Friday, April 10, 2026

Genealogical Sketch of the John Charles and Maria (Beamish) Paul Family of Ireland and San Francisco

This is a genealogical sketch of the lives of the John Charles and Maria (Beamish) Paul family of Ireland and New York. They are my wife Linda's 2nd great-grandparents.



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John Charles Paul Early Years

John Charles Paul was born in about October 1823[1] in St. John’s, Newfoundland, the second son and second child (of four) of John Paul (1792-1838) and Mary Quirk (1800-1866), who married in about 1820, probably in Newfoundland. The family was probably of Irish extraction. The family included these children:
  • Oliver Paul was born before 14 November 1822 in St. Johns, Newfoundland, British Colonial America.
  • John Charles Paul, born October 1823, St. John’s, Newfoundland, British Colonial America; married Maria T. Beamish, 29 April 1852, New Bedford, Bristol, Massachusetts; died 31 May 1879, San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
  • Thomas Paul, born February 1829, Lowell, Middlesex, Massachusetts; married Jane Coughlin, 3 July 1855, New Bedford, Bristol, Massachusetts; died 2 July 1870, San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
  • Robert Havlin Paul, born 12 June 1830, Lowell, Middlesex, Massachusetts; married Margaret Agnes Caughlin, 4 March 1862, Mokelumne Hill, Calaveras, California; died 26 March 1901, Tucson, Pima, Arizona.
The Paul family moved from Newfoundland to Lowell, Massachusetts before 1829, and to New Bedford, Massachusetts before 1852. John Charles Paul may have been a cooper and/or a whaler before his marriage.

Maria Beamish Early Years

Maria T. Beamish was born on 27 August 1827[2] in Ireland (estimated from cemetery records), the daughter of Thomas and Catherine (--?--) Beamish of Ireland. Maria’s birthplace, if her parents migrated to America, or if Maria had siblings, are not known.

She migrated to Massachusetts before 1850 because she is enumerated in the 1850 United States Census in New Bedford in the Samuel Rodman household; she is listed as age 23, born in Ireland, with no occupation.[3]

Their Married Life

John Charles Paul and Maria T. Beamish were married on 29 April 1852 in New Bedford, Bristol, Massachusetts.[4] The marriage record has this information:
  • John C. Paul -- age 28, cooper, born St. John, New Brunswick, parents John and Mary Paul
  • Maria I.(?) Beamish -- age 23, born St. Johns, New Brunswick, parents Thomas and Catherine Beamish
  • by Thomas McNulty, R.C. Parish Priest
John Charles Paul and Maria T. Beamish had the following children:
  • Mary Ann Paul, born November 1854, Massachusetts; married Herman Schaffner, before 1876, San Francisco, San Francisco, California, United States, three children; died 16 February 1908, San Francisco, San Francisco, California, United States.
  • Rebecca M. Paul, born November 1856, Chicago, Cook, Illinois; married Charles Henry Small before 1880, San Francisco, San Francisco, California, one child; died 21 October 1914, San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
  • Robert Paul was born about 1859 in Chicago, Cook, Illinois. He died before 1864 at the age of 5 in Chicago, Cook, Illinois.
  • Abbie C. Paul was born in September 1861 in Chicago, Cook, Illinois. She died on 11 November 1894 at the age of 33 in San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
  • Robert Henry Paul was born about 1864 in San Francisco, San Francisco, California. He died on 14 September 1902 at the age of 38 in Acapulco, Mexico.
  • Thomas E. Paul was born in December 1868 in San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
  • John Charles Paul was born about December 1868 in San Francisco, San Francisco, California. He died on 22 September 1889 at the age of 20 in San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
The family moved from New Bedford to Chicago, Illinois by1856, and to San Francisco by 1862, perhaps by train and boat through New Orleans.

In the 1860 United States Census, the John C. Paul household resided in Chicago Ward 8, Cook County, Illinois.[5] The household included:
  • Jno C. Paul - age 36, male, a cooper, born in Newfoundland
  • Maria Paul - age 35, female, born in Ireland
  • Mary A. Paul - age 6, female, $100 in personal property, born in Mass., attends school.
  • Rebecca M. Paul - age 3, female, born Illinois
  • Robert Paul - age 1, male, born Illinois
  • Julia Taylor - age 16, female, servant, born in Newfoundland
John Charles Paul was listed in the San Francisco County Great Register of Voters for California, with this information in 1868:[6]
John Charles Paul, age 43, born Newfoundland, resides 9 Clara, a Janitor, Ward 10, not naturalized, registered 24 January 1867
He was listed in the San Francisco City Directories for the years 1862 to 1878 at various addresses (335 Green Street (1864). 9 Clara Street (1869), 28 Clara Street), and with occupations of Cooper (1862), Laborer (1865), Janitor (1869-1878), Watchman (1872-1876), etc.

In the 1870 United States Census, the John C. Paul household resided in San Francisco Ward 10, San Francisco County, California.[7] The household included:
  • John C. Paul - age 43, male, white, a car conductor, $450 in personal property, born in England
  • Maria Paul - age 41, female, white, keeping house, born in Ireland
  • Mary Paul - age 15, female, white, attending school, born in Massachusetts
  • Rebecca Paul - age 13, female, white, attending school, born in Massachusetts
  • Abbie C. Paul - age 9, female, white, attending school, born in Illinois
  • Robert Paul - age 5, male, at home, born in Illinois
  • John Paul - age 3, male, white, at home, born California
  • Thomas Paul - age 2, male, white, at home, born California
John Charles Paul was listed in the San Francisco Great Register of Voters in 1878 with the following information:[8]
#4792, John Charles Paul, age 53, born Newfoundland, a Janitor, resided 28 Clara, Precinct 11, naturalized by naturalization of father, registered Nov. 2, 1876
Later Years

John Charles Paul died on 31 May 1879 in San Francisco. A death notice for John C. Paul appeared on Page 4 of the San Francisco Chronicle newspaper dated 3 June 1879.[9] The death notice said:
"PAUL -- In this city, May 31, John C. Paul, a native of St. Johns, New Brunswick, aged 55 years and 7 months.

