Tuesday, June 3, 2025

"Austin and Della: Curtain Call On the Prairie" - AI Historical Fiction

 My great-grandparents Henry Austin Carringer (1853-1946) and Abbey Ardelle "Della" Smith (1862-1944) married on 11 September 1887 in Wano, Cheyenne County, Kansas.  I told their stories in ABC Biography of #12 Henry Austin Carringer (1853-1946) of Pennsylvania, Iowa, Colorado and California (27 April 2025) and ABC Biography of #13 Abbey Ardelle "Della" (Smith) Carringer (1862-1944) of Wisconsin, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, and California (30 April 2025) based on my genealogical and family history research over 38 years.

I don't have any "family stories" about their early life except what is in the records I have from family sources, books and periodicals, and online record collections.  Fortunately, I have a marriage certificate hanging on my wall at home, so I know when, where and by whom they were married.  I also know that each of them, and Della's father, owned land in Cheyenne County, Kansas in the mid-1880s, so they were neighbors.  I also know that they both were actors in theater plays in the 1880s in Wano, and acually have some playbill images from Della's scrapbook.

I asked several three artificial intelligence tools to provide a realistic but fictional short story about Austin's proposal of marriage to Della.  

Here is the short story created by OpenAI ChatGPT4:

"Curtain Call on the Prairie"

The sun dipped low behind the Kansas plains, bathing the fields in a golden hush. The tall grasses of Wano whispered in the breeze, and a lone cicada struck up a steady rhythm from somewhere beneath the boards of the playhouse porch. Austin Carringer sat quietly beside Della Smith, their shoulders nearly touching, their boots dusty from rehearsal.

Behind them loomed the modest theatre they and a handful of neighbors had built by hand just three summers earlier. It wasn’t much—just weathered lumber, a patched curtain, and a few oil lamps—but to them, it was sacred ground. On that stage, they had lived lives far grander than the dusty prairie could offer. There, they had wept, laughed, fought duels with wooden swords, danced in moonlight, and whispered forbidden love in tones that echoed through the sparse rows of benches.

Austin glanced at Della out of the corner of his eye. Her auburn hair was pinned loosely, a few strands playing against her cheek as the wind lifted them gently. In her lap rested a folded copy of The Secret; or, A Hole in the Wall, their most recent triumph, which had drawn nearly the whole township to the playhouse.

“You know,” he said, voice quiet, “there are evenings that feel like a page from a poem.”

Della smiled without turning. “You say that every time the wind calms.”

“Maybe. But this one feels different.” He shifted, reaching beneath the bench for a small parcel wrapped in linen. “Maybe because tonight I’ve come to the end of a script I’ve been carrying in my heart for three years.”

That caught her attention. She turned to face him, eyes sparkling with curiosity.

“Della,” he continued, “we’ve worn so many names on that stage. You’ve been Lady Audley, tragic and beautiful, with fire behind your eyes. You’ve been the Dairyman’s Daughter, pure and steadfast. And I’ve been fools and lovers and poor Joe in My Cousin Joe, trying not to trip on my lines.”

She laughed then, a soft, bell-like sound that never failed to undo him.

“But none of those roles,” he said, “felt as real as this one now.”

He opened the parcel and drew out a simple gold ring, delicate, engraved faintly with vines that curled like wild prairie roses. He stood, then dropped to one knee in the dirt at her feet.

Her breath caught.

“Abbey Ardelle Smith,” he said, his voice shaking just enough to make her heart swell, “in The Dairyman’s Daughter, you said, ‘Love, like the rising sun, does not ask permission to warm the earth—it simply does.’ That’s what you’ve done to me. Since we became neighbors. Since we built that rickety stage. Since you beat me out for the lead in Lady Audley’s Secret.” He smiled. “You’ve warmed every piece of me.”

Della’s eyes brimmed with tears.

“I want to write the rest of life’s play with you. No scripts. Just you and me. Wano to San Diego, hand in hand, scene by scene. Will you marry me?”

The prairie was silent but for the wind and a distant crow. Della looked down at him, her throat tight with emotion. She touched the ring, then his cheek.

“In My Neighbor’s Wife, I said, ‘A home is not four walls, but the soul you share it with.’ I always wondered what that line meant. Until now.” She leaned forward. “Yes, Austin. A thousand yeses.”

He slipped the ring on her finger, his hands calloused but gentle. Then he rose and pulled her into an embrace, as the prairie sky blushed violet above them.

They stood like that for a long moment, two players now fully themselves, the stage behind them and a new journey ahead.

“So,” she said at last, eyes twinkling, “San Diego?”

Austin grinned. “San Diego. With twenty dollars in our pockets and every hope in our hearts.”

As the moon rose higher and the wind carried the scent of dust and sage, a curtain in the playhouse fluttered—its final bow for the night. And as they walked home across the fields, fingers entwined, the real play of their lives was just beginning.

