Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Life Memoir of Brita Olsdatter Leland (1818-1895) of Norway and Wisconsin in 1894

  I wrote an AI-assisted ABC biography for my wife Linda's 2nd great-grandparents Sjur Eriksen Leland and Brita Olsdatter in ABC Biography of the Sjur Torgersen Leland (1804-1889) and Brita Olsdatter (1818-1895) Family of Voss, Norway and Dane County, Wisconsin based on my genealogical research over 38 years.

I wondered what Brita Olsdatter Leland might have said in a life memoir told to her grandchildren in 1894. 

(AI Google NotebookLM Infographic for Brita Olsdatter Leland's memoir)

1)  I requested Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 to create a memoir told by Brita Olsdatter Leland about her life in 1894.  The prompt was:  "Please write a life memoir for Brita Olsdatter Leland based on the attached biography, as she might tell to her grandchildren in 1894."

2)  The AI Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 memoir (edited for accuracy and completeness) is: 

My Life Story
As Told by Brita Olsdatter Leland to Her Grandchildren
Deerfield, Wisconsin - 1894

My Childhood in Midtun

Come sit by me, children, and I'll tell you about the old days, about Norway and how we came to be here in Wisconsin. I'm seventy-six years old now, and my memory reaches back a long, long way, all the way to the mountains of Voss where I was born.

I was born on the fourth of October in 1818, in a place called Midtun in Voss. That's in the Hordaland region, where the mountains rise up steep and beautiful, and the lake sits like a mirror reflecting the sky. My father was Ole Olavsen and my mother was Ingeborg Botolfsdatter. They married the very year I was born, so I was their first child, their firstborn daughter.

I had five brothers and sisters who came after me. First came my sister Åsa, just two years younger than me. We were close, Åsa and I, helping our mother with the younger ones. Then came Rannveig, and later Ingeborg, and finally two brothers, Olav and Sjur. The house was always full of noise and laughter and work. There was always work to be done on a farm in Voss.

We lived in Midtun when I was small, and later we moved to Eimstad, not far away. Life in Voss was hard but beautiful. The winters were long and cold, with snow piled high, and the summers were short but glorious, when the grass grew thick and green on the hillsides. We kept sheep and cattle, grew what we could in the rocky soil, and helped each other as neighbors do.

My sisters Åsa and Rannveig both married and stayed in Voss. Åsa married Gusskalk Olssen, and Rannveig married Ingebrikt Olssen. They're still there, as far as I know, living the life we all knew as children. Sometimes I wonder what became of them all, if they think of me here across the ocean.

Meeting Sjur

Now, your grandfather Sjur—he was quite a bit older than me. Fourteen years older, to be exact. He was born in 1804, when the century was still young. His family came from Tungeteigen, and they moved around to different farms—Gjelle, Mølster. His father was Torgeir Olsen and his mother was Anna Sjursdatter. They had a large family too, six children. Sjur had two brothers, Ole and Ivar, and three sisters.

I don't remember exactly when I first met Sjur at the church in Voss, but by the time I was in my late twenties, we had an understanding. He was a good man, steady and reliable. In March of 1850, our first child was born—your father Torger. Three months later, on the twenty-first of June, we stood together in the church in Vinje and were married properly. That was the way things were done sometimes in those days. We were a family already, and the church made it official.

We started our married life on Mølster farm, near where Sjur's family had lived. Little Torger was just a baby, learning to sit up and make his funny noises. The next year, in December of 1851, our second son Ole was born. We had moved by then to Gjelle farm. And two years after that, in December of 1853, came our third son, Mathias.

Three boys! I was busy from morning till night, washing and cooking and mending, milking the cows and tending the garden, all while keeping an eye on those three lively boys. Sjur worked the land, as his father had and his grandfather before him. We thought we would live our whole lives there in Voss, raise our children there, grow old there.

The Decision to Leave Norway

But then the letters started coming from America. Sjur's brother Ivar had gone across the ocean a few years before us, and he wrote about the land available in Wisconsin, about how a man could own his own farm, good flat land without rocks, not like the steep hillsides of Voss. Other neighbors had gone too, and their letters spoke of opportunity.

It was a hard decision, children. The hardest decision of my life. I was thirty-seven years old, Sjur was fifty-one, and we had three little boys—Torger was six, Ole was four, and Mathias was just two years old. To leave everything we knew, everyone we loved, to cross an ocean we'd never seen, to go to a country where they didn't even speak our language—it seemed almost mad.

But Sjur was determined. He said there was no future for us in Voss, that the boys would have no land of their own. And I trusted him. I trusted that God would watch over us. So in the spring of 1856, we sold what we couldn't take with us, packed up our belongings, said our goodbyes, and made our way to Bergen.

I remember saying goodbye to my mother and father. They were getting older—Mother was sixty-four and Father was sixty-two. I wondered if I would ever see them again. As it turned out, I never did. They both lived many more years—Father until 1871 and Mother until 1872—but I never saw them again after that day in 1856. That was the price of America.

The Voyage Across the Ocean

We boarded a sailing ship called the Hebe in Bergen. It was a new ship, and we were told it was fast. I was terrified, I don't mind telling you. The ocean seemed to go on forever, gray and rolling and angry. I'd never been on a ship before, never been farther from home than the next valley.

We were packed in below deck with dozens of other families, all of us Norwegian, all heading for America. The smell down there—oh, children, I won't describe it. The ship rocked and pitched, and many people were sick. I tried to keep the boys entertained and fed, tried to keep them from running wild in the cramped space. Sjur stayed strong, never complained, though I know he must have worried.

