I wondered if the FREE AI tools could provide me with a story about about the courtship and early marriage years of my great-grandparents Thomas Richmond and Julia "Juliett" White of Connecticut.
My AI-assisted biographies for Thomas Richman/mond and Julia "Juliett" White, based on my genealogical research. are in ABC Biography of #10 Thomas Richman/Richmond (1848-1917) of Wiltshire, England and New England and ABC Biography of #11 Julia E. "Juliett" (White) Richmond (1848-1913) of Windham County, Connecticut.
(AI NotebookLM Infographic of Thomas Richmond and Juliett White Courtship and Marriage)
1) My Prompt to free Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 was: "Please write a story about the courtship and early marriage years (1867-1869) of Thomas Richmond and Juliett White in Connecticut."
2) The AI tool responded with this story (yes, it is historical fiction, but the way it might have been):
The Weaver's Promise
A Story of Thomas and Juliett
Chapter One: The Mill Town Meeting (Spring 1867)
The rhythmic clatter of the looms at the Killingly woolen mill
filled the air as twenty-year-old Thomas Richmond stepped through the
mill's heavy wooden doors for his first day as a carder. The English
accent he'd carried from Wiltshire had softened during his eleven
years in America, but it hadn't entirely disappeared—a fact that
made him both self-conscious and proud in equal measure.
He was inspecting the carding machines when he heard it: a clear,
bright voice cutting through the industrial din, humming a melody he
didn't recognize. Following the sound, he found a young woman seated
at a corner desk, her dark hair pinned neatly beneath a simple
bonnet, her fingers moving swiftly as she tallied inventory in a
ledger.
"Miss?" Thomas called out, then cleared his throat.
"Pardon me, miss?"
Juliett White looked up, startled, her pen pausing mid-stroke. Her
eyes—a warm brown that reminded Thomas of the Connecticut earth
after rain—met his with a mixture of surprise and wariness.
"I'm Thomas Richmond," he said, removing his cap. "The
new carder. I'm afraid I don't know where Mr. Hawkins keeps the
weekly production reports."
"Top shelf, behind the door," Juliett replied, her voice
carrying the crisp efficiency of someone used to being useful. "Filed
by week, then by department." She studied him for a moment.
"You're young for a carder."
"I'm twenty," Thomas said, perhaps too defensively.
"I've been working in woolen mills since I was twelve. My mother
was a weaver back in England. I was a weaver in Burrilville for
awhile."
Something in Juliett's expression softened. "My father works
the night shift on the looms. Henry White. Perhaps you'll meet him."
"I'd be honored, Miss White."
It was Juliett's turn to look self-conscious. "It's not 'Miss
White' exactly. I'm not married, but I'm... I'm living with my
father, his new wife and her son, and my siblings now and I need to
work outside my home. My mother passed three years ago." The
words came out matter-of-factly, but Thomas caught the tremor beneath
them.
"I'm sorry," he said quietly. "That must be
difficult."
Juliett straightened her shoulders. "We manage. Someone has
to."
Chapter Two: Choir Practice (Summer 1867)
Thomas had been attending the Baptist Church in East Killingly for
only a month when the choir director approached him after services.
"Young man, I heard you humming during the hymns. You've got
a fine voice. We could use a tenor for our choir."
It was at Wednesday evening practice that Thomas discovered
Juliett White was also a member, her fingers dancing across the small
organ in the corner while the director led the singers through their
parts.
"Miss White," he greeted her during the break, "I
didn't know you played."
"My mother taught me," Juliett said, her hands resting
on the keys. "She said music was the closest thing to prayer we
could make ourselves." She played a soft chord. "Do you
sing in England? I mean, did you, before you came here?"
"My mother used to sing while she worked at her loom,"
Thomas said, settling onto the bench beside her—close enough to be
friendly, far enough to be proper. "Old folk songs, mostly. I
don't think I knew they were beautiful until I couldn't hear them
anymore."
Juliett's fingers found a melody, tentative at first, then more
confident. "Play me one. I'll find the notes."
And so Thomas sang, his voice carrying the words his mother had
sung in a Wiltshire cottage a lifetime ago, while Juliett's hands
followed along, transforming memory into music.