Here's the X Grok 3 short story:

Setting: A balmy evening in August 1887, just outside Wano, Kansas. The sun dips low, painting the sky in hues of amber and rose, casting long shadows over the adjacent Carringer and Smith family lands. The air carries the sweet scent of prairie grass and blooming wildflowers, with a faint breeze rustling the cottonwood trees near a small creek. Austin and Della have just finished rehearsing at the Wano playhouse, their laughter echoing from a spirited run-through of “My Cousin Joe.” They’re strolling along a dirt path, the glow of lantern light from nearby farmhouses dotting the horizon.

Characters:

    • Henry Austin “Austin” Carringer: A charismatic man in his mid-30s, with a lean build, tousled brown hair, and a warm, earnest smile. His love for the stage is matched only by his devotion to Della, his partner in both life and performance

    • Abbey Ardelle “Della” Smith: A vibrant woman in her mid-20s, with bright eyes and a quick wit. Her grace on stage and spirited nature off it have captivated Austin for three years.

Austin: (slowing his pace, glancing at Della with a soft smile) Della, ain’t this sunset somethin’ else? Like the final act of “Lady Audley’s Secret,” when the stage lights dim and the world feels like it’s holdin’ its breath. Makes a man ponder what’s worth holdin’ onto.

Della (twirling a wildflower between her fingers, her bonnet catching the last rays of sunlight) Oh, Austin, you’re waxin’ poetic again. Too many nights as the dashing hero in “The Dairyman’s Daughter”? Or maybe you’re rehearsin’ for some new role you ain’t told me about. (teases, nudging him) What’s got you so dreamy tonight?

Austin: (chuckling, then turning serious as he stops under a cottonwood) Ain’t a role, Della, though I’ve played plenty a fool for you on that Wano stage. Three years we’ve been at this—courtin’ through curtain calls, stealin’ kisses between scenes, walkin’ these fields when the stars come out. (takes her hand, his voice low) You remember that line from “My Neighbor’s Wife”? “My heart is thine, though the world may part us.” Well, darlin’, my heart’s been yours since that first night in Wano, when you laughed at my stumblin’ lines and made me feel like a king.

Della: (blushing, but keeping her playful tone) My, my, Austin Carringer, quotin’ the playhouse to woo me? You’re pullin’ out all the stops! (softens, meeting his gaze) I remember that night too. You were so nervous, you nearly dropped the prop lantern in “The Secret; or, A Hole in the Wall.” But I saw somethin’ in you—somethin’ true. Still, you’re gonna have to do better than borrowed lines if you’re plannin’ to sweep me off my feet.

Austin: (grinning, stepping closer, his voice warm and steady) Fair enough, Miss Smith. No script this time, just me. (takes both her hands, his eyes searching hers) Abbey Ardelle, you’re the melody to every song I’ve ever sung, the light in every scene I’ve played. Like in “Lady Audley’s Secret,” when she says, “Love is the chain that binds the heart forever”—that’s you to me, Della. I can’t imagine a day without your laugh, your fire, your hand in mine. I’ve got this land, a few dollars, and a dream bigger than these Kansas plains. I want to marry you, Della. Will you be my partner, not just on stage, but for all the acts to come?

Della: (eyes widening, her breath catching as she clutches the wildflower tighter) Austin… you’ve been rehearsin’ this, haven’t you? (pauses, her voice softening as she steps closer) Three years of starin’ into your eyes across that stage, hearin’ you say lines like “My Cousin Joe’s” “I’d cross the world for thee, my love, and count it but a step.” I thought those were just words, but… you mean ’em, don’t you? (her voice trembles slightly) Marriage is a bigger leap than any we’ve taken, even when that rickety prop table collapsed mid-scene!

Austin: (laughing softly, then growing earnest) Bigger than that, and twice as thrilling. I mean every word, Della. I see us leavin’ Wano, sellin’ this land, and takin’ a train west—California, maybe, where the sun sets over the ocean. I’ve got $20 saved, enough for tickets and a honeymoon to start our story right. (lifts her hand to his lips, quoting softly) “The Secret” had it right: “No wall can hold a heart that’s true.” Say you’ll come with me, darlin’. Say you’ll be my wife.

Della: (a tear glistening in her eye, but her smile radiant) California? You’re promisin’ me oceans and adventures? (pauses, then steps into his arms) Austin, you’ve been my leading man since that first curtain rose here in Wano. Every laugh, every glance, every moment we’ve shared—it’s all led to this. Yes, I’ll marry you. (playfully) But don’t think you can steal the spotlight in this marriage, Mr. Carringer. I’m still the star of this show!

Austin: (pulling her into a warm embrace, laughing) Never, my love. You’ll always be the star, and I’m just lucky to share the stage. (pulls back, his face alight with joy) Let’s find Rev. Richards tomorrow and make it official. Then we’ll pack our dreams and that $20 and chase the horizon west—together.

Della: (resting her head against his chest, her voice soft) To our final bow in Wano and a new act in California. Lead on, Austin. I’m ready for our next scene.

