By Eilene Lyon
My recent genealogical research has included using a new feature available at Family Search, the free genealogy site owned by the LDS Church. They are now using A.I. to search some of the handwritten documents in their vast collection. This is an A.I. application I can heartily approve.
There will never be enough time and volunteers to index or transcribe all the handwritten documents of interest to researchers. By teaching A.I. to read them, genealogists can now locate more records relevant to their family.

As I researched my Arbogast ancestors, I used this tool to find records for John C. Arbogast and his parents and siblings. An interesting case arose with his youngest brother, Jacob Arbogast. In 1860, Jacob lived with John’s family in Jersey County, Illinois. Jacob was 22 at the time.1 I’m not certain if he got “into trouble” before he went to Illinois, or after he returned to Ohio. Probably the latter.

In September 1861, a woman named Elizabeth Schrader/Shrader, took Jacob to court claiming that he fathered her out-of-wedlock child. The jury sided with Elizabeth in 1862, and Jacob was ordered to pay her $300 in child support. The case was summarized and closed in 1866 after he had completed the periodic payments (though he still owed court costs).2
By then, Jacob had relocated from Tuscarawas County, Ohio, to Adams County. That same year he married Margaret W. Thatcher.3 Their first child was born in 1867. They had four more children and the couple remained married until Jacob’s death in 1916, in Missouri.4

What about Elizabeth Schrader and the child? I spent some time researching a likely candidate (Elizabeth Schrader was a common name), but that turned out to be a detour. While researching that Elizabeth’s brother, William, I found a different William Schrader, who also had a sister named Elizabeth.
This second Elizabeth quickly proved to be my target. I found her living with her parents, Jacob and Elizabeth Schrader, in the 1870 census, in Tuscarawas County. Also in the household was a child, age 8, named…Levi Arbogast.5 Aha! No question, this was the unnamed child in the 1861 bastardy case. I had mistakenly assumed the child would have the Schrader surname.

