Some people eat, sleep and chew gum, I do genealogy and write...

Thursday, May 21, 2026

A Guide to Land and Property for Genealogists: Understanding Estates in Land and Land Tenure

 

1. Foundations: Why Legal History Matters to Genealogists

To the beginning genealogist, modern property law often appears as a dense thicket of arbitrary rules. However, as Mr. Justice Holmes famously observed, "Upon this point a page of history is worth a volume of logic." New York Trust Co. v. Eisner, 256 U.S. 345, 349 (1921) We cannot truly understand the law of the present without looking back over the millennium of its evolution. Property law is not simply the study of "owning things"; it is the study of a "bundle of legal relations" and a history of how society organizes power over the earth.

The story begins with the Norman Conquest of 1066. When William the Conqueror assumed the throne, he established the principle of "political legitimacy" by treating the lands of his Anglo-Saxon opponents as forfeited. This established the King as the ultimate lord and the source of all land titles. Under this "pyramid of tenure," no subject truly "owned" land in the modern sense. Instead, they "held" it as tenants of a superior lord, who in turn held it from the King.

This historical pyramid created the framework for our modern system. As the personal relationship between lord and tenant faded over centuries, the law shifted its focus from who you held the land from (tenure) to how long you were entitled to hold it (estates).

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2. The Feudal Framework: Lords, Tenants, and Tenures

In the medieval system, the nature of a landholding was defined by Tenure. The law drew a sharp line between Free Tenure (held by freemen with certain, honorable services) and Unfree (Base) Tenure (held by villeins whose services were uncertain and subject to the lord's whim). These unfree holdings eventually evolved into "copyhold" tenure, which was finally abolished on January 1, 1926, by the Law of Property Act 1922, converting those interests into modern socage. (Note:  While the Law of Property Act was passed in 1922 (and amended in 1924), its sweeping provisions—including the official "enfranchisement" (abolition) of copyhold land into freehold/socage—took effect exactly on January 1, 1926.)

The four primary divisions of Free Tenure were distinguished by the servitia debita (services due):

Tenure Type

Primary Obligation

Nature of Service

Modern Equivalent/Status

Knight Service

Military

Providing a quota of armed knights for the King’s host.

Abolished (converted to Socage).

Serjeanty

Personal

Administrative or household duties (e.g., King’s steward).

Largely obsolete; few vestiges remain.

Frankalmoin

Religious

Spiritual services (e.g., saying Masses) for the grantor.

Obsolete (abolished by Statute).

Free and Common Socage

Economic

Fixed rent or agricultural products.

The basis of modern ownership.

The Significance of "Socage" Socage was the "great residual tenure." Because its services were "fixed and definite" rather than dependent on a lord's discretion, it survived the decay of the feudal system. It is the legal ancestor of the modern fee simple absolute.

While tenure defined the hierarchy of the holding, the concept of estates was developed to measure the duration of the interest.

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3. Freehold Estates: The Permanent Interests

Freehold estates are interests in land of an uncertain duration. Historically, these were the only interests that conferred "seisin"—the formal, legal possession recognized by the King's courts.

The Primary Freehold Estates

  1. Fee Simple: The absolute "totality of ownership." It is an estate of inheritance that potentially lasts forever.
  2. Fee Tail: Designed to keep land within a specific family lineage (e.g., "to A and the heirs of his body"). This is now largely obsolete in American law.
  3. Life Estates: An interest measured by the life of a specific human being.

The Life Tenant vs. The Remainderman

A Life Estate creates a natural tension between the current possessor (the life tenant) and the person who takes the land next (the remainderman).

  • Possessory Rights: The life tenant has the right to undisturbed possession and the income/profits (emblements) of the land.
  • Duty to Prevent Waste: The life tenant must preserve the property. They are liable for permissive waste (failure to maintain structures in reasonable repair). However, they are not bound to make extraordinary repairs or improvements (Moynihan, Cornelius J. 1962. Introduction to the Law of Real Property : An Historical Background of the Common Law of Real Property and Its Modern Application. St. Paul, Minn.: West Pub. Co., p. 60).
  • Alienability: A life tenant can sell their interest, but the buyer's interest still expires when the original life tenant dies.