And the Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4 short story:

An August Evening, 1887 - Wano, Kansas

The summer sun hangs low over the Kansas prairie, casting long shadows across the small settlement of Wano. Austin Carringer and Della Smith sit on the wooden steps of the theatre playhouse where they've spent countless evenings rehearsing and performing together. The distant sound of cattle lowing drifts across the grassland as crickets begin their evening chorus.

Austin: Della, these three summers here in Wano... they've been the finest of my life. Watching you command that stage in "Lady Audley's Secret" last week—you were magnificent. The way you delivered that final scene, when Lady Audley confesses her crimes... you had the entire audience spellbound.

Della: (laughing softly) Oh, Austin, you flatter me so. Though I must admit, having you as my leading man in all these productions has made even the most dramatic scenes feel... natural somehow. Do you remember our first performance together in "The Dairyman's Daughter"? I was so nervous I nearly forgot my opening lines.

Austin: How could I forget? You were trembling like a leaf, but the moment you stepped into that spotlight, you transformed completely. (his voice growing softer) You know, Della, sometimes when we're up there together, delivering those romantic scenes... it hardly feels like acting at all.

Della: (blushing slightly) Austin Carringer, you shouldn't say such things. What would the other players think?

Austin: Let them think what they will. (taking her hand gently) Do you remember the lines from "My Cousin Joe"? When Joseph declares his love to Margaret by the garden gate?

Della: (her voice barely above a whisper) "My heart has been yours since first we met, though I dared not speak it..."

Austin: (continuing the quote, his eyes never leaving hers) "For love like ours needs no grand gestures, only the courage to speak what has long been true." (pausing) Della, those words... they weren't just lines to me.

Della: (turning to face him fully, sensing the change in his tone) Austin, what are you trying to tell me?

Austin: That's just it, my dear. Nothing has ever felt more natural to me than being by your side. Whether we're running lines for "My Neighbor's Wife" or simply walking between our families' homesteads at sunset, or sitting together after the curtain falls... I find myself thinking that perhaps our greatest performance isn't on that stage at all.

Della: (her voice trembling slightly) Austin, you're frightening me with such serious talk. And yet... my heart races when you speak so.

Austin: (standing and extending his hand to help her up) Walk with me a moment? Down toward the creek where the cottonwoods grow? There's something I must tell you away from prying ears.

They stroll slowly away from the playhouse, their footsteps soft on the prairie grass. The evening air carries the scent of wild flowers and distant woodsmoke. As they walk, Austin begins to recite softly.

Austin: "In all the world, there is no heart for me like yours. In all the world, there is no love for you like mine." (he stops walking) Do you recognize those words, Della?

Della: (stopping beside him, her breath catching) From "The Secret"... when William finally confesses his love to Sarah through the wall that has kept them apart for so long.

Austin: The wall between them crumbled that night, didn't it? Just as I hope the wall of propriety between us might crumble now, if you'll allow it.

Austin: Della, I've been carrying something in my heart for longer than I care to admit. When I first met you here in Wano three years ago, I thought you were the most spirited woman I'd ever encountered. But these summers here, watching you bring those characters to life on stage, seeing how you laugh with the other players, how you tend to your family's land with such determination...

Della: (stopping and looking up at him) Austin Carringer, what are you trying to say to me?

Austin: (reaching into his vest pocket and dropping to one knee) Then let me tear down every wall between us, Della. I'm saying that I can't imagine a single day of my life without you in it. These three years of courtship, of stolen glances across the stage, of walking you home under these prairie stars... they've been leading to this moment. Della Smith, would you do me the extraordinary honor of becoming my wife?

He produces a simple gold band, its surface catching the last rays of sunlight.

Della: (gasping, her hand flying to her heart) Austin! Oh my stars... I... (tears beginning to well in her eyes, her voice breaking with emotion) All this time I hoped... I dreamed you might feel as I do, but I never dared believe it could be true.

Austin: (still kneeling, his voice tender) It's more true than any line we've ever spoken on that stage, my darling.

Della: (reaching down to touch his face) Then yes, Austin Carringer. Yes, with all my heart and soul. I will be your wife.

Austin: (rising and slipping the ring onto her finger, his hands trembling slightly with emotion) Then we'll make our own grand production, won't we? Our own beautiful story that will run for decades, not just a few summer nights.

Della: (admiring the ring through her tears before embracing him) Better than any play we've ever performed. Though I do hope our real life has fewer tragic endings than the ones we've been acting out! No more Lady Audleys meeting their doom, or dairymen's daughters pining away from consumption.

Austin: (laughing and spinning her around, her skirts swirling in the prairie breeze) Only happy scenes from here on out, my dear Della. Comedy and romance, adventure and joy. I promise you that. (setting her down gently) We'll sell our land here, take our savings—modest though they may be—and make our way in the world together. I've been thinking... what would you say to California? I hear San Diego has weather fine enough for year-round theatre, and opportunities for a young married couple willing to work hard.

