Sunday, May 24, 2026

Chula Vista Genealogical Society Meeting on Wednesday, 27 May Features Tina Beaird

 Wednesday, 27 May 2026, 12 noon PDT 

Chula Vista Genealogical Society 

General Meeting (in a Zoom Video Conference) 

"Grandma Nellie’s Scrapbook: Identifying and Interpreting Historic Photographs"

by Tina Beaird


Many people become heirs to a box of unidentified family photos and have no clue what to do with them. Tina will offer solutions for identifying these ‘lost’ family members by teaching attendees how to use genealogy sources in conjunction with observational techniques.

Tina Beaird is owner of Tamarack Genealogy and is also a Genealogy/Local History Librarian at the Plainfield Public Library in Plainfield, IL. Tina lectures extensively on topics including genealogical methodology, military research and archival preservation. She is a member of the Genealogical Speakers Guild and the Association of Professional Genealogists as well as First V.P. of the Illinois State Genealogical Society and Board Director for the Oswego Heritage Association. She volunteers her time with several historical and genealogical societies across Illinois. Tina has provided research assistance for nearly twenty years and has been researching her family’s history, as time permits, for over thirty years. She is a rabid baseball fan and her and her family have visited 26 out of 30 Major League Ballparks across the U.S.
 
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PLEASE REGISTER for this event on the CVGS website at  (https://chulavistagenealogysociety.wildapricot.org/event-6317022).  

An event email and reminders will be sent to all CVGS members the week before the event.  A confirmation email will be sent to all those who register with the Zoom link and the last email reminder will be sent on Wednesday morning of the event.

Attendance is free but only 100 Zoom seats are available, so please register soon.

This program will be held online using the Zoom video conferencing platform for Meetings.  It will be hosted by CVGS President Terri Seat. Contact presidentofcvgs@gmail.com if you have problems or register too late for the email.    

Please note that the meeting starts at 12 noon Pacific Time (3 p.m. Eastern time, 2 p.m. Central time, 1 p.m. Mountain time). The Zoom Meeting room will be open by 11:45 a.m. Pacific Time for visiting and helping attendees connect. The speaker handout and the program recording are available to CVGS members for two months after this event on the CVGS website "Members" tab.  

NOTE: The Chula Vista Genealogical Society offers an annual membership of $30. Besides the monthly General Meeting with a program speaker on the last Wednesday of each month, there is a monthly Research Group meeting on second Wednesdays on Zoom, an in-person Education meeting on third Tuesdays, and a Family History Ruondtable meeting on third Wednesdays on Zoom, all at 12 noon Pacific time.  There is also a monthly 8 page email newsletter chock full of program announcements, research tips, research articles, and program reviews.

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Disclosure:  I am a lifetime member of the Chula Vista Genealogical Society, a former Treasurer (2003-2004), Vice-President Programs (2005-2006), President (2007-8), and am currently the Research and Queries chairman (since 2003) and Newsletter Editor (since 2009).

The URL for this post is:  

Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post.  Share it on Twitter, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below.  Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com.  
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Betty and Fred’s Story: Building a Life Together – Late December 1943 to Early January 1944

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

And now we are up to the week after Christmas, two years into World War II, and life goes on.


               (AI NotebookLM Infographic - Late December 1943 to Early January 1944)

1)  Based on the biographies and the earlier stories, I asked Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 to tell another story - what happened next (I offered some suggestions!)?  Here is the next story (edited for more detail and accuracy): 

 Betty and Fred’s Story: Building a Life Together -- Late December 1943 — Early January 1944

The Ordinary Days After Christmas

The week between Christmas and New Year's had a particular quality to it — a looseness, a sense of the calendar holding its breath. At Rohr, the work continued without pause; the war observed no holidays in its appetite for parts and materials and the careful tracking of both. Fred was back at his desk the morning of the twenty-seventh, the plant humming around him with its usual purposeful noise, and he found he was glad for it. The work steadied him. It always had.

Betty, at home on Twin Oaks Avenue, fell into the rhythm that was becoming her days, but thought often about her grandmother Della.

Randy at two months was a different creature than Randy at two weeks — more present, somehow, more there. His eyes tracked movement with real intention now. He had discovered that certain sounds, made by his own mouth, produced interesting results in the people around him, and he was conducting what appeared to be a systematic investigation of this phenomenon. He could hold his head up briefly when placed on his stomach, a development Betty noted in the small journal she'd begun keeping, recording the ordinary miracles as they arrived.

She sang to him in the mornings while she moved through the house — not always real songs, sometimes just a running narration of what she was doing set to a loose melody, which Randy appeared to find acceptable. She took him on walks in the new baby buggy when the weather allowed, down the quiet streets of Chula Vista in the pale winter sunshine, and discovered that the motion settled him in a way that nothing else quite matched. She met two other young mothers on these walks — women in similar circumstances, husbands at work or overseas, babies in buggies, the sidewalks of a wartime neighborhood their common ground.

She wrote in her journal. She sketched — the sketchbook always within reach, Randy's sleeping face recorded from half a dozen angles, the light through the kitchen window on a January morning, the Christmas tree before Fred took it down. She was an art teacher between assignments, between school years, between one version of her life and the next, and drawing kept her hand in and her eye sharp and gave her something that was purely hers in the hours when everything else was Randy's.

She was, she recognized, happy. Tired and sometimes lonely in the specific way of women whose husbands work long hours, but genuinely, substantively happy. She wrote that in her journal too, because it seemed worth recording.


The Call from Fern Street

On the Friday before New Year's, Fred came home from Rohr at his usual hour, and Betty met him at the door with her coat already on and Randy bundled in her arms.