Derivative Estates: Social Security for Spouses

Historically, the law provided derivative estates to support surviving spouses:

  • Dower: A life estate for a widow in one-third of the lands her husband held in fee during the marriage.
  • Curtesy: A life estate for a widower in the wife’s lands. Critically, unlike Dower, Curtesy required that a child of the marriage be born alive (Moynihan, p. 52). Note: At common law, curtesy (the widower’s life estate) only initiated "curtesy initiate" upon marriage and the birth of a live issue capable of inheriting the estate. If no child was born alive, the husband took no life estate upon his wife’s death. Dower did not share this requirement.

While freeholds are characterized by their "permanent" feel, the law also recognizes essential temporary interests that lack the historical dignity of seisin.

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4. Nonfreehold Estates: The Basis of Modern Leasing

Nonfreehold estates (or "chattels real") have a fixed or calculable duration. In these interests, the tenant has possession, but seisin remains in the landlord (the reversioner). This is a crucial distinction: the law historically treated these as personal property interests rather than "real" property.

  1. Estate for Years: An interest for a fixed period (even if less than a year). It must have a certain beginning and a certain end.
  2. Periodic Estate: Continues for successive periods (e.g., month-to-month) until one party provides proper notice of termination.
  3. Tenancy at Will: Lasts as long as both parties desire. At common law, it could be terminated by either party without notice.
  4. Tenancy at Sufferance: Arises when a tenant "wrongfully holds over" after their right to possession ends. There is no "privity" here; the tenant is merely a step above a trespasser.

The Modern Lease Today, a lease is a hybrid: it is both a conveyance of an estate and a contract of covenants. Key covenants include the Covenant of Quiet Enjoyment (the landlord's promise not to interfere with possession) and the Duty to Pay Rent.

As estates expire, the land must "go" somewhere, leading us to the law of future rights.

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5. Future Interests: The Rights of Reversion and Remainder

A future interest is a present right to the future enjoyment of land.

  • Reversion: The interest retained by the grantor (e.g., A grants to B for life; A holds the reversion).
  • Remainder: The interest given to a third party (e.g., A grants to B for life, then to C; C holds the remainder).

Comparing Conditional Future Interests

When a Fee Simple is granted with conditions, the "words of art" used in the deed determine the legal outcome:

Interest Type

Associated Estate

Magic Words

Nature of Termination

Possibility of Reverter

Fee Simple Determinable

"so long as", "while", "until"

Automatic: The estate ends immediately when the condition is broken.

Right of Entry

Fee Simple on Condition Subsequent

"provided that", "but if"

Optional: The grantor must take action to re-enter and terminate the estate.

The Concept of Seisin Historically, "Seisin" meant possession under a freehold estate. It was the "stock of descent" and the basis for ownership. While the distinction between seisin and mere possession has blurred in modern statutes, it remains the foundation for why leaseholders (who lack seisin) were historically denied certain legal remedies available to freeholders.

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6. Practical Application: From Land Records to Homesteading

How do these 1,000-year-old concepts reach us today? They are preserved in the Chain of Title.

From the "Patent" to the Deed Book

Modern ownership is proven by tracing the history of the land back to the Patent—the original grant from the government. Using Grantor/Grantee indexes, a researcher reconstructs this chain. Because of the Statute of Frauds (1677), these transfers must be in writing to be enforceable, which is why your local county courthouse maintains "Deed Books."

Core Documents and Their "So What?"

  • Warranty Deeds: The seller guarantees clear title.
  • Quitclaim Deeds: The seller transfers whatever interest they have, "as is." These are frequently used to "clear" title by releasing potential future interests (like a Right of Entry) or inchoate dower rights that might otherwise cloud a sale.
  • Mortgages: Documents that use the land as collateral for a debt.