From that evening on, they arrived early to every practice,
stealing twenty minutes to trade songs—his English folk tunes for
her American hymns, his memories of coal smoke and stone cottages for
her stories of Connecticut summers and her mother's garden.
Chapter Three: The Walking Path (Autumn 1867)
"Miss White—Juliett—might I walk you home?"
It had become Thomas's weekly question after choir practice, and
Juliett's answer had evolved from a hesitant "If you're going
that way" to an expected "I'd like that."
On an October evening, with leaves crunching beneath their feet
and the first hint of winter in the air, they took the long way
through town, past the quiet shops and the creek that ran behind the
church.
"My father asked about you," Juliett said, her breath
misting in the cooling air. "He says you're good with the
carding. That you listen when there's a problem and help others
learning the trade."
Thomas felt heat rise to his cheeks despite the cold. "I
remember what it's like to be the one learning. Besides, my mother
always said you catch more flies with honey than vinegar."
"Your mother sounds wise."
"She was a hard worker," Thomas said. "Still is.
She and my father built a life here from nothing. Came over with five
children and whatever they could carry." He paused. "I was
only eight. Old enough to remember England, young enough to become
American."
"Do you ever wish you'd stayed?"
Thomas considered this. "Sometimes I miss what I imagine it
might have been. But then I think—if we'd stayed, I'd probably be
working coal like my father did there. I wouldn't have learned the
carding trade." He glanced at her. "Wouldn't have met you."
Juliett stopped walking. In the lamplight from a nearby house,
Thomas could see the color in her cheeks, though whether from cold or
emotion, he couldn't say.
"Thomas Richmond," she said softly, "are you
courting me?"
"I'd very much like to be," he admitted. "If you'd
allow it. If your father would allow it."
"My father works nights," Juliett said, a small smile
playing at her lips. "He sleeps days. Which means I'm the one
who decides who comes calling at our house." She began walking
again, and Thomas hurried to catch up. "You may call on Sunday
afternoons. After church. For two hours."
"Two hours?" Thomas grinned. "That's very
generous."
"I'm a generous woman," Juliett replied. "Besides,
someone needs to teach you how to make proper American coffee. That
English tea you're always drinking won't do at all."
Chapter Four: The Proposal (Winter 1867)
The snow fell heavy on the third Sunday of December, transforming
Putnam into a hushed white landscape. Thomas had intended to wait
until spring to ask the question that had been burning in his chest
for months, but as he sat in the White family's modest parlor,
watching Juliett darn socks by the fire while her younger siblings
played quietly in the corner, he couldn't imagine waiting another
day.
"Juliett," he said, setting down his coffee cup with a
trembling hand, "might we speak privately? On the porch,
perhaps?"
She looked up from her mending, catching something in his tone.
"It's snowing."
"I don't mind the cold."
On the porch, wrapped in coats and scarves, Thomas took both of
Juliett's hands in his. Behind them, through the window, he could see
her brother and step-brother pressing their faces to the glass, their
breath fogging the panes.
"I'm not a wealthy man," Thomas began. "I have
steady work, and I'm good at what I do, but I can't promise you
luxury. What I can promise is that I'll work hard every day to
provide for you. That I'll honor you and cherish you. That I'll help
you care for your family as if they were my own." He paused,
gathering courage. "Juliett White, would you consent to be my
wife?"
Juliett's eyes glistened with tears that might have been from the
cold wind or from something deeper. "You know what you're taking
on?" she asked quietly. "A wife who comes with
responsibilities? A household to help support?"
"I know I'm taking on the finest woman I've ever met,"
Thomas said firmly. "Everything else, we'll manage together."
"Then yes," Juliett whispered. "Yes, Thomas
Richmond, I'll marry you."
Through the window, her siblings erupted in cheers that could be
heard even through the glass and falling snow.
Chapter Five: The Wedding (June 20, 1868)
East Killingly’s Baptist Church was modest but lovely, decorated
with wildflowers that Juliett's sisters had gathered that morning.
The guest list was small—Thomas's parents and siblings, Juliett's
father, his wife, and her brother and married sisters and their
husbands, and a handful of friends from the mill and the choir.
