Saturday, July 16, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, July 16

• This Day in Goodlove History, July 16

• By Jeffery Lee Goodlove

• jefferygoodlove@aol.com



• Surnames associated with the name Goodlove have been spelled the following different ways; Cutliff, Cutloaf, Cutlofe, Cutloff, Cutlove, Cutlow, Godlib, Godlof, Godlop, Godlove, Goodfriend, Goodlove, Gotleb, Gotlib, Gotlibowicz, Gotlibs, Gotlieb, Gotlob, Gotlobe, Gotloeb, Gotthilf, Gottlieb, Gottliebova, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlow, Gutfrajnd, Gutleben, Gutlove



• The Chronology of the Goodlove, Godlove, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlieb (Germany) etc., and Allied Families of Battaile, (France), Crawford (Scotland), Harrison (England), Jackson (Ireland), LeClere (France), Lefevre (France), McKinnon (Scotland), Plantagenets (England), Smith (England), Stephenson (England?), Vance (Ireland from Normandy), and Winch (England, traditionally Wales), including correspondence with -George Rogers Clarke, George Washington, and Thomas Jefferson.



• The Goodlove/Godlove/Gottlieb families and their connection to the Cohenim/Surname project:

• New Address! http://www.familytreedna.com/public/goodlove/default.aspx



• This project is now a daily blog at:

• http://thisdayingoodlovehistory.blogspot.com/

• Goodlove Family History Project Website:

• http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/g/o/o/Jeffery-Goodlove/



• Books written about our unique DNA include:

• “Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People” by Jon Entine.



• “ DNA & Tradition, The Genetic Link to the Ancient Hebrews” by Rabbi Yaakov Kleiman, 2004.



“Jacob’s Legacy, A Genetic View of Jewish History” by David B. Goldstein, 2008.



• My thanks to Mr. Levin for his outstanding research and website that I use to help us understand the history of our ancestry. Go to http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/ for more information. “For more information about the Weekly Torah Portion or the History of Jewish Civilization go to the Temple Judah Website http://www.templejudah.org/ and open the Adult Education Tab "This Day...In Jewish History " is part of the study program for the Jewish History Study Group in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.







Birthdays on this date; Mary E. Rich, Hugh C. Preston, Mathew Peters, Daniel W. McKinnon, William C. LeClere, John Godlove, George A. Coup



Weddings on this date; Wiltrude P. Cook and Wendell L. Newman, Adeline H. Brannaman and Ralph J. Goodlove, Gertrude Ryznar and Donald W. Goodlove



July 16, 622: The Prophet Mohammed begins his Hijra from Mecca to Medina.[2] The Islamic calendar starts with the Hijra, the migration of Muslims from Mecca to Yathrib. That event occurred in the year 622 C.E. according to the Western calendar. In Yathrib (now known as Medina), the original Islamic state was established and defended. [1][1][1]





July 16, 1212: At The Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa Chistain forces under King Alfonso VIII of Castile defeated a force of Almohads. Contrary to popular misconception, the treatment of the Jews was not all positive under Muslims and all negative under Christians. It depended upon which sects of Muslims were in control and who was leading the Christians. In this case, life under the Almohads was, to put it mildly, was not a positive experience for the Jews. Alfonso had a positive view of the Jews, stopped the attacks on the Jews of Toledo and expanded their rights. Part of this positive treatment may be attributed to the fact that king was smitten with a Jewess named Rachel Fermosa of Toledo. [3][2]







July 16, 1751 instructions from the Ohio Company to Christopher Gist stated:

…You are to look out & observe the nearest & most convenient Road You can find from

the Company‘s Store at Wills‘s Creek to a Landing at Mohongeyela; from thence You are to proceed down the Ohio on the South Side thereof, as low as the Big Conhaway, and up

the same as far as You judge proper, and find good Land—You are all the Way to keep

an exact Diary & Journal & therein note every Parcel of good Land…[3]