"Friends and acquaintances are respectfully invited to attend the funeral this day (Tuesday) at 2 o'clock P.M. from No. 28 Clara street."
John Charles Paul is buried in the Holy Cross Catholic Cemetery in Colma, San Mateo County, California after his remains were moved there from Mount Calvary Cemetery.[1] There is no gravestone for him. The Find A Grave memorial has this additional information from cemetery records:
“Cooper by trade, married, res of 20 Clara, died of dropsy, native of Newfoundland. Parish: St. Patrick

“Originally buried in Mount Calvary Cemetery (SF/defunct). Removed & re-interred at the general reburial area of Holy Cross (H 4 16 14) on 29 Apr 1940, along with 4 others.”
In the 1880 United States census, this family resided at 773 Acheson Street in San Francisco, San Francisco County, California.[10] The household included:
  • Maria Paul - white, female, age 51, widowed, keeping house, born Ireland, parents born Ireland/Ireland
  • Mary Ann Paul - white, female, age 25, daughter, married, without occupation, born Massachusetts, parents born NewFound/Ireland
  • Rebecca Paul - white, female, age 23, daughter, married, without occupation, born Illinois, parents born NewFound/Ireland
  • Abby Paul - white, female, age 19, daughter, single, without occupation, born Illinois, parents born NewFound/Ireland
  • Robert Paul - white, male, age 14, son, single, telegraph boy, born California, parents born NewFound/Ireland
  • John C. Paul - white, male, age 12, son, single, at school, born California, parents born NewFound/Ireland
  • Thos. E. Paul - white, male, age 12, son, single, at school, born California, parents born NewFound/Ireland
  • Paul F. Schaffner - white, male, age 9/12, Aug, grandson, single, at home, born California, parents born New York/Massachusetts
  • Herman Schaffner - white, male, age 28, son-in-law, married, book binder, born New York, parents born Austria.
In the 1900 United States Census, Maria Paul was head of a household at 408 Natoma Street in San Francisco, San Francisco County, California. There were three lodgers living in this house. The information for Maria is:[11]
  • Maria P. Paul - head of household, white, female, born Aug 1827, age 72, widowed, 3 children born, 3 living, born in Ireland, father born Ireland, mother born Ireland, immigrated in 1830, resident of US for 70 years, can read, write and speak English.
Maria (Beamish) Paul died 9 December 1909 in San Francisco, California of senility.[12] She is buried in Holy Cross Catholic Cemetery in Colma, San Mateo, California.[2]

The Find A Grave memorial has this (from the San Francisco Examiner, Dec. 11, 1909, page 4):[2]
"PAUL-- Entered into rest, in this city, December 9, Maria Paul, beloved mother of Rebecca Small. 
"Remains at the parlors of Theodor Dierks & Co., 900 Devisadero street, corner of McAllister. Interment private."
Additional information from the cemetery records includes:
“Died of senility, at the Home of the Aged, native of Ireland, aged 82y 3m 13d
Sadly, there is no marker for this plot. In fact, as shown in the photo, many graves lack markers in Section M, Rows 2 to 15.”

Sources:

1. Find A Grave, indexed database, (https://www.findagrave.com), Holy Cross Catholic Cemetery, Colma, Calif., John C. Paul (1823-1879) memorial #107420959.

2. Find A Grave, indexed database, (https://www.findagrave.com), Holy Cross Catholic Cemetery, Colma, Calif., Marie Paul (1827-1909) memorial #105134569.

3. 1850 United States Federal Census, Bristol County, Massachusetts, population schedule, New Bedford, Page 255A, dwelling #416, family #817, Saml W. Rodman household;  imaged, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com); citing National Archives Microfilm Publication M432, Roll 309.

4. "Massachusetts Vital Records, 1841-1915," indexed database and digital images, New England Historic Genealogical Society, American Ancestors (http://www.AmericanAncestors.org), Marriages: Volume 60, Page 84, New Bedford, 1852, John C. Paul and Maria T. Beamish entry, 29 April 1852.

5. 1860 United States Federal Census, Population Schedule, Cook County, Illinois, Chicago Ward 8, page 101 (penned), dwelling #671, family number 746, John C. Paul household; imaged, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com); original records on National Archives microfilm M653, Roll 331.

6. "California Voter Registers, 1866-1898," digital images, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com), San Francisco > 1872-1873, "Great Register, San Francisco County," page 511, John Charles Paul entry.

7. 1870 United States Federal Census, San Francisco County, California, population schedule, San Francisco Ward 10, Page 247B, dwelling #624, family #911, John C. Paul household; imaged, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com : accessed 12 June 2017); citing National Archives Microfilm Publication M593, Roll 83.

8. "California Voter Registers, 1866-1898," digital images, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com), San Francisco > 1878, "Great Register, San Francisco County," page 71, #4792, John Charles Paul entry.

9. "San Francisco Chronicle," database, SFGenealogy (https://www.SFGenealogy.com), citing original documents at San Francisco Public Library, San Francisco, Calif., John C. Paul death notice, 3 June 1879, page 4.

10. 1880 United States Federal Census, San Francisco County, California, San Francisco, ED 99, Page 458A, dwelling #79, family #88, Maria Paul household; imaged, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com); citing National Archives Microfilm Publication T9, Roll 75.

11. 1900 United States Federal Census, San Francisco County, California, San Francisco, ED 37, Page 10A, dwelling #120, family #196, Maria Paul household; imaged, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com); citing National Archives Microfilm Publication T623, Roll 101.

