Monday, June 1, 2026

Ask AI: "Describe The Life of the Nicholas Brocke Family of Kendrick, Idaho in 1905" – Part 2

 I wondered if my AI Assistant Anthropic Claude could provide me with information about my wife's ancestral family's life in 1905 in Kendrick, Idaho.  My wife's 2nd great-grandparents Nicholas Brocke (1855-1938) and Anna Grieser (1859-1936) had moved to Kendrick, Idaho in 1877 and had eight children.  I posted an ABC Biography for them in ABC Biography of John Nicholas Brocke (1855-1938) and Anna Grieser (1859-1936) Family of Nebraska and Idaho.

I asked Anthropic Claude to create a description of the Nicholas Brocke family life and work in Kendrick, Idaho in 1905, based on the biography and social history.  Part 1 was posted in Ask AI: "Describe the Life of the Nicholas Brocke Family in Kendrick, Idaho in 1905" -- Part 1.

(AI NotebookLM Infographic -- Nicholas Brocke Family Life in 1905 in Idaho)

The Claude Sonnet 4.6 response was (this is Part 2 of 3): 

The Nicholas Brocke Family of Kendrick, Idaho

A Year in Their Lives in 1905 – Part 2


May: Baseball, Letters, and the County Competition

May brought warmer weather, blooming fruit trees in Nicholas's orchard, and the start of baseball season. Joseph, now sixteen, had become one of the best players in the county, and Nicholas rarely missed a home game.

The games were held Saturday afternoons on the Kendrick town diamond, and they were genuine community events. Families spread blankets on the sidelines, older men gathered in groups to talk while keeping one eye on the game, children chased each other around the edges of the crowd.

Nicholas sat beside Frank and Julia at the May opener, watching Joseph warm up on the pitcher's mound. The boy had a natural grace in motion that was nothing like his father's stolid, deliberate movements. Where Nicholas did everything by strength and persistence, Joseph made things look easy.

"Strike three!" the umpire called on the third batter, and the Kendrick crowd cheered.

"That's our boy!" Nicholas called out, not caring who heard him.

Frank grinned. "He's going to be the talk of the county by the end of summer."

Julia, sitting between them with her sewing basket—she could never quite bring herself to sit idle—looked up. "He's already the talk of town. Mrs. Hammond told me three different families have been pointing him out to their daughters."

Nicholas pretended not to hear that last part, but he filed it away.

Mid-May brought a letter from Amelia that Anna read at the breakfast table with tears she tried to hide from the boys. Amelia was expecting her second child, due in July. She was well, little Juanita was almost a year old, Severt was excited and attentive, but she wished she could be closer to home.

"A second grandchild in Montana," Anna said, folding the letter carefully.

"We'll write right back," Nicholas said. "Tell her we're proud and we're thinking of her every day." He paused. "And that we'll come see her—or she'll come to us—as soon as the baby's old enough to travel."

Anna nodded, composing herself. "I'll start knitting again this week."

The end of May brought the Latah County academic competition in Moscow, and young Nicholas represented the Kendrick school in arithmetic. Nicholas and Anna both made the trip to Moscow, sitting in the audience of the Moscow school auditorium with quiet but fierce pride.

The competition was serious business—students from schools all over the county working through increasingly difficult problems on their slates, judges reviewing answers, scores kept carefully. Young Nicholas, ten years old, was competing against children as old as fourteen in his category.

He won second place.

Walking out of the auditorium, the boy was quiet, and Nicholas wondered if he was disappointed. Then young Nicholas looked up at him. "I know where I went wrong on the last problem. I'll get first place next year."

Nicholas put his hand on the boy's shoulder. "Second place in the county is nothing to be ashamed of, son."

"I know," the boy said seriously. "But I can do better."

Nicholas caught Anna's eye, and they shared a smile over the boy's head. That determination—that refusal to be satisfied with less than his best—was pure Brocke.

June: Community Life and the Farm in Full Swing

June meant the crops were growing and needed constant attention—cultivating, irrigating, watching for pests and disease. Nicholas and Joseph were in the fields daily, with Frank coming out several times a week to help. Charles worked after school, and even young Nicholas had his assigned tasks.

