I wrote an AI-assisted ABC biography for my great-grandfather Henry Austin Carringer in ABC Biography of #12 Henry Austin Carringer (1853-1946) of Pennsylvania, Iowa, Colorado, Kansas and California, based on my genealogical research over 38 years.
I wondered what Austin Carringer might have told his only granddaughter in a life memoir in 1945.
(AI Google NotebookLM Infographic for Austin Carringer's life memoir)1) I requested Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 to "Please write a life memoir for Henry Austin Carringer based on the attached biography, as he might tell his granddaughter in 1945."
2) The AI Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.5 memoir (edited for accuracy and completeness) is:
My Life Story: As Told to My
Granddaughter Betty
By Henry Austin Carringer, 1945
Well, Betty, you've asked me to tell you about my life, and at 91
years old, I suppose I've lived long enough to have a few stories
worth telling. Pull up that chair your grandmother designed, and I'll
do my best to remember it all.
The Early Days in Pennsylvania and Beyond
I was born Henry Austin Carringer on November 28, 1853, in Mercer,
Pennsylvania, though I can't say I remember much about the place.
Everyone has always called me Austin -- never Henry. I think it was a
German family tradition, or maybe just the way my father liked it. My
father’s father was Henry Carringer and I loved that old man. My
father, David Jackson Carringer – everyone called him D.J. -- was a
farmer, carpenter and joiner, one of the finest craftsmen you'd ever
meet. My mother, Rebecca Spangler, came from good Pennsylvania German
stock, and she kept us all in line.
I had a brother, Harvey, who was one year older than me, and a
sister, Epha – we called her Effie. We were a close family, though
Harvey and I were as different as could be. He took to farming and
ranching later on, while I followed Father into the carpentry trade.
When I was just a small boy, maybe four or five years old, Father
decided we needed to move west. That's how we ended up in Iowa --
Columbus City in Louisa County, to be exact. I remember going to
school there with Harvey. The 1860 Census would have shown me as
seven years old, sitting in a one-room schoolhouse learning my
letters and numbers. Father had done well enough -- he had a little farm property, a little money set aside. We weren't rich by any means, but
we weren't poor either.
By the time I was a teenager, we'd moved again to Jackson township
in Washington County, Iowa. I kept going to school when I could, but
I was also learning the trade from Father. There's something
satisfying about working with your hands, Betty -- taking a piece of
raw lumber and turning it into something useful and beautiful. I wish
more young people understood that today.
In 1873, when I was about 20 years old, after the tornado almost
killed my mother and bad farming years and we had to sell the farm,
Father got the wanderlust again. This time we headed to Boulder,
Colorado. Now that was real frontier country back then! The air was
so clear and crisp you felt like you could see forever. And then my
sister Effie died at age 15 – we all were devastated. The 1880
Census caught us there -- Father at 51 still working as a carpenter
and joiner, Mother keeping house, Harvey trying his hand at farming,
and me at 26, listed as a millwright and carpenter. I was learning
more specialized work by then, understanding machinery and how to
build the mechanisms that powered mills and factories.
Meeting Your Grandmother
Kansas is where I met the love of my life, your grandmother Della.
It was 1884, and I was 31 years old -- starting to think I might end
up a bachelor. I had applied for homestead land in Kansas, in a
little place called Wano in Cheyenne County, and her family did too –
we were neighbors -- that's where we really got to know each other.
Now, Della wasn't just a pretty face, though she was certainly
that. She was smart as a whip and had a creative spirit that matched
my own. We performed in plays together at the local playhouse - can
you imagine your old grandfather on stage? We did "Lady Audley's
Secret" and "The Dairyman's Daughter" and several
others. Della kept all the playbills and notices in her scrapbook.
Those were magical evenings, Betty, with the whole community coming
together for entertainment.
We courted for two years. I know that seems like a long time now,
but I wanted to be sure I could provide for a wife, and Della was
worth waiting for. We finally married on September 11, 1887, right
there in Wano. Reverend Emanuel Richards performed the ceremony at
noon. A fellow named A.E. Boring was our witness -- I always got a
chuckle out of that name, though he was a strange fellow and anything
but boring.
The Journey to California
After we married, we did something that still amazes me when I
think back on it. We bought train tickets to San Diego, California
from Denver. We had exactly twenty dollars in our pockets, Betty.
Twenty dollars! We called it our honeymoon, but really it was a leap
of faith.