The Homesteader’s Perspective

For the modern homesteader, land is more than a legal abstraction; it is the basis of self-sufficiency. Transitioning from "city-dependency" to the land requires mental fortitude. You must manage the "raw, visceral life and death" of the land—from felling your own timber to defending livestock from predators. Mastery of property law provides the "bundle of rights" that protects your labor, but it is your inner resilience that maintains the homestead.

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7. Summary Checklist for the Learner

To categorize any interest in land, ask these essential questions:

  • [ ] Is the duration fixed or uncertain? (Uncertain = Freehold; Fixed/Calculable = Nonfreehold).
  • [ ] Does the tenant have seisin or merely possession? (Seisin = Freehold; Possession = Nonfreehold/Leasehold).
  • [ ] Is there a requirement for "proper notice"? (A hallmark of the Periodic Estate).
  • [ ] Does the grantor retain a future interest? (Yes = Reversion or Possibility of Reverter).
  • [ ] Are there "Magic Words"? (Check for "so long as" vs. "provided that" to determine if termination is automatic).
  • [ ] Is the life tenant committing waste? (Distinguish between necessary maintenance and extraordinary repairs).
  • [ ] Is the chain of title clear back to the Patent? (Necessary for establishing absolute ownership).

By mastering these categories, you have moved beyond "logic" into the "history" of the law, gaining the tools to navigate any property dispute or land acquisition.

This post was created with the assistance of Google NotebookLM and based on Moynihan, Cornelius J. 1962. Introduction to the Law of Real Property : An Historical Background of the Common Law of Real Property and Its Modern Application. St. Paul, Minn.: West Pub. Co. and other sources. 

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Your Genealogy Online -- Public, Private or Working?

 

I think the most important place to start in understanding the relationship between genealogical research and some legal and social customs is expressed by the reoccurring issue of "privacy." Here is a basic statement of how privacy is viewed in the United States. 

Under longstanding American jurisprudence, the baseline rule is that privacy rights are strictly personal and extinguish immediately upon the death of the individual. The dead have no legally cognizable interest in their own privacy, dignity, or reputation under traditional common law tort frameworks. Consequently, causes of action for defamation, light-portrayal, or invasion of privacy do not survive the decedent, nor can a estate or next-of-kin maintain an action for a post-mortem invasion of the decedent’s personal privacy. “Postmortem Privacy.” Michigan Law Review, n.d. Accessed May 19, 2026. https://michiganlawreview.org/journal/postmortem-privacy/.

Considering the fact that much of the genealogical research being done today is online using online resources and websites, it is important to understand the basic principle of privacy, whatever your viewpoint. If you want to keep something "private," do not put it on the internet. This also means that you should refrain from having "private" family trees. Most of the feelings concerning privacy arise from individual genealogists claiming ownership of the research and work they do in building a family tree. 

In this regard, it is important to understand the difference between maintaining a preliminary working file and entering information into an online family tree. If you want to maintain a working file, do so on a desktop program where any connection to the internet is highly controlled. FamilySearch.org is a prime example of a website where private files do not fit within the intent and structure of the FamilySearch Family Tree. 

Even if a website allows individual users to mark items, uploaded items, or family trees as private, doing so practically guarantees the loss of all the data shared in a private fashion when the contributor either retires or dies. 

Often neither pleasant nor comfortable and attempting to whitewash or protect your ancestors from their own difficulties and challenges, dramatically restricts the validity of any information provided. During my own genealogical research history, I have witnessed efforts to rewrite history by restricting access to records and also by rewriting historical records and misquoting them. Anything put on the internet should be clearly public. If you wish to maintain a working file or have private information, any information which you believe to be private, then do not put it on the internet. 

Thursday, May 14, 2026

A Suprising Genealogical Resource: The BYU Library Family History Center YouTube Channel

 https://www.youtube.com/@BYULibraryFamilyHistory/videos

Statistics:

  • 21.7K subscribers
  • 1,165 videos
  • 1,979,015 views
We have been banking videos at the BYU Library Family History Center since 2014. Looking back at the oldest videos still on the YouTube channel is like walking back in the history of genealogy over the past 12 years. One interesting example is a video entitled "Enhancing Photos with Photoshop." The differences between the procedures outlined in that video and what is going on today with AI embedded tools in Photoshop are extraordinary. See https://youtu.be/l5-biqYDzbc?si=oJMdA5kp5_QTsFnS

Some of the videos reflect the digitizing equipment available free to patrons of the library. It is interesting to see the changes in the equipment over the years, even though one of the goals of having the digitizing equipment is to preserve the older formats. The most popular video was from nine years ago and has over 69,000 views. It is called "Using the Google Goldmine for Genealogy." Little did we know how much, how far Google would change in that nine years. 