He read her face before she spoke.

"Della," he said.

"Mother called this afternoon. She's worse, Fred. She's — they think it won't be long now." Betty's voice was steady with the effort of keeping it steady. "I want to go over there."

"Of course," Fred said immediately. He hadn't even set down his lunch pail. "Let me wash my hands. Five minutes."

They drove to Fern Street in the dark of a December evening, the streets quiet, the last of the Christmas lights still burning in a few windows along the way. Randy slept in Betty's arms, unaware, wrapped in his blanket.

Lyle met them at the door. He looked, Betty thought, the way men looked when they had been carrying something heavy for a long time and could feel the end of the carrying coming — not relieved, not grief-stricken, but something in between that had no clean name.

"She's been unconscious since this morning," he said quietly. He looked at Fred. "Austin is with her. One of us go over every hour to sit with her" A pause. "She hasn't been in any pain. Dr. Paex came this afternoon and said she's — that it's peaceful."

Emily appeared from the kitchen, drying her hands, and took Randy from Betty without discussion. Georgianna was at the kitchen table with a cup of tea she wasn't drinking, her hands wrapped around the cup for warmth or comfort or both.

Lyle put his hand briefly on Betty's shoulder. "Come on," he said. "Come and sit with her."


The bedroom was as it had been at Christmas — warm, dim, the lamp low on the side table. Austin was in the chair beside the bed. He did not look up immediately. He was holding Della's hand, his thumb moving slowly back and forth across her knuckles in the absent, continuous way of a man who has been doing it for hours without thinking.

He looked up when Betty came to stand beside him.

"Betty, girl," he said. His voice was rough but his eyes were clear. "Sit down."

She sat on the edge of the bed, gently, and looked at Della.

In the low light, Della's face had a quality of simplification — the years of expression, the sharp eyes and the occasional wry set of the mouth — all of it quieted now, smoothed into something that was both her and before her, something that went back past the Kansas girlhood and the Wisconsin birth and reached toward whatever was before all of it.

She was breathing. Slowly, with long pauses between that made Betty count silently until the next one came.

Betty reached out and touched Della's free hand — the one Austin wasn't holding — and held it lightly.

"Hello, Grandma Della," she said softly. "It's Betty. I'm here."

The breathing continued its slow, tidal rhythm.

"Randy's here too," Betty said. "He's with Mother. He's fine. He's wonderful." She paused. "You told me to remember you. I will. I promise I will."

Austin looked at her over Della's still form with an expression that had no category — too old for categories, worn past them.

They sat together in the warm dim room, the three of them, while outside the last days of 1943 moved toward their end.


New Year's Day

Della Carringer died on the first day of January 1944 at 5:10 p.m. Austin and Lyle and Emily were with her. Austin had not left the room.

Emily telephoned Fred and Betty at six that night, her voice careful and composed in the way it got when she was managing herself through something difficult. Fred answered and listened and said yes and I understand and we'll come soon, and then he came to where Betty was feeding Randy in the rocking chair and he told her that she died, and that they had called the mortuary to take the body, and that Austin would stay with them for a few days.

Betty was quiet for a moment. She looked down at Randy, who was occupied and unconcerned.

"Eighty-one years," she said, finally. "She had eighty-one years."

"She did," Fred said.

"She held Randy." Betty said it like it mattered, like she was filing it somewhere permanent. "She held him at Thanksgiving and she said he was a fine boy. She saw four generations." A pause. "I'm glad she had that."

Fred put his hand on her shoulder and she reached up and covered it with her own.


The Arrangements

On the third of January, Lyle drove Austin into San Diego to the Benbough Funeral Parlors on First Avenue.

Austin was composed in the manner of a man who has had fifty-eight years to learn the shape of his wife and has understood for some time that this day would come and has made a private accommodation with it, whatever that accommodation cost him. He sat in the passenger seat and watched the city go by and said very little, and Lyle, who understood silence, did not fill it.

At Benbough's, a soft-spoken man in a dark suit guided them through the arrangements with a professional gentleness that Lyle found genuinely kind rather than merely practiced. Austin answered the necessary questions — Della A. Carringer, born in Waupun, Wisconsin, eighty-one years old, wife of Henry Austin Carringer, resident of San Diego for fifty-five years, member of the Neighbors of Woodcraft.

Cremation, Austin said. That had been Della's wish, expressed clearly and more than once. And inurnment at Cypress View Mausoleum, where there was already a place for both of them – Della had planned ahead.

The service would be held at Benbough's, Thursday the fifth of January, two o'clock in the afternoon. The Neighbors of Woodcraft, Della's lodge, would have a role in the service as was their custom.

The obituary ran in the San Diego Union on the fourth.

Betty read it at the kitchen table on Wednesday morning with her coffee. It was brief — the Union's notices always were — but it was accurate, and it named them all: Austin, her widower. Lyle, her son. Mrs. F.W. Seaver Jr. and Randall Jeffery Seaver of Chula Vista. Betty read her own name and her son's name in the newspaper and felt the particular solemnity of being made part of the official record of a life.

A great-grandson, the notice said. She touched the words with her finger.


The Funeral

The fifth of January was overcast, the marine layer sitting low over San Diego in the way it did in winter, a soft gray light over everything.

Sally Lyons had offered immediately, when Betty called. "Of course we'll come sit with him," And so it was Sally who arrived at Twin Oaks Avenue at noon, and who settled herself in Betty's rocking chair with Randy while Fred held Betty's coat and they said their goodbyes to their son, who was in reasonable spirits and did not appear concerned about their departure.