The pumping system hummed along, delivering water to the fields on a schedule Nicholas had refined over years of careful observation. He knew his land intimately—which sections dried out first, which held moisture, where the soil was richest. The system he'd installed and improved was his proudest practical achievement.

"A man named Morrison is giving a talk in Moscow about dry farming techniques," Frank mentioned one evening as they cleaned their tools. "Next Saturday."

"Dry farming?" Nicholas considered. Their irrigation gave them an advantage, but not all their acres were fully irrigated. "All right. We'll go hear what he has to say."

They went, and Nicholas came back with three pages of notes and two new ideas he wanted to try on the northwest corner of the farm, where irrigation was most difficult. Frank looked insufferably pleased about this.

"Don't say it," Nicholas told him.

"I wasn't going to say anything, Pa," Frank said, entirely too innocently.

The school board met again in early June, and Nicholas was pleased to report that the new teacher had been hired—a young woman from the Lewiston Normal School with excellent credentials and obvious enthusiasm. He'd argued hard for her appointment and felt vindicated when the other board members agreed she was the right choice.

The Catholic Church annual picnic was held in late June at the usual grove near Kendrick Creek. It was one of the social highlights of the year—families gathering for food, games, conversation, and the simple pleasure of being together after the isolation of winter.

Nicholas organized the horseshoe tournament as he had for many years. He made it to the semi-finals before losing to a younger man named Gruber, who had an infuriatingly accurate throwing technique.

"Getting soft, Brocke!" called Joseph Hasfurther—Anna's brother-in-law, married to her sister Lizzie—from the sideline.

"Come down here and say that," Nicholas replied, and the men laughed.

Anna had brought her famous fried chicken, potato salad, and apple pie. By noon, all of it was gone.

Father O'Brien made the rounds, talking with every family, asking after children and grandchildren, discussing the progress of the new church windows that the parish was fundraising for. Nicholas pledged a contribution—the church had been central to the family's life in Kendrick from the beginning, and he wasn't about to let the windows project fail.

Carrie and Harland were at the picnic, along with little Margaret, looking happy and settled in their two years of marriage. Carrie had blossomed as a mother and married woman—confident, warm, taking her place naturally among the other young Kendrick wives.

"Any news?" Anna asked her daughter quietly, with that particular maternal significance that Nicholas pretended not to understand.

Carrie shook her head with a smile. "Not yet, Ma. But soon, I hope."

The letter from Amelia came the last week of June -- she had delivered a healthy baby—another girl, born August first, named Evelyn. Both mother and child were doing well. Amelia wrote with a new seriousness, a new confidence in her words—she was a mother of two now, finding her footing in her Montana life.

Anna cried with happiness and immediately began writing back, filling the envelope with knitting patterns and advice and love. Nicholas added a postscript: "Your mother and I are very proud. We will meet our granddaughters as soon as travel permits."

July: Independence Day and Midsummer Work

The Fourth of July was the biggest celebration of the year in Kendrick, and 1905 was no exception. The whole town turned out, and Nicholas was on the organizing committee as usual, helping set up the platform in the town square early in the morning before the crowds arrived.

The speeches started at ten o'clock. Mayor Fredericks gave a patriotic address. A veteran of the Spanish-American War—not the Civil War, as in earlier years; a new generation of veterans was emerging—spoke about service and sacrifice. Nicholas listened respectfully, thinking about how much had changed even in his own lifetime. He'd been too young for the Civil War and too settled by the Spanish-American War. His country had asked things of other men, and he was grateful.

The afternoon contests were the part the children loved best. Foot races, tug-of-war, pie-eating contests. Charles entered the pie-eating contest and came in second, emerging with berry stains that Anna would be dealing with for the rest of the week. Young Nicholas won the under-twelve footrace by a comfortable margin, which pleased him considerably.

Joseph pitched for Kendrick in the afternoon baseball game against a team from Juliaetta, striking out eight batters. The Kendrick crowd was delighted.

Frank and Julia came, Julia looking radiant—Nicholas suspected there might be news coming from that direction soon. Carrie and Harland joined them all for the evening fireworks.