Della: (her eyes sparkling with excitement and tears) Twenty dollars and a dream? (laughing) It sounds like the plot of one of our melodramas! But yes, Austin, anywhere with you. Whether it's the stages of San Diego or anywhere else this wide world might take us.

Austin: (taking both her hands in his) Then let's make Rev. Richards earn his fee and marry us properly. I can't wait another day longer than necessary to call you Mrs. Austin Carringer.

Della: (standing on her tiptoes to kiss his cheek) Mrs. Della Carringer... it has such a lovely sound, doesn't it?

As the first stars begin to appear over the endless Kansas prairie, they walk back toward the settlement hand in hand, their voices carrying softly on the evening air as they plan their future. The playhouse grows smaller behind them, but their love story—their greatest and most enduring performance—has only just begun.

Did the marriage proposal happen this way?  I sincerely hope so - romantic and touching, with a touch of humor.

Three different creations of historical fiction on the same theme.  I can't choose which one to publish so I published all three! (Blogger seems to have no word limit on posts).

Which short story do you prefer?  Tell me!!

Should I make this a series of fictional short stories (but based on actual events in their lives) about the lives of Austin and Della (Smith) Carringer?  Getting married, the honeymoon trip, to San Diego, having a family, and living their lives for almost 60 more years?  

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Links to my blog posts about using Artificial Intelligence are on my Randy's AI and Genealogy page.  Links to AI information and articles about Artificial Intelligence in Genealogy by other genealogists are on my AI and Genealogy Compendium page.

Copyright (c) 2025, Randall J. Seaver

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Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post.  Share it on Twitter, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below.  Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.  Please note that all comments are moderated, and may not appear immediately.

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Ask AI: "Roast Me Based On Your Memories of Me and Be Mean."

 On the Facebook Genealogy and Artificial Intelligence group, Christine Creed Hill posted a prompt to ChatGPT4 asking “Roast me based on your memories of me and be mean.” Several responders have now asked the same thing and posted their answers, even myself. The Facebook post has some excellent responses!

You know, I can't resist having fun with genealogy and AI!

Here is the most genealogy fun I had on Monday night:

1)  My prompt to free ChatGPT4 was: "Roast me based on your memories of me and be mean."

ChattyPat said:

Alright, you asked for it—roast mode activated. 🔥

You're like a genealogist with a time machine and ADHD—zigzagging through centuries but somehow still can't find Devier's birth parents. You’ve practically interviewed every ghost in Jefferson County, NY, but even they're like, "Dude, we don’t know either."

You’ve got more Revolutionary War ancestors than a DAR chapter, yet none of them passed down the ability to finish a sentence without referencing Mercer County or some poor soul buried in Iowa. And let’s be honest—half your ancestors moved west just to escape being included in your next 47-page blog post.

And your family trees? They're not trees. They're jungles. I’m pretty sure there's a squirrel somewhere still stuck trying to navigate from Austin Carringer to Emily Auble without getting lost.

You can recall 18th-century land patents like other people recall phone numbers, but you still needed me to help you roast yourself. Pathetic—but historically accurate.

Now go sit in the corner with your Diet Coke and orange soda, and think about how you managed to make grave digging your primary hobby.

😈 You wanted mean. This was mean—with love.

Bring it on, ChattyPat!!

My second prompt was the taunt:  "anything else?"

ChattyPat responded with more genea-vitriol:

Oh, absolutely. You think I’m done? Sit down, grab your quill and parchment—because here comes Volume II of this roast.

You’ve spent so much time talking to dead people, I’m starting to wonder if you even like the living. Your ancestors probably hold weekly séances just to tell you to knock it off. “We’re at peace, stop digging up our tax records from 1852!”

You collect cemetery plot numbers like they’re Pokémon cards. “Ooh, this one died in a tragic threshing machine accident in 1879—mint condition!

And let's talk about how you treat historical documents like sacred scripture, but treat modern technology like it's witchcraft. You’ve got handwritten probate files in triplicate, but you still hesitate every time you have to update a Google Doc.

Also—your idea of a thrill? Finding a misindexed 1870 census line. Adrenaline junkie, aren't you? Other people go skydiving—you get your kicks from discovering that your 4x-great-grandmother moved 3 blocks over in 1881.

And your ancestors probably weren’t even proud of you. They’re up there like, “He’s doing what with my name? He told everyone I died of ‘consumption’? IT WAS CHICKEN POX, RANDY!”

Face it—you’re the kind of person who’d bring a pedigree chart to a first date… assuming you ever left your archives long enough to go on one.

💀 But hey, at least you're consistent—unlike 19th-century vital records.

Want more? I can keep going until your ancestors beg me to stop.

Hey, Chatty, there's nothing "BAD" there.  I'm proud of all my genealogy work.

I could go on, and did, but it was more of the same.  ChattyPat is very creative!