But God was good to us. The Hebe lived up to its reputation. We made the crossing in just three weeks—three weeks! Other families we met later had been at sea for two months or more. The sailors said they'd rarely seen such a fast crossing. We arrived in Quebec, Canada, tired and rumpled but safe, all five of us together.
Finding Our Way to Wisconsin

From Quebec, we started the long journey to Wisconsin. We traveled on a steamboat for part of the way, watching the strange new land go by. Then we took a canal boat—slower, but the boys liked watching the mules pull us along. Then we got on a railroad train, which frightened me at first with its noise and speed, but the boys thought it was the most exciting thing they'd ever experienced.

We made our way through Chicago—what a city! So many people, such noise and bustle. Nothing like Voss. Then on to Milwaukee, and finally to Edgerton in Rock County, Wisconsin. From there we traveled to find Bryngel L. Leland, someone Sjur had known in Norway, who had settled in Deerfield in Dane County.

When we arrived at Bryngel's place, I could have cried with relief. To hear Norwegian spoken again, to be welcomed by someone who knew our ways, who understood where we'd come from—it was like finding a piece of home in this vast, strange land. We stayed with him through that summer while Sjur worked and earned money and looked for land of our own.

Our First Years in America

We stayed briefly in the Koshkonong area, and it was there, in September of 1856, that your Aunt Ingeborg was born. After three boys, I finally had a daughter! I named her Ingeborg after my mother. Now we were six.

In the fall of 1856, Sjur built us a house on Section 25 in Deerfield township, and we moved into it. It wasn't much compared to what we have now, but it was ours. We were so proud of it, so grateful to have our own place again.

But then came the hardest thing I've ever endured. Our little Mathias, not even three years old, took sick that fall. We tried everything, but nothing helped. He died in the fall of 1856, just months after we arrived in Wisconsin.

Children, I cannot tell you the grief. We had brought him all this way, across the ocean, away from everything familiar, and then to lose him here in this strange land. I blamed myself. I wondered if we should never have come, if he would still be alive if we'd stayed in Voss. For months, I could barely function. Sjur grieved too, but he had to keep working. We had the other children who needed us.

Little Ingeborg helped heal my heart. She was so tiny, so precious. And the boys needed me. Torger, at six, tried to be brave and strong. Ole, at four, didn't fully understand. But they needed their mother, and that helped me carry on.

Building Our Farm

In 1859, your Aunt Anna was born. Another daughter! We named her Anna Mathea—Anna after Sjur's mother, and Mathea to remember our little boy who died. Now we were six again with Torger, Ole, Ingeborg, and Anna.

We lived in that first house for ten years, and they were good years. Hard years, but good. We learned English—well, some English. The children learned it faster than we did. We made friends with other Norwegian families in the area. There were many of us around Deerfield and London, all helping each other, keeping our language and our ways alive while becoming Americans.

In 1865, Sjur was able to buy forty acres in Section 23. Forty acres of our own! We moved there in 1866, and that farm became our home for the rest of our lives together. Sjur worked that land, and the children helped as they grew. Torger became a fine farmer. Ole learned carpentry and was so clever with his hands. The girls helped me in the house and garden.

During the 1870s, we took the name Leland. We'd been called all sorts of things—the census takers could never get our names right. Torgerson, Liland, Mølster. But Sjur's brother Ivar had married a girl from Liland farm in Voss, and both our families decided to use Leland as our surname. It connected us to home, to Voss, to the farm where Ivar's wife came from. It gave us a name that would last, that our children and grandchildren would carry. That's your name now, children. Leland. Remember it means 'from Liland farm in Voss, Norway.'

Watching My Children Grow

Your father Torger—he made me so proud. He worked hard on the farm, and for many years he served as the town clerk in Deerfield Township. People trusted him, respected him. In 1876, when he was twenty-six, he married Anna Ellingsdatter Natvig, and oh, what a beautiful wedding that was! They've given me ten grandchildren. Ten! Some of you are sitting here right now listening to this old woman's stories.

Ole never married. He's forty-two now, a good son, still living nearby. He's a skilled carpenter and joiner. If you need something built or fixed, Ole can do it. He has a kind heart, that one. He was always gentle, even as a boy.

Your Aunt Ingeborg married Anders Gullieksen Dykkesten in 1880. He was from Voss too—imagine that! Finding someone from home here in Wisconsin. They have two children, and they're living right here in Deerfield. In 1881, Ingeborg went back to Voss—she actually went back and saw the old country! I cried when she told me about it, about seeing the mountains again, the lake. She said it was just as beautiful as I remembered.

And my dear Anna. She married Charles Woelffer in 1880, the same year as Ingeborg. But Anna was not meant to have a long life. She died two years ago, in 1892, at just thirty-three years old. No children. That was hard, children, burying my daughter. No mother should have to bury her child. First little Mathias, then Anna. But that is God's will, and we must accept it, even when it breaks our hearts.

My Life Now

Your grandfather Sjur died five years ago, in March of 1889. He was eighty-four years old. We had been married for thirty-nine years, and together for even longer. He was a good man, your grandfather. Patient and kind. He worked hard every day of his life. People respected him, knew they could count on him.

When he died, he left me and our four children. Torger took care of his father's affairs, settled everything properly. We buried Sjur in St. Paul's Liberty Lutheran Church Cemetery here in Deerfield. That's where I'll be buried too, when my time comes. We'll be together again there.

I've lived here on this farm for five years without him now. The house feels empty sometimes, but my children visit, and you grandchildren brighten my days. I'm seventy-six years old. I've lived in America for thirty-eight years—longer than I lived in Norway. This is my home now, though sometimes in my dreams I'm back in Voss, young again, climbing the hillsides with Åsa, or sitting by the fire with my mother.

