Tuesday, August 2, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, August 2

• This Day in Goodlove History, August 2

• 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.



In the news!

Muhammad Ali Writes Letter To People Of Norway


By The Associated Press 08/ 1/11 01:25 PM ET

Muhammad Ali expressed his sadness about the bombing and massacre in Norway, saying he is heartbroken by the senseless deaths and the reasoning of the man behind them.

In a letter to the people of Norway written under his name, the boxing great says his "heart goes out to each of you as you deal with the unimaginable grief of your loss."

Ali wrote that the richness of diversity is something that makes the world a better place and that no one should fear multiculturalism. People, he said, have the same ideals no matter what religion or race they are.

"I see the same wishes for our children to have happy, healthy lives; I see the same concerns for others less fortunate than ourselves; I see the same desire for peace and dignity," Ali said.

The man who confessed to carrying out the massacre, Anders Behring Breivik, has said the attacks were part of a plan to start a cultural revolution and purge Europe of Muslims while also punishing politicians who have embraced multiculturalism.

Ali, a Muslim, said those who commit unspeakable acts in the name of race and religion "fail to understand that we share far more with our fellow beings than those aspects that set us apart."

He went on to say that the best way to honor the victims in Norway is to reach out and embrace others in a celebration of common human values and aspirations.

The collective power of such individual proactive acts can have a tremendous aggregate impact and provide a lasting honor to those who are no longer able to take such action themselves," Ali wrote.

Ali's spokesman, Craig Bankey, said the former heavyweight champion, who suffers from Parkinson's, communicated his thoughts in the letter to his wife.

I Get Email!



In a message dated 8/1/2011 5:27:09 P.M. Central Daylight Time, JPT@donationnet.net writes:





If I could only tell the world one thing about Israel
it would be...


Dear Jeff,

If I could only tell the world one thing about Israel, it would be the explanation for the reason why so many people hate Israel. The rising tide of anti-Semitism around the world resembles the events of the 1930’s...which led to the dreadful Holocaust that killed six million Jews, including many of my own family members. It WILL happen again if the enemies of Israel have their way.

Evil, demonic leaders like Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran have spoken glowingly of their plans to “wipe Israel off the map”...and he is coming perilously close to being able to do it. I personally heard him say in New York last year that The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion (a book of slanderous lies first published in Czarist Russia in 1903) is the reason for the way he feels about the Jewish people.

Knowing the book is a crude forgery that has been discredited for decades, many Westerners dismiss it. That is a horrible mistake with tragic consequences. It remains a best-seller in the Muslim world today, and terrorist groups like Hamas cite it approvingly in their founding documents. I wrote my new thriller, The Protocols, specifically to reveal the impact on anti-Semitism this evil lie still has on our world today.



Dr. Michael Evans





This Day…

August 2, 338 BCE: A Macedonian army led by Philip II defeated the combined forces of Athens and Thebes in the Battle of Chaeronea, securing Macedonian hegemony in Greece and the Aegean. Phillip was the father of Alexander Great. His victory paved the way for Alexander’s conquests which had a major impact on the Jewish people of which we are reminded each year when we celebrate Chanukah.[1]

August 2, 1222: Raymond VI , Count of Toulouse and Marquis of Provence passed away. “He was so sympathetic to the Jews that Pope Innocent III caused him to take an oath ‘that he would deprive the Jews of their offices and that he would never appoint any Jews or in any way favor them.’”[2]



1222: Council of Oxford: Archbishop of Canterbury Stephen Langton forbids Jews from building new synagogues, owning slaves or mixing with Christians.[3]



August 2, 1389: Catholic Archdeacon and Jew hater Ferran Martinez is denied the right to act as a judge or to preach after going against an order of the Pope. The Archbishop of Seville issued this strong punishment because Martinez refused to issue permits for Jews to build new synagogues, in accordance with the wishes of the Pope.[4]



August 2, 1542

On August 2nd, 1542, the same chief upon his own resignation, received from the king a charter of twenty merk lands of Meysnes (Mishnish) in Mull, and the twenty merklands of Strathredole in Skye, to be in free tenantry and sasine, taken at the principal messuage of Strathredole, to suffice for the whole lands. The distinction is to himself and the heirs male of his body, lawfully begotten, who failing, to his nearest and lawful male heirs whomsoever; by which heirs female and assignees seem to be excluded.[5]



1543

The Spanish version of the Bible by Francisco de Enzinas (1543) was based on Erasmus.[6]



August 2, 1675

Brookfield, Massachusetts, is attacked by Wamanoag Indians, during King Philip’s War.[7]



1675-1676

In 1675-1676 King Philip and his Wampanoag tribe became the ostensible target of both Connecticut and Massachusetts, allegedly because of the Indians’ attacks upon several towns in Plymouth. However, the New Englanders really aimed at destroying the Narragansetts who, under the protection of Rhode Island and the Crown, controlled the lands around the bay bearing their name.[8]



August 2, 1675: The “Great Synagogue” was inaugurated in Amsterdam on Rapenburgerstraat. [9]



August 2, 1696: Birthdate of Mahmud I, Sultan of the Ottoman Empire. In 1739, Mahmud signed the Treaty of Belgrade that gave citizenship rights to the Ottoman Jews. Austrian Jews were so impressed with the grant of rights that many of them applied for citizenship in Mahmud’s empire. [10]



August 2, 1762
In the year 1762, Lawrence3 Harrison and his wife Catherine sold the (346 acres in Winchester, Virginia) property to Moses Tullis. [11]



August 2, 1762: HARRISON to TULLIS



THIS INDENTURE, made August 2, 1762, between Lawrence Harrison, of the County of Frederick and Colony of Virginia, of the first part, and Moses Tullis, of the same . . . second part . . . Witness: For, five shillings, current money of Virginia . . to said Lawrence. Harrison, in hand paid by Moses Tullis . . . doth grant . . . said tract lying in the County aforesaid, granted to Jacob Heit, by deed under the hand and seal of the Right Honorable Thomas, Lord Fairfax, bearing date 1752 by transfer by Jacob Heit to Lawrence Harrison, bearing date June 5, 1758.

