I wondered if my AI Assistant Anthropic Claude could provide me with information about my wife's ancestral family's life in 1905 in Kendrick, Idaho. My wife's great-grandparents Nicholas Brocke (1855-1938) and Anna Grieser (1859-1936) had moved to Kendrick, Idaho in 1877 and had eight children. I posted an ABC Biography for them in ABC Biography of John Nicholas Brocke (1855-1938) and Anna Grieser (1859-1936) Family of Nebraska and Idaho.
I asked Anthropic Claude to create a description of the Nicholas Brocke family life and work in Kendrick, Idaho in 1905, based on the biography and social history. Part 1 was posted in Ask AI: "Describe the Life of the Nicholas Brocke Family in Kendrick, Idaho in 1905" -- Part 1; Part 2 is in Ask AI: "Describe The Life of the Nicholas Brocke Family of Kendrick, Idaho in 1905" – Part 2.
The Claude Sonnet 4.6 response was (this is Part 3 of 3):
The Nicholas Brocke Family of Kendrick, Idaho
A Year in Their Lives in 1905 – Part 3
September: Harvest
September brought harvest, and the farm became a scene of organized intensity. Nicholas hired three extra hands from Kendrick, and Frank was there every day. Even John came out on weekends to help—the harvest was the one time when everyone pulled together.
Joseph worked from dawn to dusk without complaint, doing a full man's share. Charles, twelve, hauled water and ran errands and spelled the men on lighter tasks. Even young Nicholas, ten years old, had his role—keeping track of the filled grain sacks as they piled up, running tallies that his father reviewed approvingly.
"You counted right," Nicholas told him at the end of the first day. "Every sack accounted for."
"Of course," the boy said, as if any other result were inconceivable.
The Turkey Red wheat came off the north twenty acres first, and the yield was immediately impressive—plump, heavy kernels that ran through the threshing machine in a satisfying stream of gold.
"What did I tell you?" Frank said, not quite keeping the satisfaction out of his voice.
"You told me twenty percent increase. Let's wait and see what the numbers say before you gloat," Nicholas replied.
The numbers said twenty-two percent. Nicholas didn't let on how pleased he was until he was alone with Anna that evening.
"Frank was right about the wheat," he said, sitting down to take off his boots.
"He usually is," Anna said. "He has your instincts."
"He has better instincts than me," Nicholas said, surprising himself with the admission. "He thinks further ahead."
Anna smiled. "That's what sons are for."
By the end of September, the harvest was in. Nicholas sat at the kitchen table with his account book, adding up columns of figures with the careful attention of a man who'd learned the hard way that every penny mattered. When he finished, he set down his pen.
"Best harvest we've had," he told Anna. "Maybe the best since we've been here."
Anna crossed herself. "Thanks be to God."
"And to Frank's Turkey Red wheat," Nicholas added, and Anna laughed.
October: The Latah County Fair and Community Affairs
October brought the Latah County Fair in Moscow—a major event that the Brocke family attended in force. Nicholas loaded the wagon with his best wheat samples and several varieties of apple from the orchard. Anna packed her prize-winning preserves and a beautiful quilt she'd been working on since January.
John and Etta May came with their daughter, and Frank and Julia were there, Carrie and Harland made it a real family outing. Even Charles and young Nicholas came, their eyes wide at the fairground excitement.
Only Joseph stayed home—he was seventeen and had been given charge of the farm for the day, a responsibility Nicholas trusted him with completely.
The fairgrounds were their own world: livestock competitions, produce displays, machinery exhibitions, horse races, and all manner of food and entertainment. Nicholas walked the agricultural exhibits with Frank, studying new equipment, collecting pamphlets, talking with other farmers.
There was a display of a new type of combine harvester that caught Nicholas's attention. He studied it for a long time.
"Still think it's too expensive," Frank said beside him.
"It is too expensive," Nicholas agreed. "Right now. But you're right—in ten years, everyone will have one." He paused. "Make sure we're ready when that time comes."
Nicholas won first prize for his apples and second for his wheat—the Turkey Red variety had performed well in the competition too, which Nicholas pointed out to Frank with a straight face.
"Second place wheat, Pa," Frank said dryly. "Very impressive."
"Better than third."
Anna won first prize for her strawberry preserves and second for her quilt, which delighted her. They celebrated with pie from one of the fair vendors, sitting together at a picnic table in the October sunshine.
"Look at us," Carrie said, gesturing around the table at her parents, her brothers, her sister-in-law Julia. "A proper family outing."