Tuesday July 16, 1754

Lt. Governor Dinwiddie of Virginia returns to Williamsburg (the capital of Virginia) from Winchester. Upon his arrival, Dinwiddie receives the news that Washington had surrendered at Fort Necessity. He immediately begins to write letters to the governors of the other British colonies criticizing them for their lack of support. [4]





July 16 1771

He (Lawrence Harrison) is recorded as having been the township supervisor July 16, 177l. Bedford County was erected 1771 and from it later Fayette County was erected in 1783. [5]

"In Tyrone Township, Fayette County, Pa., Charles Harrison’s neighbors were: William Harrison, William Crawfordd, Tom. Moore—_single, Tom Git, Nicholas Dawson, Uriah Springer and Joseph Vance." (Pa. Arch. S. 3, Vol. 22, p. 50) This quotation is quite enlightening, because it shows that Charles Harrison was still with his own relatives. To clarify this statement, each name will be mentioned: William Harrison was his nephew, the very famous Major William Harrison who was burned at the stake by the Wyandotte and Moravian Indians, that massacre, under Colonel William Crawford, who led it, June 11, 1782, and was also killed. Major William Harrison had married Sarah Crawford, a daughter of Colonel William Crawford. Following the death of Major William Harrison, his widow, Sarah (Crawford) Harrison, married Uriah Springer, who had come from Virginia to Fayette County, Pa. Colonel William Crawford, from Westmoreland County, Virginia, was a son of Hugh Crawford and his wife, Honore Vance. Colonel Crawford was authorized by George Washington to select, as his surveyor, favorable sites for himself and his brothers, Samuel and John Augustine Washington. [6]Thomas Gist was a son of Christopher Gist who was visited by George Washington. Christopher Gist was a member of the Ohio Company in 1753. His 2309 acre estate, known as "Mount Braddock," in Fayette County, Pennsylvania, was inherited by his son, Thomas Gist and after his death, was acquired by Colonel Isaac Meason.[7]After the death of Thomas Gist, his family went to Kentucky. Tom. Moore was the Captain Moore who married Mary Harrison, born 1761; died February 7, 1836, a daughter of Lawrence and Catheren Harrison. He was born in Kent County, Maryland in 1745; died October 20, 1823, in Harrison County, Kentucky; buried next to his wife in Poindexter Village, near Cynthiana. Joseph Vance, whose connections have not been gone into, was no doubt a relative of Honore Vance who married Hugh Crawford. All goes to show these families stuck together in early times. It appears that when the exploitation of lands in the Virginia County of Augusta, later Fayette County, Pennsylvania, was over, a number of persons, including Harrisons, went down the Ohio River to Limestone, now Maysville and up the Licking River to Cynthiana and Paris, Kentucky. They are found in Louisville and south of it on the Salt Licks and Salt River. To prove this, it is noted, in looking over the will of Major William Harrison, nephew of Charles Harrison, dated May 16, 1782; proven March 1, 1784: "It is my further will that the four thousand acres of land located in my name on Licking Creek, in the State of Virginia, be divided and distributed in manner, viz: First, I do give and bequeath unto my much beloved wife, Sarah, five hundred acres during her natural life, at the expiration of which, I desire they be sold and the money equally divided amongst my children or heirs of their body lawfully begotten." (Union-town, Pennsylvania, Court House, Fayette County, Pennsylvania, Orphans Court, Book 1, Page 6, transferred to Book, Page 3.) This will says further: 500 acres to my brother, Benjamin Harrison and the remaining three thousand be divided amongst his children. This land, described as in Virginia, eventually turned out to be located in Kentucky. [8]



Lawrence Harrison is the compilers 6th great grandfather.



July 16, 1771
Lawrence3 Harrison was township Supervisor of Bedford County, Pennsylvania, July 16, 1771. [9]

Lawrence Harrison is the 6th great grandfather of the Compiler.