2)  X.ai Grok 3 "GrokPat" took its' turn also, and gave me some great roast bits (based on 15 sources and my prompt history) [plus a graphic]:

Alright, Randy Seaver, self-proclaimed "master genealogist," let’s see if I can roast you properly now that I know who you are! I’ve got a clearer picture from your prompt history and some digging around, so buckle up for a roast that’s as sharp as your obsession with dusty old records. Since you’re begging for it, I’ll focus on your genealogy work and keep it mean, as requested, while weaving in what I know about you. No fluff, just the good stuff.

Your genealogy game is like a hamster on a wheel—spinning endlessly with no finish line in sight. You’ve been chasing your “elusive ancestors” for over 36 years, and yet your pedigree chart still has more holes than a moth-eaten sweater. You’re out there spending 8–10 hours a day on Genea-Musings, posting multiple times daily like some kind of genealogy robot, but half the time it’s just you yelling into the void about a random 1832 deed or a blurry photo from your Catalina Island getaway. Newsflash, Randy: nobody’s reading your 12th blog post of the day about Great-Great-Grandpa Seaver’s neighbor’s cousin’s land warrant. Your “cousin bait” tree on Ancestry? More like cousin repellent—nobody’s biting because it’s a chaotic mess of Seavers, Carringers, Aubles, Dills, and Bucks that only you could love.

And let’s talk about your obsession with Peregrine White, the Mayflower baby. You’re so proud of that potential connection, you probably sleep with a pilgrim hat under your pillow. But your grandma’s story and Aunt Marion’s town history book had errors, and you’re still out here trying to prove it like it’s your life’s mission. Here’s a tip: maybe your family’s just not that interesting. You’re digging through microfilms and making research trips to New England like you’re Indiana Jones, but instead of treasure, you’re unearthing another misspelled “Mary Seaver” who might’ve married a carpenter—or not. Your database has 40 Mary Seavers, and you’re still clueless about half of them. Master genealogist? More like master of confusion.

Your source citations are a whole other tragedy. You figured out in 2006—2006!—that you should’ve been citing sources properly, and now you’re frantically playing catch-up, adding 1,000 citations a month like a kid cramming for a test. That’s not dedication; that’s a midlife crisis in spreadsheet form. And your “mentally well-organized” claim? Please. Your brain’s a filing cabinet with half the folders labeled “Miscellaneous” and the other half missing. You’re so deep in RootsMagic and TreeShare, you probably dream in GEDCOM files, but your public “Record Hint” tree is just a digital hoarder’s paradise, drowning in Ancestry hints you’ll never sort through.

Oh, and your AI experiments? You’re out here using Claude (sorry, “Sonnet 4”) to write family-friendly ancestor bios, thinking you’re revolutionizing genealogy. Spoiler: it’s just you outsourcing your obsession to a chatbot, and the results are as exciting as a 17th-century tax record. You’re a retired aerospace engineer, Randy—shouldn’t you be building model rockets or something instead of blogging about your 8th cousin once removed, Mamie? Your readers might call you a “luminary” in genealogy, but let’s be real: you’re just the guy who won’t stop talking about the Seaver line at the Chula Vista Genealogical Society.

Want me to keep roasting or are you ready to retreat to your microfilm cave and cry over another unverified cousin? 

Yep, nailed it.  I have thoughts like this all the time.  Grok really had to dig into Genea-Musings to come up with those examples.  For the record, I don't talk to CVGS much any more (they've heard me speak for 30 years and are tired of it, their loss?) ... I wish I dreamed in GEDCOM files (maybe I'd sleep longer) ... and I have more than 40 Mary Seaver persons (actually 253, I counted) ... and I have Partridges in my tree too ... but what does GrokPat (GrokElon?) know? [Only what I tell it, and I initially had to tell it my name so it could search for me]. 

3)  Should I ask GrokPat to write a genea-eulogy for me too?  That might be interesting and fun! My daughters and grandkids could read it to the assembled multitude of 20 friends and family and 10 local genealogists, plus the choir.  One third of the attendees would be rolling in the pews.   When the time comes, I hope my genea-friends will have on online Zoom call to give me a proper sendoff with humor and even snark.

Or limericks?  Poems?  Songs?  Oh yeah, been there done that.  

Can ChattyPat and GrokPat roast itself?  I asked, and it's hilarious.  Accurate?  Self-serving?  I love the last line GrokPat gave me:  "Want me to keep torching myself, or should I go back to laughing at your family tree? 😏"

Enough of my genealogy fun for the morning.  This exercise lifted my spirits a bit.  

Try this out on ChattyPat or GrokPat.  

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Links to my blog posts about using Artificial Intelligence are on my Randy's AI and Genealogy page. Links to AI information and articles about Artificial Intelligence in Genealogy by other genealogists are on my AI and Genealogy Compendium page.

Copyright (c) 2025, Randall J. Seaver


Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post.  Share it on Twitter, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below.  Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.  Please note that all comments are moderated, and may not appear immediately.