The service at Benbough's was what such services are — quiet, measured, the right words said in the right order by people who meant them. The room was not large and it was adequately filled. Edgar sat with Austin in the front, and Austin sat straight-backed in his dark suit with the stillness of a man exercising a lifelong discipline. Emily sat beside Lyle and did not cry during the service, though Betty, beside her, could feel what that cost. Neighbors and friends, some from Austin’s work at Rockwell Field, were there.

The Neighbors of Woodcraft conducted their portion of the service with the solemn ritual of a lodge that has done this for its members many times and believes in the doing of it. There was something in the formality that Betty found unexpectedly comforting — the sense that Della was being seen off properly, with ceremony, by a community that had known her.

Afterward, in the gray afternoon light outside the parlor, people spoke to Austin in the way people do — the pressed hands, the few words, the what-can-you-say that is still worth saying. Austin received each person with a courteous gravity. He seemed, Betty thought, to stand a little more alone in the air around him than he had before, as though some specific warmth had been removed from his immediate atmosphere.

She hugged him before they left.

"She loved you very much," she told him. "She told me to remember you both. I will."

Austin put his hand on her cheek briefly — a gesture so uncharacteristic of him that it startled her — and then he nodded and turned to speak to someone else, and Betty went to find Fred.


They drove home through the gray afternoon, the heater running, the city moving past the windows.

After a while Fred said, "Tell me about her. Tell me things I don't know."

Betty looked at him.

"About Della," he said. "You know things. Tell me."

Betty was quiet for a moment, and then she began.

"She painted," Betty said. "Watercolors, mostly. Landscapes — the Kansas plains from when she was a girl, and later California things. The houses. The bay. Eucalyptus trees. She had a particular way of doing light on water that I could never figure out, and when I asked her how she did it she said you had to look at the water longer than you thought you needed to and let your hand follow your eye." Betty paused. "I've thought about that every time I've painted since. Let your hand follow your eye. It works. It works for drawing too."

Fred said: "Is that why you became an art teacher?"

"Partly," Betty said. "She made it seem like something a woman did because she needed to, not just as an accomplishment. She took it seriously." A pause. "She took me seriously, when I drew. When I was eight years old and showed her something I'd done, she looked at it the way she'd look at a real painting. Not indulgently. Actually looked."

She watched the streets go by.

"She taught me piano," Betty said. "Wednesday afternoons for about four years. I was not a gifted student — I had the technical side but I was impatient, I wanted to play things before I'd earned them — and she never let me skip the work, but she also never made me feel stupid for wanting to run ahead. She'd say: you have to know the rules before you can decide which ones matter." Betty smiled faintly. "She said that about a lot of things."

"She must have been something when she was young," Fred said.

"She was from Waupun," Betty said. "Wisconsin. She used to tell me about the winters there — the real winters, the kind that have authority, she said. She met Austin at the ranch in Wano, Kansas in 1885 when they both proved claims there. They acted in plays together and they married there. She told me that they honeymooned to San Diego in 1887 and she looked at the harbor and the bay and said to Austin: this is where we're meant to be. And he said: then we'll stay. And they did. They stayed and they built their life here."

"From Wisconsin to San Diego," Fred said. "That's some distance."

"It was a different kind of distance then," Betty said. "Without the highways and the — it was a real journey. She talked about it sometimes. The wagons to Iowa and Kansas and Nebraska, and then the train through the desert to San Diego. Her first sight of the Pacific." Betty paused. "She said the Pacific was larger than she'd been prepared for. That Lake Michigan you could imagine the other side of. The Pacific you couldn't."

Fred nodded slowly.

"She had family stories," Betty went on, settling into it now, the stories coming up like things surfacing from deep water. "From Kansas and Nebraska — Austin's family were in Colorado when they met. There were homestead stories, hard-winter stories, the kind where you understand that the people who came before had a different relationship with difficulty than we do. She told them without complaint, without drama. Just: this is what happened and this is how it was managed." A pause. "I think that's where my father gets it from," she said, glancing at Fred. "Where Austin gets it from. That quality of — not being defeated by things."

She looked out the window.

"When they built the house," she said. "The house on Thirtieth Street, where they've been for forty-six years. She told me about choosing the lot, and Austin building most of it himself, and the first night they slept in it when it wasn't entirely finished — she said she lay there listening to the sounds of a new house settling and thought: mine. Just that. Mine. After all the moving and the journeying and the building toward something." Betty's voice had gotten quieter. "She said every woman needs a place that's hers. That you can walk every room of in the dark."

The car moved through the streets of Chula Vista. Twin Oaks Avenue appeared ahead of them.

"I want that," Betty said, quietly. "What she and Austin had. Not the same — you and I aren't the same as them, we're different people in a different time. But that length of it. That knowing each other all the way through."

Fred pulled the car to the curb in front of the house. He turned off the engine but didn't move to get out.

"You'll have it," he said. "We'll have it."

Betty looked at him in the gray afternoon light.

"Fifty-eight years," she said.

"At least," Fred said.

She took his hand. They sat for a moment in front of their house on Twin Oaks Avenue, which was not yet the place Betty could walk in the dark but would be, given time.

Then they went inside to be with their son, Della’s great-grandson.


to be continued

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2) Here is the Google NotebookLM Video Overview about Betty, Fred and Randy's life after  Christmas Day 1943:    not available now -- NotebookLM balks.

3) This story is historical fiction based on real people -- my parents and me -- and a real event in a real place. I don't know the full story of these events -- but this is how it might have been. I hope that it was at least this good! Claude is such a good story writer! I added some details and corrected some errors in Claude's initial version.