1771
Lawrence3 Harrison became the first Supervisor for Tyrone Township, in the newly created Pennsylvania County called Bedford. [James Edward Harrison, A comment of the family of ANDREW HARRISON who died in ESSEX COUNTY, VIRGINIA in 1718. [10]



1771-1772
A money dispute in Bedford County, Pennsylvania, is useful to this study. In 1771, Jacob Hite of Virginia brought suit against William Crawford and Lawrence3 Harrison. In 1772, Jacob Hite pursued his claim against Crawford and the executors of Harrison's estate. Jacob Hite thought of Lawrence3 Harrison's widow as Katharina. Papers recorded in later years in Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, support Jacob Hite's idea. Although she sometimes appeared in the record as Catherine, Lawrence3 Harrison's widow called herself Katherina. [11] Lawrence Harrison and William Crawford were both the 6th great grandfathers of the Compiler.



July 16, 1773



[12]



John Crawford is the Compilers 6th great grandfather.







FROM MR. GILBERT SIMPSON.



July: y [mutilated3 1773

HONOERD SR I Receved your Letter of the 8 of Junly in which I Find YOU are much disturevd and I am Reyley Sorrey that you Should be so much uneasey at a thing that kind before you know that you are a Loosing anything I Full well know I must bear all the blame and Sure I am to bear all the Loos tho verey Ill able to bear any for I know my Self to be a Great Looser in this present year and not only So but I verely beleve I am a Greatter by not Going to yor Land for Good -by but what must becom of that house that devids against its Self for my wife never Let me fairly know her intencions unteel your Negro,s and other things Came to me and then I thoug[ht] it was best to gooe out and Settle In hoops She would Com in to another way of thinking but f the more I Strove to persuad the Further She Semd to be of and to Give a person so Nearly Connected as a wife is unease perhaps all there days I Could not So I think my Self at this time to be in a fare uneaseye way than what you Can have any Right to be in For Sr I am Going [to] Let you know why I think you Can be at no los in the first plase you Furnish me with two hands as Sorrey as they Could well be for the fellow is a worthless hand and I beleive aliways will be so Sum occasiond by his feet and Sum Natural in his boons as for the Garl She knew nothing of work but I beleive She will make a fine hand after two or three years in the next plase I Saved you teen or twelve pounds by Settleing on yor Land as I did for it was taxt as unCultavated Lands but Capt. Crawford told me that Coming on the Land he would have the tax taken off in the Next plase there is a hansom Little Improvement made on your Land according to the time and hands For I Neve[r] Lit of harder work nor did more of it in the time than I did ther for I find the Clearing is as hard there as any where for tho the Grubing is Lit[t]l[e] the Cuting is vastly heavey occasiond by the Great Number of old trees Lying on the Earth tho I Got Six acers in Corn and under Good fens from the 6 of aprel unteel the 7 of may and the Ground well brook up and Cleard two acres more and had my Corn all hild up before I Came awaye which was abot the first week in June which was a fort night Sooner than intended to Com in but had I not a Com when I did I mus have Lost my horses by the Great Number of Flyes and no paster to keep them in and as I had a Good deel of harvisting at home I Could not Stayd above a fort night Longer and as for the work Going on I am not the Least aifrade for I Laid off anuf to bee don and am nowise affrade of its being don according to the Goodnes of the hands for I aliwise found my fellow faithful to his trust and to do more when I was from him thn when I was present and as I Got a nye Neibur to Com onst a day to derect them I think there is but Little daynger of the work Going on by which meens Sr I think your Land 50 better this day than it was the first day I Set feet on it for to Consider the hard of Going into the woods and haveing Every rnouthfull of bread to buy and not noing wheare to buy it for Sum time Conciderable and no house to put ones head in Except an 4 old bark Cabbin of Nine feet SQuair in which I was forst to Remain for fifteen days and Nights occasiond by bad wether which had Like to have been my Last by Catching bad Colds unteel it flung me in to fevers but now the worst is over there is a Good Large Cabben of Eighteen feet SQuair and the inside hulid all down and in Good order to make a Qu[a]rter of or to take of ruff and to put a Shingeld on whch was the in tent of it at first So to Concider all things I beleive Sr you will not find your Self at Such a Loos as you Complan of as f9r I am Certain that ther is not Such another plase to be found as yours is booth for the Goodness of the Land and the Convenans of the plase for I do beleive had I a been provided with Corn and oats and pastering that I Could have maid fifteen pounds this Spring by Travelers and a been at Little trouble So your plase is now in a fine begining way and I do verely beleive that you may See more profit in Seven years time by keeping Six hands and Stock on that plase with an overseer if he be a fathfull person than you would by twelve hands on any of your other Lands otherwise if you was to Rent it out I Look on it to [be] worth Six or Eight pounds a year from the Jump and your hands Could be brought baik and all your other affairs Could be Sold to a Great advantage So that I am Sorrey Sr Should Complain before you Consider the matter aright it is true you may be at a Loos to Get a proper person to undertake your buysness for you tho there is ma[n]y will offer of which this Letter Corns by one of the Name Richard Stogdon from the Nor[t]h and a utter Strainger to me by whos hands I hope you will Send me a Line or tow mor to Let me know whether you will bee at home at your august or not for then I would Corn down to alexandria I would have Corn to you Long Sens but I have been Tormened with boyles insomch that I Could not Ride ever Sence I have been at home but Sr my advise to you is to Get an Overseer if you Give him Standing wag[e]s for depend it will bee more to your profit than to bee in partnersnip with any person for the profits ariseing from the plase must bee Great I would bee Glad to know whether you perpose to take any part or all my things or not So Sr I Remain your humble Srt.