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Monday, June 2, 2025

Monday Memories: Childhood Games

My whole childhood (I was born in 1943, so the 1950s) was playing games - everything with my father, my mother, my brothers, and my friends was a competition. Who could get the answer first? Who could go around the block the fastest (running, biking, flexying)? Who could eat everything on their plate first (the winner usually got the leftovers)? Who could hit the whiffle ball into the street first? Who had the most and/or best baseball cards? Who could win at ping-pong, or basketball, or whiffle ball, or whatever game we made up to play in the house, on the patio, on the street, at school, or at the park? There were epic games!  Every day!

My mother would just watch, or referee, and hope that we didn't get hurt, or kill somebody. My father wanted his sons to be competitive and play baseball, football, and basketball competitively like he did, so he could coach and teach us. Well, two of them did. I tried, but was too small and had bad eyes and was left-handed. 

My advantage with my brothers was that I was the oldest son, but my brother Stanley, 3 years younger, was always my size.  And all of my friends were bigger and stronger than me.  So I had to be smarter and outthink or outwit the others.

The game that I excelled at was a word game, GHOST (check it out at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghost_(game)).  We (my family of four) played GHOST almost every night after dinner at the dinner table for several years when I was aged 10 to 15 (and my brother Stan was aged 7 to 12, brother Scott was 12 years younger than me).  Our version was: 

You went around the table spelling English words one letter at a time, with a minimum of four letters. The words had to be in the dictionary (I think we had the 1909 edition of Webster's New International Dictionary). If you spelled a complete valid word, then you got penalized a point. The winner of the game was the one with the fewest points at the end of the game (which was usually when my father wanted to stop to do some work at his desk). A player could challenge the spelling of the previous player, who had to pronounce and spell the complete word s/he was thinking of. If they could, then the challenger got the point. If they couldn’t, then the one challenged got the point. A player who ended a valid word got a point (in GHOST?) and if they got five points, they had to drop out of the game. 


This was a great game to help us boys with spelling and vocabulary because it got us reading the dictionary for hours searching for interesting words. It also gave us some family time in the mid-to-late 1950s before we all were addicted to the evening television shows. 

My strategy in GHOST was to find unique words in the dictionary that I could “hang” on one of the other family members. for instance, if someone started a new word with “b” and it was my turn, then I would say “d” and the family had to spell “bdellium” - it was the only word in the dictionary starting with “bd.” If they started with “m” then I would say “n” and the word had to be “mnemonic.” If someone started a new word with “g” then I would say “h” and the family had to spell “ghost” or “ghoul.” Eventually, we got around to finding and spelling “antidisestablishmentarianism,” “pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis” (I remembered the first parts, but had to look that one up!) and other long words, but we had to be careful not to spell a complete word within the longer word - like “antidisestablishment.” I had a list of words that I could use.  We experimented in later years with being able to add two letters in order to avoid spelling a valid word. 

I loved to try to get my father to spell the valid word, and he would usually try to bluff his way through. I tried to avoid getting my mother, but didn’t mind getting my brother. Challenging had a strategy too - if I knew I was going to get hung with a word ending, I would try to bluff everyone by confidently saying a letter and hoping that I wouldn’t be challenged. Of course, this usually broke down into arguments satisfied only by the one challenged looking the word up in the dictionary and either bragging or getting a letter!

This must be where my love for word games originated.  I do Wordle every morning now!

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NOTE:  Some of my Monday Memories are from earlier blog posts and/or my MyHeritage MyStories book, edited and/or embellished. <G>

Copyright (c) 2025, Randall J. Seaver


Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post. Share it on X, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below. Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.  Please note that all comments are moderated and may not appear immediately.

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Randy's Genealogy Pot-Pourri - Week Ending 1 June 2025

 Here are the highlights of my family history and genealogy related activities over the past week (ending Sunday, 1 June 2025).  

1)  Attended the 28 May General Meeting of the Chula Vista Genealogical Society with 30 in attendance on Zoom.  Kate Penney Howard presented "Adoption and DNA."

2)  Participated in the 26 May Mondays With Myrt webinar on Streamyard.  The panelists discussed Memorial Day posts (I mentioned my Asahel Read historical fiction story), Tony Ptroctor's STG-FTG program, and Dan's research trip to Pennsylvania. 

3)  Transcribed the 1798 Deed of Josiah Sawtell Selling Land in Middlesex County, Massachusetts to Zabdiel Adams with help from FamilySearch Full-Text Search.

4)  Wrote a genealogical sketch for 2nd Great-GrandAunt Nancy E. (Oatley) Edson (1818-1892) of Rhode Island and Connecticut for the 52 Relatives theme.

