I wrote an AI-assisted ABC biography for the family of my 4th great-grandparents Philip and Mary (Smith) Row in ABC Biography of Revolutionary War Soldier Philip Row (1752-1817) and His Wife Mary (Smith) Row (1750-1843) of New Jersey based on my genealogical research over 38 years.
I wondered what Philip Row might have told his grandchildren in a life memoir in 1815.
(AI Google NotebookLM Infographic for Philip Row's life memoir)
1) I requested Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 to "Please write a life memoir for Philip Row based on the attached biography, as he might tell his grandchildren in 1815."
2) The AI Anthropic Claude Sonnet 5 memoir (edited for accuracy and completeness) is:
The Remembrances of Philip Row
As Told to His Grandchildren in
the Year 1815
Come close, little ones, and sit by the fire. Your grandmother
tells me my stories grow longer each time I tell them, but an old
soldier is entitled to his tales, is he not? I am past sixty years
now, and my hands do not work as they once did, but my memory of the
old days remains clear enough. Let me tell you of my life, so that
you will remember it when I am gone.
My Beginnings
I was born in December of 1752, here in New Jersey, though I could
not tell you precisely where. My people were German folk, as were so
many of our neighbors in this part of Hunterdon County. I never knew
my parents well enough to tell you much about them—such is the way
of things sometimes, children. Not every question in life gets
answered, and I have made my peace with what I do not know.
I grew up speaking German in my home, as most families did in our
settlement. To this day, I keep my accounts and my Bible records in
German—I never did learn to write the English tongue, though I can
speak it well enough for trading and business. Your grandmother's
nephew, John Beamer the schoolmaster, has helped me with English
matters over the years, being fluent in both languages.
Taking a Wife
I was a young man of nineteen years and seven months when I
married your grandmother, Mary Smith, on the ninth of July, 1772. She
was twenty-one years and eight months old—older than me, though
that never troubled either of us. Reverend Frederick Dellicker
performed the ceremony.
I recorded the date in my German family Bible with my own hand—the
date of our marriage, and both our ages at the time. I have always
believed such things should be written down properly, so that they
are not forgotten or disputed in later years. That page remains in
the Bible still, and I trust it will be kept safe long after I am
gone.
We settled here in Tewksbury Township, in New Germantown—Oldwick,
as some now call it—and began our life together. I was not a
wealthy man, children, but I had land, strong hands, and a wife
willing to work alongside me. That was enough to build a life upon.
Our Children Begin to Arrive
Your grandmother gave me our first child, a daughter we named
Mary, on the nineteenth of July, 1773—just over a year after our
wedding, and ten days past the anniversary of our marriage. I
remember holding that small child and feeling a kind of joy and
terror both at once, wondering how I would provide for a family in an
uncertain world.
Little did I know how uncertain that world was about to become.
The Call to War
By 1775, the troubles between the colonies and the Crown had grown
into open rebellion. I was a young husband and father by then, with
your grandmother carrying our second child. But when the militia
called for men to defend Hunterdon County and this new nation we were
building, I answered that call. It was my duty, as I saw it, and I
could not turn away from it.
I served under Captain Godfrey Reinhardt in the Hunterdon County
Militia. We were organized into classes, called up in rotation for a
month's service at a time, though when danger pressed hard upon us,
the whole militia would be summoned together. I carried my rifle as a
common soldier in those early days, not knowing what lay ahead of me.
Years of Service
I will not trouble you with every tour of duty I performed,
children, for there were many, and an old man's memory grows
uncertain about the exact order of things. But I will tell you of
what I remember most clearly.
In the summer of 1776, I served under Captain Reinhardt, and later
that year under Colonel Mehelm and General Dickinson at
Elizabethtown. In the autumn, I was posted at Raritan under
Lieutenant Cramer, and then at Elizabethtown again, where I witnessed
General Washington's retreat through New Jersey as the British
pressed hard upon our army. Those were dark days, children—darker
than you can imagine. Many believed the cause was lost.
That winter, I served at Trenton and New Brunswick under Captain
Emmam. The service was harder than expected—what should have been a
month's duty stretched to six weeks in the bitter cold of January and
February 1777. I remember well how word came to us of General
Washington's victory at Trenton on Christmas night, crossing the icy
Delaware to surprise the Hessian garrison. It gave new heart to all
of us who had begun to despair.
I fought at the Battle of Millstone that winter as well, serving
alongside the Somerset troops under Colonel Frelinghausen and Colonel
Nelson, when we met the enemy at Van Eps Mills. Your grandmother and
I once rode past that very spot together, and I pointed it out to
her—strange how a quiet field can hold such memory of chaos and
danger.
The Night Raid on Staten Island
One tour I remember with particular clarity was a raid we made
against the enemy on Staten Island. We crossed at night from
Elizabethtown, meaning to catch the British garrison unaware. In the
midst of the fighting, I lost the flint from my rifle—a soldier's
nightmare, children, to have your weapon fail you in the heat of
battle. I had to duck behind a corn crib to fit a new flint and
reload while the enemy pressed close upon us.
I could hear them shouting as I worked, could hear their shots
striking near me. When I finally came out from behind that corn crib
to rejoin my comrades, I fired upon the enemy, and their musket balls
flew thick around me as I ran. I do not know by what mercy I was not
struck that night, but I have always believed the Lord had further
purpose for my life.