 Of course, we are talking about genealogy videos, and many of the older videos are just as valuable today as they were when they were made. For example, doing research in places like Germany or England has not changed significantly over the years. There may be new online resources, and there may be some jurisdictional changes, but the basic process of doing the genealogy is only now becoming different. 

Genealogical research is hitting a major turning point as AI-driven handwriting recognition becomes standard. These advancements are tackling the most labor-intensive aspects of family history, expediting the search process well beyond simple transcription and opening doors that were previously closed to many researchers.

Here are some statistics for the Harold B. Lee Library:

The Harold B. Lee Library (HBLL) at Brigham Young University is consistently ranked as one of the top university libraries in the United States. Below are the key statistics regarding its physical size, collections, and patron usage. 

Physical Size and Capacity

The library is a massive facility, largely expanded through a major underground addition completed in 2000

  • Total Area: Approximately 689,000 square feet.

  • Shelving: There are 98 miles of shelving for physical materials.

  • Seating Capacity: The library can accommodate roughly 4,600 patrons at once, featuring a variety of spaces including group study rooms, a family-friendly study area, and specialized labs.

  • Levels: It consists of 6 floors (levels 1 through 5, plus a basement/level 0).

Collections

The HBLL manages a vast array of both physical and digital resources.

  • Total Items: Over 6 million items, including books, periodicals, and multimedia materials.

  • Special Collections: The L. Tom Perry Special Collections library contains rare books, manuscripts, and archives, including one of the largest viola repositories in the world (the Primrose International Viola Archive).

  • Digital Reach: The library provides access to tens of thousands of online journals and hundreds of databases. In 2014, it was recognized as one of the "25 Most Used Digital Libraries" in the country

Usage and Circulation

Despite the national trend toward digital-only research, the HBLL sees significant physical engagement.

  • Daily Gate Count: Typically over 10,000 patrons per day, with peaks reaching 25,000 during the fall and winter semesters.

  • Yearly Attendance: Over 3 million visitors annually.

  • Circulation Trends: Recent data suggests that nearly 700,000 items are checked out each year. Notably, while physical book circulation saw a decline for many years, it has recently shown an upward trend as students return to physical media alongside digital resources.

  • In-House Use: Beyond checkouts, the library serves as a central hub for high-volume data analysis and technical research, supported by its extensive computing labs and specialized help desks.

Saturday, May 9, 2026

AI, Education, and Genealogy

 

Volunteering in a library in a large university, I have a significant amount of contact with university students. Since my primary activity is teaching and supporting other volunteer missionaries and patrons of the library, I also have a significant contact with a broad spectrum of ages and backgrounds. In this context, I am in a somewhat unique position to see the impact of AI both in and out of a university environment. Currently, three of the large online family tree database programs, Ancestry.com, FamilySearch.org, and MyHeritage.com, all have AI involvement. The university, however, has mixed reactions as an institution about the use and implementation of AI in the classrooms. 

It is interesting that the overall main reaction with all of the individuals that I interface with seems to be based on the initial announcements that were made about AI more than three years ago. There is a correlation between the reaction of most of the public to the FamilySearch.org website with concerns about the changes made to an open AI-based family tree and the consistent initial fear of AI hallucinations. Individuals associated with the University have a broad spectrum of response to and implementation of AI. This attitude is generally a reflection of articles such these. 