What I Want You to Remember

So that's my story, children. From Midtun to Deerfield, from a girl in the mountains of Norway to an old woman in the farmlands of Wisconsin. It's been a long journey, full of joy and sorrow, gain and loss.

I want you to remember where you came from. You're Americans, yes, but you're also Norwegian. Your roots go back to Voss, to those steep mountains and clear lakes, to generations of farmers who worked the land. Your great-grandparents, my parents, Ole and Ingeborg, are buried there. Sjur's parents, Torgeir and Anna, are buried there. That's where your people come from.

But you're here now, in America, and this is where your future is. Your grandfather and I came here so that you could have land, opportunity, a chance to build something. We sacrificed everything familiar so that you could have more than we had.

Remember to work hard. Remember to help your neighbors. Remember to honor God and go to church. Remember to take care of family, because family is what matters most. Your grandfather taught me that. When everything else is gone, family remains.

I don't know how much longer I have in this world. None of us knows that. But I'm content. I've lived a full life. I crossed an ocean, raised four children to adulthood, buried two children and my husband, and lived to see my grandchildren grow. I've known love and loss, fear and courage, despair and hope.

When I'm gone, remember your old grandmother who came from Norway. Tell your children about Voss, about the voyage on the Hebe, about the farm in Deerfield. Keep these stories alive. That's how we stay connected, across time and distance. That's how we remember who we are.

Now, it's getting late, and these old bones are tired. Thank you for listening to an old woman's memories. Go on now, go play, and let me rest. But come back tomorrow, and maybe I'll tell you more stories about the old country, about your grandfather when he was young, about the adventures we had. There are always more stories to tell.

— Brita Olsdatter Leland, Deerfield, Wisconsin, 1894

------------------------------

(Brita died the following year, on September 3, 1895, at the age of 76, and was buried beside Sjur in St. Paul's Liberty Lutheran Church Cemetery in Deerfield.)

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3)  The Video Overview of Brita Olsdatter Leland's memoir, created by the Google NotebookLM AI tool, is: 

5)  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 create readable text in seconds, including local and national historical events and social history detail when requested.

6)  This is historical fiction, based on my own genealogical research. It is what Brita Olsdatter Leland might have told her grandchildren in 1894.  

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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) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

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Monday, February 9, 2026

Findmypast Opens Newspaper Archive For Free To Celebrate 100-Million-Page Milestone

 I received this information from Findmypast today:

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Findmypast opens newspaper archive for free to celebrate 100-million-page milestone

  • Findmypast and the British Newspaper Archive reach 100 million historical newspaper pages digitized and published online to the public
  • The collection dates back to 1699, covering over 2,700 titles and more than 7 million issues, offering a vast, powerful resource for uncovering vibrant family stories
  • Findmypast’s high quality digitization process and powerful search tools mean it's easier than ever to make discoveries, add them to family trees, or save them to Workspace projects
  • To celebrate, Findmypast is offering free access to the entire newspaper archive until 16 February 2026, giving family historians a full week to explore
Findmypast is celebrating a monumental milestone this week: its ever‑growing digital historical newspaper collection reaches 100 million fully searchable pages, opening up countless new opportunities for family historians to uncover hidden stories, forgotten moments, and long‑lost ancestors.

This milestone marks one of the world’s largest long-running digitization projects to enable broader access to these significant historical records. To celebrate the occasion, Findmypast is offering free access to its entire newspaper archive until 16 February 2026, giving researchers a full week to dive into centuries of headlines and discover the unexpected.

Spanning 400 years and featuring more than 2,700 titles and 7 million issues from Britain, Ireland and beyond, Findmypast’s newspaper archive is one of the richest sources for building a vivid picture of your ancestors’ lives. Whether you're chasing down an ancestor’s wartime heroics, tracking a long‑forgotten marriage announcement, or stumbling across a scandal that reshapes your family narrative, these pages offer a window into events as they happened.

Findmypast’s newspaper search tools are designed to help family historians uncover stories quickly and accurately. Researchers can draw on extracted details from birth, marriage, and death notices—instantly linkable to family trees—and refine broad searches with smart filtering to pinpoint the most relevant results. Clip and save articles to your tree, add them to your Workspace, or create a Collection around a family member or project.

The vast, continually growing archive brings new titles online weekly, digitized page-by- page by a dedicated team on an ongoing basis. Using the latest equipment, the pages are scanned to a high resolution, and the images processed using Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. This extracts the text data, enabling Findmypast’s own machine learning technology to identify key terms powering a more detailed search, including information like names, dates, locations, and even phrases. Quality checks ensure that the pages are clean and readable before they are processed and added to the archive.

Lee Wilkinson, Managing Director of DC Thomson History, which owns Findmypast, said:
“Reaching 100 million published newspaper pages is a landmark moment for Findmypast, and a powerful reflection of what long-term partnership can achieve. Over 15 years, we have worked closely with major archives, cultural organizations, and publishers to preserve these fragile records and expand public access to them. Each page adds depth to our history and gives researchers, educators, local historians and families new ways to understand the lives and communities that came before us. I’d encourage everyone to go online and explore this rich resource for free.”
Explore the newspaper archive today at www.findmypast.com.  Search the newspaper archive at https://www.findmypast.com/search-newspapers.

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

See all of my posts about Findmypast at  https://www.geneamusings.com/search/label/FindMyPast

Disclosure: I have a complimentary subscription to Findmypast, and have accepted meals and services from Findmypast, as a Findmypast Ambassador. This has not affected my objectivity relative to Findmypast and its products.

The URL for this post is: 

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

 Here are the highlights of my family history and genealogy related activities over the past week (ending Sunday, 8 February 2026).  