12. "California Death Index, 1905-1939." database, FamilySearch (https://www.FamilySearch.org), San Francisco County, Maria Paul entry, 9 December 1909.

Relationship

John Charles Paul (1823-1879) and Maria T. Beamish (1827-1909) are maternal 2nd- great-grandparents of my wife, Linda (Leland) Seaver (1942-still living), through:
  •  her great-grandnother Mary Ann Paul (1854-1908)  who married Herman Schaffner (1851-1921) in 1876 in San Francisco
  • her grandfather Paul Frederick Schaffner (1879-1934) who married Edna Catherine McKnew (1884-1974) in 1906 in San Francisco. 
  • her mother Edna May Schaffner (1913-1979)  who married Leo Severt Leland (1911-2002) in 1937 in San Francisco.

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Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

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Ask AI: " Describe a Day In the Life Of the Shubael Seaver Family in Massachusetts in 1690?"

I wondered if my AI Assistant Anthropic Claude could provide me with information about a family's life in 1690 in Roxbury town, Massachusetts Bay Colony.  My 8th great-grandparents, Shubael and Hannah (Wilson) Seaver had five children in 1690 and Shubael was a wheelwright. I posted an ABC Biography for the family in ABC Biography of Shubael Seaver (1640-1730) and Hannah (Wilson) Seaver (1646-1722) of Massachusetts. 


(AI NotebookLM Infographic -- Shubael Seaver Family  in 1690 in Massachusetts Bay Colony)

I asked Claude to create a historical fiction story about this family in Roxbury in 1690, based on the biography.

The Claude Sonnet 4.5 response was:

The Wheelwright's Autumn

A Day with the Shubael Seaver Family, Roxbury, Massachusetts Bay Colony, 1690

Morning - First Light

Shubael Seaver woke before dawn, as he had every morning for the past fifty years. At fifty years old, his body protested the cold November air seeping through the cracks in their wooden house near Stony River, but habit was stronger than discomfort. Beside him, Hannah stirred beneath the heavy quilts they had piled on as autumn deepened into early winter.

"Is it time already?" she murmured, her breath visible in the dim light.

"Nearly," Shubael replied, swinging his legs out of bed and reaching for his breeches and waistcoat. "I need to get to the shop early. George Clark wants that wheel finished by midday—he's moving his household to the new property he bought from me, and he'll need his cart in working order."

Hannah sat up, wrapping a shawl around her shoulders. At forty-three, she was still a handsome woman, though the years of bearing and raising children had left their mark. She glanced toward the trundle bed where their youngest, Thankful, slept soundly. The child was only six, still small enough to sleep in their chamber.

"I'll get the fire going and put the porridge on," Hannah said, sliding her feet into her wooden clogs. "The older children should be stirring soon."

As Shubael dressed, he could hear the first sounds of the household coming to life. Above them, in the loft where the boys slept, there was a thump and a muffled complaint—likely young Shubael, now eleven, protesting that Joseph had kicked him in the night. The girls shared another small chamber: Hannah at sixteen, and Abigail at thirteen.

The Morning Meal

By the time full daylight crept through the small glass windows—a luxury Shubael had been able to afford through his wheelwright business and careful land dealings—the family had gathered around the table in the main room. The fire in the large hearth had taken the worst chill off the air, and the smell of cornmeal porridge bubbled in the iron pot hanging over the flames.

Shubael sat at the head of the table, with Hannah to his right. The children arranged themselves according to age: Joseph at eighteen sat nearest his father, then sixteen-year-old Hannah, thirteen-year-old Abigail, eleven-year-old Shubael junior, and little Thankful perched on a stool beside her mother.

There was an empty space at the table that no one mentioned—where Robert would have sat, had he lived. Their firstborn son had died some years ago, the family's private grief. They did not speak of it, but the absence remained.

"Let us give thanks," Shubael said, and all heads bowed. "Almighty God, we thank Thee for this food, for the roof over our heads, for the health of our bodies, and for Thy many mercies. Guide our hands in our work this day, keep us from sin, and help us to do our duty faithfully. Through Christ our Lord, Amen."

"Amen," the family echoed.

Hannah ladled out the porridge—thick cornmeal sweetened with a little molasses, a rare treat since Shubael had recently sold a parcel of land and they could afford such luxuries. There was also brown bread from yesterday's baking, and mugs of small beer for the adults and milk for the children.

"Father," Joseph said between bites, "shall I come to the shop with you today? I've finished splitting the wood Mother needs for the week."

Shubael considered. Joseph was a good worker, strong and reliable, though the boy seemed more inclined toward farming than the wheelwright's trade. Still, every son should learn his father's craft.

"Aye, you can help me fit the iron tire to the wheel for Mr. Clark. It's skilled work, and you need to see it done proper. The timing must be exact—the iron heated just so, shrunk onto the wheel while it's hot. Too hot and it warps the wood; too cool and it won't grip tight."

"May I come too, Father?" young Shubael piped up. "I want to learn to be a wheelwright like you!"

Shubael smiled at his namesake. "Not today, son. You've your lessons with your mother. But Saturday, perhaps, you can come and learn to select good timber. A wheelwright must know his wood before he knows anything else."

The boy's face fell slightly, but he nodded obediently.

The Women's Work

After the meal, the household divided according to the day's labors. Shubael and Joseph pulled on their heavy work coats and headed out toward the shop by Stony River, their breath steaming in the cold morning air. Young Shubael began his lessons at the table, where Hannah would teach him to read from the Bible and the hornbook, and to cipher his numbers.