As the fireworks burst overhead in red, white, and blue, Nicholas stood with his family around him—the ones who were there—and thought about the ones who weren't. Etta in Spokane, probably watching fireworks of her own with August and their son. Amelia in Gardiner having a newbord baby, no doubt missing home on a day like this.

He'd written to both of them last week. Etta had written back with a funny description of little Frederick's reaction to a firecracker. He was still waiting to hear from Amelia.

"Happy Fourth," Anna said beside him, her hand finding his in the dark.

"Happy Fourth," he replied.

The rest of July was unrelenting work. The crops needed constant attention through the hottest part of summer—irrigation adjustments as temperatures climbed, vigilance against the grasshoppers that had been bad the previous year, cultivating between rows to keep the weeds down. Nicholas was in the fields from early morning until the heat became brutal around midday, then back out in the cooler late afternoon.

One particularly hot afternoon, he paused to drink from his canteen and survey his fields. The wheat stood tall, the beans were climbing their poles, the corn was flourishing, the fruit trees were heavy with developing fruit. His pumping system delivered water faithfully, day after day.

Frank came up beside him, also drinking, squinting into the sun. "Looking good, Pa."

"Yes," Nicholas agreed. "If we don't get hail, this will be one of our best years."

"I've been thinking about that north forty acres Peterson wants to sell," Frank said carefully. "Have you thought any more about it?"

Nicholas had been thinking about it. He was fifty years old. More land meant more work, more investment, more risk. But Frank was twenty-five and needed room to grow, and good farmland didn't come available often.

"Talk to Peterson," Nicholas said. "Find out what he's asking. We'll look at the numbers."

Frank tried not to look too pleased. "Yes, sir."

August: Harvest Preparations and Family News

August meant preparing for harvest—the culmination of all the year's work. Nicholas and Frank walked the wheat fields together, checking the kernels for ripeness, estimating yields.

"Another two weeks," Nicholas judged. "The Turkey Red on the north twenty is ripening a little ahead of the rest—we'll cut that first."

They checked every piece of equipment—scythes sharpened, the threshing machine arrangement with their neighbors confirmed, wagons repaired, grain bins cleaned. Nicholas ran a hand over the threshing machine's belts and gears, checking for wear. He'd seen harvests ruined by equipment failures, and he wasn't about to let that happen.

That evening after Frank and Julia had gone home, Nicholas sat on the porch smoking his pipe. A new grandchild in Montana. Carrie’s daughter growing up down the road and another child on the way. Etta's children in Spokane. The family was expanding, branching out into the world.

He thought about his own parents, his father Peter who'd come from Prussia with nothing, worked the railroads and the copper mines and finally built a farm in Nebraska. And now here was Nicholas, fifty years old, with a farm that had produced a family that was spreading across the West.

That was how it was supposed to work. That was America.

To be continued...

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The AI Google NotebookLM Video Overview of this story is in:  

This is historical fiction based on known events in the lives of my ancestors -- it might have been this way. Nicholas and Anna (Grieser) Brocke  are my wife's 2nd great-grandparents, and I have significant information about this family from the available records, but I know nothing about their day-to-day lives.

As always, I am amazed at what life was like in any place over 120 years ago. This description of their family life in Idaho is interesting and so different from our current daily activities.

After I read these types of social history summaries, I wish that I could be a time traveler for one day to visit this Brocke family in 1905 Idaho 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) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

The URL for this post is:

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Amanuensis Monday -- 1801 Deed of John Underhill Selling Land in Rockingham County, New Hampshire To Mary Brown

This week's document for transcription is the 1801 Deed of John Underhill selling 78 acres of land in Chester, Rockingham County, New Hampshire to Mary Brown for $600.  

a)  Rockingham County, New Hampshire. Deeds 1801-1802:  pages 460-461, image 730 of 786:


The transcription of this deed, starting on page 460 at the top of the left-hand page of the  image, with the assistance of FamilySearch Full-Text Search:

[Page 460 starting at the top of the left-hand page of the image]:

[in the left-hand margin]

Underhill
to 
Brown

[In the body of the page]