Stay tuned for the next chapter in this family story.

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The AI-assisted ABC Biography of my mother, Betty Virginia (Carringer) Seaver, is in ABC Biography of #3 Betty Virginia (Carringer) Seaver (1919-2002) of San Diego, California. I also  wrote Betty's Story: The First-Year Art Teacher about the start of her teaching career.

The AI-assisted ABC Biography of my father, Frederick Walton Seaver, is in ABC Biography of #2 Frederick Walton Seaver Jr. (1911-1983) of Massachusetts and San Diego, California.  I also wrote Fred's Story: The Three-Day Cross-Country Escape  and Fred's Story: "I Need A Girl" about him coming to San Diego, and wanting a girlfriend.

Here are the previous chapters in this story:

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

Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

The URL for this post is:  

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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Saturday, May 23, 2026

Saturday Night Genealogy Fun -- Describe An Ancestor's Occupation

  Calling all Genea-Musings Fans: 

 It's Saturday Night again - 

time for some more Genealogy Fun!!



Here is your assignment if you choose to play along (cue the Mission Impossible music, please!):


1)  Are there ancestor's occupations that you know nothing about?

2)  Pick a great-grandparent or earlier ancestor who held an unfamiliar job (cooper, cordwainer, hostler, etc.). Look it up and write a short description of what their daily work life might have been like. 

3)  Share your information about your ancestors' locations in your own blog post, writing a comment on this blog post, or put it in a Substack post, Facebook Note, or some other social media system.  Please leave a comment on this post so others can find it.

Thank you to Linda Stufflebean for this week's SNGF challenge!

Here's mine:

My second great-grandmother, Abigail A. (Vaux) Smith (1844-1931) was a Milliner.  I never knew what that was until recently.  

I asked OpenAI ChatGPT5 to tell me what a Milliner's job was, and what their daily work might have been like.  Here is the response:

A milliner was a maker and seller of women’s hats, bonnets, caps, veils, and fashionable accessories. In the 19th century, especially for women like your ancestor Abigail Smith (1844–1931), millinery was one of the few respectable skilled trades open to women. It combined sewing, design, business sense, customer service, and fashion awareness.

The word “milliner” originally came from “Milaner,” meaning someone dealing in fancy goods from Milan, Italy, but by Abigail’s time it specifically meant a hatmaker for women.

What Abigail Smith Probably Did

Abigail’s work would depend on whether she worked for another milliner shop, operated her own business, worked from home, or did seasonal piecework. Most milliners in small towns did a little of everything.

Her work likely included:

Designing and Making Hats

She would create bonnets, straw hats, silk hats, mourning hats, children’s caps, winter hoods,   decorative trims. Women’s hats in the Victorian period were elaborate and highly seasonal.

A milliner shaped and decorated straw, buckram, frames, felt, silk, velvet, lace, ribbon, feathers, artificial flowers, beads, jet ornaments, and sometimes bird wings or entire stuffed birds during the height of fashion in the 1880s-1890s.

Her Daily Work

A typical day might have looked like this:

  • Morning:  Open the shop or workroom;  Sweep floors and organize materials. Receive deliveries of ribbon, lace, feathers, or straw blanks; Meet customers wanting new hats or repairs.
  • Midday: Measure customers’ heads; Discuss styles, colors, and current fashions; Sew linings and trims by hand; Steam and shape hat frames; Attach decorations carefully with tiny stitches.
  • Much of the work required strong eyesight, nimble fingers, patience, and long hours bent over fine handwork.
  • Evening:  Finish stitching orders by lamplight; Prepare hats for display; Sometimes teach apprentices or daughters helping in the business.

During busy seasons — especially spring and Easter — she might work 12- to 14-hour days.

Millinery Was Fashion Work

Milliners had to keep up with changing styles from large cities like New York City,   Boston,   Philadelphia, and even Paris. Fashion magazines and paper patterns circulated widely by the late 1800s.

A successful milliner needed artistic taste, knowledge of fabrics, social skills, and practical business ability.

Social Status and Customers

Milliners served farm wives, town women, churchgoers, brides, widows needing mourning attire, and wealthier ladies wanting fashionable hats.

In many communities, a woman’s bonnet or hat was one of her most visible status symbols.

A good hat might be worn to church, social calls, weddings, funerals, fairs, political gatherings, or photographs.

The Work Could Be Physically Hard

Although considered “ladylike,” millinery was demanding.

Common difficulties included:

  • eye strain,

  • back pain,

  • poor lighting,

  • seasonal financial uncertainty,

  • and exposure to dust or dye chemicals.

Some hat materials were surprisingly unpleasant:

  • stiffeners used glue or shellac,

  • dyes could stain hands,

  • and feathers shed everywhere.

Milliners and Women’s Independence

Millinery gave many women rare economic opportunity in the 19th century.

An experienced milliner could own a shop, hire assistants, train apprentices, travel for supplies, and earn her own income before marriage or after widowhood.

For widowed or unmarried women, it could mean genuine independence.

That makes Abigail’s occupation especially interesting historically. She was not simply “sewing.” She was participating in commerce, fashion culture, skilled handcraft, and women’s entrepreneurship.

What Her Workplace Might Have Looked Like

A small-town millinery shop often included a front display room with mirrors and hat stands,   shelves of ribbons and flowers, sewing tables, dress forms, boxes stacked to the ceiling, and perhaps a back workroom heated by a stove.

Genealogical Clues You Might Look For

Because Abigail was a milliner, you may find:

  • city directory listings (“milliner,” “dressmaker,” or “fancy goods”),

  • newspaper advertisements,

  • business cards,

  • tax records,

  • apprenticeship records,

  • or photographs showing hats she made.