The older girls had their own work. Hannah—named for her mother—was an accomplished spinner and would spend the morning at the wheel, converting the flax they had prepared in the summer into thread for weaving. Abigail was to help her mother with the week's baking, for tomorrow was the Sabbath, and no work could be done from Saturday evening until Monday morning.

"Abigail, fetch the rye flour from the store room," Hannah said, tying on her apron. "And mind you don't let the cold air in longer than needful. We need to keep the warmth in while we bake."

"Yes, Mother," Abigail replied, already moving toward the small room where they kept their provisions.

Little Thankful was set to carding wool—tedious work, but necessary, and even a six-year-old could do it under supervision. The child sat near the fire, pulling the wool through the wire teeth of the cards to straighten the fibers, her small hands working steadily.

As the women worked, they talked—of neighbors, of the sermon from last Sabbath, of the upcoming marriage of Mary Curtis to John Parker, of the weather and what it might mean for the winter ahead.

"I heard from Goodwife Newell that there may be trouble with the Indians again," young Hannah said quietly, not wanting to frighten her youngest sister. "They say some of the tribes are restless."

Hannah the mother pursed her lips. "There's always talk. We've had peace these twelve years since King Philip's War ended, and I pray we shall continue to have it. But we must trust in God's providence and the militia's readiness. Your father and Joseph both drill with the trainband regularly."

The mention of King Philip's War brought a shadow to the room. Hannah remembered those terrible years from 1675 to 1678, when it seemed the entire colony might be overrun. She had been pregnant with Abigail during the worst of it, sick with fear for her husband and children. Many Roxbury men had gone to fight; some had not returned. The memory of those dark days never quite left the minds of those who had lived through them.

"Come now," she said, shaking off the dark thoughts. "Let us finish this baking. The bread won't rise itself, and we've pies to make as well. Thanksgiving is but three weeks away, and there's much to prepare."

The Wheelwright's Shop

Down by Stony River, Shubael's shop was a sturdy wooden building with a large open front where he could work in good light. Inside hung his tools—saws, adzes, drawknives, chisels, augers, and the specialized tools of the wheelwright's trade. Stacks of seasoned wood lined one wall: white oak, elm, ash, each for its particular purpose.

The wheel for George Clark lay partially completed on the workbench. Shubael had already fitted the hub and mortised the spokes into it—fourteen spokes of straight-grained white oak, each carefully shaped and fitted. Now the felloes—the curved sections that would form the rim—were being attached, and then would come the delicate work of fitting the iron tire.

"See here, Joseph," Shubael said, running his hand along one of the spokes. "Feel how the grain runs straight and true? That's what gives it strength. A spoke with cross-grain or a knot will snap under weight. You must learn to read the wood like you read the Good Book—every mark and grain tells you something."

Joseph nodded, genuinely interested despite his preference for open fields over the close work of the shop. "How do you know which tree to cut for the best timber?"

"Experience, lad. Forty years of working wood teaches you things no book can tell. But I'll share what I know. For spokes, you want oak from the north side of a tree—it grows slower there, makes tighter grain. For hubs, you want elm from wet ground—it resists splitting better. For the felloes, ash with a bit of curve already in it, so you're working with the wood, not against it."

They worked in companionable silence for a while, Shubael shaping the final felloe while Joseph held it steady. The shop smelled of wood shavings and the forge where the iron tire would soon be heated.

"Father," Joseph said after a time, "I've been thinking... I know you want me to learn the trade, and I'm grateful for it. But my heart is more in the farming. What would you say if... when I marry... I were to take up land somewhere? Perhaps in Sudbury or Framingham, where there's more open country?"

Shubael paused in his work, but didn't look up. He had known this was coming. Joseph was a good son, but he didn't have the wheelwright's love of precision and close work. He was happiest when he was helping with their small plot of land, or when he visited his uncle Caleb's larger farm.

"You're eighteen now, Joseph. Nearly a man. It's right that you should think on your future." He set down his drawknife and met his son's eyes. "I won't lie—I had hoped one of my sons would follow me in this trade. But I won't force a man to do work his heart's not in. Young Shubael shows promise, and he's only eleven. Perhaps he'll take to it. And if not..." He shrugged. "I've done honest work and made a decent living. That's what I want for you too, whether it's at a workbench or behind a plow."

Joseph's relief was visible. "Thank you, Father. I'll still help you whenever you need it. And I'll learn all I can, for a man should have more than one skill."

"Aye, that's wise. Now, let's get this tire heated. The day's passing, and Mr. Clark will be wanting his wheel."

Midday Lessons

Back at the house, young Shubael sat at the table with his mother, struggling over his letters. He could read simple passages from the Bible now, and could cipher well enough to keep accounts, but he found the work tedious.

"'In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth,'" he read haltingly from the great family Bible. "'And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep...'"

"Very good," Hannah encouraged. "Now, write it out in your copybook. Mind your letters—keep them even and clear."

The boy sighed but picked up his quill and dipped it carefully in the ink. Writing was even more tedious than reading, but Mother insisted it was necessary for any man who hoped to conduct business or read the law.

At the spinning wheel, young Hannah worked steadily, her foot pumping the treadle in a smooth rhythm while her fingers teased out the flax into fine thread. She had been spinning since she was Thankful's age, and now could do it while letting her mind wander. She thought about Edward Cole, the cordwainer's apprentice who had smiled at her after meeting last Sabbath. He was twenty-one, established in his trade, and she was sixteen—a good age for thinking about marriage, though she knew her parents would want her to wait another year or two.

The smell of baking bread filled the house, warm and yeasty. Abigail had proved particularly good at baking, with a light hand for pastry that even her mother envied. The pies she was making—pumpkin sweetened with molasses and spiced with the precious ginger Hannah had bought from the peddler last month—would be a treat for the Sabbath dinner.

