind the "No Occupation"

The 1920 census's notation of "no occupation" for Amelia obscures the reality of her labor-intensive life. She was:

  • Cook preparing three meals daily for seven people

  • Laundress washing and ironing for the entire household

  • Housekeeper maintaining cleanliness and order

  • Seamstress making and mending clothes

  • Nurse caring for sick family members

  • Teacher helping with homework and life skills

  • Accountant managing household budget

  • Social Director maintaining family relationships and community connections

  • Counselor providing emotional support

  • Manager coordinating complex household operations

Personal Resilience and Future Strength

In 1920, Amelia was in her prime years as a wife and mother. She had been married sixteen years and had successfully raised five children through infancy (no small feat when infant mortality was high). She had adapted from frontier Idaho to railroad town Montana to urban San Francisco.

Unknown to her, she faced:

  • Twenty more years with Severt

  • Buying a home in the Sunset District in the early 1920s

  • Raising children through the Great Depression

  • Becoming a widow at 56

  • Living with her daughter Alda’s family for 35 years

  • Losing all her siblings

  • Watching her children and grandchildren succeed

The strength, resilience, and domestic skills she honed in 1920 would sustain her through these challenges. The woman managing that crowded household at 182 Chattanooga Street was building character, maintaining family, and creating a legacy that would extend through generations.

A Typical Week in Amelia's Life

Monday: Laundry day—the most exhausting day of the week, involving washing, rinsing, wringing, hanging, and beginning to iron clothes for seven people.

Tuesday: Ironing completed, mending, and catching up on housework neglected during laundry day.

Wednesday: Marketing for mid-week shopping, thorough house cleaning, perhaps baking bread.

Thursday: More cleaning, preparation for weekend, possibly hosting a friend for afternoon coffee.

Friday: Marketing again, preparing for weekend, extra cleaning, perhaps planning Sunday dinner.

Saturday: Deep cleaning, special baking, allowing children more freedom to play, Severt home for part of the day, perhaps family outing or shopping trip.

Sunday: Church in morning, special Sunday dinner, visiting with family or friends, relative rest day (though still cooking and basic chores).

This pattern repeated week after week, month after month, year after year—the rhythm of domestic life that sustained the family.

Conclusion: The Unsung Architect

In 1920, Amelia Leland was the unseen architect of her family's success. While Severt worked outside the home and received the title of "head of household," it was Amelia's tireless labor that created the stable, clean, fed, and emotionally supported family unit that allowed everyone to thrive.

Her teenage daughters would grow up to be independent working women before marriage. Her sons would achieve long lives and success. Her household would weather the Depression and emerge intact. And she herself would live to age 90, surrounded by descendants who owed their existence to her strength.

The woman at 182 Chattanooga Street in 1920, with her "no occupation" notation, was in fact practicing multiple occupations simultaneously, demonstrating skills, endurance, and love that made all other family achievements possible. She was the foundation upon which the Leland family legacy was built.

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3)  The Google NotebookLM Video Overview of this post is below.

4)   I have no easy way to double check on these responses from Claude. I don't have many book resources for the subjects and the locality,  but there are published books available for this time period and general location. The AI tools have been pre-trained on historical events, social history, geography, education, occupations, literature and other disciplines so they can provide information for questions like this one, and now have the ability to search the Internet for website articles.

5)  As genealogists, we can usually find the early 20th century vital and census records for California families, and we may find occupation, newspaper, land and probate records.  The family mentioned is my wife's paternal grandparents and I have significant information about their lives from the available records, but I know nothing about their daily lives other than what the records tell me.  

6)  After I read these types of social history summaries, I wish that I could be a time traveler for one day to visit the Leland family in San Francisco and witness their daily lives.  I'm glad that the general lifestyles and occupations are known from historical records and witness accounts.

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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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Monday, December 22, 2025

New FamilySearch Feature: "Simple Search" in Full-Text Search Collections

 Checking Facebook today, I saw that David Rencher of FamilySearch had posted this three days ago:

"May your holidays be full and your nights be late! Sleep is overrated!
We just released a new way to search billions of full-text records using everyday language—no search form required. To use it, go to familysearch.org/labs to turn on the "Try Simple Search" experiment. Help us improve it by sharing your feedback."

This is for FamilySearch Full-Text Search collections.  Interesting. Why haven't we been able to do this before?  Does it work?  Of course, I had to try it out:

1)  Here is the FamilySearch Labs screen capture for the Simple Search feature:

2)  In the search box, I typed my query:  "Search for George Wakeman (1740-1815) of CT, NY, PA and OH.":

The search results were:

Only 341 matches. I should be able to look at those in a few hours.

3)  Or I could use the Filters for Collectins, Year, Place, etc.  I chose "Years" and selected 1700s:

That resulted in only 5 matches.  I expected more.  

4)  I clicked on one of them and saw the typical FamilySearch Full-Text Search result:


I had not found that record for George Wakeman before. Or the other records.

5)  There are some evident guidelines here:

  • Using just the name, a birth/death life span and places results in many results.
  • You will get results for persons with the name even if they are outside any birth-to-death life span range.
  • Using the Filters can reduce the number of matches to a century or a decade, and to specific countries/states/counties.
  • It didn't find any matches for Connecticut, although he resided there for 35 years.  Perhaps the Search is limited because I am not an LDS member or at a FamilySearch Center.

6)  I wonder how much information I can use? I changed my query and asked for land records in New York (where I know there are some) and it did not find any land records within the year range in the prompt.

7)  At first look, this new feature seems to work fine, and should be much easier to use. 

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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 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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