Know all men by these Presents , That I John 
Underhill of Chester in the County of Rockingham 
and State of Newhampshire husbandman 
For and in confideration of the sum of Six hundred Dollars
to me in hand before the delivery hereof, well and truly paid by 
Mary Brown the Wife of Benjamin Brown Esquire of 
Chester aforesaid to her sole use forever
the receipt whereof I do hereby acknowledge, have given, granted, bargained, sold, and by these 
presents, do give, grant, bargain, sell, alien, enfeoff, convey and confirm unto the said Mary 
Brown her heirs & assigns forever, a certain tract of Land laying 
in Chester aforesaid, containing Seventy eight acres be it the same more or less 
it being & containing all my homestead whereon I now Dwell, bounded 
as follows first at a Stake & Stones being Stephen Luskins N. E. Corner 
thence S 35 West ninety rods & one half to Stake & Stones being 
said Luskins S E corner ^thence^ N 53 W Seventy two rods by s'd Luskins 
Land to a hemlock marked, thence S 14 ½ W Sixty eight Rods by 
David Underhill 's Land to Stake & Stones, thence S 52 E one 
one hundred & Twenty one rods & an half by Ebenezar Dearborn's Land 
to the highway a Stake & Stones, thence Northerly by the highway Sixty 
six & a half rods a Stake & Stones, thence N 50 W thirty two rods and
an half by the aforesaid Browns & Swetsers Land to stake & stones, thence 
N 34 E eighty five rods to a Stone Standing in the wall thence N 52 W. 
forty three & an half Rods by the main road to the bound first mentioned 
with the building on the same except the Griffin house which is Claimed 
by the Town ---
To have and to hold the said granted premises with all the privileges and appurtenances to the 
same belonging to her the said Mary to her sole use and
heirs and assigns to her & their only proper use and benefit forever. And I the said 
John Underhill for myself my - heirs, executors, and administrators, 
do hereby covenant, grant, and agree to and with the Said Mary Brown
her heirs, and alligns, that until the delivery hereof I am 
the lawful owner of the said premises and am seized and possessed thereof in 
my own right in fee simple, and have full power and lawful authority to grant and convey the 
same in manner aforesaid; that the said premises are free and clear of all and every incumbrance
whatsoever, and that I the said John my heirs, executors and 
administrators, shall and will warrant the fame to her
her heirs and affigns against the lawful claims and demands of any person or persons whomsoever. 
Witness my hand & Seal this twenty third day of 
March Anno Domini, one thousand eight hundred & one 
Signed , Sealed & delivered  
in presence of us ---                            John Underhill    {seal}
Henry Swester                                   Hannah Underhill   {seal}
Stephen Chase
                  Rockingham, State of Newhampshire 
March 23'd 1801. Personally appearing John Underhill & Hannah 
Underhill & acknowledged the above 
Instrument to be their voluntary act & deed before me 
                                                Stephen Chase Just Peace 
Rec'd & Recorded 8th February 1802 - 
                                              Jos: Adams Rdr

The source citation for this deed record is:

"Rockingham County, New Hampshire, United States records," Deed of John Underhill Jr to Mary Brown, executed 23 March 1801, recorded 8 February 1802; imaged, FamilySearch   (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSRZ-PQ8M-4?view=fullText : accessed 1 May 2026), Image Group Number 008298506, "Rockingham. Deeds, 1801-1802, 1801," page 460, image 730 of  786; original records in Rockingham County, New Hampshire Register of Deeds.

This deed documents the sale of 78 acres of land (his entire homestead) in Chester, Rockingham County, New Hampshire, sold by John Underhill  of Chester, Rockingham County to Mary Brown of Chester for $600 in lawful money on 23 March 1801 (recorded 8 February 1802).  

John Underhill (1745-1816) and his wife, Hannah Colby (1745-1791), are my 5th great-grandparents, through their son Amos Underhill (1772-1865) who married Mary Metcalf (1780-1855) in 1801 in Piermont, Grafton County, New Hampahire.

I found this record using the FamilySearch Full-Text Search feature by searching for John Underhill and New Hampshire. The Full-Text Search transcription missed orm isplaced few words.