Thomas stood at the altar in his best suit, watching as Juliett
walked down the aisle on her father's arm. She wore a simple dress of
ivory cotton that she'd sewn herself, with lace at the collar that
had belonged to her mother. In her hands she carried a small bouquet
of daisies and Queen Anne's lace.
When she reached the altar, Henry White placed her hand in
Thomas's with a gruff nod that Thomas understood to mean both "Take
care of her" and "Welcome to the family."
The ceremony was brief but heartfelt. When the minister pronounced
them husband and wife, Thomas kissed Juliett gently, mindful of their
audience, and heard his mother sigh happily behind him.
At the small gathering afterward in the church hall, Thomas's
mother Hannah pulled Juliett aside. Her English accent was still
thick after twelve years in America.
"You're good for my boy," Hannah said, patting Juliett's
hand. "He needs someone strong, someone who knows her own mind.
You'll build a good life together."
"Thank you, Mrs. Richmond," Juliett said. "I hope I
can make him as happy as he's made me."
Hannah smiled. "Oh, I don't think you need to hope for that,
dear. I can see it in the way he looks at you."
Chapter Six: Home in Putnam (Summer 1868)
After the wedding, they moved to Putnam (about six miles north of
Killingly) and Thomas worked in a local mill. The little house Thomas
had rented for them in Putnam was just a few streets away from his
parents' home in Putnam—close enough to walk for Sunday dinner, far
enough to feel independent. It was small: two rooms downstairs and a
tiny bedroom upstairs under the eaves, with a kitchen garden plot out
back that Juliett immediately began planning.
"We'll plant vegetables here," she said, pacing off the
space with her skirts swishing through the grass. "Tomatoes,
beans, squash. And maybe some flowers along the fence. Mother always
said a house without flowers was like a song without music."
Thomas watched her from the back step, marveling at how quickly
this simple house had become a home with her in it. She'd already
hung curtains in the windows, placed her mother's Bible on the
mantle, and somehow made the sparse furniture they'd collected look
cozy and intentional.
"What are you smiling at?" Juliett asked, catching his
expression.
"You," Thomas said honestly. "This. All of it."
He stood and crossed to her, wrapping his arms around her waist from
behind. "I keep thinking I'm going to wake up and find this was
all a dream."
Juliett leaned back against him. "Well, you'd better not. I
have plans for this garden, and I'll need someone to help me turn the
soil."
They stood like that for a long moment, watching the sun set over
their small piece of Connecticut, their small piece of America, their
home.
Chapter Seven: New Beginnings (Spring 1869)
The morning sickness started in December, subtle at first—just a
general queasiness that Juliett attributed to something she'd eaten.
But when it continued week after week, always worst in the mornings,
Thomas's mother Hannah knew immediately.
"You're with child," Hannah announced during a Sunday
dinner, looking pleased. "I'd wager you're due sometime in mid-
or late-summer."
Juliett's hand went instinctively to her still-flat stomach. "But
I haven't... we weren't sure..."
"I've had enough children to know the signs," Hannah
said firmly. "And don't you worry about a thing. I'll teach you
everything you need to know."
True to her word, Hannah became Juliett's constant companion
through the spring and summer, teaching her about childbirth, infant
care, and the thousand small skills that came with motherhood. James
Richmond, Thomas's father, would shake his head good-naturedly at the
two women constantly huddled together, comparing notes and making
plans.
As Juliett's belly grew, Thomas found himself gripped by a mixture
of excitement and terror. He read everything he could find about
pregnancy and childbirth. He built a cradle in their small workshop,
sanding it smooth and painting it white. He worried constantly.
"You're going to wear a hole in the floor with all that
pacing," Juliett told him one evening in late August, her hand
resting on her swollen belly. "Women have been having babies
since the beginning of time. I'll be fine."
"I know," Thomas said, kneeling beside her chair and
placing his hand over hers. "But this isn't just any woman. This
is you. This is our child."
Juliett smiled and guided his hand to where the baby was kicking.
"Feel that? That's your daughter, telling you to stop worrying."
"Daughter?" Thomas raised an eyebrow. "How do you
know?"
"Mother's intuition," Juliett said confidently. "We're
having a girl, and we're going to name her Anne Frances. Annie for
short, and Frances to honor my mother."