Women in this trade sometimes worked alongside sisters, daughters, or widowed relatives, so a FAN-club approach may help.

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Well now I know more than I ever knew about millinery.  ChatGPT also provided a number of historic photographs from the late 1800s to illustrate his response.  

I have only one photograph of Abbie Smith and her millinery shop in San Diego in about 1895.

(AI ChatGPT restoration of the original faded black and white photo)

Unfortunately, I don't recall seeing a photograph in my photograph collection of Abbie wearing a hat. 

You can read Abbie's life memories in Abigail A. (Vaux) Smith's Life Memories - An AI-Assisted Memoir based on my genealogical research and Anthropic Claude's historical fiction.  

Here is a Google NotebookLM Infographic about the 19th century work of a Milliner: 


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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, and may not appear immediately.

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

An AI Poem Set To Music: "The Genealogist's Quest"

 I love using the Artificial Intelligence tools to create biographies, poems, songs, memoirs, stories, infographics, audio overviews, video overviews, slide decks, briefing documents, and more.  

A year ago, I asked Anthropic Claude to create a poem about what a genealogist does, and the result was this poem titled "The Genealogist's Quest:" 

The Genealogist's Quest

In dusty archives where silence reigns,
I hunt through time's forgotten lanes,
With vital record certificates in hand—
Birth, death, and marriage, neatly planned.

The county clerk's official seal,
Makes distant ancestors feel real,
Each document a treasure trove
Of dates and places, bonds of love.

The family Bible's yellowed page
Reveals the chronicles of age,
Between the psalms and sacred verse,
Life's milestones in grandmother's cursive.

While old photographs in sepia tone
Show faces I have never known—
Victorian poses, stern and proud,
Silent voices speaking loud.

Through surname books and town histories,
I trace my ancestors' mysteries,
Local chronicles and published lore
Unlock each courthouse door.

Each periodical article a clue
To lives that once were bright and new—
Obituaries rich with praise,
Stories of their working days.

In church records, baptisms shine,
Connecting branch to family line,
Confirmation, communion, wedding bells,
Each sacred moment the ledger tells.

While census records, row by row,
Tell tales of long ago—
Occupations, ages, names,
Immigration's hopes and claims.

Military records speak of war,
Of battles fought on distant shore,
Service cards and pension files,
Tell of courage, sacrifice, and trials.

Immigration records mark the day
My forebears found their way—
Ellis Island's passenger lists,
Names checked off with ink-stained wrists.

Probate records list the goods
Left behind in neighborhoods,
Wills and estates, debts and property,
Family feuds and poverty.

Land records show the plots they owned,
The earth where seeds were sown—
Deeds and surveys, boundaries drawn,
From dusk of night to break of dawn.

In burial records, final rest
Is marked with dates and names expressed,
Cemetery plots and funeral cards,
Inscriptions weathered, worn, and scarred.

While DNA matches light the path
Through genetics' aftermath—
Cousins found across the globe,
Shared ancestors they help disrobe.

Now AI helps me sort and see
Patterns in my family tree,
Processing data, making sense
Of time's vast evidence.

Algorithms scan through millions of names,
Connecting distant family claims,
Machine learning finds the thread
Between the living and the dead.

With sources checked and stories told,
I build what never grows old—
A family tree with branches wide,
Charts that show from where I ride

Each citation carefully placed,
Every fact and date retraced,
Pedigree charts and family groups,
Time's mysteries in careful loops.

Each name a life, each date a door
To generations gone before,
In this quest that has no end,
Past and present gently blend.

Through records kept by careful hands,
I map my heritage's distant lands,
A genealogist's sacred art—
Preserving each ancestral heart.

Using the song lyrics, I used the free Suno.com song creator to put the poem to music.

I also asked Google NotebookLM to create an Infographic for the poem:


Then I used Canva.com to upload the Infographic, the poem song, and created an MP4 video of the poem/song.  Finally, I uploaded the Canva video to my YouTube channel.  

Here is "The Genealogical Quest" on my YouTube channel:


Yep, that's what we try to do!  Enjoy!!

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


Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

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, and may not appear immediately.

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ABC Biography of the Rudolf and Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler Family of York, Pennsylvania (1738-1835)

 Using the ABC method described in Using Artificial Intelligence In the Ancestor Biography Creation (ABC) Process -- Updated, enhanced by further developments, here is another ancestor couple biography using the Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 AI tool.

1) The genealogical sketches for my 4th great-grandparents Rudolf and Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler of Pennsylvania, including family members, record abstracts and sources, are in 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks - Week 84: #100 Rudolf Spengler (1738-1811) and 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks - Week 85: #101 Maria Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler (1748-1835). Rudolf Spangler was a Revolutionary War soldier.


(AI NotebookLM Infographic - Rudolf and Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler Family Biography)

2) For the Claude AI biography, I attached a PDF of the genealogical sketch for the specific ancestors using the plus (+) icon, and then prompted the AI tool with:  "You are an expert genealogist and family historian. Please create a biography based on information in the attached file for the Rudolf and Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler family. Include parents, siblings, spouses and children (with birth and death dates and places). Summarize life events, add historical events as appropriate, but do not add or embellish any extra genealogical details. Use section headings. Expand the information in each section to add more details. The tone should be engaging and suitable for family members."