While I was able to trace Jacob throughout his life, Elizabeth, her parents, and her son, Levi, all seem to have vanished after that 1870 census. I’ve been able to trace all but one of Elizabeth’s known siblings, and this foursome does not appear in any of their households after 1870. (Given the ages of her parents, there may have been unknown older siblings.)
At this point, I feel like I’m chasing four ghosts. Did they all die before 1880? And if so, where? They aren’t in the Tuscarawas County death records for that time period or in Find a Grave. I tried searching for Elizabeth and Levi in the 1880 census with just first names (in case Elizabeth married). Did they change their names and move somewhere else to avoid stigma? Do you have any ideas?
Update: Thanks to a remark by Marie, I went back to the death records and found Levi. His surname was badly misspelled, but clearly the right person. He was living in Fairfield Township in Tuscarawas, listed as a farmer (the index said “student”), age 16, cause of death was suicide. Sad enough, but it also said “parents unknown.” I still have not found his mother or her parents.6
Feature image: Historic marker in New Philadelphia, Ohio, about the Tuscarawas County courthouses. The one Elizabeth Schrader filed her case in no longer exists. (Tuscarawas County Historical Society)
- 1860 U.S. Census, Jersey County, Illinois, population schedule, Illinois precinct, p. 33, dwelling 20, family 20, John Arbogauss family; image Ancestry (https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/7667/images/4213649_00033 : accessed 15 May 2025). The household also included John’s brothers Charles, Jacob and Lewis (Louis) and Lewis’s wife and children. The enumeration date was 14 August 1860. ↩
- Tuscarawas County, Ohio, Appearance Docket 1860–1862 Book 14 p. 325; “Tuscarawas, Ohio, United States records,” images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QHN-PQNQ-T68M : accessed 15 May 2025), image 353 of 634; Image Group Number: 110033212. ↩
- 1900 U.S. Census, Lawrence County, Missouri, population schedule, Red Oak District 0085, p. 9B, family 193, Jacob Arbogast; image, Ancestry (https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/7602/images/4118798_00517 : accessed 15 May 2025), image 18 of 22. The marriage record in Adams County was likely destroyed in a courthouse fire in 1910. ↩
- Missouri State Board of Health, death certificate for Jacob Arbogast, Jasper County, file no. 1871, 24 Jan 1916; image, Ancestry (https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/60382/images/1916_00001942-00759 : accessed 15 May 2025). ↩
- 1870 U.S. Census, Tuscarawas County, Ohio, population schedule, Jefferson Township, p. 25, dwelling 181, family 174, Jacob Schrader; image, Ancestry (https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/7163/records/37736693 : accessed 15 May 2025), image 25 of 27. ↩
- Tuscarawa County, Ohio, Death Record, Book 1, pg. 65, line 1 for Levi Armogust [sic], died March 34 [sic], 1878, recorded May 14, 1878; image FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-89ZR-KGS : accessed 17 May 2025), digital film 4,016,991 image 104. ↩
Bastardy has become my new favorite word. Merriam Webster, if you’re listening . . I thank you.
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Hmm. Well, don’t make it a literal, personal project!
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I’ll refrain.
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Oh good.
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😉
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I used Family Search the last time I was trying to pin down some info. It was helpful in may ways but that’s when I realized I don’t have the patience to dig too deeply or venture down all the many side roads and dead ends! 😉
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It can be majorly time consuming! But I really dig it.
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I have no useful ideas here but sure did enjoy seeing the word Bastardy in my feed this morning. I have a new word.
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I had no idea this word would strike such a chord with people!
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Haha. New words are fun.
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It appears to be just a legal term for cases like this one.
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It’s still new to me and I like it. Lol.
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Whatever floats your boat!
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It’s possible we all are just a little juvenile.
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😆
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Your persistence and clever detective work paid off, Eilene. Yet another example of what fascinating nuggets we can find on our genealogical journey.
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I just wish I had the “rest of the story.” Maybe a DNA match will reveal that Levi survived to adulthood.
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Since there are no death records, my guess is that they must have moved elsewhere. Let’s hope they had better lives! Maybe you could try a simple Google search for the name. Maybe some current relatives will pop up and you can search in records around where they live? I just searched for Levi A. and found a blacksmith who gives demos for Highland Games in the U.S. (!)
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I hope you’re right, Marie. I’m thinking it may be possible that a DNA match on Ancestry will reveal a descendant from Levi. But you made me realize I did not search those death records for the Arbogast surname. Levi may be in there, but his mother and maternal grandparents are not.
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OMG. I did find him in the death records for Tuscarawas County. He committed suicide at age 16. How very sad.
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Oh that is so sad! But way to go on the detective work.
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Certainly not what I had hoped to find!
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What a sad ending. I wonder if the stigma of his bastardy contributed to the cause?
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I suspect it might. But why wasn’t his mother named in the death record? Why was he seemingly alone at age 16? More questions than answers, I’m afraid. But I’m glad I resurrected his too-short life from obscurity.
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To keep the family name squeaky clean, I would say, could be the reason to omit the mother’s name. Perhaps there wasn’t a legal requirement back then to name the parents?
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That’s a possibility, but she was certainly known to be his mother for at least the first 8 years of his life, and there is the court record, which is just as public as a death record. While it might not have been required to name parents, I think the practice was always to do so, if they were known. It does seem as both the Arbogast and Schrader families generally had low profiles in the county. They don’t turn up in news, history books, etc.
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Well, that was an interesting story Eileen and was $300.00 child support made in periodic payments to suffice for the rest of this child/young man’s life? Perhaps Levi saw his mother struggling financially to take care of both of them and this was why he took his life. I hope you find out what happened to the rest of the family.
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I know, that wasn’t a lot of money, even then. But his grandfather did have a farm. What’s odd is that he had moved to a different part of the county from his family and whoever reported his death didn’t get his last name right or know who his family was (nor did they step forward to claim him, it seems).
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I hope you will be able to obtain more information to do a follow-up Eilene.
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Thank you, Linda. I hope so too.
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This is interesting, both the personal information and how you came by it. I knew that the Mormons were into genealogy in general, but didn’t know about the AI angle of it. Wonder what else you’ll discover about Levi and family?
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Unfortunately, any further information would probably require a visit to the courthouse and some luck.
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How sad to learn Levi died by suicide… I hope at some point you can solve the mystery of the disappearance of Elizabeth and her parents.I agree with you re the AI and Full-text search – for me it’s what AI is meant for, not generating a research plan for me. But, to each their own.
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Given that anything produced by AI such as a research plan requires double-checking everything for accuracy means waste of time to me. Nothing is sadder to me than suicide, particularly a teen.
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Wow, how sad…back then being born out of wedlock was such a stigma. Today it seems like many young couples or even single people choose to have children outside of marriage, so perhaps that stigma is gone. But poor Levi! Did his mother abandon him? Seems likely. Unless he was a runaway?
I am very intrigued to learn more about FamilySearch’s AI tool for transcribing handwritten documents. Which ones here did it transcribe? Does it do the old German script? That would be a game changer for me. Does it only transcribe documents found on FamilySearch? And what do the results look like?
Thanks!
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It does seem Levi may have been abandoned. It’s hard to fathom, but mother and grandparents seem to have left the county. Deed records aren’t online, so I can’t check to see if Jacob sold his farm.
The full-text search is still in beta, but it searches primarily deeds and probate records. There are many others, though, it seems. Certainly not everything. It pulls up the image, highlighting the search terms. There is a full transcript of the image, but I have found them not particularly useful. No to old German text. You can save the image only or the image and transcription (though the bottom of the image is likely to be cutoff, so I just save the image).
One thing that is very odd: instead of the film number, it gives an Image Record Group number and I’ve found this is not searchable under film number in the catalog. On top of that the image group is not found under the listings for the county either, sometimes. I do not understand where these images are found other than in the full-text function. Therefore it’s a good idea to save the link in your research notes or as a web link in Ancestry.
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Oh, well, that doesn’t sound all that useful then! I mostly need it for those German documents, and those aren’t on FamilySearch, but other online archives or sometimes Ancestry (which does transcribe most of the names and dates anyway). Thanks!
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Yeah, it’s only for their collection.
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I enjoyed reading about this search, Eilene, and what you did to move forward, the tools that became available. Your research takes an incredible amount of focus and tenacity–well done.
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Thank you, Jet. I do enjoy uncovering the stories, even though some don’t have happy endings.
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