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

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:  

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 X, 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, May 31, 2026

Best of the Genea-Blogs -- Week of 24 to 30 May 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:

*  From Research Notes to Hero Image: by Carole McCulloch on Essential Genealogy.

*  Testing ChatGPT Images 2.0 “Research Visual” for Genealogy Infographics by Diane Henriks on Know Who Wears the Genes In Your Family.

*  A Navy Life: The World War II Service of Bobby Gene Shults by Diana Elder on Family Locket.

*  Bringing Hiram Currey’s Story to Life and From GeoCities to WordPress by Marcia Crawford Philbrick on Heartland Genealogy.

*  Genealogy Bloggers Resource Toolboxes: 2026 Edition by Linda Stufflebean on Empty Branches on the Family Tree.

*  Stop Calling Every WWII File a Service Record by Jennifer Holik on Soul Traveler.

*  Scribe AI: The New AI Analysis Tool From MyHeritage by Natalie Webb on Family Tree Technology.

 Legacy Family Tree Webinars Is Raising Prices and Marilyn Monroe’s Hidden Family History: What Genealogy Records Reveal by Thomas MacEntee on Genealogy Bargains.

*  Comments on the FamilySearch AI Research Assistant and Instructions for using the Overview Video Function of NotebookLM by James Tanner on Genealogy's Star.

*  Writing Your Family History Book by N.P. Maling on Sea Genes Family History & Genealogy Research.

*  Your Chronicle Is Finished. Now What? by Denyse Allen on Chronicle Makers.

*  My Complicated Relationship With AI Creations in Genealogy by Doris Kenney on A Tree With No Name.

*  286,960 DNA Matches: This Isn’t Just a List—It’s a Database. by Sylvia on Looking For My Roots.

*  Roundup: AI Tools at Ancestry.com, FamilySearch and MyHeritage by Andrew Koch on Family Tree Magazine.

*  The Brick Wall Solution Roadmap: The Genealogy Framework That Turns a Dead End Into a Next Step by Jennifer Dondero on The Occasional Genealogist.

*  Reading Between the Lines: A Five-Part Guide to Historical Newspapers by Jen Baldwin on Jen Baldwin.

Here are pick posts by other geneabloggers this week: 


*  GenStack [30 May 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.

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

Genealogical Society of Santa Cruz County (GSSCC) Program on Tuesday, 2 June 2026 Features Sarah Day

   I received this information from my friend and society colleague Gail Burk:

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

Genealogical Society of Santa Cruz County (GSSCC) Lecture Series 

 Co-hosted Online by GSSCC and the Santa Cruz Public Libraries (SCPL) 

View meeting on Zoom or View In-person at Downtown Library (224 Church Street, Santa Cruz, CA 95060)
 
 To register for the Zoom meeting, please type in or click 

Tuesday, 2 June 2026 1:00 PM PDT 

Guest Speaker:  Sarah Day


"Genealogical Research in

Central and South America"

This program explains how to conduct genealogical research in Central and South American countries. It will include key record types, such as civil and church records, along with other records -- census and notarial documents. The presentation will also include information about paleography (handwriting reading) and language tools, alongside naming customs and historical context. Attendees will leave with a good understanding of the basics of how to conduct family history research in these regions, the tools to use, and where to look for the records.

Sarah Day, AG®, is a professional genealogist accredited in the United States Southwest region. She received a Bachelor’s degree from Brigham Young University in Genealogy -- Family History. She has research experience across the U.S. with a particular emphasis on African American genealogy. Additionally, she has researched across Europe and the Americas with a focus on Spanish-speaking countries, including onsite genealogical research in Spain. Sarah has presented at numerous conferences, including RootsTech, as well as to many other groups and societies. Sarah’s genealogy business is The GenZ Genealogist.

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Disclosure:  I am a member of this organization in Santa Cruz, California. I receive a free membership for presenting occasional presentations.


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.  All comments are moderated, and may not be posted immediately.

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

Betty and Fred’s Story: Building a Life Together -- January and February 1944

 Here is the latest chapter in the story of the married life and times of my parents, Fred and Betty (Carringer) Seaver, who married in July 1942. The background information and the list of chapters of their life together are listed at the end of this post.  This is historical fiction with real people and real events, and is how it might have been.

