How many family artifacts have survived in your family? One of my most treasured finds is a poetry journal kept by my great-grandmother, Josie Winifred Hammond. For this week's Saturday Night Genealogy Fun, I'm sharing how her poem "Little Sod Shanty" was transformed into a song using AI.…
My latest ABC Biography explores the life of my second great-grandfather, Albert Hutchinson (c.1836–1896). From his early years in New York to service with the 1st Iowa Cavalry during the Civil War and his later life in Iowa, Missouri, and Kansas, Albert's story reflects the experiences of many…
Marcia Crawford Philbrick
Marcia Crawford Philbrick
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{Can AI help tell our ancestors' stories? For this project, I transformed the biography of my second great-grandfather, Albert Hutchinson, into a folk-country song using ChatGPT and Suno, paired it with a NotebookLM infographic, and created a video in Canva. Watch the finished result and learn…
An 1834 probate court case over Aaron Hutchinson’s New York will reveals more than inheritance—it uncovers family relationships, health details, and the tensions that can make probate records a goldmine for genealogists. #genealogy #familyhistory
Marcia Crawford Philbrick
Marcia Crawford Philbrick
Marcia Crawford Philbrick
Marcia Crawford Philbrick
An Ancestry hint for Cynthia Hutchinson led me to a 1957 compiled family history of Aaron Hutchinson (1767–1833)—and a possible clue about my ancestor Albert Hutchinson, husband of Julia Harding. I’ve shared my faithful transcription and the research questions it raises. #genealogy #familyhistory
Genealogy discoveries are even better when shared. After writing about Percy Ernest Crawford’s SS-5 application, I uploaded the document to Ancestry, WikiTree, and FamilySearch so other Crawford researchers can benefit. Are there treasures in your files that should be shared? #genealogy #FamilyHisto
Marcia Crawford Philbrick
Marcia Crawford Philbrick
Friday Find: Ever order a genealogy record and receive the wrong one? That happened when I requested a death certificate for Henry Clay Crawford—but the mistaken document introduced me to another Henry Crawford and his family story. Sometimes the wrong record still leads to discovery. #genealogy #Fa
Marcia Crawford Philbrick
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!): Were you lucky enough to receive or discover artifacts from your ancestors (parents, grandparents, or more distant relatives) as you pursued your genealogy research? Describe one or more of the artifacts you found or received and where you obtained them.
Bringing Albert Hutchinson's Story to Life with Music and Video One of my genealogy goals is to preserve family stories in formats that make them accessible and engaging for future generations. Traditional biographies are an important part of that effort, but I've also been experimenting with ways to combine genealogy research with modern technology. Recently, I completed an ABC Biography for my second great-grandfather, Albert Hutchinson (c.1836–1896).
heartlandgenealogy.org
Old probate records often contain much more than a simple distribution of property. Sometimes they preserve family tensions, medical testimony, and details about relationships that would otherwise be lost to history. That was certainly the case when I recently revisited a transcription in my files concerning the probate of Aaron Hutchinson of Caledonia, Livingston County, New York. "Livingston, New York, United States records," images, FamilySearch ( : May 18, 2026), image 300 of 676; New York.
One of my goals is to create biographies for my ancestors using the records I have gathered over the years. Today's biography focuses on my second great-grandfather, Albert Hutchinson, a Civil War veteran whose life took him from New York to Iowa, Missouri, and Kansas. Early Life Albert Hutchinson was born about 1836 in Northampton, Fulton County, New York. Much about his childhood remains a mystery, but the 1850 census provides an important clue.
One of the pleasures of genealogy is finding a record you didn’t know existed. Recently, Ancestry served up a hint for Cynthia Hutchinson, sister of my probable ancestor Albert Hutchinson. Normally, I approach compiled family histories with caution, but this one immediately caught my attention because it centered on Aaron Hutchinson (1767–1833) and his descendants. My ancestor Albert Hutchinson…
When the Wrong Record Still Tells a Story Genealogy research rarely follows a perfectly straight path. Sometimes the record you want is missing. Sometimes the index contains an error. And sometimes, after carefully ordering a document and waiting for it to arrive in the mail, you open the envelope and discover… the wrong record. That’s the story behind today’s Friday Find.
Last week’s Friday Find featured a document I obtained years ago from the Social Security Administration: the original SS-5 application for Percy Ernest Crawford (1893–1978). That application provided exactly the kind of details genealogists love to uncover—Percy’s full name, birth date, birthplace, parents’ names, residence, and even his employment status at the time he applied for a Social Security number.
A DAR application tucked away in my files turned out to document my own Revolutionary War ancestor. Follow the lineage from Imelda May Jessee back to Nathaniel Wells and learn about his service during the American Revolution. #Genealogy #FamilyHistory #DAR #WellsFamily
Marcia Crawford Philbrick
heartlandgenealogy.org
A DAR Application for My Ancestor Nathaniel Wells One of the pleasures of genealogy is discovering that a document collected years ago contains information that is far more relevant than I originally realized. That was the case when I recently revisited a photocopy of a 1923 application for membership in the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR). The application was submitted by…