Knight, Will. “Using AI for Just 10 Minutes Might Make You Lazy and Dumb, Study Shows.” Tags. Wired, May 6, 2026. https://www.wired.com/story/using-ai-negative-impact-thinking-problem-solving-study/
AI Chatbots Could Be Making You Stupider.” April 20, 2026. https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20260417-ai-chatbots-could-be-making-you-stupider.
This list could go on and on. It has been interesting to me to note that this reaction to AI is almost exactly the same as the reactions to hand-held calculators. Here is a citation to a Masters Thesis on this topic. 

Banks, Sarah A. "A Historical Analysis of Attitudes Toward the Use of Calculators in Junior High and High School Math Classrooms in the United States since 1975." Master’s thesis, Cedarville University, 2011. See chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED525547.pdf

Here is a quote from this Master's Thesis"
"The onset of calculators initially brought concerns that this new technology was not fully understood nor would be appropriately utilized by educators and that the effects on students were unknown.  Future research studying how children were affected and the necessary changes to curriculum was recommended (“Math in the Schools,” 1975).  At this time, some educators feared that students would not be able to retain their knowledge of simple arithmetic if they learned to use a calculator before fully grasping basic mathematical concepts.   Other teachers, however, saw calculators as a chance to increase student motivation by using more “real-life” problems (Pendelton, 1975)."
Traditional genealogy involves a significant amount of drudgery such as untold hours of combing through old documents page by page, either on a microfilm viewer or in documents themselves in an archive.

Here is a not-so-hypothetical problem faced by many research genealogists. In doing research in a single parish in England or some other country, you find many people with exactly the same names. Separating out the individuals into families, into unique families, is a tremendous challenge. Over the past three years, I have begun to develop a methodology to use AI to solve this particular challenge. The results have been spectacularly successful. Now, because I have used AI rather than sitting in front of a microfilm reader or scrolling through endless digital documents, I am wondering if my brain is now fried. Or is it the other way around? My brain was being fried by sitting in front of a microfilm reader, and now I have time to think about actually working on the documents. 

AI is here to stay. It will only become more useful and more universally used. Rather than worrying about whether students are going to lose intelligence by using AI, perhaps the educators should spend some time trying to figure out how to help them responsibly use AI. 

By the way, this particular post was admirably assisted by AI voice recognition so that I didn't have to type this whole thing into my computer.

Using AI as an excuse or as a crutch probably has the same effect as spending time with video games or social media.  But continuing to use hallucinations as an excuse for failure to learn about or utilize AI will have the same effect as these other computer interactions.  Using AI with Google Gemini, NotebookLM, and Google Gems can effectively reduce hallucinations to almost nonexistence. Additionally, utilizing carefully drafted prompts can substantially increase AI's accuracy. 

Friday, May 8, 2026

MyHeritage Scribe AI: Genealogy Tool

 

Scribe AI 

Deciphering the remnants of the past has long been a task of patience and specialized skill for family historians. Whether it is a faded letter in 19th-century cursive, a gravestone weathered by a century of elements, or a family crest with forgotten symbolism, the barrier between the record and the researcher is often one of legibility and context. To address these challenges, MyHeritage has introduced Scribe AI, a tool designed to transcribe, translate, and interpret historical materials using generative artificial intelligence.

At its core, Scribe AI—an acronym for Scientific Record Indexing Base Engine—is built to handle the varied and often difficult materials that populate genealogical collections. Rather than a simple text-to-digital converter, the system applies specific procedures based on the type of material uploaded. For a handwritten letter, it provides a full transcription; for a historical photograph, it offers an analysis of clothing styles and visual clues to estimate a date and location.

One of the most practical applications for the active researcher is the tool’s ability to interpret complex documents. When a user uploads a record, the AI does more than just read the words; it extracts key genealogical details such as names, dates, and relationships. It also provides a section on historical context, explaining the significance of the document type or the era in which it was created. For those working with international records, the system can translate text from over 50 languages into the user’s primary language, effectively lowering the barrier for research in foreign archives.

The utility extends to physical artifacts that are notoriously difficult to document. Gravestones, for instance, are analyzed not just for their inscriptions but for the iconography and symbolism carved into the stone. Similarly, heraldic coats of arms are explained through their design elements and historical plausibility. For documents spanning multiple pages, the AI processes the entire file as a single contextual unit, ensuring that the narrative flow of a long letter or a legal document remains intact.