1)  Wrote, edited and published the Chula Vista Genealogical Society newsletter for February 2026.  

2)  Attended and participated in Mondays With Myrt on 2 February - we discussed Jill's award, GeneaBloggers webinar, Miles' NotebookLM post, Liv's story, and my Flexible Flyers post.

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

10)  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

11)  My AncestryDNA test now has 50,633 DNA matches (up 28 from 1 February) with 2,149 "close" matches (20 cM or more) today (up 0), with no new ThruLines.  Added Notes to one Match, and added no new DNA match lines to RootsMagic.    MyHeritageDNA test now has 14,117 DNA matches (up 16 from 1 February) 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 74,882 profiles (up 2 from last week)  and 147,950 source citations (up 6).  

13) Wrote 24 Genea-Musings blog posts last week (Sunday through Saturday), of which three were a press release. The most viewed post last week was Betty and Fred's Story: "A Home and Planning Ahead" with over 355 views.  Genea-Musings had about 262,00page views last week and over 760,000 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. Brother-in-law Paul came to visit on Tuesday through Thursday to visit Linda, and we wneto ut to dinner three nights. Still reading Unfinished Business by J.A. Jance. Watched the Super Bowl with friends in Coronado. The San Diego State Aztecs basketball team was 2-0 last week, so now are 17-6 on the season.
   
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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. 

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Randy's Memories -- My Life at Age 40 in 1983

I wrote several articles about my life over the past 20 years, but they are all in my "Engineer-speak" and "Just-the-facts" writing style.  One story which somehow escaped being posted to Genea-Musings but is in my unpublished memoir and the published StoryWorth book is this one.


(AI Google NotebookLM Infographic - Randy Seaver at Age 40 in 1983)

I wondered if my AI-assistant Anthropic Claude could turn it into an engaging story about my life in 1983 when I was age 40.  Here is Claude's description:

1983, A Year of Balance and Adventure: Randy at 40

In October 1983, Randy celebrated his 40th birthday in the Chula Vista home on Via Trieste where he and his wife Linda had built their life together—a home they would still occupy more than four decades later. After 13 years of marriage, Randy had found a rhythm that many chase but few achieve: a life rich with family, meaningful work, community involvement, and personal pursuits.

The household buzzed with the energy of two young daughters. Nine-year-old Lori was starting her softball journey on an American Girl team at Loma Verde park, while seven-year-old Tami navigated second grade. The cul-de-sac at the end of their street became an impromptu playground where bicycles, kickball, and whiffle ball filled summer evenings. On weekends, neighborhood barbecues transformed the street into a volleyball court, the net strung up as neighbors gathered.

Linda orchestrated the complex logistics of modern motherhood—shuttling daughters to two different schools, shepherding school work, volunteering in their classes, leading Girl Scout troops, serving as a church deacon, lunches with friends, and maintaining friendships that stretched across distances with letters and phone calls. Her days were a carefully choreographed dance of cooking, teaching, cleaning, and nurturing.

Meanwhile, Randy was in his 16th year at Rohr Industries, where he managed a team of ten as an Aero/Thermo Group Engineer. His work on engine nacelle projects took him across the Atlantic multiple times to Derby, England, collaborating with Rolls Royce on the RB211-535 project and also working on a business jet initiative with Cessna. He was an expert on thrust reverser design and performance. It was during one of these English trips that Randy experienced what would be both his first and last hot air balloon ride with his friend Eric Smith—a memory that stood out among the many business meetings.

Beyond work and family, Randy wove himself into the fabric of his community. As a newly appointed Elder at Chula Vista Presbyterian Church, he served on the Communications and Fellowship Committee. He and Linda were active in a church social group and devoted time to Presbyterian Marriage Encounter, scheduling events that strengthened other couples' relationships.

That summer, the family embarked on an epic road trip in their new light blue 1983 Oldsmobile, traversing the West Coast from San Diego to Victoria, British Columbia, and back again. They stayed with friends, or camped in a tent, and occasionally stayed in a motel. The journey read like a love letter to the American West: the granite cliffs and majestic waterfalls of Yosemite, camping beneath Shasta Mountain next to a railroad track (big mistake!), a cold water cabin near the sapphire depths of Crater Lake, the lush Columbia River valley with waterfalls, and the misty shores of the Pacific Northwest. They visited family and friends along the way—cousin Bonnie in Seattle, DX enthusiast Bruce in Seattle, and Dxer Nick and his family in Victoria. The return trip wound through Seaside, Florence and the Rogue River on the Oregon coast, down through the towering redwoods of Northern California, and included stops in San Francisco to see Linda's father and brother before the final stretch home through Santa Barbara.

When evening settled over Via Trieste, Randy indulged his fascination with DXing—the art of listening for distant AM radio stations. For an hour or two most nights, and sometimes in the midnight or pre-dawn hours of weekends, he tuned into the mysterious world of Medium Wave propagation. His expertise was such that he contributed articles on radio wave propagation to DX newsletters, sharing his knowledge with fellow enthusiasts scattered across the country.

As Padres and Chargers fans, Randy and Linda regularly climbed to the upper deck of San Diego Stadium for baseball games, cheering alongside thousands of other San Diegans. They watched what games they could on television, their sports fandom woven into the seasonal rhythms of California life.

The year brought profound sorrow as well. In May, Randy's father succumbed to prostate cancer after a year of declining health, his final days marked by a blocked bladder and a fatal heart attack in the hospital, followed by a memorial service and burial at Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery. In the wake of this loss, Randy and Linda made the weekly pilgrimage to Point Loma to help his mother with shopping, repairs, and the simple gift of presence.