Afternoon Visit

Around mid-afternoon, there came a knock at the door. Hannah wiped her floury hands on her apron and opened it to find her sister Susanna Gill, along with Susanna's daughter Mary, who was about Abigail's age.

"Sister! Come in, come in out of the cold!" Hannah exclaimed, embracing Susanna warmly. "What brings you by?"

"Thomas had business in town, and Mary and I thought we'd visit while he conducts it. Besides, I wanted to ask if you and Shubael might come to dinner next Thursday. Nothing fancy, just family, but we haven't had a good visit in weeks."

"We'd be delighted! Let me put the kettle on for tea—real tea, not just herbs. Shubael just sold some land, and I've been a bit extravagant." She smiled conspiratorially.

The two sisters settled by the fire while the girls gathered around, eager for company and news. Visits were one of the chief entertainments in colonial life, a chance to share news, gossip, recipes, and all the details of daily life that made up the fabric of their community.

"How is your Hannah doing with her spinning?" Susanna asked, watching her niece at the wheel. "Mary here is still all thumbs with it—the thread comes out lumpy as porridge!"

"I am not!" Mary protested, laughing. "It's just that I'd rather be doing almost anything else. Give me a needle and embroidery thread, and I'm happy. But that spinning wheel and I are enemies."

"Every woman needs to spin," young Hannah said primly, though her eyes twinkled. "But I confess, I'd rather be reading if Mother would let me. Father says perhaps when young Shubael is more advanced in his letters, he'll teach me Latin."

"Latin!" Susanna looked shocked. "Whatever for? That's hardly needful for a woman."

Hannah the mother shrugged. "Shubael has peculiar ideas about learning. He says an educated mind is never wasted, man or woman. Besides, he wants all our children to be able to read the Bible for themselves and think on spiritual matters."

The afternoon passed pleasantly, with tea and good conversation. Little Thankful and Mary played with the corn-husk dolls that Abigail had made, while the older girls listened to the women talk about neighbors, upcoming weddings, births, illnesses, and all the interconnected news of Roxbury life.

Evening - Return and Rest

As the sun began to set, Shubael and Joseph returned from the shop, cold but satisfied. The wheel for George Clark had been completed perfectly—the iron tire fitted just right, shrinking tight as it cooled, binding the whole wheel into a strong, true circle.

"It's a good piece of work," Shubael announced as he hung up his coat. "Clark was well pleased and paid in silver coin, not just promissory notes. I'll add it to what we've saved from the land sales. We're in good standing."

The evening meal was simpler than breakfast—bread and cheese, cold meat left from yesterday's dinner, and apples from their small orchard. But it was plentiful, and the family gathered around the table once more, grateful for the day's work completed.

After the meal, as was their custom, Shubael took down the Bible and read aloud to the family. Tonight it was from the Psalms—"The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want..." His voice filled the room, strong and sure, while the firelight flickered on the walls and the family listened in comfortable silence.

Then came the evening catechism. "Young Shubael," his father said, "what is the chief end of man?"

The boy recited promptly, "Man's chief end is to glorify God and to enjoy Him forever."

"Good. Abigail, what is sin?"

"Sin is any want of conformity unto, or transgression of, the law of God."

One by one, he questioned them on the Westminster Shorter Catechism, the foundation of their faith and education. Even little Thankful could answer the simplest questions, and the older children had memorized all one hundred and seven questions and answers.

Entertainment and Song

With the serious business of the evening devotions complete, the atmosphere lightened. These few hours between supper and bed were the family's time for rest and modest entertainment.

"Father, will you tell us again about when you ran the boundary lines between Roxbury and Boston?" young Shubael asked eagerly. "And about when you were young?"

Shubael smiled, settling back in his chair. "Again? You've heard that tale a dozen times."

"But we like it!" Thankful insisted.

So Shubael told them about being seventeen years old, tramping through the snow with the surveying party, learning to use the measuring chains and mark the stones that would define the town boundaries. He told them about learning his trade as a young man, about the first wheel he made that wobbled so badly it was unusable, about his father Robert and the wisdom he had passed down.

Hannah contributed her own stories—about growing up as the eldest daughter in a family of nine children, about learning to manage a household from her mother, about the time when she was twelve and tried to card wool while reading a book and ended up with such a tangled mess that her mother had despaired of ever sorting it out.

The children laughed, and young Hannah said, "I think I inherited that from you, Mother—I'm always trying to do two things at once!"

Joseph brought out his simple wooden flute, which he played passing well, and they sang together—psalm tunes mostly, for other music was considered frivolous by many in their church, but the Seavers took a somewhat broader view. Joseph played, and they sang "The Lord's My Shepherd" and "Old Hundredth" in harmony, their voices blending in the warm firelit room.

Abigail showed her little sister a new pattern for braiding, teaching Thankful how to weave three strands of wool into a neat plait. Young Shubael challenged his father to a game of fox and geese, played on a board Shubael senior had carved years ago, with dried beans for the geese and a small carved fox piece.

Hannah the younger sat with her mother, working on a piece of embroidery—a sampler she was making with her name and the date, practicing the stitches she would need when she had a household of her own. They talked quietly about Edmund Cole, and whether he might be a suitable match, and what qualities to look for in a husband.

"Your father and I were fortunate," Hannah told her daughter. "We were well-matched in temperament and faith. He's a good provider and a kind man. Those things matter more than romance, though I'll not say we haven't had our share of that too." She smiled softly. "Look for a man who fears God, works honestly, and treats his mother with respect. If he honors his mother, he'll likely honor his wife."

Night Falls

As the fire burned low and the candles guttered, Shubael stood and stretched. "Time for bed. Tomorrow is the Sabbath, and we must prepare our hearts as well as our bodies. Early to bed, early to rise."

