52 AI Ancestors in 52 Weeks: Week 51: Musical

I’ve combined Amy Johnson Crow’s 52 ancestors in 52 weeks challenge, and Steve Little’s The 2025 AI Genealogy Do-Over, to create a unique 52 AI ancestors in 52 weeks party!

52 AI Ancestors in 52 Weeks: Week 51: Musical

Introduction

Some families have musicians. Others have musical moments. This week’s theme, Musical, invited us to recall the songs, sounds, and dance steps that echo through our family history.

Our family didn’t pass down a violin or leave behind a trail of concert programs – but they did pass down a story. Or at least, part of one.

Rose Elizabeth Carey met Edward Joseph Anderson at a dance hall. That much is certain. The rest? Well, that’s where the fun begins.

The Discussion

Here’s what we know for sure, according to family records:

  • Rose Carey was born in Harlem (in upper Manhattan) in 1916, worked at Western Union, and married Edward Anderson in 1939.
  • Edward “Ed” Anderson, a Staten Island-born accountant, was methodical, soft-spoken, and a baseball fanatic. After he grew up in a Staten Island orphanage, he moved to Manhattan, likely for work.
  • They met at a dance hall, likely in Manhattan, sometime in the late 1930s. Dance halls in NYC were especially vibrant spaces for working-class people to socialize, particularly young women like these two.

And that’s it. No song titles. No saved stubs. No love letters with lipstick kisses. Just a setting, and an invitation to imagine.

So let’s imagine:

It’s Saturday night. The dance floor is full. A swing band plays something peppy: maybe Benny Goodman, maybe Glenn Miller. A pretty young woman steps onto the floor. She’s got a confident smile and the kind of red lipstick that holds up through laughter. That’s Rose.

Across the room, a tall man with serious eyes and polished shoes watches. That’s Ed.

Maybe he doesn’t dance much. Maybe she dances with everyone. Maybe the music carries them both.

“Would you like to dance?”
“I thought you’d never ask.”

In our version of the story, they dance until the band plays a slow number: “Stardust”, let’s say, and they don’t even notice the room around them anymore. Just each other.

Did it really happen that way? Probably not. But the truth – they met at a dance – is an invitation to color in the rest.

Figure 1 An AI-generated image seeded with a wedding photo of my grandparents.

How AI Can Help

AI didn’t give me this memory, but it gave me the tools to shape it into a story.

Using AI tools like ChatGPT, you can:

  • Turn a one-sentence family fact into a vivid blog post.
  • Imagine period-appropriate music or fashion from a given date.
  • Research common songs at 1930s dance halls in Manhattan.
  • Even generate images or playlists to accompany the story.

It’s not about rewriting history, it’s about making it easier to picture, and more fun to tell.

Challenge for Readers

This week, try one of these:

  • Find a family couple whose meeting story you’ve never fully explored. What setting were they in? What music might’ve been playing?
  • Pick a decade and imagine the soundtrack your ancestor would’ve heard most often. Were they swing? Gospel? Polka? Protest folk?
  • Call an older relative and ask if they remember dancing—and to what. Sometimes the best stories aren’t about songs, but about who sang them.

For More Information

Next Week’s Topic (last one!): “Memorable”

AI Disclosure

This post was created by me with the help of AI tools. While AI helps organize research, the storytelling and discoveries are my own.

52 AI Ancestors in 52 Weeks: Week 24 – Artistic

Prompt: “The theme for Week 24 is “Artistic.” Is there a painter, crafter, quilter, knitter, crocheter, or musician in the family? This is their week.”

I’ve combined Amy Johnson Crow’s 52 ancestors in 52 weeks challenge, and Steve Little’s The 2025 AI Genealogy Do-Over, to create a unique 52 AI ancestors in 52 weeks party!

52 AI Ancestors in 52 Weeks: Week 24: Artistic

Introduction

I was a computer science major in college. This is, in part, because I have no artistic talent whatsoever. My drawings look like modern art—unintentionally. But I grew up knowing that my grandfather’s sister, Lydia Coral West (1888–1944), was an artist – my grandparents had a still life oil painting of hers hanging in their house.

Discussion

I was recently reminiscing with my uncle about our memories of the family, and it turns out he had a charcoal drawing that Aunt Lydia did of my grandfather (his father) when he was small. He offered the drawing to me and of course, I jumped at the opportunity! It’s dated 12/31/1914. I quickly got a custom frame, and I proudly display it in my home—with a detailed note on the back explaining the artist, subject, and provenance, of course.

Figure 1 My grandfather, age 7, as drawn by his sister

Well, I may have no artistic talent, but I can appreciate this century-old portrait of a man I loved well.

How AI can help

Even if you can’t paint like Aunt Lydia, AI tools can help you see your artistic ancestors more clearly:

  • Restoring Images: Try AI tools like MyHeritage Photo Enhancer or Hotpot.ai to sharpen old photos of artworks or portraits.
  • Detecting Watermarks or Signatures: AI-based image analysis tools can help uncover faint or hidden artist marks on old paintings.
  • Identifying Art Styles: Upload artwork to platforms like Google Arts & Culture to see if it resembles specific art movements or periods.
  • Family Storytelling: Use ChatGPT or Sudowrite to help you write a story or caption from the artist’s point of view for creative flair.

Challenge:

  1. Find an artwork, piece of sheet music, or handmade item created by an ancestor. Use AI to enhance a photo of it.
  2. Write a fictional letter or diary entry from your artistic ancestor using AI assistance. What might Aunt Lydia have said about drawing her little brother?

Summary

Even if we aren’t artists ourselves, we can still honor the creatives in our family tree. Lydia Coral West may not have had a gallery opening, but her work hangs proudly in my home—and her legacy lives on through stories, images, and a little digital help.

Further Resources

  • MyHeritage Photo Enhancer: Sharpen and colorize old family photos and artwork for clearer details.
    myheritage.com/photo-enhancer
  • Hotpot AI Tools: Offers image restoration and background removal—useful for isolating and enhancing old sketches or crafts.
    hotpot.ai
  • Google Arts & Culture: Explore art styles and historical context by comparing your ancestor’s work with museum collections.
    artsandculture.google.com
  • Sudowrite: An AI-powered writing tool that helps generate creative writing, fictional letters, and ancestor storytelling ideas.
    sudowrite.com

Next Week’s Topic: “FAN Club” – it’s time to look beyond your ancestor and into their Friends, Associates, and Neighbors.

Disclosure

This post was created by me with the help of AI tools. While AI helps organize research, the storytelling and discoveries are my own.