Perhaps in response to the stress and grief, Randy committed to taking better care of himself. He began an exercise program with his Rohr colleague Dennis, pounding the pavement in walks and runs until he shed weight, eventually reaching 180 pounds.

When asked to describe himself at 40, Randy's answer was simple and sincere: he was happy. Happy as a son, husband, father, worker, coach, parishioner, DXer and friend. He tried to have fun with everybody he encountered. And in 1983, standing at the midpoint of his life in a house on Via Trieste, surrounded by the people and pursuits that mattered most, Randy could say with certainty: life was good.

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Can Google NotebookLM turn this into an Infographic and Video Overview?  Of course!!  The Infographic is at the top of this post, and the video is here:  

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

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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) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

The URL for this post is:  https://www.geneamusings.com/2026/02/randys-memories-my-life-at-age-40-in.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.

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Amanuensis Monday -- 1776 Mortgage Deed of George Wakeman to John Heugan For Land in Ballstown, Albany County, New York

This week's document for transcription is the 1776 Mortgage Deed of George Wakeman who mortgaged his entire estate in Ballstown, Albany County, New York to John Heugan for 571 pounds, 17 shillings and five pence to be paid by 1 March 1776.

Albany County, New York, Mortgages 1773-1785:  pages 280-281, image 194 of 549]:

The transcription of this Mortgage Deed is (starting on page 280 about 30% below the top of the page) with the assistance of FamilySearch Full-Text Search:

[Page 280 starting at about 305 down the left-hand page of the image]:

REGISTERED for and at the request of John Hengan of Schenectady the twentieth day of January in the year of our Lord 1776. 
MEMORANDUM that on the thirteenth day of January in the year of our Lord One thousand seven hundred and seventy six George Wakeman of Ballston in the County of Albany in consideration of the sum of Five hundred and seventy one Pounds seventeen shillings 
and five pence to him the said George Wakeman by the said John Heugan in hand well 
and truly paid at or before the ensealing and delivery of these presents the receipt 
where of the said George Wakeman doth hereby acknowledge Hath Mortgaged, All his 
estate real and personal whatsoever and wheresoever in the said Province of New 
York and the Revision and Revisions &c. Provided nevertheless and it is the true 
intent and meaning of these Presents and of the said Parties here unto that if the 
said George Wakeman his heirs or assigns do and shall well and truly pay or cause to 
be paid unto the said John Heugan his executors administrators or assigns the full 
sum of Five hundred and seventy one Pounds seventeen shillings and five pence of 
lawful money of New York with lawful interest for the same on or before the first 
day of March next ensuing the day of the Date of these presents according to the 
condition of the above in part recited bond or obligate on without any deduction defal 
cation or abatement whatsoever then and from thenceforth these Presents and every 
matter and thing here in contained shall cease and be utterly null and void which 
Mortgage was duly acknowledged before Henry Bleecker Esq. one of the Judges of the 
Court of Common Pleas for the County of Albany the 13th day of Jan 1776. 
Recorded and Exd the day and 
year first above written. 
                                                          SS Steph Delancey Clerk.

The source citation for this mortgage record is:

"Albany County, New York, United States records," mortgage deed of George Wakeman to John Heugan, executed 13 January 1776 recorded 20 January 1776; imaged,   FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9W7-NWWW?view=fullText : accessed Jan 2, 2026), Image Group Number: 007121146, "Albany, Mortgages, 1773-1785," page 280, image 194 of 549; New York. County Court (Albany County).

This mortgage deed is for the entire estate of George Wakeman of Ballston, Albany County, New York. George Wakeman agreed to pay John Heugan 571 pounds 17 shillings and five pence principal plus interest in current money of New York Province, on 1 March 1776.  The real estate was part of the 1,006 acres that George Wakeman had bought with a mortgage deed from Dirck Lefferts in 1772.  It is not known whether any money was exchanged in 1776 or later as agreed. 

George Wakeman (1740-1815) was born before 1 June 1740 in Fairfield, Connecticut, the son of Samuel and Elizabeth (--?--) Wakeman. He married Sarah Hill (1742-1832) on 17 June 1762 in Fairfield, Connecticut.  George Wakeman died before 2 January 1815 in Wayne township, Ashtabula County, Ohio.

George and Sarah (Hill) Wakeman are my 6th great-grandparents through their daughter Hannah Wakeman (1763-1814) who married Thomas Partridge (1758-1828) in New York on  2 October 1785.  

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

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/2026/02/amanuensis-monday-1776-mortgage-deed-of.html

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 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, February 8, 2026

Best of the Genea-Blogs - Week of 1 to 7 February 2026

  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: 

*  Level Up Your Research: Why You Need a Personal Reference Guide for Genealogy by Lisa Stokes on Lisa Stokes Heritage Research.

*  The Revolution Didn't Free Everyone by Aryn Youngless on Genealogy By Aryn.

*  Discovering Incest in Family History: A Comprehensive Research Guide and If Genealogists Ran the Winter Olympics: The 2026 Milan-Cortina Games You Never Knew You Needed by Thomas MacEntee on Genealogy Bargains.

*  Getting Started With AI for the Absolute Beginner and AI Intelligence and Genealogical Research by James Tanner on Genealogy's Star.

*  Testing AI Photo Animations: Which Style Brings Ancestors to Life Best? by Diane Henriks on Know Who Wears the Genes In Your Family.

*  Ancestry "AI Stories" in Beta by Marian B. Wood on Climbing My Family Tree.

*  Why My Genealogy Research Breakthrough Hasn’t Happened Yet by Kirsten M. Max-Douglas on Our Growing Family Tree.