Chapter Eight: Annie's Arrival (13 July 1869)
The labor started on a warm July evening, just as summer was in
full bloom. Thomas sent for the midwife and his mother, then spent
the next fourteen hours being utterly useless, according to Hannah,
who finally banned him from the bedroom.
"Go to your father's house," she commanded. "Or go
to the mill. Go anywhere but here, pacing and worrying and asking
every five minutes if she's all right."
Thomas went to St. Phillip’s Episcopal Church in Putnam instead,
his family’s home church, slipping into a pew in the empty building
and praying with a fervor he'd never before experienced. He prayed
for Juliett's safety, for the baby's health, for strength and courage
and mercy.
It was nearly dawn when his father found him there, still praying,
though by then it was more meditation than actual words.
"You have a daughter," James said quietly. "A
healthy, loud, beautiful daughter. And your Juliett is fine. Tired,
but fine."
Thomas ran the entire way home.
He found Juliett propped up in their bed, exhausted but radiant,
holding a tiny bundle wrapped in the blanket his mother had knitted.
The baby had a shock of dark hair and her mother's nose, and when she
yawned, Thomas felt his heart expand in a way he hadn't known was
possible.
"Anne Frances Richmond," Juliett said softly. "Say
hello to your papa, Annie."
Thomas sat carefully on the edge of the bed, unable to take his
eyes off his daughter's small, perfect face. "She's beautiful,"
he whispered. "She's absolutely beautiful."
"She has your eyes," Juliett said. "Or she will,
anyway. They're blue now, but I think they'll turn that green-gray
color like yours."
Thomas reached out tentatively, and Juliett placed Annie in his
arms. The baby weighed almost nothing, her entire body fitting in the
space between his elbow and his hand. She made a small sound,
something between a sigh and a coo, and Thomas felt tears prick his
eyes.
"Hello, Annie," he murmured. "I'm your papa. And I
promise you—I promise both of you—that I'm going to take care of
you. I'm going to work hard and be honest and make a good life for
this family."
Juliett reached out and took his free hand. "We're going to
make a good life together," she corrected gently. "The
three of us. And whoever else God sees fit to send our way."
Epilogue: Thanksgiving 1869
The Richmond family—Thomas, Juliett, and four-month-old
Annie—gathered with Thomas's parents for Thanksgiving dinner.
Hannah and Thomas’s sisters fussed over the baby while James carved
the turkey, and Juliett helped set the table, moving more slowly than
usual but regaining her strength day by day.
"A toast," James announced when everyone was seated,
raising his glass. "To family, to blessings, and to the future."
"To the future," everyone echoed.
Thomas looked around the table—at his parents who had brought
him to this country as a boy, at his siblings who were happy and fun,
at his wife who had chosen to build a life with him, at his daughter
sleeping peacefully in her grandmother's arms—and felt the weight
of gratitude settle over him like a warm blanket.
He had crossed an ocean, learned a trade, found love, and started
a family. He had transformed from Thomas Richman of Wiltshire to
Thomas Richmond of Putnam, Connecticut. He had built a life that,
while modest, was entirely his own.
And this, he thought as Juliett caught his eye and smiled, this
was only the beginning.
Author's Note: This is a work of fiction based on the
historical figures of Thomas Richmond (1848-1917) and Julia E.
"Juliett" White (1848-1913). While the biographical
details—their marriage date, the birth of their first child Annie,
their residence in Putnam, Connecticut, and their family
connections—are historically accurate, the specific scenes,
dialogue, and emotional moments are imagined. The story attempts to
honor their memory while bringing to life what their courtship and
early marriage might have been like during the post-Civil War era in
New England.
==============================
3) Here is the Video Overview of this post by Google NotebookLM.
4) This story is based on the facts that are available for the Thomas and Juliett (White) Richmond family, my paternal great-grandparents. This story is historical fiction based on social history and society norms at the time and place, so it is likely realistic. It might have happened this way.
5) I had to tell this story. Each ancestor faces challenges and experiences joys in their life, and telling stories about them helps our descendants understand the lives of their parents and ancestors, and their own lives.
==============================================
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. Note that all comments are moderated, so they may not appear immediately. Subscribe to receive a free daily email from Genea-Musings using www.Blogtrottr.com.