Rising Through the Ranks
As the war continued, Captain Reinhardt was promoted to Major, and
I was raised to the rank of Ensign in his stead. Later still, I
became a Lieutenant. I had a proper suit of regimentals made—a blue
coat faced with red, with an epaulette upon my shoulder—which I
wore when performing my duties as an officer.
It was no small thing, children, to rise from a common private to
an officer's rank. I take some quiet pride in it, though I have never
been a boastful man. It meant greater responsibility, and greater
danger too, for officers draw the enemy's particular attention in
battle.
Monmouth, Springfield, and Beyond
I fought at the Battle of Monmouth in June of 1778, one of the
fiercest engagements I witnessed in the whole war. The heat that day
was terrible—men fell from the heat as much as from British lead.
Before the battle, I had spent time on guard duty at Trenton, and
then marched with my company to Freehold and Englishtown, where the
fighting occurred.
I also served in the Battle of Springfield, and in the engagements
at Short Hills and Ash Swamp. Near the war's end, in the early months
of 1780 or perhaps 1781—my memory grows uncertain on the precise
year—I was called to Pluckemin when the Pennsylvania troops rose up
in mutiny. The militia was summoned to intercept them, and I
performed that duty as I had performed so many others.
I served under many commanders through those years—Colonel
Mehelm, Colonel Frelinghausen, Colonel Seely, General Winds, General
Dickinson. I mention their names now so that you will know I served
under real men, in real battles, for a cause I believed in with my
whole heart.
Our Family Continued to Grow
Even as the war raged, your grandmother and I continued to build
our family. Elisabetha was born in January of 1776, while I was
already engaged in militia service. John Jacob followed in April of
1779. Peter came to us about 1782, once the worst of the fighting had
passed. William arrived in August of 1785, followed by Anna about
1787. Phillip Johannes was born before October of 1791, and our
youngest, Johannes, arrived about January of 1795.
Eight children in all, children—your own parents and aunts and
uncles among them. We had each one baptized at the Zion Lutheran
Church here in Oldwick, where the pastor recorded our name in the
German fashion, as Rau. To our English neighbors, we are Row, but to
God and the old church register, we remain Rau. A name matters less
than the love and faith behind it, I have come to believe.
Peace and Prosperity
When the war finally ended in 1783, I returned to farming in
earnest, grateful to lay down my rifle and take up my plow instead.
Those years that followed were good ones. We watched our children
grow to adulthood, marry, and begin families of their own—your own
parents among them.
Mary married John Hubert in 1794. Elisabetha married Jacob Adam
Apgar, and they have given us one grandchild. John Jacob married
Elizabeth Hueven in 1803, and they have blessed us with five
grandchildren of their own. Peter married Catherine Case in 1808, and
they have one child. Anna married Johannes Auble in 1804, and they
have four children so far though I love each grandchild equally,
whether there be one or eight.
And now, just this past January, my son Phillip Johannes has
married Jane Johnson down in Somerset County. I pray they will be as
blessed in their marriage as your grandmother and I have been in
ours.
We lost William and Johannes when they were young boys, and the
pain in my heart is still there.
Reflections in My Later Years
I am an old man now, children, and I feel my strength failing in
ways it did not used to fail. My hands ache in the cold mornings, and
I tire more easily than I once did. But I do not complain, for I have
lived a full life—fuller than I ever imagined possible when I was a
young man of nineteen marrying your grandmother in 1772.
I have fought for this nation's freedom, faithfully performing my
duty through every year of that long war, from its beginning to its
end. I have built a farm and a family here in Hunterdon County. I
have watched my children grow, marry, and give me grandchildren to
bounce upon my knee and tell my stories to, as I do now with you.
I keep my accounts still in German, as I always have, and John
Beamer continues to help me with matters requiring English. I have
never been ashamed of my German heritage, children, even as I fought
for an English-speaking nation's independence. A man can love his
homeland's customs and still give his loyalty and his blood for the
country of his birth.
What I Wish for You
I want you to remember, children, that your grandfather was a
soldier who believed in the cause of liberty enough to leave his
young wife and children for months at a time, not knowing if he would
return home to them. I want you to remember that freedom was not
given to us easily—it was won through hardship, danger, and the
sacrifice of many men like myself, and of women like your
grandmother, who kept our homes and families together while we were
away.
I want you to work hard, as I have worked hard. I want you to
value your family above all worldly things, for it is family that
sustains us through both war and peace. I want you to remember your
German heritage with pride, even as you build your lives as Americans
in this new nation we fought to create.
When I am gone from this world, remember these stories I have told
you tonight. Tell them to your own children and grandchildren in
turn, so that the memory of what we endured—and what we built—does
not fade with the passing of years.
Now, children, the hour grows late, and this old soldier must rest
his weary bones. Come, give your grandfather a kiss before you go to
bed, and know that I love each and every one of you more than words
can say.
God bless you all, and may you never have to know the hardships of
war as I have known them. May you live instead in the peace and
prosperity that we fought to secure for you.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Philip Row died at his home in Tewksbury Township, Hunterdon
County, on June 9, 1817, having written his will that same day. He
was approximately sixty-four years old.
===========================
3) The Video Overview of Philip Row's life memoir, created by the Google NotebookLM AI tool, is:
4) I edited the Claude memoir text to correct minor inconsistencies and errors. Every large language model (LLM) AI tool writes descriptive text much better than I can write. The AI tools are very perceptive, insightful and inspiring, creating engaging text in seconds, including local and national historical events and social history detail when requested.
5) This is historical fiction, based on my own genealogical research and family records. It is what Philip Row might have told his grandchildren in 1815.
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