What is my place in history? I read that question this past week and thought it would be an interesting topic to help celebrate the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence.
In my mind, I'm just a link in a never-ending chain from the first homo sapiens (say, Adam and Eve some 40,000 years ago) to myself through thousands of generations. Unfortunately, we don't know much about all of the links in that chain. However, I've been able to discern perhaps 2,000 links who lived in the past 400 years through genealogical research.
I've lived from 1943 to 2026 so far, but almost all of my life has been spent in the San Diego, California area with occasional forays to interesting places for work, vacations, sightseeing, and research pleasure. My view of my place in history is limited by my education and my experiences.
Have I contributed to historical events or movements? I worked as an aerospace engineer for about 40 years, and have worked as a genealogist for about 39 years now (the two vocations overlap). I've been a grandson, son, husband, father, and grandfather, and a student, friend, colleague, coach, researcher, and writer.
How can I judge my place in history? Perhaps my vision is limited.
I know -- I'll ask an Artificial Inteeligence tool to evaluate my place in history!!! But how will I provide enough information for an AI tool to evaluate my place in history?
I wrote a book of my memories several years ago as part of a StoryWorth project (titled Life Stories of Randy Seaver) as a Christmas gift for myself and my daughrers in 2024. I edited it and published it again as a MyHeritage MyStories book when that featrure was announced in early 2025. The StoryWorth book was 203 pages including a few family photographs. I have a word processing file of the books that are about 65 pages (Times New Roman, 12 point font) in a PDF file.
1) I attached the PDF of my Life Stories bok to Anthropic Claude Sonnet 5 and asked it: "Please write a 2000 word story in my voice about my place in history - like a biography but tilted toward historical achievements and my family life based on the attached document."
I've spent close to forty years now tracing the lives of the people who came before me — soldiers, farmers, weavers, colonial governors, and even a few kings — and somewhere along the way I finally turned the lens around and asked myself a fair question: where do I fit into all of this? Am I just one more name at the bottom of a very long pedigree chart, or did I actually brush up against history myself, in my own small way, during my eighty-some years on this earth? The honest answer is both. I am the product of an extraordinary sweep of history running back through Mayflower passengers and English monarchs, and I've also stood, however briefly, at the edge of a few genuinely historic moments of my own. Let me tell you about both halves of that story.
The Long View Backward
My genealogy research has turned up some remarkable connections, and I don't say this to brag so much as to marvel at it. Through my New England lines I descend from thirteen Mayflower passengers — William White, Francis Cooke, Richard Warren, George Soule, William Brewster, Stephen Hopkins, and Edward Fuller among them — ordinary English families who threw in their lot with a leaky ship and a wild, unknown coastline in 1620. I descend from colonial governors too: Thomas Prence of Plymouth, Simon Bradstreet and Thomas Dudley of Massachusetts Bay, Caleb Carr of Rhode Island, Robert Treat of Connecticut. And further back still, if my research and the old royalty books are to be believed, the line runs all the way through William the Conqueror, back through Alfred the Great, to Charlemagne himself. My own 2nd great-grandfather, Isaac Seaver, was a blacksmith who served the Union Army during the Civil War. None of these people knew they were laying track toward a skinny, far-sighted kid in Brooklyn Heights in San Diego who would spend his retirement digging them all back up. But they were, and I have felt the weight and the privilege of that inheritance every single day since I opened my first genealogy book in 1988. I am awed by the lives of my ancestors – especially those who risked it all by migrating across the ocean or the continent, who toiled on farms and homes, in workshops and offices, who raised families and taught their children the ways of life in the world. Each person is unique and deserves their place in history.
I think about my grandfather, Lyle Carringer, born in 1891, who lived to see the automobile, the airplane, radio, two World Wars, television, the atomic age, rocket ships, and men walking on the moon — sixteen presidents and a lifetime of wonder, as I once wrote about him. He never lost his sense of awe at any of it. I think I inherited that same appetite for watching the world change, and I've been lucky enough to watch quite a lot of it change myself.
Standing at the Edge of History
I was twenty years old, eating lunch in the cafeteria at San Diego State on Friday, November 22, 1963, when the intercom crackled and told us President Kennedy had been shot and had died at the hospital. They sent everybody home. It took me two bus transfers to get there, and when I walked in, my father — who rarely talked politics with me — looked up and said, very somberly, 'This is a terrible thing, Randy.' We sat in front of our black-and-white television all that weekend, through the Oswald killing, the funeral procession, President Johnson's swearing-in, and I remember feeling, at twenty, that the bright, hopeful decade I'd grown up believing in had just cracked down the middle. I was there. Millions of Americans were there in the same sense, glued to the same grainy images, but I was one of them, and it has stayed with me for sixty years.