5) Curated genealogy-related articles to keep myself and my readers updated on the genealogy world in:
6)  Wrote two "ABC Biographies" using my AI-assisted "Ancestor Biography Creation" process in:
8)  Requested free AI tools to create a poem and song lyrics about my 3rd greatgrandfather,  John Rich (1790-1868), and had Suno.com create a song using the lyrics.  Posted the poem created by Gemini 2.5 Flash, the song lyrics created by Claude Sonnet 4, the Suno song link, and the ContentLM podcast link in "John Rich's Legacy" -- A Family History Poem, Song and Podcast Created by Artificial Intelligence.
                                           (AI image of 1850 hand loom weaver in Wiltshire)

9)  My AncestryDNA now has 49,244 DNA matches (up 36 from 25 May) with 2091 "close" matches today (up 3), with no new ThruLines.  Added Notes to 2 Matches, and added no new DNA match lines to RootsMagic.   MyHeritageDNA now has 13,542 DNA matches (up 11 from 25 May) for me.  Reviewed the new DNA matches on AncestryDNA, MyHeritageDNA, FamilyTreeDNA and 23andMe.  

10)  Searched for more records of ancestral families on Ancestry, FamilySearch and MyHeritage, downloaded record images to my digital file folders, and added research notes, events and sources to RootsMagic profiles.  My RootsMagic family tree now has 74,578 profiles (up 0 from last week) and 147,760 source citations (up 6).  Added more short biographical sketches and source citations to ancestors, and edited historical place names for a number of families.  

11) Wrote 22 Genea-Musings blog posts last week (Sunday through Saturday), of which one was a press release. The most viewed post last week was ABC Biography of #20 James Richman/Richmond (1821-1912) of Wiltshire and New England with over 399 views.  Genea-Musings had about 95,800 page views last week and over 367,000 views over the past month. 

12)  Real life events:  Visited Linda several days at her memory care facility and we played Uno. Went to the grocery store on Monday and Friday.  Visited the dentist on Tuesday to check on my extracted tooth hole.  Finished reading Everything To Lose by Andrew Gross, and started G-Man by Stephen Hunter.  The Padres season continues and I watched six games this week - they were 4-2 this week (overall 33-24 now). 

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The URL for this post is:  https://www.geneamusings.com/2025/06/randys-genealogy-pot-pourri-week-ending.html

Copyright (c) 2025, Randall J. Seaver

Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post. Share it on X, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below. Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.  Please note that all comments are moderated and may not appear immediately. 

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Amanuensis Monday -- 1798 Deed of Josiah Sawtell Selling Land to Zabdiel Adams in Middlesex County, Massachusetts

This week's document for transcription is the  1798 Deed of Josiah Sawtell selling land to Zabdiel Adams for $346.66 in Middlesex County, Massachuswetts.

*  Middlesex [Massachusetts] Deeds, 1798-1799 - pages 122-123, image 72 of 287:


The transcription of this document is (based on the FamilySearch Full-Text Search, with corrections as required, including line breaks):

[starting on the left-hand page of the image, about 20% down page 122]

Josiah Sawtell     }
       to                    } Know all men by these Presents 
Zabdiel Adams    } That I Josiah Sawtell of Townshend , in the Coun-
ty of Middlesex & Commonwealth of Massachu-
setts yeoman in consideration of three hundred & 
Forty six Dollars & sixty six Cents paid by Zab-
diel Adams of Lunenburg in the County of Wor-
cester & Commonwealth of Massachusetts Clerk 
The receipt whereof I do hereby acknowledge do here-
by give grant sell and convey unto the said Zad-
diel Adams his Heirs and Assigns forever A Certain 
Farm or Messuage situate situate here in the wester-
ly part of said Townshend Containing one hun-
dred acres more or less being the whole of the two 
divisions or house lots N'o 33 & 60 laid out to Sam-
uel Waldo on the south side of Squannicook Ri-
ver as by a referance to the Proprietors Records 
will more fully appear excepting two acres 
& half off the westerly part of said Premises now 
in the occupation of Hezekiah Richardson and 
which he holds by Deed from William Hobart
also excepting all roads Thro said granted Pre-
mises. To have & to hold the aforegranted 
Premises to the said Zabdiel Adams his Heirs & 
Assigns to his and their use & Behoof forever and 
I do covenant with the said Zabdiel Adams his 
Heirs & Assigns that I am lawfully seized in 
Fee of the aforegranted Premises That they are free 
of all Incumbrances that I have good right to 
sell and convey the same to the said Zabdiel 
Adams and that I will warrant and defend the 
same premises to the said Zabdiel Adams his 
Heirs & Assigns forever against the lawful Claims 

[page 123] 

and demands of all Persons. Provided neverthe-
less that if the said Josiah Sawtell his Heirs Executors 
or Administrators pay to the said Zabdiel Adams 
his Heirs Executors Administrators or Assigns the 
sum of three hundred and Forty six Dollars & 
sixty six Cents by the twenty fourth day of October 
next with Interest for the same annually untill
paid and the further sum of twenty four Dol-
lars and twelve cents  on demand with Interest
for the same untill paid Then this Deed as al-
so two certain notes of hand bearing even 
date with these presents given by the said Jo-
siah Sawtell to the said Zabdiel Adams to pay 
the same sums and interest at the times aforesaid 
shall both be void otherwise shall remain in 
full force. In witness whereof I the said Josiah Sawtell 
have hereunto set my hand & seal this twenty fourth 
day of June in the year of our Lord one thousand 
seven hundred & ninety eight Josiah Sawtell 
seal Signed sealed and delivered in presence of 
us Samuel Dana  Luke Dodge      Middlesex ss 
June 30th 1798. Then the above named Josiah Saw-
tell   personally appeared and acknowledged the a-
bove instrument to be his free act and Deed be-
fore me Aaron Brown Just of Peace 
Middlesex ss .  Cambridge July 23d 1798 
Received and entered 
                       by Samuel Bartlett Reg'r