GILBT SIMPSON

LOUDOUN[13]



Captain Crawford is the compilers 6th great grandfather.



Sunday, July 16th, 1775.



Went to Major Crawford’s, delivered some letters I had for him, gives me bad accounts of the Boston affair. Informs me Lord Dunmore had abdicated the Government of Virginia and gone on board a Man of War.[14] Captain Crawford is the compilers 6th great grandfather.





XV.— IRVINE TO LINCOLN.



FORT PITT, July 16, 1782.

Sir:— This moment I have received an account that Han­nastown,[15] the county town of Westmoreland, was burned last Saturday afternoon by a large body of Indians, some say three hundred, others only one, with some mounted.1 That place is about thirty-five miles in the rear of Fort Pitt, on the main road leading to Philadelphia, generally called the Pennsyl­vania [Forbes] road. The Virginia [Braddock’s] road is yet open, but how long it will continue so is uncertain, as this stroke has alarmed the whole country beyond conception. Should the country be evacuated on the south side of me, I know not what the consequence will be, having no magazine of provision, indeed barely supplied from day to day. I can­not at present write more particularly, as I am not yet certain whether the enemy are not in force in the neighborhood. I have sundry reconnoitering parties out, but the bearer, a Mr. Elliott, who promises to forward this from Lancaster county, where he lives, could not be prevailed on to wait their return.[16]



“Extract of a letter from Westmoreland county, Pa., 16 July, 1782:

‘In a former letter I informed you of the unhappy fate of Col. Crawford, since which a man has made his escape from - the Indians who says that fire was made for his torture, when a very heavy rain came on and obliged them to defer his execution. During the night he was left tied in the care of three Indians who fell asleep; that he got loose and escaped without waking the Indians and arrived here seven clays after. He says the Indian from whom Dr. Knight escaped came to the town he was in, with his head much cut; that the Delawares applied to the Muncies for Col. Wm. Harrison (son-in-law to Crawford), who being given up was tortured in the most cruel manner, they having bound him to a stake, fired powder through every part of his skin for an hour, after which they cut him in quarters and hung them on stakes. This and other similar acts of barbarity the Indians said they did in revenge for the murders and robberies committed by our frontier inhabitants on their relations, the Moravians; and that in future they would spare none of our people.’ “— [17]





Col. William Crawford is the 6th great grandfather, William Harrison is the 5th great grandfather and Dr. Knight is the 1st cousin seven times removed in law of the compiler.