*  Getting Started with AI for Family History Research by Alice Childs on Genealogy Now.

*  Testament of Twelve Souls and AI Helps with Family History Blogging by Carole McCulloch on Essential Genealogy.

*  What Can You Learn About Your Ancestors' Daily Lives? by DiAnn Iamarino Ohama on Fortify Your Family Tree.

*  Custom Clusters: Step Into Your Match’s Shoes by Rick T. Wilson on MyFamilyPattern.com.

*  Does Your Past, or Your Ancestors Past, Define Who You Are Today? by Paul Chiddicks on Paul Chiddicks.

*  You finished your family history. Now can you legally publish it? by Denyse Allen on Chronicle Makers.

*  Transforming Court Records Research with AI: A Case Study from Colonial Virginia Part 1 – Finding and Logging by Diana Elder on Family Locket.

*  Finding Clues in FindAGrave, et al by Jill Morelli on  Genealogical Certification: My Personal Journal.

Here are pick posts by other geneabloggers this week:

*  The Chiddicks Observer Edition 43 (2 February 2026) by Paul Chiddicks on Paul Chiddicks. 

*  Friday’s Family History Finds [6 February 2026] by Linda Stufflebean on Empty Branches on the Family Tree.

*  This week’s crème de la crème -- February 7, 2026 by Gail Dever on Genealogy a la Carte.

*  GenStack [7 February 2026] by Robin Stewart on Genealogy Matters.

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.


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

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.

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Slide Show for the Zachariah and Elizabeth (Prescott) Hildreth Family of Massachusetts

  After writing the ABC Biography of the Zachariah Hildreth (1728-1784) and Elizabeth Prescott (1734-1812) Family 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:

Here is the Slide Show for the Zachariah and Elizabeth (Prescott) Hildreth Family of Massachusetts:

Zachariah and Elizabeth (Prescott) Hildreth are my 5th great-grandparents. Zachariah Hildreth (1728-1784) is one of my ancestral Revolutionary War soldiers.

This slide show is only 3 minutes and 40 seconds 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/2026/02/slide-show-for-zachariah-and-elizabeth.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.

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Betty and Fred's Story: "Building a Life Together"

 The AI-assisted ABC Biography of my mother, Betty Virginia (Carringer) Seaver, is in ABC Biography of #3 Betty Virginia (Carringer) Seaver (1919-2002) of San Diego, California. I also  wrote Betty's Story: The First-Year Art Teacher about the start of her teaching career.

The AI-assisted ABC Biography of my father, Frederick Walton Seaver, is in ABC Biography of #2 Frederick Walton Seaver Jr. (1911-1983) of Massachusetts and San Diego, California.  I also wrote Fred's Story: The Three-Day Cross-Country Escape  and Fred's Story: "I Need A Girl" about him coming to San Diego, and then wanting for a girlfriend.

Then I wrote:


And now:

                (AI NotebookLM Infographic - Betty and Fred's Story - Building a Life Together) 

1)  Based on the biographies and the earlier stories, I asked Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 to tell another story - what happened next (I offered some suggestions!)?  Here is the next story (edited for more detail and accuracy):

Betty and Fred’s Story: Building a Life Together

Early August 1942 - Finding Their Rhythm

Betty stood at the kitchen counter on a Saturday morning in early August, staring at the recipe card Eleanor had given her for her birthday two days earlier. "Pot Roast with Root Vegetables" was written across the top in Eleanor's neat handwriting, with detailed instructions below.

"It says to sear the meat first," Betty called to Fred, who was in the backyard assessing the overgrown patch of dirt behind their small garage. "What does 'sear' mean exactly?"

Fred appeared in the doorway, dirt smudged on his forehead. "It means brown it in a hot pan before you put it in the oven. Seals in the juices."

"How do you know that?"

"My mother taught me. She said a man should know basic cooking in case his wife gets sick." He grinned. "Want help?"

"Yes, please. I'm terrified I'm going to ruin it."

Together, they worked through Eleanor's recipe—Fred showing Betty how to season the roast and sear it properly, Betty carefully chopping carrots, potatoes, and onions according to the instructions. They put everything in the Dutch oven Emily and Lyle had given them as a wedding gift and slid it into the oven.

"Three hours," Betty said, setting the timer. "Now what?"

"Now we tackle the backyard. I was thinking—we have space for a vegetable garden. With rationing getting stricter, growing our own food makes sense."

Betty looked out at the weedy patch of dirt. "I don't know the first thing about gardening."

"Neither do I. But we can learn. That's what we've been doing since we got married—learning together."

They spent the afternoon clearing weeds, turning over soil, and planning where vegetables might go. It was hot, sweaty work, but there was something satisfying about it—creating something together, preparing for the future.

When the pot roast came out of the oven at six o'clock, they were both filthy and starving. Betty lifted the lid nervously.

"It looks like real food," she said, surprised.

"It smells amazing." Fred carved into the roast, and the meat fell apart, tender and flavorful. The vegetables had cooked to perfect softness, soaking up the savory juices.

They ate at their kitchen table, both surprised by how good the meal was.

"Eleanor's recipe works," Betty said. "I actually cooked something edible."

"You cooked something delicious. My mother would be proud."

Betty had received a stack of recipe cards for her birthday—her twenty-third, celebrated quietly because they were still newlyweds getting settled. Sally Lyons had contributed "Easy Chicken and Dumplings." Phyllis Tazelaar had written out "Beef Stew for Beginners." Marcia Chamberlain had provided "Foolproof Meatloaf." Even her mother had added to the collection with family favorites.

"I'm going to work through all of these," Betty declared. "I'm going to learn to be a good cook."

"You're already a good wife. The cooking will come."