The family dispersed to their sleeping chambers. Joseph and young Shubael climbed the ladder to the loft, while the girls went to their room. Little Thankful was carried, half-asleep, to the trundle bed in her parents' chamber.

Shubael and Hannah prepared for bed in the chilly room, moving quickly under the heavy quilts. Outside, the November wind rustled the bare branches, and somewhere in the distance a dog barked.

"It was a good day," Hannah said softly, snuggling close to her husband for warmth.

"Aye, it was," Shubael agreed. "The work went well, the family is healthy, and we're blessed with provision. God has been good to us."

"He has indeed. Though I confess I worry sometimes—about the children's futures, about whether we're teaching them rightly, about whether there will be enough land for the boys when they marry..."

"Hush, now. 'Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof,' remember? We'll manage, as we always have. Joseph will find his way, and young Shubael shows promise in the trade. The girls will marry well—they're good, godly young women. And we've enough put by that we won't starve in our old age."

Hannah was quiet for a moment, then said, "Did you see how young Hannah's face lit up when I mentioned Edward Cole? I think she's quite taken with him."

"I've noticed. He's a good lad—hard worker, from a decent family. Give it a year or two, and we may be planning a wedding."

They lay in the darkness, warm under the quilts, listening to the house settle around them. Fifty years old and forty-three, respectively, they had been married twenty-two years and built a life together in this rough new land. They had known grief—children lost, hard winters, wars and troubles—but they had also known joy and satisfaction.

In the loft above, Joseph lay awake, thinking about land in Framingham and a girl named Mary he had seen at meeting. Young Shubael dreamed of wheels and workshops and following in his father's footsteps.

In their room, Hannah the younger whispered to Abigail about Edward Cole until Abigail told her to hush and go to sleep. Little Thankful murmured in her sleep, dreaming of corn-husk dolls and her cousin Mary's visit.

And outside, the stars wheeled overhead in the cold November sky, the same stars that had shone on this land before the English came, and would shine long after. But for now, in this moment, the Seaver family slept in their house by Stony River, safe and warm and together—a small circle of light and life in the vast darkness of the colonial wilderness.

Tomorrow would be the Sabbath, with its own rhythms and requirements. But tonight, the day's work was done, and that was enough.


Historical Note: This story is based on documented facts about the Seaver family, including their occupations, land transactions, and family structure in 1690. Details of daily life, education, entertainment, and domestic arrangements are drawn from historical research on colonial New England life, though specific conversations and personal interactions are fictional. The family's faith, work ethic, and community involvement are consistent with documented evidence about the Seavers and their Roxbury neighbors.

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

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. The family mentioned is my 8th great-grandparents family, and I have significant information about their lives 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 300 years ago.
This description of their family life on one autumn day, in Massachusetts Bay Colony, is breath-taking 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 Seaver family in 1690 Massachusetts and witness their daily lives.  I'm glad that the general lifestyles and occupations are known from historical records and witness accounts.

==============================================\

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:  

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.  Note that all comments are moderated, so they may not appear immediately.

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Findmypast Friday: Picture the past with even more old photos

I received this information from Findmypast today:

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

We've bolstered our Photo Collection and our school records this week.


This week, explore over 40,000 new photos in our Photo Collection, and over 130,000 records from eight schools across England.

Plus, discover the early years of the Salvation Army with the new newspaper War Cry. What will you find within these fascinating new additions?

Findmypast Photo Collection

We've added 41,373 photos, spanning the first two decades of the 20th century. Discover these transformative years in vivid detail with these new photographs.

Britain, School and University Students

Your ancestors' schooldays are illuminated within these 132,851 new school records. These additions span a wide date range, from 1264 to 1926.

Sounding a War Cry

Our newspaper archive has expanded by 71,299 pages, comprising the new title War Cry and updates to Social Gazette, both from the Salvation Army.

New title:
  • War Cry, 1879-1985
Updated title:
  • Social Gazette, 1893-1909
New podcast: A Family History of the Irish Famine

Hunger spreads. Tempers ignite. One man swept into a riot. Tune into Part 2 of our latest podcast series now, featuring host Jen Baldwin and Irish genealogy expert Fiona Fitzsimons.

More on this topic:   english records   school records   photographs


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

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:  

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, Instagram, Threads 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 immediately.

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Thursday, April 9, 2026

Added and Updated MyHeritage Record Collections - Week of 3 to 9 April 2026

   The following Record Collections were ADDED or Updated in the MyHeritage Collections Catalog during the week of  3 to 9 April 2026:

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

There are 0 ADDED record collections in the list this past week, and MyHeritage now has a total of  7,536 record collections (an increase of 2 collection from last week.  The overall set of MyHeritage collections has 39,431,962,177 records or entries (an increase of about 72 million entries from last week).  

The number of entries in the family tree collections were last updated this week. 

See previous Genea-Musings posts about MyHeritage record collections and features in https://www.geneamusings.com/search/label/MyHeritage.com.

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

Disclosure: I receive a complimentary Co mplete Plan subscription to MyHeritage, and have received other material consideration in past years. I uploaded my autosomal DNA raw data to their DNA product. This does not affect my objective analysis of MyHeritage products. I am a paid subscriber to Family Tree Webinars and love it.

The URL for this post is:  https://www.geneamusings.com/2026/04/added-and-updated-myheritage-record_01743449786.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 it 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, so they may not appear immediately.

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The Golden Shore -- A Schaffner Family Story: Parts 1 and 2:

After writing ABC Biography of Frederick Schaffner (1828-1899) Family of Germany, New York and San Francisco, based on my genealogical research, I asked Anthropic Claude to tell the family story of the Schaffner's migrating from New York City to San Francisco by sea. Here is the story:


(Infographic created by Google NotebookLM - Parts 1 and 2 of The Golden Shore)



The Golden Shore
A Story of the Schaffner Family

New York to San Francisco, 1855


Part One -- The Leaving

New York harbor, June 1855

The morning Frederick Schaffner decided to leave New York for good, the city smelled of fish and horse dung and something sweeter underneath — bread, perhaps, from one of the bakeries on Hester Street — and he stood at the window of their rooms on Orchard Street for a long time, breathing it in, trying to fix it in his memory like a photograph.