Not six years later, I was sitting in my parents' living room on 30th Street on a Sunday evening in July 1969, watching a different kind of history on their bigger television set. Neil Armstrong stepped down onto the surface of the moon, fulfilling a challenge President Kennedy had laid down back in 1961, the same year I graduated from high school. I had grown up on model airplanes and slide rules and a fierce, quiet ambition to work in aviation, and here was the ultimate expression of everything I found thrilling about flight — a human being walking on another world, broadcast live into my parents' home. I didn't know it then, but within two years of Kennedy’s death I would be a working aerodynamicist myself, and the space race that thrilled me that July night helped push an entire generation of engineers, myself included, into the aerospace industry.
I even had a small, personal footnote in professional sports history. In the summer of 1963, as a nineteen-year-old college student, I took a summer job as a training camp boy for the brand-new AFL San Diego Chargers, out at their camp in the high desert. That same team went on to win the AFL Championship that season — the only league title the franchise would ever win in San Diego. I've always half-joked that I was the team's good luck charm, and whether or not that's true, I was there, at the beginning of professional football in my hometown, carrying equipment and making beds for men who would become legends of the American Football League.
Those two moments — Dallas and the moon — bookended a turbulent decade for me, and I followed nearly all of it closely: the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962, when I was still a teenager wondering if the world would still be there in the morning; the assassinations of Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King in 1968; the Watts riots; the long, grinding years of the Vietnam War, which I watched from the relative safety of a college and occupational draft deferment while friends of mine did not have that same luck. I voted for the first time in 1964, and I have voted in every election since, through sixteen presidential terms now from Johnson to Trump. None of that makes me a historical figure. But it does mean that for over sixty years running, I have been a first-hand witness to the American century unfolding in real time, not from a textbook but from a kitchen table with the evening news on a radio or on a couch in the living room.
A Scientist of Small Things
Long before I was ever paid to think about airflow, I was already an amateur scientist of the airwaves. In 1960, a fellow named Randy introduced me to DXing — the hobby of hunting for distant radio stations on the AM band, sometimes bouncing off the ionosphere from thousands of miles away. It consumed me for years. I became the editor of a weekly DX club bulletin, essentially blogging by mimeograph decades before anyone called it blogging, and I attended DX conventions in Milwaukee, Colorado, Montreal, Vancouver, Sacramento, and Boston, and even hosted one in San Diego. Along the way I became something of an expert in radio wave propagation, a genuinely scientific pursuit carried out by ordinary hobbyists like me, sitting up all night with a good receiver, a tape recorder and a notebook, quietly adding to the world's understanding of how signals travel around a curved and restless planet. It was good training, as it turned out, for an engineering career built on patiently teasing physical truths out of stubborn, invisible things like airflow over a wing or pressures on an engine inlet.
A Career Built Inside Aviation History
If my brushes with the big historic moments were mostly those of a witness, my career gave me something closer to a hand in shaping the ordinary miracle of modern air travel. I spent thirty-five years, from October 1967 until my retirement in 2002, working as an aerodynamicist and eventually Chief of Aerodynamics and Thermodynamics at Rohr Corporation in Chula Vista — later Rohr Industries, then Goodrich Aerostructures, then part of United Technologies. Rohr made many of the nacelles, the engine pods, that hang beneath the wings of nearly every large commercial jet you have ever flown on.
It's easy to overlook how historic that quiet, unglamorous work really was. Every time a family boards a jetliner today and crosses an ocean in a matter of hours, safely and almost without a thought, they are living inside a piece of engineering history that people like me spent whole careers refining, mile by mile, program by program, rivet by rivet. Many of the airplanes I’ve flown on had Rohr/Goodrich products that I helped design and test. I never walked on the moon and I was never a general or a senator, but I helped make the modern age of flight a little quieter, a little safer, and a little more efficient, and there is real satisfaction in that.
Becoming Part of the Historical Record Myself
The strangest twist in all of this is that after I retired from engineering, I became, in a modest way, a historian myself — not of nations, but of families, and in the process, something of a pioneer in a small corner of the digital age. I started writing Genea-Musings on April 15, 2006, and I have published something on it essentially every single day since -- almost 20,000 blog posts on the genealogy industry, how-to demonstrations, and family stories.
Every biography and story I write about my ancestors — Joseph Seaver as a boy in 1686 Roxbury, Henry Austin Carringer coming from Pennsylvania to San Diego, Samuel Vaux crossing the ocean from England, Robert Seaver and Eunice Rayment settling in colonial Massachusetts, many Revolutionary War ancestors, one Civll War soldier (Isaac Seaver), one US Marine Lyle Carringer,one Navy seman (Frederick W. Seaver) — is itself an act of preserving history that would otherwise vanish.