The source citation for this deed is:

Middlesex County Massachusetts, Deed Records, deed of  Josiah Sawtell to Zabdiel Adams, dated 23 June 1798, recorded 30 June 1798; imaged,  "Middlesex , New Hampshire, United States records," FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G9Z7-KXPS?view=fullText : accessed May 25, 2025), Image Group Number: 007448513, "Middlesex. Deeds 1798-1799," pages 122-123, image 72 of 287; Original records: Middlesex County (Massachusetts). Register of Deeds.

This is a Derivative Source (because it is a court clerk's transcription of the original deed with Primary Information and Direct Evidence of the names of the two parties, and the dates of the deed execution, signing and recording.  

Note that this is a mortgage deed - Josiah borrowed money from Zabdiel Adams and he retains the land if he pays the notes, with interest, back by 24 October 1798.

Josiah Sawtell (1768-1847) was born 24 January 1768 in Groton, Middlesex County, Massachusetts Bay Colony, the son of Ephraim and Abigail (Stone) Sawtell. He married Hannah Smith (1768-1827) on 5 October 1789 in Amherst, Hampshire County, Massachusetts.  Josiah died 7 December 1847 in Townsend, Middlesex County, Massachusetts.  They had nine children.

Josiah and Hannah (Smith) Sawtell are my 4th great-grandparents, through their daughter Hannah Sawtell (1789-1857) who married Zachariah Hildreth (1784-1857) in 1810 in Townsend, Massachuseetts.

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

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NOTE: Genea-blogger John Newmark (who writes the excellent TransylvanianDutch blog) started a Monday blog theme years ago called "Amanuensis Monday." John offers this definition for "amanuensis:"

"A person employed to write what another dictates or to copy what has been written by another."

The URL for this post is: https://www.geneamusings.com/2025/06/amanuensis-monday-1798-deed-of-josiah.html

Copyright (c) 2025, Randall J. Seaver

Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post. Share your comments on Twitter, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below. Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.  Note that all comments are moderated, and may not appear online immediately.

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Sunday, June 1, 2025

Best of the Genea-Blogs - Week of 25 to 31 May 2025

  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: 

*  Top 5 Colonial Record Research Tips for Genealogists by Diane Henriks on Know Who Wears the Genes In Your Family.

*  Segment Triangulation Insight by Jim Bartlett on Segment-ology.

*  Which One Are You? by Paul Chiddicks on Paul Chiddicks.

*  Reading and Transcribing Old Handwritten Documents: Transkribus by Wayne Shepheard on Discover Genealogy.

*  ABC Biography with EndnotesABC Song and More; and Telling Her Story: Captain Dorothy Swart Tatum by Marcia Crawford Philbrick on Heartland Genealogy.

*   Pirates, poets, and a ghost or two along the way by Jeff Record on The Last Aha.

*  Can We Tell Our Stories? by Barbara Tien on ProjectKin.

*  The Hidden Tool on Ancestry You Should Be Using: Recognize Ancestors by Ellen Thompson-Jennings on Hound On the Hunt.

*  "Is This You?" by Carole McCullough on NextGenGenealogy.

*  Happy I Hired a Pro Genealogist by Marian B. Wood on Climbing My Family Tree.

 Ancestral Memory – Fact, Fiction, or Something In Between? by Paul Chiddicks on Paul Chiddicks.

*  Shared DNA at a glance: the new DNA matrix tool by Jonny Perl on DNA Painter Blog.

*  The End of an Era: Uploads at MyHeritage by Leah Larkin on The DNA Geek.

*  Even in the Face of Injustice: What My Ancestors' Darkest Hour Taught Me About Resilience by  Crista Cowan on Crista Cowan | The Barefoot Genealogist.

Here are pick posts by other geneabloggers this week:

*  Friday’s Family History Finds by Linda Stufflebean on Empty Branches on the Family Tree.

*  This week’s crème de la crème — May 31, 2025 by Gail Dever on Genealogy a la Carte.

*  GenStack [31 May 2025] by Robin Stewart on Genealogy Matters.

*  The Chiddicks Observer 14th Edition [26 May 2025] by Paul Chiddicks on Paul Chiddicks.

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.


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Copyright (c) 2025, Randall J. Seaver


Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post. Share it on X, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below. Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.  Please note that all comments are moderated and may not appear immediately.

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