He was twenty-six years old. He had crossed one ocean already. He supposed he could cross another.

Behind him, Martha Matilda was folding their possessions into two leather trunks with the methodical calm she brought to everything. She was Irish, and the Irish, Frederick had observed, did not waste energy on dread. They simply got on with it. He loved her for this, among other things.

"Herman," she said, not looking up from her folding, "stop pulling at the strap, you'll break it."

Frederick looked down. His son was sitting on the floor beside the larger trunk, four years old and already in love with anything mechanical — buckles, hinges, the latch on the door, the gas lamp fixture in the hallway. Herman had his mother's dark eyes and Frederick's stubbornness, a combination that had already proven formidable.

"He can't break it," Frederick said.

"He broke the kettle," Martha Matilda said.

"That was different."

She looked up at him then, one eyebrow slightly raised in the way that meant she was not going to argue but also was not going to concede. Frederick smiled. She went back to her folding.

The passage had cost them most of what Frederick had saved from two years of cooking in various establishments along the Bowery — one hundred and twenty dollars for two adults, half price for Herman, in steerage class aboard the SS Illinois, a side-wheel steamship of the United States Mail Steamship Company departing Pier 4 on the North River at ten o'clock that morning, bound for Aspinwall on the coast of Panama. From there, they would cross the isthmus by the new railroad to Panama City, and then north on another vessel to San Francisco.

Frederick had read the advertisement in the Staats-Zeitung perhaps forty times. He had memorised it. He could recite the sailing dates and fares and the names of the agents in the way that other men memorised scripture.

He picked Herman up off the floor. The boy immediately grabbed his collar.

"Vater," Herman said. "Where are we going?"

"California," Frederick said.

"Is it far?"

"Yes."

"As far as Germany?"

Frederick considered this. He had told Herman about Germany — about Darmstadt, about the linden trees and the ducal palace and the smell of the city on a summer morning. Not that Herman would remember any of it. He had been born in New York.

"Farther," Frederick said. "But we go by ship, which is faster."

Herman seemed to find this satisfactory. He grabbed Frederick's ear instead of his collar, which was worse, but Frederick said nothing.

They carried the trunks down three flights of stairs themselves. Their neighbor Mrs. Kaufmann stood in her doorway and watched them go without speaking, which was unlike her — she was usually a woman of considerable verbal resource — and Frederick understood that she disapproved of the venture. Half the neighborhood disapproved of the venture. A man with a good situation in New York, they said, did not abandon it to chase rumors on the other side of the world. The Gold Rush was over. California was a gamble.

Frederick did not try to explain. He had tried explaining, and it hadn't helped. Some things you did not do because they made sense. You did them because you could feel, in the bones of your chest, that staying still was a kind of dying.

He picked up the smaller trunk. Martha Matilda took the larger one. Herman walked between them down Orchard Street toward the river, his hand in no one's, looking at everything.

— ★ —

The SS Illinois was not a beautiful ship, but she was big — nearly two hundred and fifty feet from bow to stern, Frederick estimated — and she sat in the Hudson like a great self-satisfied animal while a thousand things happened around her simultaneously: cargo swung aboard on cranes, passengers crowded the gangways, coal smoke thickened above her twin funnels, and somewhere below decks a steam whistle released periodic shrieks that made Herman cover his ears and laugh.

Steerage was below the waterline. Frederick had known this from the advertisement — had read the word and understood it in the abstract way you understand things you have not yet experienced — but the reality of it hit him as he descended the forward companionway with their smaller trunk under one arm and Herman's hand in his free one: the low ceiling, the smell of two hundred bodies and their possessions already close in the summer heat, the wooden sleeping shelves built two high along the hull, the single lantern swinging at the far end of the compartment.

He had crossed from Germany to New York in a ship not unlike this one. He knew what was coming.

"It's fine," Martha Matilda said, behind him. She said it the way she said most things — as simple fact, not reassurance. Frederick loved her for this too.

They found a shelf near the forward bulkhead — not the best position, he knew, for when the sea grew rough the bow moved most — but it offered a small advantage: a porthole the size of a dinner plate, filmed with salt, through which a narrow cylinder of grey harbor light fell onto the planking. Herman discovered this porthole within thirty seconds of their arrival and pressed his face against it with great concentration, as though the Hudson River were communicating something important.

"What do you see?" Frederick asked him.

"Water," Herman said. "And a bird."

"What kind of bird?"

Herman considered this with the gravity of a four-year-old confronting a serious scientific question. "A wet one," he said.

A woman across the aisle laughed — a stout German woman of perhaps fifty, with grey hair pinned severely under a black bonnet. She caught Frederick's eye and nodded.

"Erste Reise?" she asked. First voyage?

"To California," Frederick said. "Not the first time on a ship."

"Nor mine," she said. "I came over in 1838. I told myself: never again on a ship. And here I am." She shrugged with magnificent resignation. "My son is in San Francisco. He sends money."

"Mine will be in San Francisco too," Frederick said. "Someday."

He looked at Herman, who had abandoned the porthole and was now investigating the latch on their trunk with the systematic patience of a locksmith.