July 16, 1793


The original furnace (march, 1791), was a small establishment, but in 1793 Mr. Meason associated with him John Gibson and Moses Dillon, and this firm (styled Meason, Dillon & Co.) erected a much larger furnace and foundry on the site of the first one. On the formation of the partnership, July 16, 1793, Meason transferred to Dillon and Gibson one sixth of six hundred acres of the furnace which includes the furnace which is now erecting. With the houses and appurtenaces, and also one half of two thousand seven hundred acres adjoining, and between it and the Youghiogheny River.[18]



In 1793, Col Meason and Moses Dillon joined in rebuilding and enlarging Union Furnace. Their manufactures included stove castings, pots, dog irons, and salt kettles.[19]



Col. Isaac Meason is the the 5th great grand uncle in law of the compiler.



1793 - Benjamin Harrison was a member of the Kentucky Legislature in 1793 representing Bourbon County. (Drake etc., p. 145; History Bourbon etc., p. 220)



Benjamin Harrison is the 5th great granduncle of the compiler.





July 16, 1826:

Gravestone Inscriptions as copied in old Crawford Cemetery by H, Margorie Crawford, September 4, 1949:

1. All on one big stone which has fallen over:

Jno. Crawford, died September 22, 1816. Aged 66 1/3 years.

Effy Crawford, died November 22, 1822

Hannah P. Crawford, died July 16, 1826

Moses Crawford, died 1808

Sarah Rowland, late Sarah Crawford, died----

Thomas, son of Sarah Rowland, died---[20]



John Crawford is the 5th great granduncle, Effy Grimes Crawford is the 5th great grand aunt in law, Moses Crawford is the first 1st cousin 6 times removed of the compiler.





Sat. July 16, 1864

Heavy thunder in the afternoon[21]



(William Harrison Goodlove is the compilers 2nd great grandfather).





July 16, 1908

Wm. Goodlove has rented his farm to Dick Bowdish.[22] William Harrison Goodlove is the 2nd great grandfather and Dick Bowdish is the great grand uncle in law of the compiler.



Richard Harrison Gray, Ruth Gray Johnson’s brother, died as a child of a sudden illness while the family was visiting Central City. He is buried at Jordan’s Grove Cemetery. Richards parents, R. H. Gray, M. D. and Nettie O. Gray M. D. were both doctors.[23]

Richard Harrison Gray is the 1st cousin 2 times removed, Richard Hardy Gray is the great grand uncle in law, and Netti O. Gray is the Great grand aunt of the compliler.





July 16, 1937



• A concentration camp is established at Buchenwald.[18]



Sat. July 16, 1864



Heavy thunder in the afternoon[19]







July 16, 1908



Wm. Goodlove has rented his farm to Dick Bowdish.[20]











• July 16, 1940



• The expulsion of Jews from Alsace and Lorraine to southern France is initiated.[21][24]







July 16, 1941



Jewish lawyers are limited to 2 percent of those admitted to practice by the French bar. On August 11, the same 2 percent limitation is applied to Jewish physicians.[22][25]







July 16, 1941



• Up to this date, 2,700 Jews have been shot outside Riga.[23][26]







• July 16-29, 1941



• The Germans and Soviets fight at Smolensk, with the Germans eventually victorious.[24][27]















• July 16-17, 1942



• A total of 12,887 Jews of Paris are rounded up and sent to Drancy; in all, about 42,500 Jews are sent to Drancy from all over France during this Aktion.[25][28]











July 16, 1942



The following points are discussed: the date of the roundup is put off to July 16. It will begin at 4 A.M., and the arrested Jews will be assembled at the Vel d’Hiv. Andre Tulard, keeper of the Prefectur’s Jewish Census file, estimates that 24,000 to 25,000 individuals will be interened. Upper age limits are raised to 55 for women and 60 for men. This is probably because examination of the records for stateless Jews shows they are too few to produce the predicted number of arrests, but it somewhat contradicts the appearance that these are to be “deportations for labor service” the initial description of the operation.







For the moment, it is planned that Public Assistance agencies will take charge of children under 15 taken to the Vel d’Hiv, before turning them over to the UGIF. Jewish women who are mothers of infants under twop years of age will not be arrested, but stateless Jewish spouses of Aryans will be arrested. The first deportatrion convoy after the police raids will leave for the East on July 21 and 22 and others will follow at a contemplated rate of three times per week.