3)  The Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 biography (lightly edited for accuracy) is: 



A Family History of the
Rudolf & Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler Family
of York, Pennsylvania (1738–1835)

Introduction

The story of Rudolf and Dorothea Spangler is one of industry, patriotism, and deep community roots in the borough of York, Pennsylvania. Rudolf, a craftsman of rare skill, rose from silversmith and clockmaker to soldier, politician, and respected civic leader during the founding decades of the American republic. Dorothea, born across the Atlantic in Strasbourg, France, brought with her the heritage of a family that had already made its mark in Pennsylvania colonial life. Together, they built a household of eleven children and left a legacy that would endure for generations in York County and beyond.

Their lives spanned one of the most consequential eras in American history. Rudolf was born when Pennsylvania was still a British colony, served in the Revolutionary War, and lived to see the new nation establish its institutions. Dorothea outlived her husband by nearly twenty-four years, dying in 1835 at the remarkable age of eighty-seven—a testament to her remarkable fortitude. This family biography draws on the genealogical sketch compiled by Randall J. Seaver, as well as contemporaneous sources including census records, probate documents, and period newspapers.

Rudolf Spangler: Origins and Early Life

Rudolf Spengler (the family name was also spelled “Spangler” interchangeably in colonial records) was born in 1738 in York, York County, Pennsylvania Colony. He was the son of Johann Baltzer “Baltzer” Spangler (1706–1770) and Maria Magdalena Ritter (1706–1784), who had married in 1732 in Baden-Württemberg, Germany, before emigrating to the Pennsylvania Colony. Baltzer Spangler was among the wave of German-speaking immigrants who shaped the character of York County in the early eighteenth century, bringing with them their trades, their Reformed faith, and their family traditions.

Rudolf grew up as one of eight children in the Spengler household. York was a young but growing town—it had been laid out in 1741 and incorporated as a borough in 1787—and the Spangler family were woven into the fabric of its social and commercial life from the very beginning. His father Baltzer, who died in 1770, appears to have established the family firmly in York, where multiple generations would remain for over a century.

Rudolf’s Parents

Rudolf’s parents, Johann Baltzer Spangler and Maria Magdalena Ritter, married in 1732 in Baden-Württemberg before settling in York, Pennsylvania Colony, where they raised their family. Baltzer died in 1770 and Magdalena in 1784.

Rudolf’s Siblings

Rudolf was the fifth of eight children born to Baltzer and Magdalena Spangler:
  • George Spengler (born 20 March 1732, Weiler, Rheinland-Pfalz; died 2 October 1810, York). He married Anna Maria Schultz about 1755 in York.
  • Maria Juliana Spengler (born 25 October 1734, York; died 1770, York). She married Johann Frantz Wilhelm Bickle on 12 December 1757 in York.
  • Johann Baltzer Spengler (born 16 April 1735, York; died 1 August 1798, York). He married Christina Messerschmidt before 1761 in York.
  • Michael Spengler (born about 1737, York; died August 1793, York). He married Margaret Dinkel—notably a member of the same Dinkel family into which Rudolf himself would marry.
  • Rudolf Spengler (born 1738, York) – the subject of this biography.
  • Elizabeth Spengler (born 1740, York; died 25 November 1825, York). She married Francis Koontz on 5 November 1764 in Lancaster.
  • Daniel Spengler (born about 1742, York; died about 1777, York). He married Maria Elisabetha Leightner on 29 December 1765 in York.
  • John Spengler (born 29 June 1747, York; died 11 October 1796, York). He married Margaret Barth in 1777 in York.
Interestingly, the Spengler and Dinkel families were already intertwined before Rudolf and Dorothea’s marriage: Rudolf’s brother Michael married a Margaret Dinkel, and Dorothea’s sister Margaret Salome Dinkel married a Philip Caspar Spengler. These overlapping family ties were common in tight-knit German immigrant communities where a relatively small group of families formed the social and commercial core of a community.

Dorothea Dinkel: Origins and Early Life

Maria Dorothea Dinkel was born about 1748 in Strasbourg, Alsace, France—a city at the crossroads of French and German culture situated on the Rhine River at the border of modern France and Germany. She was the daughter of Johann Daniel Dunckel (1713–1755) and Maria Ursula Hornuss (1713–1793), who had married in 1735. The family emigrated from Strasbourg, likely during the 1740s or early 1750s, joining the large flow of German-speaking Alsatian and Palatine immigrants who settled in Pennsylvania—a journey of several weeks by ship across the Atlantic followed by travel inland to York County.

Dorothea’s father, Daniel, died in 1755 when she was just a young child, leaving her mother Ursula to raise the family. Ursula Hornuss Dinkel lived to 1793, long enough to see her children established in Pennsylvania society. The Dinkel family settled in York, where Dorothea grew up alongside her siblings in the same German Reformed community that the Spanglers called home.

Dorothea’s Parents

Dorothea’s father, Johann Daniel Dunckel, was born in 1713 and died in 1755 at the age of only forty-two, leaving her mother Maria Ursula Hornuss (1713–1793) to raise the children. Ursula lived to eighty years of age.