At ten o'clock precisely, the Illinois shuddered beneath them as her engines came alive, and the last mooring lines were cast off, and the dock and the city and the life Frederick had built there over five years began, slowly, to move away.
Part Two

Part Two -- The Caribbean Sea

Eleven days south of New York

The Atlantic treated them gently at first, which was a mercy, and then, south of Cape Hatteras, with considerably less mercy, which was not. For three days the ship rolled and plunged through heavy swells that turned steerage into something between a laundry and a hospital. The bucket at the end of the aisle became the most important object in the world, and was passed from hand to hand with a cooperation that no other circumstance could have inspired among such a varied collection of strangers.

Herman was not seasick. Frederick found this almost offensive. The boy moved through the pitching ship with unconscious ease, gripping whatever presented itself — shelf edges, belt loops, the arm of the German grandmother, who had given her name as Frau Bauer and who bore Herman's attentions with tolerant amusement — and seemed to find the whole experience merely another variety of interesting.

Martha Matilda was sick for two days and did not complain once, which Frederick thought was either saintliness or stubbornness and was probably both.

He himself managed, barely. He had managed on the Atlantic crossing from Germany too, and had sworn he would never do it again, and here he was. It seemed to be a pattern.

On the fourth day the swells subsided and the sea turned the color of deep slate and then, as they moved south, a color Frederick had no word for — a blue so saturated it looked painted, like the blue in a church window. The air changed too. It grew dense and warm and smelled of salt and something green and living underneath. Herman spent every possible hour on deck, leaning on the rail with his chin on his hands, watching the flying fish break the surface beside the bow.

"They fly," he told Frederick, with the urgency of someone reporting a miracle.

"They do," Frederick agreed.

"Why?"

Frederick thought about this. He had wondered the same thing on his Atlantic crossing and had never found a satisfactory answer. "To escape something chasing them," he said finally. "Or perhaps just because they can."

Herman absorbed this. "I would fly," he said, "if I could."

"Where would you fly to?"

Herman pointed ahead, roughly southward. "There," he said.

"That's the way we're going anyway," Frederick said.

"I know," Herman said. "But I would fly."

— ★ —

Life in steerage found its own rhythms after the first week. Frau Bauer, who had been a baker in Frankfurt, organised a small trading economy among the German passengers — a piece of sausage for a portion of hard cheese, a shirt-mending for a reading of the ship's broadsheet that was distributed every few days by one of the officers. Martha Matilda, who spoke no German but communicated with Frau Bauer through a combination of English, mime, and the universal language of shared exasperation, was drawn into this economy naturally; she could sew faster than anyone else in the compartment and her stitches were invisible.

There was an Irish family from Cork — the O'Briens, Patrick and Brigid and their three children, the oldest of whom was perhaps seven — and Martha Matilda talked with them for hours in the low voice she used when she was homesick but didn't want anyone to know it. Frederick listened sometimes without letting on that he was listening. They talked about Cork, about the crossing, about what Patrick O'Brien hoped to do in California. He wanted to work in construction. Half the men on the ship wanted to work in construction. San Francisco, from everything they'd read, was building itself as fast as men could move lumber.

"And your husband?" Brigid O'Brien asked one afternoon, nodding toward Frederick, who was sitting a few feet away mending his boot.

"He was a cook in New York," Martha Matilda said. "A good one."

"And in California?"

Martha Matilda was quiet for a moment. Frederick pretended great concentration on his boot. "Whatever is needed," she said. "He's not a man who sits still."

Frederick kept his eyes on the boot and said nothing, but he felt something warm and solid in his chest, like a coal that had been banked and was now quietly glowing.

===============================
A work of historical fiction
Characters based on the real Schaffner family of San Francisco.
All dialogue and scenes are imagined.

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

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. The family mentioned is my wife's ancestral family (Frederick Schaffner is her 2nd great-grandfather), and I have significant information about their lives from the available records, but know nothing about their day-to-day lives.

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

Information like this is very helpful to add historical events and social history content to a person's biography. 

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

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.  Note that all comments are moderated, so they may not appear immediately.

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Treasure Chest Thursday -- 1681 Baptism Record of Jane Andrews in Rushall, Wiltshire

  It's Treasure Chest Thursday - an opportunity to look in my digital image files to see what treasures I can find for my family history research and genealogy musings.

The treasure today is the 1681 Baptism record of Jane Andrews in the Rushall, Wiltshire Church of England parish records.

The baptism entry for Jane Andrews is the first record for 1681 baptisms on the page:


The transcription of this record is:

"1673 Jane y'e CDaught[er] of Robt Andrews & Frances his wife Bapt'd March 27 1681"

The source citation is:

Staverton, Wiltshire, Church of England records, Jane Andrews baptism entry, 27 March 1681, daughter of Robert Andrews and wife Frances; imaged, "Wiltshire, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriage and Burials, 1531-1812," Ancestry.com  (https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/61187/records/560228 : accessed 11 March 2026), Rushall  > Parish Registers > 1652-1725, image 14 of 34; Original records in Original data in Wiltshire Church of England Parish Registers, Wiltshire and Swindon History Centre, Chippenham, Wiltshire, England.

Jane Andrews was born before 27 March 1681 in Rushall, Wiltshire, the daughter of Robert and Frances (--?--) Andrews.   She married Henry Rawlins (1673-1744) on 28 January 1705 in Wilsford, Wiltshire.  Jane died before 4 September 1757 when he was buried in Wootton Rivers, Wiltshire.

Henry and Jane (Andrews) Rawlins are my 6th great-grandparents, through their daughter Elizabeth Rawlings (1714-1770) who married Joseph Richman (1710-1761) in 1731 in Whaddon, Wiltshire.

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

Disclosure:  I have a paid All-Access subscription to Ancestry.com now.  Ancestry.com has provided a complimentary subscription and material considerations for travel expenses to meetings, and has hosted events and meals that I have attended in Salt Lake City, in past years.


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.  All comments are moderated, and may not appear immediately after posting.

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