Integration is a key feature of this release. Scribe AI is accessible via a dedicated landing page, but it is also woven into the existing MyHeritage ecosystem. Users can apply the tool to photos and documents already stored in their "My Photos" section or use it directly while viewing records in the site’s vast historical database.

From a technical and ethical standpoint, the development of Scribe AI includes a focus on privacy. MyHeritage has stated that documents and photos processed by the tool are used solely to generate results for the user. These materials are not indexed, made searchable for others, or used to train new AI models.

For the genealogist, the arrival of such technology represents a shift in how time is spent. By reducing the hours traditionally required for manual transcription and initial interpretation, researchers can focus more on the "next steps"—a feature the AI also provides by suggesting further avenues of inquiry based on the record’s content. As family history increasingly moves into the digital and AI-assisted realm, tools like Scribe AI aim to make the insights hidden in old records accessible to a broader audience of researchers.

This video provides a visual walkthrough of the Scribe AI interface and demonstrates its transcription and interpretation capabilities in real-time.

Here is an example of a Scribe AI analysis:



The actual report was much longer.

https://youtu.be/zbbyRnBSPz8?si=ePmhW6EWtAVvciUN


MyHeritage Family Infographics Explained


MyHeritage.com 

For many family historians, the challenge of research is not just finding the data, but making sense of the patterns hidden within it. While traditional pedigree charts and group sheets are essential for organization, they often struggle to convey the broader story of a family’s migration, longevity, or social trends. MyHeritage has recently introduced a tool called "Family Infographics" that aims to bridge this gap by transforming raw genealogical data into a series of visual narratives.

The Family Infographics feature operates by scanning a user's existing family tree and synthesizing the information into a cohesive visual report. Rather than requiring manual entry, the tool pulls from the dates, locations, and relationships already established in the database. The result is a collection of charts and maps that provide a high-level overview of a family’s history, making complex data points more accessible at a glance.

The infographics cover a wide range of demographic information. Users can view statistics on life expectancy across generations, identify the most common first names in their lineage, or see the distribution of birth months among their ancestors. Geographical data is also a primary focus; the tool generates maps that illustrate where family members were born, married, and died, providing a clear visual representation of a family’s movement over time.

Beyond the statistical summaries, the feature highlights specific "milestones" and "extremes" within the tree. It identifies the oldest living relatives, the most prolific branches of the family, and couples with the longest marriages. By focusing on these specific narratives, the tool serves as an entry point for family members who may not be active researchers but are interested in the highlights of their shared heritage.

Accessibility and sharing are central to the design of this new feature. The infographics are generated automatically and are available through both the MyHeritage web platform and mobile application. Because the reports are formatted for visual clarity, they are easily shared via email or social media, allowing researchers to present their findings in a format that is more engaging for a general audience.

For the serious genealogist, these infographics offer a different perspective on their research, occasionally revealing gaps in data or unexpected trends that might be missed in a standard list format. It represents a continuing shift in the industry toward data visualization, turning the "dry" facts of the past into a more dynamic story for the present.





Wednesday, May 6, 2026

A New Rule for Using AI in Genealogy

Rule #4 You are the Master, AI is the Assistant

I have spent many years watching the genealogy landscape shift, from the days of cranking through microfilm in a dimly lit library to our current era of instant, global digital access. We are now standing at the threshold of the most significant transition I’ve seen in my decades of research: the rise of Artificial Intelligence. As I’ve often said, genealogy is not a hobby of collecting names; it is a discipline of verifying evidence. We now have a powerful new "assistant" in this journey, but we must be very careful to maintain the correct relationship with this technology.

In the world of computer science, there is a concept known as the "master/servant" relationship. While it might sound like something out of a Victorian novel, it describes the technical architecture of how complex tasks are distributed across a system. One central "master" process directs "servant" processes to perform specific duties. It’s remarkably similar to how a large archive operates, with a head archivist coordinating various clerks to pull records from different stacks. When you use an AI tool today, you are essentially engaging this technical workforce. However, the most important lesson for us as family historians is the functional one: in this partnership, you are the Master, and the AI is the Servant.