Dannecker telexes Eichmann that the raids will be carried out gby the French police from July 16 to July 18 and it is expected that about 4,000 children will be among those arrested.



Dannecker sets out the main arguments in favor of deportation of these 4,000 children: to prevent promiscuity between them and non-Jewish children under Public Assitance care; and the impossibility that the ‘U



GIF can care for more than 400 of them. Dannecker requests an urgent response to the question of whether, beginning with the tenth convoy (July 24), the 4,000 children can also be deported. These will be children ages 2 to 16, whose fate Premier Laval has said does not interest him. The minimum age for children to be deported is set at two because the Special Commission has exembpted from arrest mothers with children under two and the children themelves. Dannecker further requests an urgent response to a question posed in his July 6 telex; whether beginning with convoy 15, he can deport children under 16 whom Vichy will deliver from the Unoccupied Zone and whom Laval had asked Knochen to deport with their parents.[26] [29]







July 16-17, 1942



The Vol d’Hiv roundup begins as planned before dawn, at 4 A.M. on Thursday, July 16. By 8 A.M. the Paris police inform the prefect of police that many Jewish men had left their homes the evening before. They doubtless have been alerted by rumors of the roundup from individual policemen and members of the Jewish Communist resitance organization, and apparently they believe only men wil be targeted, as was the case in the three prior roundups. By 3 P.M. when the action is haltyed for the day, there are 11,363 prisoners, 2573 men, 5,165 women, and 3,625 children.







The operation is resumed July 17 and goes on until 1 P.M., but with less success. By 5 P.M. the tally of arrests for the two days totals 12,884; 3,031 men, 5,802 women, and 4,051 children. The Prefecture instructs local police to continue their search for Jews not found at home during the raids; a police van will be sent to each of Pari’s six police divisions for several days to collect arrested Jews. A total of 8,160 Jews are held in the Vel d’Hiv (1,129 men, 2,916 women, 4115 children), and 4,992 single adults and couples without children or with grown children (1,989 men and 3,003 women) are interned at Drancy.







According to a report of the Prefecture of Police, Parisians openly express reproach “for these measures, which they consider inhumane.”







Rothke reports that Darquier de Pellepoix thinks it will be possible to place the 4,115 children in various institutions in Paris and its suburbs. Rothke’s aim is to prevent dispersal of the children in case Berlin accepts Dannecker’s proposal and it becomes possible to begin deporting them, perhaps August 4 or 5. Darquier’s solution is set aside in favor of keeping the children and parents together and moving them to the Pithiviers and Beaune-la-Rolande camps while awaiting Berlins’s decision. Rothke notes that “representatives of the French police have expressed many times the wish to see convoys toward Germany include shildren as well.” Novertheless, if parents and children cannot be deported together because Berlin fails to make an early decition or the children cannot immedieately be accepted to the East, it is understood that the parents will bedeported first. A negative decision on the children’;s deportation isn’t even considered; in the margin of his report Knochen note: “in my opinion [they] can be deported all the same after a decision of the RSHA,” the Main Office for State Security, in Berlin.







The French police representatives, who insistently voice support for deportation of the Jewish children with or without their parents, are led by Leguay, the Vichy police delegate, and the two leading Paris Police Prefecture officials on Jewish matters, Francois and Tulard.







Three considerations weigh in the French police officials’ demand that the children be deported, with their parents or after them.







First, the number of Jews arrested is far short of the German demands accepted by Bousqet and Laval. Between 20,000 and 22,000 arrests were anticipated, but the count of arrested adults in the agreed age ranges yields 8,833 potential deportees. To increase the number, the raids would have to be resumed, though they would be less effective because stateless Jews who escaped arrest would bwe on their guard. The SS expect their schedule for the dispatch of deportation trains to be respected; the French judge it best to give them a suitable number of Jewish heads by adding the 4,000 children. ‘The 13,000 total including the children will still be short of the 22,000 sought, but it will gain time and avert conflict with the Germans. It is clear that if the FGrench insist on deporting the children , the Gestapo will report it and Berlin will know in advance that there will be no official French opposition to the policy.