"Missing a few," Nicholas said quietly, and they all knew he meant Etta in Spokane and Amelia in Gardiner, Montana.
"I'll write to them both this week and tell them about the fair," Anna promised. "Every detail."
Late October brought the school board meeting focused on the upcoming winter term. Nicholas advocated for a new set of arithmetic books—the ones currently in use were ten years old and falling apart. It took three meetings and considerable persuasion before the board approved the expenditure.
"Education costs money," Nicholas said at the final meeting, with some exasperation. "That's the price of having an educated community. Pay it."
November: Thanksgiving and Reflection
November brought the first hard frosts and the satisfying work of putting the farm to bed for winter—draining the irrigation pipes, banking the foundations of the farm buildings, getting in the last of the root vegetables, ensuring the animals were well set up for the cold months ahead.
A letter arrived from Etta in Spokane with a photograph enclosed. Little Frederick was two years old now, a serious-looking boy in a stiff collar. The baby Thelma was four months old in her mother’s arms. Nicholas propped the photograph on the mantelpiece where he could see it from his chair.
Another letter came from Amelia. Juanita at seventeen months was well, and baby Evelyn at 5 months was thriving, she wrote, both growing fast and strong. She was finding her footing in Gardiner—had made some good friends, was active in the Catholic parish there. She hoped to bring the children to Kendrick for a visit next summer, if travel permitted.
Nicholas wrote back himself—a long letter by his standards, two full pages. He described the harvest in detail, knowing Amelia would want to know about the farm. He told her about young Nicholas winning second at the county competition and vowing to win first next year. He told her the farm looked well, that Frank's Turkey Red wheat idea had proved out, that her mother was already planning the garden for next spring. And he told her that her old room was waiting, whenever she could come.
Thanksgiving brought the nearby family together at the farm. John and Etta May, Frank and Julia, Carrie and Harland. Joseph, Charles, and young Nicholas. It was a fine, full table—nine adults and several children around it, the house warm with cooking smells and conversation.
Before the meal, Nicholas stood to give thanks. He thought about the letters from Etta and Amelia, the photographs on the mantelpiece, the new granddaughters in Montana he hadn't yet met.
"Lord," he said, "we are grateful for this food and this harvest—the best we've had. We are grateful for this family around this table. We hold in our hearts today those who couldn't be with us—Etta and her family in Spokane, and Amelia and her family in Gardiner, and our new granddaughter Evelyn who we haven't yet had the pleasure of holding. We ask your blessing on all of them, wherever they may be. Amen."
"Amen," echoed around the table.
Anna served the turkey, passing plates down the table with the ease of a woman who'd been feeding large groups for thirty years. The conversation flowed—farm news, town gossip, plans for winter.
After dinner, while the women cleared up and the younger boys escaped outside, Nicholas sat with John, Frank, and Harland in the parlor. The men talked quietly—crops and prices and community affairs—but eventually the conversation turned, as it often did between men of different generations, to the future.
"What do you make of the automobile situation?" John asked. "Seeing more of them in Kendrick every month."
"They're coming whether we like it or not," Nicholas said. "Same as the railroad, same as the telephone. New things come. The question is whether you're ready for them."
"Are we ready?" Frank asked.
Nicholas considered this seriously. "We're in good shape. Good land, good equipment, no debt. The irrigation system gives us an advantage most farms don't have. If we keep improving, keep paying attention, keep working hard—" he looked at his sons and son-in-law— "we'll be all right. Better than all right."
December: Christmas and Year's End
December brought snow and cold and the pleasant preparations for Christmas. Anna baked for days—pfeffernüsse, strudel, and the German Christmas cookies she'd learned from her own mother, recipes that had traveled from Baden-Württemberg to St. Louis to Nebraska to Idaho. The smell of cinnamon and anise filled the farmhouse.
Nicholas went to town and bought gifts with more thought than people might have expected from him. For Joseph, a new hunting knife he'd been admiring. For Charles, a proper woodworking set—the boy had shown interest in carpentry. For young Nicholas, a set of mathematical puzzles and a new arithmetic book that went beyond anything his school offered.
For Anna, he'd been planning since October. He'd seen her admire a particular shawl in the dry goods store window in Moscow at the fair—deep blue wool, finely made. He'd gone back to Moscow quietly and bought it. He was rather proud of himself.
He also sent packages to Etta in Spokane and Amelia in Gardiner—candy for the children, warm socks and small practical luxuries for the women, a good pipe tobacco for their husbands. The packages went off two weeks before Christmas to allow for delivery.