Mid-August 1942 - Dinner with the Steddoms

The following Saturday, Rod and Eleanor Steddom invited them for dinner at their apartment in North Park. Rod was a civil engineer working on defense projects, and Eleanor was still teaching after getting married two years earlier.

"It's so good to see you both!" Eleanor hugged Betty and Fred warmly. "How's married life treating you?"

"Wonderfully," Betty said. "Though I'm still learning to cook."

"You'll get there. It took me a year to make a decent roast chicken."

Over dinner—Eleanor's chicken and dumplings, perfectly executed—the conversation turned to the war. News from the Pacific was grim. The Japanese controlled vast territories. American forces were fighting desperate battles at Guadalcanal.

"I've been thinking about enlisting," Rod said suddenly. "I have engineering skills the military needs. It feels wrong to sit at home while other men are fighting."

Eleanor's face paled, but she said nothing.

Fred shifted uncomfortably. "I've had the same thoughts. I'm thirty-one now, too old for the draft, but they're taking volunteers. And I have aircraft manufacturing experience."

Betty felt her stomach drop. She'd known this conversation was coming—it was happening in households across America. But she wasn't ready for it.

"What about your work at Rohr?" Betty asked, trying to keep her voice steady. "They need you there. You're in war work already."

"It's not the same as serving in uniform," Fred said quietly.

"It's exactly the same," Eleanor said firmly. "Forgive me, but the men who build the planes are just as important as the men who fly them. Without you, there are no planes. Without planes, we can't win the war."

"Eleanor's right," Betty added. "You're already serving, Fred. You're working ten-hour days, six days a week. You're contributing."

Rod and Fred exchanged a look—the unspoken communication of men wrestling with duty and conscience.

"Let's see how things develop," Rod finally said. "If they start conscripting men our age, we'll go. But for now, we keep doing what we're doing."

The subject shifted to lighter topics—how Fred and Betty were settling into their house, plans for the fall, mutual friends from San Diego State. But the conversation about enlistment hung in the air, an unspoken worry that would hover over all their gatherings in the months ahead.

Driving home that night, Betty took Fred's hand. "You're not seriously considering enlisting, are you?"

"I don't know. Part of me feels like I should. Like sitting at home while other men fight is cowardly."

"You're not sitting at home. You're at Rohr, building the equipment those men need to fight. That's not cowardly—that's essential."

Fred squeezed her hand but didn't answer. Betty knew this conversation wasn't over.


Late August 1942 - The Vegetable Garden

Over the next few weeks, Fred and Betty worked on their vegetable garden whenever they had time—early mornings before work, evenings after dinner, Saturday afternoons. They bought seeds and starter plants from a nursery in Chula Vista: tomatoes, beans, lettuce, carrots, zucchini, and herbs.

"The man at the nursery said these are easy for beginners," Fred explained as they planted. "And they'll produce through fall and winter in San Diego's climate."

Betty had never gardened before, but she found herself enjoying it—the feel of dirt under her fingernails, the satisfaction of setting plants into the ground, the hope that they'd grow and produce food. It felt patriotic somehow, contributing to the war effort by growing Victory Garden vegetables.

"My grandmother would be proud," Betty said as they watered the newly planted garden. "She always grew her own vegetables."

"Mine too. She had a huge garden in New Hampshire. Probably still does, though she's getting older."

They established a routine of checking the garden every evening after work, watering when needed, pulling weeds, watching for the first signs of growth. Within a week, tiny tomato plants were showing new leaves. The bean plants sent up delicate tendrils. The lettuce sprouted in neat rows.

"We're farmers," Fred announced proudly. "Agricultural pioneers."

"We have six tomato plants. That hardly makes us farmers."

"Give it time. By October, we'll be drowning in vegetables."


Early September 1942 - Dinner at Fern Street

The first Saturday in September, they drove to Fern Street for dinner with the Carringer family. Emily had prepared Betty's favorite meal—fried chicken, mashed potatoes, green beans from the Carringer's own garden, fresh biscuits.

"How's work treating you both?" Lyle asked as they ate.

"Busy," Fred said. "We lost three more men to enlistment this week. Everyone who's left is working longer hours to compensate."

"How many hours are you working?" Emily asked with concern.

"Usually ten hours a day, sometimes twelve. Six days a week. It's exhausting, but it's necessary."

Betty saw her mother and father exchange a worried look. She knew what they were thinking—that Fred might enlist, that they could lose their son-in-law to the war.

"And you, Betty?" Georgianna asked. "How's the secretary job?"

"I love it, actually. Mr. McCreery said I've brought order to chaos. I've implemented a new filing system, reorganized his calendar, and streamlined the approval process for engineering changes. He says I'm indispensable."

"That's my girl," Lyle said proudly. "Always been organized and capable."

After dinner, while Fred helped Lyle with something in the garage, Betty sat with her mother and grandmother in the living room.

"Is Fred thinking about enlisting?" Emily asked directly.

Betty shouldn't have been surprised that her mother had intuited this. "He's mentioned it. A lot of his colleagues are joining up. He feels guilty staying home."

"But he's in essential war work," Georgianna protested.

"I know. I've told him that. But I can't control what he decides." Betty felt tears prick her eyes. "We've been married less than two months. I can't imagine being separated from him."

Emily pulled Betty close. "Let's pray it doesn't come to that. Let's pray this war ends before they need to take all our men."


Mid-September 1942 - Dinner with the Lyons

George and Sally Lyons hosted them for dinner in their small house in Chula Vista. George was a telephone worker, and Sally was teaching elementary school.

"Many are leaving teaching," Sally joked as she served pot roast—her mother's recipe, she explained. "The wartime economy offers better pay for less classroom chaos."