Second, failure to deport the children would involve the police and the Vichy administration in the material problems of their long term lodging, care and feeding, education, and legal staus. (However, for severlal days, the abomidable treatment of Jewish families in the Vel d’Hiv is proof of the negligence and incompetence of the French officials involved.)







For Leguay, Francois, and Tulard, it is absolutely necessary that the children be deported, If they are not, a problem will be created that will last for years. In addition, if one day the Germans are defeated, these children become adults will ask what has happened to their parents and will demand judgement of the French officials responsible for their disappearance.







The children must be deporteed, and quickly, so that French officials will be involved with them as briefly as possible. In the Loiret camps where the children will be sent, Leguay, Francolis, Tulard, and the Orleans Prefecture all have failed to make preparations for their arrival; nor, in a region that is one of France’s granaries, have they arranged sufficient food for them; nor do they concern themselves with proper hgygiene or health conditions, and many of these 4,000 children very quickly will become ill. Some will find their deaths here in the Loiret within a few weeks and will bhe buried in individual or common graves in local cemeteries. Finally, these officials will deliberately plunge these thousands of children into frightful emotional distress when they separate them from their mothers.







The third consideration that certainly musyt wigh in the French decision is a fear of public knowledge of the coming separation of families. Darquier’s proposal to send the children to shelters in Paris and its suburbs would make it necessary to separate children and parents at the Vel d’Hiv. There are terrible scenes ahead, and it will be less disagreeable to have them played out far away, hidden behind the barbed wire of the Loiret camps. Parisians will have no knowledge of these events, and their compassion for Jewish families will not be reinforced. On returneing home in the evening, Paris policemen will not be talking about the scenes of hysteria they provoke during the day. (When time comes to deport the mothers, French police at the Loiret camps, more or less isolated from the local population, will use their rifle bgutts to separate them from their children and pack them into sealed boxscars. It would be three weeks before boxcars would be sent for the children.) [27] [30]







• July 16, 1943



• Ernst Gottlieb, born November 3, 1905 in Bosen. Resided Bosen. Deportation:Westerbork. July 13, 1943 Sobibor (Last known whereabouts). Date of death: July 16, 1943. Declared legally dead. [28][31]











July 16, 1945



On July 16, 1945 at 5:30 the test bomb at Alamagordo, in the New Mexico desert. It was the equivalent of 18000 lbs of TNT. Truman told Stalin at Potsdam that the Americans had a weapon of immense power. Stalin already knew through his intelligence sources. No one knew of its terrifying potential.[29][32] Eisenhower was against using the bomb on the grounds that the Japanese were already beaten. Truman had already made up his mind.[30] [33]







• July 16, 1969



• 25 years after the Werner von Braun built the V2 rocket for the Nazi’s, the first America Apollo mission is launched by von Braun.[31] [34] A 1943 document indicates that Wernher von Braun specifically requests concentration camp inmates for work in Dora Concentration camp. 10,000 people will die here while working on missile production.[28][32][35] Wernher von Braun (who would later send an American to the moon) is awarded the Knights Cross by Hitler in 1944.[29] [33][36]



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[1] [1] [1] Introducing Islam, Dr. Shams Inati, page 67.

[2] [3] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/

[3] In Search of the Turkey Foot Road.

[4] http://www.nps.gov/archive/fone/1754.htm

[5] {The Genealogical Society of Pennsylvania Publication, Volume 10, p. 66) (No Date)(Check Pa. Arch. S. 3, Vol. 22, p 50)

[6] (Historic She pherdstown, by Danske Dandridge, Page 310.)

[7] (Torrence and Allied Families, page 324.)

[8] Genealogies of Virginia Families, From the Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Volume III, 1981

[9] [Robert Torrence, Torrence and Allied Families (Philadelphia: Wickersham Press, 1938), 325; Israel Daniel Rupp, History and Topography of Dauphin, Cumberland, and Bedford Counties (Lancaster, Pennsylvania: G. Hills, 1846), 490.]