Your grandmother and I figured that if we had each other and our
skills, we could make it anywhere. And San Diego -- oh, Betty, you
should have seen San Diego in 1887! It was so much smaller than it is
now. The air smelled of salt and eucalyptus, and you could feel the
possibility in the air.
I found work right away as a carpenter at the lumber mills in
National City. It was hard work, but honest work, and it paid enough
to get us started. I even joined the National City Fire Department -
Active Hose No. 1. That was quite an experience, I can tell you! When
the alarm bell rang, we'd all come running, and there was real
camaraderie among the men.
Joy and Sorrow
In August of 1889, we had our first child. The San Diego Union
even announced it - said we had "a bright faced boy, who tips
the scales at nine pounds." We named him Devier David, after
both his grandfathers - Della's father Devier Smith and my father
David Jackson Carringer.
Betty, I'm not sure I can properly describe the joy we felt. After
two years of marriage, working hard and saving what we could, to have
a healthy baby boy seemed like all our dreams coming true at once.
But life has a way of teaching you hard lessons. On May 10, 1890,
little Devier died. He was only nine months old. One day he was fine,
laughing and playing, and the next... well, the next he was gone.
I've lived 91 years now, Betty, and I can tell you that was the
hardest thing I've ever faced. People sent us cards and letters -- I
remember one with gold lettering on black that said "One less at
home" and went on about heaven and God's will. Family wrote from
Kansas and Pennsylvania trying to console us, telling us it was part
of God's plan.
Your grandmother and I, we couldn't accept that. We'd been raised
Christian, gone to church, said our prayers. But what kind of God
takes a baby? We decided right then that we didn't need religion --
we had each other, and we had our values of working hard and being
kind to others. That's been our religion ever since, and it's served
us well enough.
A New Beginning
On November 2, 1891, your father Lyle was born in a house at 16th
and H Streets in San Diego. We were terrified, if I'm being honest.
After losing Devier, every cough, every fever filled us with dread.
But Lyle was strong and healthy, and watching him grow eased some of
the pain we'd carried.
We moved around a bit in those early years - 28th and Logan in
'93, then Della opened an art studio at 29th and Logan in '95. Your
grandmother has always had that artistic eye. She painted, she
designed furniture, she could make any place beautiful. I have the
skills to build things, but she has the vision to imagine them first.
There's a family picture from 1895 that I treasure - Lyle sitting
in a little wagon, me with my bicycle (I was quite proud of that
bicycle!), Della's mother Abigail, and my brother Edgar, all posed in
front of Abigail’s hat shop. Those were good years, Betty. We were
building something.
Building Our Home
In 1894, we bought nine lots in what they called Seaman and
Choate's Addition - down at 30th and Watkins Avenue. Cost us $450,
which was everything we'd saved. We put it in Della's name -- I
always believed a woman should have property of her own.
For three years we saved every penny we could. I kept working at
Russ Lumber and Mill Company, and Della took in art students.
Finally, in 1897, we had enough. The San Diego Union reported
that a building permit was issued to Della A. Carringer for a "$600
residence."
I built that house with my own hands, Betty. Every board, every
nail, every window frame. It was two stories, facing Watkins Avenue
(they call it Hawthorn Street now). I did all the finish work inside
- the moldings, the built-in cabinets, even some of the furniture.
Della designed it, and I built it. That's how we've always worked.
There's a photograph from around 1900 showing the whole family at
that house -- me and Della, young Lyle, my parents who'd come out
from Colorado in 1898, my brother Edgar, and Della's mother Abbie.
Even the family horse is in the picture! We used a horse-drawn surrey
to take ourselves and the neighbors down to the streetcar line at
16th and D Street. That was quite a journey in those days.
A Life of Work
I worked at Russ Lumber in National City and then in downtown San
Diego for years, learning every aspect of the trade. I worked as a
carpenter, a machinist, whatever was needed. Your grandmother and I,
we always believed in being useful, in learning new skills.
Then in 1917, when I was already 64 years old - an age when most
men are thinking about slowing down -- I did something unexpected. I
became an aviation mechanic at Rockwell Field, the U.S. Army Aviation
Station over in Coronado.
Now, Betty, you have to understand what that meant. I'd spent my
whole life working with wood, with traditional tools and methods. And
here was this new technology -- airplanes! Flying machines! It seemed
like something out of a Jules Verne novel. But I realized that wood
and fabric were still the main materials in those early planes. They
needed someone who understood how wood moved and behaved, how to work
it precisely, how to join pieces so they'd hold under stress.