And now we are up to mid-January 1944, two years plusinto World War II, and life goes on.


                               (AI NotebookLM Infographic - January - February 1944)

1)  Based on the biographies and the earlier stories, I asked Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 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 

-- January and February 1944


The Weeks After New Years Day

Life, which pauses for grief but does not stop, resumed its forward motion.

Fred went back to Rohr on the Monday after the funeral and found the work waiting exactly as he'd left it — the requisition orders, the material tracking, the careful logistics of keeping a warplane production line supplied and moving. He was good at the work and he knew it, and knowing it helped.

Betty settled back into her days with Randy, who was approaching four months old and conducting himself accordingly.

He had found his voice in a new way — not the crying voice, which they knew well, but a social voice, a series of coos and small vocalizations that he produced in what appeared to be genuine conversational intent. He would look at Betty and make a sound and wait, and if she responded, he would make another sound. They could go several rounds this way, the two of them, a dialogue in languages that only one of them understood but that both of them took seriously.

He had also, sometime in the third week of January, produced his first real smile.

It happened in the morning, when Fred was getting ready for work. He came into the bedroom to find Betty changing Randy on the bed, and he leaned over his son's face and made the humming sound he'd developed, and Randy looked up at him and — smiled. Not the reflex smile of a newborn, not a gas bubble, but the real thing: deliberate, directed, illuminating his whole face.

Fred stood up straight and looked at Betty.

"Did you see that?"

"I saw it," Betty said. She was smiling too, the smile that Randy's smile produced automatically in anyone within range.

"He smiled at me."

"He did."

Fred looked back down at Randy, who had returned to regarding the ceiling with his usual philosophical calm, the smile apparently concluded. Fred pointed at him. "Do it again," he said.

Randy did not do it again on demand. But he did it again that evening, and the morning after, and with increasing frequency as January moved toward February, until the smile was simply part of him, a feature as natural as his dark eyes and Betty's mouth.

A Saturday Evening

On a Saturday evening in the latter part of January, they got a babysitter for Randy — a reliable girl from down the street who came with good references from the Henderson family — and drove to meet the Steddoms, the Lyonses, and the Tazelaars at a restaurant on Fifth Avenue that Rod Steddom had been recommending since October.

The table was large and loud and wonderful.

It had been over a month since all four couples had been together, and the evening had the quality of a reunion — the overlapping conversations, the laughter that broke out at one end of the table and spread before anyone at the other end knew what had caused it. Eleanor Steddom was in particularly good form, with a story about a neighbor's escaped chickens that she told with such precise comic timing that Sally Lyons had to put down her water glass.

Dick Tazelaar had heard something at his work about the war in the Pacific and wanted Fred's opinion, and they went back and forth on it with the engaged seriousness of men who follow these things and understand the stakes. George Lyons told a story about a situation at his office that should not have been as funny as he made it sound but somehow was. Phyllis Tazelaar and Betty fell into conversation about the neighborhood, about children, about what they were reading, in the comfortable way of women who have established real friendship and can pick it up anywhere.

Fred, looking down the table at some point in the evening — at these people, his friends, his wife laughing at something Eleanor had said, the food and the drink and the warmth of a restaurant on a January night while outside the city went about its wartime business — thought about the letter he'd written to Betty at Christmas. The ordinary days. The whole list.

This was on the list. He was certain of it.

Valentine's Day

The fourteenth of February fell on a Monday, which was not ideal, but Fred had decided in early January that it didn't matter.

He made the reservation at the U.S. Grant in the first week of February, calling from the telephone at Rohr during his lunch break with the precise focus he brought to logistics problems. A table for two, seven o'clock, the main dining room. He told Betty only that they were going out to dinner and that she should wear the burgundy dress.

Betty appeared at six-thirty in the burgundy dress with her hair done and the perfume he'd given her at Christmas, and Fred stood in the doorway of the bedroom and looked at her for a moment.

"You look beautiful," he said. Not as a pleasantry. As a fact being stated for the record.

Betty looked at him in his new charcoal suit, the navy tie, the silver cufflinks catching the light.