[10] (Oklahoma City, Oklahoma: privately printed, no date), 59.]

[11] [James Edward Harrison, A comment of the family of ANDREW HARRISON who died in ESSEX COUNTY, VIRGINIA in 1718 (Oklahoma City, Oklahoma: privately printed, no date), 59.]



[12] The Horn Papers, Early Westward Movement on the Monongahela and Upper Ohio 1765-1795 by W.F. Horn Published for a Committee of the Greene County Historical Society, Waynesburg, Pennsylvania by the Hagstrom Company, New

York, N.Y. 1945

Ref. 33.92 Conrad and Caty by Gary Goodlove 2003



[13] Letters to Washington and Accompanying Papers by Stanislaus Murray Hamilton, VOL IV pgs 217-220

[14] The Journal of Nicholas Cresswell, 1774-1777 pg. 97

[15] “By provision of the act [erecting the county of Westmoreland] the courts were to be held at the house of Robert Hanna till a court house should be built. Hanna’s settlement was on the old Forbes road, about thirty miles east of Pittsburgh, and about three miles northeast of the present county town, Greensburg. Robert Hanna, a north-county Irishman, had early opened a public house here, and near him had soon been commenced a settlement prosperous for those times: If we except the region immediately contiguous to Fort Ligonier, and the region about the forks of the Ohio [Pittsburgh], the settlement about Hanna’s wa.s, at this date [1773], the most flourishing in the county. After the courts had been appointed for here, the place was further stimulated. It was the first collection of houses between Bedford and Pittsburgh dignified with the name of town. It, at no time, contained more than perhaps thirty log cabins, built after the primitive fashion of those days, of one story and a cock-loft, in height, with clap-board roofs, and a huge mud chimney at one end of each cabin. These, scattered along the narrow packhorse track among the monster trees of the ancient forest, was that Hannastown, which occupi8ed such a prominent place on the early history of Western Pennsylvania, where was held the first court west of the Alleghany [in oppostition to the tyrannical acts of Great Britain], were passed.” G. Dallas Albert, in Dr. Wm. H. Egles’s History of Pennsylvania, pp. 1153, 1154.

(Washington-Irvine Correspondence by Butterfield, pages 176-177.)

[16] Washington-Irvine Correspondence by Butterfield pages 176-177.

[17] Pennsylvania Packet, July 30, 1782.

Washington-Irvine Correspondence by Butterfield pages 176-177.

[18] History of Fayette County, Pennsylvania, by Franklin Ellis, 1882 pg 235.

[19] In 1804, Col. Meason filled the first order for sugar kettles called for by Southern planters.

[20] (Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett pge. 454.21)

[21] William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary

[22] Winton Goodlove papers.

[23] Linda Petersen Papers, 9/30/2010.

[24]

[21] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1763.

[25] [23] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1766.

[26] [23] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1766.

[27] [24] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1766.

[28] [25] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1772.

[29]

[26] French Children of the Holocaust, A Memorial by Serge Klarsfeld, page 39.

[30] [27] French Children of the Holocaust, A Memorial by Serge Klarsfeld, pages 39-43.

[31] [28] [1] Gedenkbuch, Opfer der Verfolgung der Juden unter der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft in Deutschland 1933-1945. 2., wesentlich erweiterte Auflage, Band II G-K, Bearbeitet und herausgegben vom Bundesarchiv, Koblenz, 2006, pg. 1033-1035,.

[32] [29] History’s Turning Points, The Atomic Bomb, HISTI.

[33] [30] History’s Turning Points, The Atomic Bomb, HISTI.

[34] [31] Hitler’s Manager’s, Wernher von Braun: The Rocket Man, 10/15/2005

[35] [32] Hitler’s Manager’s, Wernher von Braun: The Rocket Man, 10/15/2005

[36] [33] Hitler’s Manager’s, Wernher von Braun: The Rocket Man, 10/15/2005

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