I became the foreman of the wood and fabric section in the
airplane repair shop. For ten years, I supervised the repairs on
military aircraft. Young men would come through -- some of them
weren't even born when I started working with wood -- and I'd teach
them how to do it right. It was some of the most satisfying work of
my life, Betty. Here I was, an old-timer, contributing to the newest
technology mankind had ever developed.
I retired on my 79th birthday in 1932, after 15 years of service.
The fellows at the shop got together and presented me with a letter
of appreciation, a clock inside an eight-foot wide wooden propeller,
and this big, comfortable easy chair -- the one you're sitting near
right now. I was touched by that, I truly was.
Our Home and Philosophy
Over the years, Della and I kept improving our property. In the
1920s, we did a major renovation. We moved the original house to the
middle of the block -- it's 2115 30th Street now -- and turned the
front porch so it faces south to catch the sun. We added rooms to the second-story and made it a separate flat with an external staircase, and stuccoed over
everything. You can't even tell now what the original structure
looked like.
We also built a two-story apartment house at 2114 and 2116 Fern
Street. That took some doing - we had to get a trust deed for $4,000
-- but it's been a good investment.
Your grandmother has always said that flowers are her hobby, and
our lot shows it. We've planted and grown just about every kind of
fruit and vegetable that grows in California. Della designed some of
our furniture, and I built it to her specifications. We've always
worked as partners, Betty, and that's been the secret to our long
marriage.
Golden Years
In 1937, the San Diego Union did an article about us on our golden
wedding anniversary -- 50 years married! They took our picture and
called us "True Vowers." The reporter asked Della about our
philosophy of life, and she said something I've always been proud of:
"We have worked hard as partners and tried always to be kind and
helpful to others. After all, we are of the opinion that this is the
best religion to make a happy and successful life."
That's it, Betty. That's what I want you to remember. No fancy
theology, no complicated rules. Just work hard, be kind, help others,
and partner with someone who shares your values.
We've been careful with our property and our affairs. A few years
back, in 1939, we signed everything over to your father Lyle, though
we kept the right to live here and collect any rent during our
lifetimes. It's important to plan these things, to make sure the
family is taken care of.
Reflections
I've lived through so much, Betty. I was born before the Civil War
started. I've seen the country stretch from coast to coast. I've
watched technology change from horse-drawn carriages to automobiles
to airplanes, from letters to telegraphs and telephones and radio, from outhouses to modern toilets and running water. I've lived through the Civil War, the Spanish-American War, the Great
War, and now this terrible Second World War that's finally winding
down.
I've been demanding in my old age -- I know that. When you've
lived as long as I have and worked as hard as I have, you develop
opinions about how things should be done. But I hope you'll remember
that everything I've done, I've done with purpose and care.
Your grandmother Della passed away last year, and I miss her every
single day. Fifty-seven years of marriage, Betty. She was small and
got wrinkled in her old age, but she was always beautiful to me. We
built this life together, brick by brick, board by board.
I don't know how much longer I have -- I'm 91 now, and my body is
wearing out. But I've had a good life, Betty. I've seen this country
grow. I've raised a good son in your father. I've worked with my
hands and my mind. I've loved deeply and been loved in return.
That's really all any person can ask for, isn't it?
A Final Thought
You have been a beautiful granddaughter, with your grandmother’s art talents, now married with a husband and baby to love, nourish and cherish. Life goes on.
When I'm gone, Betty, I hope you'll remember that life is about
partnership, perseverance, and practical skills. Don't wait for
miracles or divine intervention. Make your own luck through hard work
and kindness. Find people who complement your strengths and shore up
your weaknesses. Build something lasting -- whether it's a house, a
family, or just a reputation for honest work.
Your grandmother and I will be together at Cypress View Mausoleum
when my time comes. We came to California with twenty dollars and
built a life and a house. That's our legacy to you and your
generation.
Now, enough of an old man's rambling. Why don't you help me out to
the garden? Your grandmother planted some roses that are blooming
beautifully, and I like to sit among them and remember.
Henry Austin Carringer passed away on November 30, 1946, just
two days after his 93rd birthday. He was cremated and inurned with
his beloved wife Della at Cypress View Mausoleum in the Bronze
Corridor, Niche 61, where they rest together still. Still remembered, not
forgotten!
===========================
3) The Video Overview of Austin Carringer's life memoir, created by the Google NotebookLM AI tool, is: not available yet.
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 Austin Carringer might have told his granddaughter, my mother, in 1945.
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