The Legacy That Matters Most
Of everything I've written here, none of it means as much to me as this: on Valentine's Day 1970 I asked Linda Joan Leland to marry me, and it remains the best decision I ever made. Linda taught elementary school for twenty-five years, first in Coronado and then in Chula Vista, shaping the minds of hundreds of children the way good teachers quietly do, without ever making headlines for it. She served as a Deacon at Chula Vista Presbyterian Church, led a Girl Scout troop, coached softball, and has been a steady, loving friend to more people than I could ever count. We raised two daughters, Lori and Tami, who grew into smart, capable, hard-working women — Lori in business management, Tami with advanced degrees in education now working in university leadership — and each of them married well and built families of their own. Together they have given us five grandchildren, sweet, smart, fun and ambitious kids who adore their grandparents every bit as much as we adore them, and each other.
Where That Leaves Me
================================
The AI Google NotebookLM Video Overview of this story is in:
2) Wait, that's not all. I asked Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 to write song lyrics to describe and celebrate my place in history based on the book PDF. Here are the song lyrics.
A Life Worth Remembering
(Verse 1)
Born in October, nineteen forty-three,
National City, California, that was me,
A skinny kid on 30th Street, Brooklyn Heights,
Riding my Flexy in the Southern California light.
My Gram sang carols by the fire Christmas Eve,
My Gramp showed me stamps from every place you could conceive,
I rode my bike down every street in San Diego town,
Built my world from the bottom up, brick by brick and pound by pound.
(Verse 2)
I was eating lunch in sixty-three, SDSU,
When the intercom told us what we never thought it'd do —
Said the President was gone, send everybody home,
And I rode two buses back, a twenty-year-old, alone.
Six years later, Sunday night, a grainy black-and-white,
Armstrong stepped onto the moon — Lord, what a sight!
I was already drawing airflows, dreaming of the skies,
Engineering the machines that helped a whole world rise.
(Chorus)
I am a hinge between the old and the new,
From Mayflower ships to jet engines cutting through,
From Plymouth Rock to the Pacific shore,
One ordinary man in an extraordinary story's core.
I watched the world change, held my family tight,
Put my name on the airplanes that crossed the night,
Not a king, not a hero, just a man who tried —
A life worth remembering, and I wear that with pride.
(Verse 3)
Thirty-five years at Rohr, Chula Vista, California sun,
Nacelles, thrust reversers, 'til the work was done,
Boeing, Douglas, Airbus — I helped keep them in the air,
Every safe flight crossing oceans, I put something there.
I was a training camp boy for the Chargers, sixty-three,
They won the championship — don't tell me that wasn't me!
I DX'd on the AM band, chased signals through the night,
A scientist of small things, always hunting for the light.
(Chorus)
I am a hinge between the old and the new,
From Mayflower ships to jet engines cutting through,
From Plymouth Rock to the Pacific shore,
One ordinary man in an extraordinary story's core.
I watched the world change, held my family tight,
Put my name on the airplanes that crossed the night,
Not a king, not a hero, just a man who tried —
A life worth remembering, and I wear that with pride.
(Bridge)
My roots run deep, from Mayflower decks to colonial shores,
Through Alfred the Great and Charlemagne and so much more,
But none of that matters half as much as what I built right here —
A family, a life, a legacy I hold so dear.
Linda, my love, my partner, my very best friend,
Twenty-five years teaching children, a deacon to the end,
Lori and Tami, women of grace and grit and fire,
Five grandchildren climbing higher and higher and higher.
(Verse 4)
I've been blogging Genea-Musings since two-thousand-and-six,
Every ancestor I find is another name I fix
Back into the story so the grandkids someday know
Every farmer, every soldier, every seed that helped them grow.
I am the hinge — the keeper of the old and the new,
From Roxbury to Rohr, from Wiltshire to the seven-eighty-seven's view,
I've had my seat at history's table, quiet but here,
And I wouldn't trade a single blessed day of my eighty-some years.
(Final Chorus)
I am a hinge between the old and the new,
From Mayflower ships to jet engines cutting through,
From Plymouth Rock to the Pacific shore,
One ordinary man in an extraordinary story's core.
I watched the world change, held my family tight,
Put my name on the airplanes that crossed the night,
Not a king, not a hero, just a man who tried —
A life worth remembering, and I wear that with pride.
(Outro - slow, fading)
*Go look them up in the family tree…*
*Mayflower, Rohr, and a life lived free…*
*Linda, Lori, Tami, five grandkids bright…*
*Genea-Musings, every morning, posted in the light…*
*San Diego born, San Diego raised…*
*A life worth living… and a life worth praised.*
4) Isn't Artificial Intelligence great? I'm having lots of genealogy and family history fun!
Subscribe to receive a free daily email from Genea-Musings using www.Blogtrottr.com.