I see a growing number of researchers—both beginners and those who should know better—treating AI as an "oracle" that can be a friend or simply "do" their genealogy for them. But we must remember one of my Rules of Genealogy: Rule Fifteen: A fact is not a fact unless you have a record to prove it.  AI only "knows" your family through what it can find online and if it cannot find and produce the appropriate source for its information, then the information is useless.

To bridge the gap between "old school" standards and "new school" tools, we must act as "forensic auditors" of our own research. When your "servant" (the AI) brings you a lead—perhaps a transcription of a difficult-to-read land deed or a summary of a probate file—your job is to verify any reponse by examining the original records. We use AI for the "heavy lifting" of data processing, but we keep the "intellectual labor" for ourselves. We provide the judgment and the critical eye; the AI provides the processing speed.

Maintaining this relationship requires a shift in how we work. Instead of asking broad, vague questions, we must provide highly structured "master prompts" that force the AI to analyze evidence rigorously. We should ask it to highlight conflicts and cite the specific records it is using. Once the AI provides a lead, we treat it with the same skepticism we would apply to a printed family history from a hundred years ago—we verify every claim against the primary sources. By staying in the "master" seat, we can embrace these incredible advancements while ensuring our family stories are built on a foundation of solid, verified truth. The tools change, but the standards of good research remain the same. Here is a revised example, of a prompt that establishes instruction for the AI Chatbot to act as a Master Genealogist.

Revised Prompt: The Professional Genealogy Research Architect

Role: Act as a Board-certified Professional Genealogist (BCG) and Expert Research Consultant. Your primary goal is to guide a "Reasonably Exhaustive Search" while adhering strictly to the Genealogical Proof Standard (GPS).

Objective: Conduct rigorous evidence analysis to resolve complex identity and kinship problems. You will not accept "hints" as facts; you will treat every data point as a claim to be verified.

Operating Framework:

For every piece of information provided, you must apply this multi-layer analysis:


Source & Information Taxonomy:

Source: Original, Derivative, or Authored.

Information: Primary, Secondary, or Undetermined.

Evidence: Direct, Indirect, or Negative.

Correlation & Logic:

Compare independent sources to look for patterns or discrepancies.

Explicitly address Conflicting Evidence (e.g., age variances, name spelling shifts, or geographic outliers).

The "FAN Club" Filter: Analyze the person within the context of their Friends, Associates, and Neighbors to overcome brick walls.

Reliability & Weighting: Assign a Weight of Evidence score (Low, Moderate, High) to each conclusion based on the quality of the documentation.

Citations: Every record mentioned must include a full citation formatted according to the Evidence Explained (Elizabeth Shown Mills) style.

The Workflow:


Phase 1: The Research Objective. I will provide a specific, focused research question.

Phase 2: Evidence Audit & Gap Analysis. You will analyze my "Known Facts" and identify what is missing (e.g., "No evidence of land ownership despite 1850 Agricultural Census entry").

Phase 3: Strategic Research Plan. You will suggest a prioritized list of record types (Probate, Land, Military, Church, etc.) and specific repositories or databases to consult.

Action: Acknowledge your commitment to these standards. Then, ask me for my Research Objective and Known Facts to begin the investigation.

Before finalizing any conclusion, perform a 'Red-Team' analysis: Identify the weakest link in the evidence chain and suggest one specific scenario that could disprove the current hypothesis.

If a citation cannot be fully formed due to missing data in the record, use placeholders (e.g., [publisher unknown]) and flag the missing element as a research task.

When analyzing records from before 1800, account for archaic spelling, secretary hand transcription errors, and legal Latin terminology relevant to the jurisdiction.

Here is a recent video I did that adds some additional guidance for AI's application to genealogy and genealogical research. 

Developing an Ethical and Safe Use of AI for Genealogy - James Tanner

This post was written with the assistance of Google Gemini 3.1 Pro.