Dorothea’s Siblings

Dorothea was the youngest of six children born to Daniel and Ursula Dinkel in Strasbourg before the family emigrated to Pennsylvania:
  • Margaret Salome Dinkel (born 6 April 1736, Strasbourg; died 29 June 1813, York). She married Philip Caspar Spengler about 1752 in York—another member of the Spengler family, drawing the two families into close kinship.
  • Anna Maria Dinkel (born about 1738, Strasbourg; died 23 February 1797, York). She married Philip Albright about 1760 in York.
  • Johann Daniel Dinkel (born 17 June 1741, Strasbourg; died 1812, Bridgewater, Rockingham, Virginia). He married Anna Margaret Ruhl before 1758 in York, before later moving to Virginia.
  • Peter Dinkel (born 11 July 1742, Strasbourg; died 22 December 1827, York). He married Anna Elizabeth Wolfe on 15 February 1767 in York, just two weeks after Dorothea’s own wedding.
  • Maria Catherina Dinkel (born 22 June 1746, Strasbourg; died 22 March 1831, York). She married David Candler on 30 October 1763 in York.
  • Maria Dorothea Dinkel (born about 1748, Strasbourg) – the subject of this biography.
Marriage and Life Together in York

Captain Rudolf Spengler and Maria Dorothea Dinkel were married on 1 January 1767 at Trinity Reformed Church in York, Pennsylvania Colony. Rudolf was approximately twenty-eight years old and Dorothea was about eighteen. The marriage record appears in the church’s register, where their names are recorded as “Rudolph Spengeler” and “Dorothea Duenckel.”

The wedding day itself is immortalized in a charming anecdote: on the morning of his wedding, Rudolf went with his gun and deer hounds to Baumgardner’s Woods, a mile southeast of York, where he shot a deer to provide venison for his own nuptial dinner. The story speaks volumes about the man—self-reliant, vigorous, and thoroughly at home in the Pennsylvania countryside.

The couple settled in York, where they would spend the rest of their lives. It was a propitious time to build a life in York County: the borough was growing steadily, trade was flourishing, and the German-speaking community was well established. Rudolf’s craft skills, civic ambitions, and military service would place the Spangler name among the most respected in the region.

Rudolf’s Trades and Crafts

Rudolf Spengler was a silversmith and clockmaker by trade—skilled crafts that required both artistic talent and technical precision. As a silversmith he worked with precious metals, fashioning decorative and functional objects for the wealthier families of York. As a clockmaker, he crafted timepieces of lasting quality. When the historian Edward W. Spangler was researching his 1896 book The Annals of the Families of Caspar, Henry, Baltzer and George Spengler, he discovered three tall “grandfather’s clocks” still in existence that Rudolf had made, each bearing the inscription “Rudy Spengler, York town” on its dial. These surviving artifacts are remarkable testaments to his craft. By 1773 he had expanded his activities and was assessed as a merchant in York—a sign of growing prosperity and commercial ambition.

Revolutionary War Service

When war with Britain broke out in 1775, Rudolf Spangler did not hesitate. He became a member of Captain George Eichelberger’s Company in 1775 and was shortly afterward elected Captain of the Sixth Company of the York County Militia. This unit was part of the five York County battalions that marched to eastern New Jersey in 1776 to form the famous “Flying Camp”—a mobile reserve force of some ten thousand troops assembled by Congress to defend the Middle Colonies.

The Flying Camp saw significant action during the critical New York and New Jersey campaigns of 1776, a period of severe hardship for the Continental cause. Rudolf’s willingness to lead men into this dangerous theater of the war earned him the honorific title “Captain,” by which he was known for the rest of his life. This title was engraved on his gravestone, a mark of enduring honor.

Property and Civic Affairs

The U.S. Census of 1790 shows the Rudolph Spangler household in York Township with one adult male, eight males under the age of sixteen, and three females—a lively and full household reflecting his large family. By 1798, the Direct Tax List documents his substantial property holdings: he owned at least two houses (one a two-story brick house on West Market Street, the other unfinished), a stable, a barn, and a brick kitchen, as well as land parcels in York Township. The larger house was assessed at $1,750 and the second at $400—meaningful sums at the time.

Rudolf served as County Treasurer from 1801 to 1805. He was a State Senator and Burgess of York in 1803, and a member of the General Assembly of Pennsylvania in 1810—the year before his death. By 1805 he had patented lands in what is now Springgarden Township, and his property holdings extended across multiple lots on East Market, South Queen, King, and High Streets in York. His civic career, by any measure, was one of remarkable distinction for a man who had arrived in the world as the son of a German immigrant craftsman.

Their Children

Rudolf and Dorothea raised eleven children together in York, Pennsylvania. The family was a central part of York’s German Reformed community, and their children married into many of the county’s most prominent families.
  • General John Jacob Spengler (born 28 November 1767, York; died 17 June 1843, York). Married (1) Susannah Hay on 5 May 1791 in York, seven children; married (2) Catherine Allen Hamilton on 23 May 1820 in Harrisburg, five children. He achieved the rank of General, continuing the family’s military tradition.
  • Maria Catherine Spengler (born 1 January 1770, York; died 27 December 1824, York). Married George Augustus Barnitz in 1792 in York, seven children.
  • Elizabeth Spengler (born 23 February 1773, York; died 14 April 1844, York). Married William Nes before 1793 in York, five children.
  • Margaret “Recky” Spengler (born 14 March 1773, York; died 15 April 1852, Winchester, Frederick, Virginia). Married Joseph Slagle on 22 September 1807 in York, six children. She outlived her siblings, dying at age seventy-nine in Virginia.
  • Jesse Spengler (born 5 July 1775, York; died 12 September 1860, York). Married Mary D. Heckert before 1798 in York, nine children. Jesse lived to the extraordinary age of eighty-five.
  • Johannes Spengler (born 22 May 1777, York). No further records are noted for Johannes.
  • Anna Maria Spengler (born about 1779, York; died 11 April 1816, York). Married Peter Schmahl on 27 April 1797 in York, four children. Anna Maria died relatively young at around age thirty-seven.
  • Daniel Spangler (born 9 October 1781, York; died 19 July 1851, Georgetown, Beaver, Pennsylvania). Married Elizabeth King on 12 March 1815 in York, ten children. Daniel relocated to western Pennsylvania.
  • Mary Margaret Spengler (born about 1783, York; died 1841, York). Married Martin Kieffer in 1804 in York, no children.
  • Peter Spengler (born 16 May 1786, York; died 22 May 1823, York). Married Sarah Gardner on 15 October 1812 in York, four children. Peter died young at age thirty-seven, just eleven days after his birthday.
  • Helen Dorothea Spengler (born 24 June 1789, York; died 15 May 1842, York). Married Charles Frederick Fisher on 2 October 1808 in York, four children.
Rudolf’s will, written around 1807 and proved on 26 August 1811, named four sons—Jacob, Jesse, Daniel, and Peter—and five daughters—Catherine (wife of George Barnitz), Elizabeth (wife of William Nes), Mary (wife of Peter Small), Margaret (wife of Joseph Slagle), and Magdalena (wife of Charles Fisher). Note that the will uses the given name “Magdalena” for what family records call Helen Dorothea—a reminder that informal names and legal names did not always agree in this era. The will left all of Rudolf’s estate to Dorothea for her lifetime, with the remainder to be divided equally among the children after her death. The document is a model of clarity and fairness, characteristic of the man himself.