"How is it going?" Betty asked.

" I love the students, the art projects, seeing kids have breakthroughs. But I don't like grading papers until midnight or dealing with difficult parents." Sally paused. "Do you miss it?"

"More than I expected to," Betty admitted. "But I love what I'm doing at Rohr. I feel like I'm contributing something important."

The men talked about production challenges at their respective plants. The telephone company was trying to accommodate all of the new wartime housing; Rohr was making parts for multiple aircraft manufacturers. Both were operating at maximum capacity, struggling to keep up with military demand.

"We're hiring women now," George said. "Not just as operators - they're learning to do electrical work, and assembly. Some of them are better than the men they replaced."

"Same at Rohr," Fred added. "We have women in material control now, in quality inspection, even in some technical roles. The war is changing everything."

After dinner, while the men cleaned up (a new arrangement that all the couples had adopted—men helped with domestic work now that women were working outside the home), Sally pulled Betty aside.

"How are things really going? Married life treating you well?"

"It's wonderful. Hard sometimes—we're both tired from work, and we're still learning each other's rhythms. But wonderful."

"Any thoughts about babies?"

Betty felt her cheeks warm. "Not yet. We want to settle in first, see how the war develops. Maybe in a year or two."

"That's smart. Dick and Phyllis weren't planning, but..." Sally lowered her voice. "Phyllis is expecting. Due in January."

"Oh! How exciting!"

"She's terrified. First baby, wartime, Dick working long hours. But also happy. It's complicated."

Driving home, Betty told Fred about Phyllis's pregnancy.

"That'll be us someday," Fred said. "When the time is right."

"Are you ready for that? To be a father?"

"Not yet. But I will be. When it happens, I'll be ready."

Betty leaned her head on his shoulder, thinking about the future—children, a family, all the life they'd build together. If the war didn't tear them apart first.

When they got home, they had received a telegram from Fred’s brother, Edward back in Massachusetts. Fred opened it with a worried look, but it said “You have a nephew, son Peter born Sept 7. Mother and baby fine.”

Fred mused “I wonder if Ed is going to enlist in the service. Gerry mentioned it before our wedding that he was thinking of enlisting in the Navy.”


Late September 1942 - Hosting the Chamberlains

Betty and Fred hosted their first dinner party as a married couple in late September, inviting Marshall and Dorothy Chamberlain, their daughter Marcia, and Aunt Emily.

Betty was nervous about cooking for guests, but she'd been practicing. She made Sally's mother's pot roast recipe—now perfected through multiple attempts—with roasted potatoes and carrots from their garden.

"These carrots are from your garden?" Dorothy asked, impressed. "They're delicious!"

"First harvest," Fred said proudly. "We're officially Victory Gardeners."

Marshall raised his glass. "To Fred and Betty, in their first home, growing their own food and building a good life together. You make marriage look easy."

"It's not easy," Betty said honestly. "But it's good. Worth all the hard work."

After dinner, they sat in the small living room drinking coffee, and the conversation turned—as it always did—to the war.

"Roosevelt is calling for 60,000 planes to be built next year," Marshall said. "60,000! The production goals are astronomical."

"We'll have to hire thousands more workers," Fred added. "Which means more women in the factories, more training programs, more challenges."

"Do you worry about being drafted?" Dorothy asked Fred directly.

"Every day. I'm thirty-one, so I'm in a lower priority group. But if they expand the age range or if I volunteer..." He shrugged. "I have skills the military needs."

"Don't volunteer," Marcia said fiercely. "Please, Fred. You're already doing important work. Don't volunteer."

Betty wanted to hug Marcia for saying what she couldn't bring herself to say.

The evening ended on that somber note, all of them aware that their comfortable lives could change at any moment. The war was a constant shadow, lurking at the edge of every conversation, every plan, every hope for the future.


Early October 1942 - Increasing Hours

By October, Fred was working twelve-hour days regularly, sometimes six days a week, sometimes seven. Rohr had lost more than a dozen engineers and technicians to enlistment, and the remaining staff was stretched impossibly thin.

Betty would wake at 5:30 to find Fred already in the kitchen making coffee, dark circles under his eyes.

"You need more sleep," she'd say.

"I need thirty-six hour days," he'd reply. "Sleep will have to wait until we win the war."

Betty's own job had expanded. Frank McCreery relied on her for more than just secretarial work—she was reviewing engineering documents for completeness, coordinating between departments, even attending some planning meetings to take notes.

"You have a good mind for this work," McCreery told her one afternoon. "If you were a man, I'd recommend you for engineering training."

The casual sexism stung, but Betty knew he meant it as a compliment. Women could be secretaries, but engineers? That was still a man's world, even in wartime.

They'd fall into bed exhausted every night, sometimes too tired even for conversation. Their intimate life suffered—it was hard to feel romantic when you were both bone-tired from twelve-hour days.

"This can't last forever," Betty said one night as they lay in the darkness. "We'll burn out."

"It has to last until we win. That's just how it is."

"I miss you. I know we're together, but I miss you. I miss having time to just be together."

Fred rolled over and pulled her close. "I miss you too. This isn't the marriage I planned. But it's the marriage we have right now. We'll get through it."


to be continued …

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

2) Here is the Google NotebookLM Video Overview about Fred and Betty's next two months building their life together: 

3)  This story is historical fiction based on real people -- my parents -- and a real event in a real place.  I don't know the full story of these events -- but this is how it might have been. I hope that it was at least this good! Claude is such a good story writer!  I added some details and corrected some errors in Claude's initial version.

Stay tuned for the next episode in this family story.

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

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

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