"You're not so bad yourself, Fred Seaver," she said.

They left Randy with Eleanor Steddom, who had volunteered for this specific duty with enthusiasm and had arrived with a bag of knitting and a cheerful certainty that she and Randy would get along famously. Randy, nearly four months old and recently sociable, seemed to share this assessment.

The U.S. Grant was everything it always was — the high ceilings, the polished wood, the particular hush of a room that has been elegant for a long time and knows it. The maître d' found their reservation and led them to a table near the window. Betty looked around the dining room with the quiet pleasure of a woman who appreciates beautiful rooms.

"Fred," she said. "This is wonderful."

"You deserve wonderful," he said, simply.

They ordered — the menu was still good despite the wartime shortages, the kitchen working with what was available and doing it with skill. They had a glass of wine. The room was full of couples, many of them young, many of the men in uniform, the evening weighted with the romantic urgency that the war had given everything.

They talked the way people talk when they are comfortable enough with each other to follow any thread wherever it leads — about Randy, inevitably, because Randy was now the central fact of their lives and his latest developments were worth reporting. About Rohr, and a particular problem Fred had been untangling in the materials tracking that he'd finally solved that week. About Betty's sketching, and the class she was thinking about proposing to the Chula Vista school district for the fall. About Della, still — grief doesn't follow a schedule, and Della came up naturally and was allowed to.

And then, somewhere in the second glass of wine, with the dinner things cleared and the room soft around them, they talked about nothing in particular, which is another way of saying they talked about everything that mattered.

"I read your letter again last week," Betty said, at some point in the evening.

Fred looked at her. "Which one?"

"The Christmas one." She met his eyes. "I keep it in the secretary desk. I've read it — I don't know how many times."

Fred was quiet for a moment. "It came out sideways," he said. "Like I said it would."

"It came out perfectly," Betty said. "It came out exactly like you."

Outside the windows of the U.S. Grant, Broadway moved through its wartime Monday evening — jeeps and buses and couples walking, the harbor visible at the end of the street in the dark, the ships in the bay. San Diego in February 1944, the war in its third year, the future unresolved.

Inside, Fred reached across the table and took his wife's hand.

They stayed until the evening was nearly done.

Randy at Four Months

Randy Seaver at four months old had opinions.

This was new. Or rather, the expression of them was new — he had always, Betty suspected, had opinions, but he now had sufficient motor and vocal equipment to make them known, and he did so with consistency.

He had opinions about lying on his stomach, which he would tolerate for precisely the amount of time he determined appropriate before making his dissatisfaction audible. He had opinions about which direction he faced in his crib — he preferred to look toward the window, a preference so reliable that Betty had long since stopped placing him any other way. He had opinions about the particular song that best accompanied the diaper process, though as he could not yet specify which song he preferred, this remained an area of ongoing research.

He had begun reaching for things — not successfully, not yet with the coordination to actually grasp what he aimed for, but with clear intent, his small arm extending toward whatever had caught his eye, his face arranging itself into an expression of concentrated effort. He reached for the mobile above his crib. He reached for Betty's necklace. He reached for Fred's face, once, and Fred had gone very still and let him.

He was sleeping for longer stretches now, a development that Fred and Betty discussed with the reverence usually reserved for significant events. Five hours. Then six. One magnificent night in early February, nearly seven — Betty woke at four in the morning not because Randy had cried but because he hadn't, and lay there for ten seconds of irrational alarm before the sound of his breathing through the open door reached her and she sank back into the pillow.

She lay awake for a while anyway, in the good dark, listening to her son breathe and her husband sleep and the quiet sounds of Twin Oaks Avenue in the small hours of the morning.

The house settled around her. Her house. Already, she thought. Already she was learning the dark of it.

She thought of Della, and what Della had said. Mine. After all the journeying. Mine.

Betty closed her eyes and let herself be still.


To be continued...

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2) Here is the Google NotebookLM Video Overview about Betty, Fred and Randy's life in January and February 1944:    

 3) This story is historical fiction based on real people -- my parents and me -- 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 chapter in this family story.

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

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 wanting a girlfriend.

Here are the previous chapters in this 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


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