Rudolf’s Final Years and Death

By the time of the 1810 Census—just a year before his death—Rudolf’s household had grown smaller. Most of his children had married and established their own homes. The census records show one man over forty-five, a younger man between sixteen and twenty-six, a younger woman in the same age range, and an older woman—likely Dorothea—still at home.

Rudolf Spengler died on 5 August 1811 in York, at approximately seventy-three years of age. His obituary, published in The York Recorder on August 10, 1811, captured the esteem in which he was held:
“Died, in this borough, at an advanced age, on Thursday last, Rudolf Spangler, Esq. The confidence reposed in the deceased by his fellow citizens in choosing him to serve in the State Senate and House of Representatives, are sufficient testimonials that in private and public life he was the honored and upright man. His remains were yesterday deposited in the German Reformed burying ground, attended by a long train of mourning relatives and friends.”
He was initially interred in the German Reformed burying ground, and was later buried alongside his wife at Prospect Hill Cemetery in York, where their shared gravestone still stands today.

Dorothea’s Long Widowhood and Death

When Rudolf died in 1811, Dorothea was approximately sixty-three years old. She would spend nearly a quarter-century more as his widow, living to the remarkable age of eighty-seven. Around 1815, a left-profile sketch of Dorothea was drawn, which was later preserved in a Spangler family history book—a rare and touching memento of a woman who had lived through the entire founding era of the American republic.

In 1834, at approximately eighty-six years of age, Dorothea penned her last will and testament entirely in her own hand and entirely in German—the language of her Strasbourg childhood and her York community. The will was authenticated in court after her death by local citizens who could verify her signature, a testament to the respect she commanded in the community.

Maria Dorothea Spangler died on 12 June 1835 in York, Pennsylvania. Her obituary, published in The York Gazette on June 18, 1835, remembered her with warmth and reverence:
“In memory of Dorothea Spangler, relict of Rudolf Spangler, deceased… How few they that arrive at that period of life, blessed with a happy temperament of mind. She led the life of a pure and upright Christian. Relatives and friends revere and cherish her memory.”
She was laid to rest beside her husband at Prospect Hill Cemetery in York. Their shared gravestone bears an inscription that is as simple and dignified as their lives:

Rudolf Spangler Born 1738 Died Aug. 5 1811 Capt. 1775

Dorothea Spangler Born 1748 Died June 12, 1835

Legacy and Historical Significance

The story of Rudolf and Dorothea Spangler is, in many ways, the story of early America itself. Rudolf’s father crossed the Atlantic as part of the great German migration that transformed colonial Pennsylvania; Rudolf himself fought in the Revolution and helped build the new nation’s institutions; and his children spread across Pennsylvania and beyond as the young country expanded. Dorothea brought a distinctly European heritage—born in Alsace, raised amid the French and German cultures of the Rhine borderlands—and grafted it onto the deeply rooted German-American community of York.

Their eleven children—who married into families named Barnitz, Nes, Slagle, Heckert, Schmahl, King, Kieffer, Gardner, and Fisher—wove the Spangler family into the very fabric of York County society. Son General John Jacob Spengler continued the military tradition his father had begun, rising to the rank of general. Son Jesse lived to eighty-five, long enough to see the Civil War threaten the union his grandfather had helped create.

The three grandfather clocks bearing the inscription “Rudy Spengler, York town” that still survived into the 1890s when genealogist Edward W. Spangler found them are perhaps the most evocative symbol of Rudolf’s life: handmade objects of lasting beauty and utility, built by a man who measured time carefully and used it well.

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4) An Audio Overview (essentially a podcast) created by the Google NotebookLM AI tool) describing and celebrating the lives of the Rudolf and Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler family can be heard here (click on "Play" for the "Audio Overview").

5)  The Video Overview discussing the Rudolf and Dorothea (Dinkel) Spangler family created by the Google NotebookLM AI tool is:  


6)  The Slide Deck produced by Google NotebookLM was incorporated into a Google Slides file, and the created Google Vids presentation is below:  


7)  I edited the Claude biography text to correct minor inconsistencies and errors. Every large language model (LLM) AI tool writes descriptive text much better than I can write. I was an aerospace engineer in my former life, and my research reports and genealogical sketches reflect "just the facts gleaned from my research." The AI tools are very perceptive, insightful and create readable text in seconds, including local and national historical events and social history detail when requested.

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


Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver

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, and may not appear immediately.

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