On Christmas Eve, the family attended midnight Mass at St. Mary's. The church was beautiful with its evergreen decorations and candles, and the choir—which included Carrie—sang magnificently. Father O'Brien's sermon was about the importance of family, of holding those close whom God had given us, and of remembering those from whom we were separated by distance but not by love.
Nicholas thought about Etta's family in Spokane and Amelia's family in Gardiner. He hoped the packages had arrived. He hoped they were warm and safe and happy.
Christmas Day was the nearby family again—John and Etta, Frank and Julia with son George, Carrie and Harland and their daughter Margaret and baby Harland, the boys at home. The presents were exchanged with ceremony. Young Nicholas immediately opened his mathematics puzzles and was absorbed in them within minutes, which made everyone laugh.
Anna unwrapped the blue shawl and went still.
"Nicholas," she said.
"You looked at it twice at the fair," he said gruffly. "I have eyes."
She put it around her shoulders and reached up to kiss his cheek. The boys made sounds of mock disgust, and everyone laughed.
In the afternoon, letters arrived by special holiday delivery—one from Etta, one from Amelia. Anna read them aloud, her voice warm with feeling. Etta described Christmas morning in Spokane, the children's excitement, August's good humor. Amelia described little Juanita’s second and baby Evelyn’s first Christmas, how she'd grabbed at the ribbons on the packages, how Severt had laughed until he cried.
"Next summer," Anna said, folding the letters. "We'll go to Spokane. And Amelia will come here with her girls. I've already decided."
Nicholas looked at her with mock sternness. "You've already decided?"
"Yes," Anna said serenely. "I have."
On New Year's Eve, the house was quiet. The boys were in bed. Nicholas sat in his chair by the fire with his pipe, Anna in her chair with her knitting, the blue shawl around her shoulders. The clock on the mantel ticked steadily toward midnight.
Nicholas looked at the photograph of Etta's children on the mantelpiece. He thought about Amelia's babies in Montana. Now there were seven grandchildren who'd grow up in Kendrick, close by or far way.
He thought about 1905—the best harvest in years, the family growing and prospering, the community solid and improving, his farm as productive as it had ever been.
"Good year," he said.
"Very good year," Anna agreed without looking up from her knitting.
"Next year will be better," he said. It wasn't wishful thinking. It was simply what he believed—what he'd always believed, from the moment he'd staked that first claim in Idaho. Things could always be better if you worked for it.
Outside, the snow fell quietly over the dark fields. The farm was sleeping, gathering itself. In a few months, the cycle would begin again—the plowing, the planting, the growing, the harvest. The eternal rhythm that had shaped every year of Nicholas Brocke's adult life.
He was fifty years old, in the prime of his life, his farm in excellent condition, his family growing in all directions. He had sons working beside him, sons and daughters making their ways across the West, grandchildren arriving, a community that valued him.
He didn't know what was ahead—the joys and losses that were coming, the world changes that would transform life in Idaho as everywhere else. He just knew this moment, this fire, this woman knitting beside him with his Christmas shawl around her shoulders.
The clock struck midnight.
"Happy New Year, Anna."
"Happy New Year, Nicholas."
Outside, somewhere in town, someone fired a rifle into the air—the traditional Kendrick salute to the new year. Nicholas smiled at the familiar sound.
1906 was beginning. And Nicholas Brocke was ready for it.
The family would continue to grow through 1906 and beyond—and mny more grandchildren would be born over the years. Amelia's girls thriving in Montana, Etta's family putting down deeper roots in Spokane. Nicholas and Anna would make that long-planned trip to visit their scattered children, and Amelia would indeed bring her babies to Kendrick that summer, giving Anna the grandchildren reunion she had been planning since the day Amelia's first letter arrived from Gardiner.
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The AI Google NotebookLM Video Overview of this story is in:
This is historical fiction based on known events in the lives of my ancestors -- it might have been this way. Nicholas and Anna (Grieser) Brocke are my wife's great-grandparents, and I have significant information about this family from the available records, but I know nothing about their day-to-day lives.
As always, I am amazed at what life was like in any place over 120 years ago. This description of their family life in Idaho is interesting and so different from our current daily activities.
After I read these types of social history summaries, I wish that I could be a time traveler for one day to visit this Brocke family in 1905 Idaho and witness their daily lives. I'm glad that the general lifestyles and occupations are known from historical records and witness accounts.
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