(Signed) Lawrence Harrison





August 2, 1765: Susannah Smith10 [Francis Smith9, William Smith8, Lawrence Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. 1739 / d. 1823) married Col William Preston (b. 1729 / d. 1783).

A. Children of Susannah Smith and William Preston:

+ . iii. Francis Preston (b. August 2, 1765 / d. May 26, 1835)[12]



August 2, 1765: -General Charles Cornwallis was the son of the first Earl

CornwaUis. He commenced military studies early in life, was made

colonel of the Thirty-third foot August 2, 1765, major-general September

29, 1775, and January I, 1776, received the local rank in America of

lieutenant-general. He was considered the most able and reliable of

all the English commanders during the war, but his reputation was

greatly stained by the many cruelties afterward inflicted in the South-

ern Department by his e.xpress orders. [13]





August 2, 1770. George Washington’s Journal: Met the Officers of the first Virga. Troops at Captn. Weedens wherc we dined & did not finish until abt. Sun set. Mrs. Washington & Patcy dind at Cola. Lewis’s where we lodgd.[14]’[15]







No. 9.—William CRAWFORD TO George WASHINGTON.





STEWART’S CROSSING,[16] August 2, 1771.



SIR:—I have done nothing with Colonel Croghan in regard to the land you want of him as yet, as I could see none of his land in his line now run that will answer, to be laid off as he wants it laid off. I have found some at about fifteen or sixteen miles distance from Fort Pitt, which is very good farming land, and as good meadow land as ally. The upland is level, or no more hilly than is necessary to make the ground dry. The tract is like Gist’s,[17] and full as good as his and as level, the draft of which I shall show you when I come down. I do not know whether Crosson will take this in his line or not. He is to have a tract laid off by his surveyor for you on Mingo creek, which is good land; but I do not know as yet what quantity there will be, as it is not done, but is to be done, and I am to bring, for your perusal, the draft when I come down. It is to be as large as the good land will admit of any how, in a square, which is the way he will have his land run out. I shall close no bargain with him till I see you, which will be as soon as I can possibly get my business done up the river; but I do not much like running any land in Tygart’s Valley, [18] as the people in general are very contentious there, for want of the law being properly established amongst them; but, if possible to be done, I will do it.

I have run out the different tracts of land described in your memorandum, between the Little Kanawha and the Big Kanawha; and that tract above the Captina, [19] or opposite to Pipe creek. [20]

It is not large. I have not made out the draft yet, nor shall I do so until I come down to your house. I saw a letter from Mr. Tilghman in regard to Colonel Croghan. He says the latter has no right to any land as yet, nor can not tell whether he ever will have any from the Crown. Croghan claims it from an Indian deed and is making out patents to such as will buy of him ; but Mr. Tilghman says in his letter: “.1 hope persons will ask themselves how they will come by their money again, if, in a few years, his title should be found not good.”

I am to view his land on Mingo creek again before I come down; and if it should not be his land, it may be you can make it your own hereafter. I have nothing material now, further, to let you know, that I can think of. I am, etc.

P. S.—Mingo creek empties into the Monongahela above the mouth of Youghiogheny, and the land is near the bead. It is a small creek.[21]



August 2nd, 1774



Received of Capt. Wm. Herrad Twenty Five Beeves for the use of the militia at Fort Fincastle

I say Recd. Wm. Crawford[22]



Wednesday, August 2nd, 1775.

Returned to V. Crawford’s. Intend to go to Fort Pitt the first opportunity. I am now getting strong and healthy.[23]



August 2, 1776

The Declaration of Independence is signed by members of the Continental Congress, in Philadelphia.[24]



LouisviLLE August 2, 1784. Commr



Copy of the proceedings of the Commrs for adjusting the claims of the Officers & Soldiers of the Illinois Regiment to the Lands given them under a resolution of January 2, 1781 agreable to Act of Assembly passed October Session 1783.





met according to adjournment; Present, Walker Daniel, Geo. R. Clark, John Montgomery, John Bailey, Robert Todd & William Clark, Gen Comm’

Ordered that the Board adjourn ‘till tomorrow morning. Sign’d W. DANIEL Ch~[25]



• August 2, 1790: The United States conducts its first census. Out of a population of four million people, there are approximately 2,000 Jews.[26]



August 2, 1819: An anti-Semitic riot breaks out in the city of Wurzberg. It will be the first in string of such violent actions to plague the Jews of Germany[27]

On August 2, 1821: U.S. soldiers nearly annihilated Black Hawk's band as it attempted to escape west across the Mississippi, and Black Hawk finally surrendered.

Casualties in the 15-week war were grossly one-sided. An estimated 70 settlers or soldiers lost their lives; estimates for the number of Indians killed are between 442 and 592. Black Hawk was captured and incarcerated for a time in Fortress Monroe, Virginia. In order to demonstrate the futility of further resistance to the powerful Americans, Black Hawk was taken on a tour of the major eastern cities before being relocated to an Iowa Indian agency. He lived the remaining six years of his life under the supervision of a Sauk chief who had once been his enemy. Unlike Black Hawk, the Sauk chief had cooperated with the United States government.[28]



Iowa 24th Infantry

Corp. Elias Gabriel, enlisted August 2, 1862, wounded, discharged January 5, 1865, as sergt. Iowa 24th Infantry.

Blakely, Z., enlisted August 2, 1862, corp., died September 10, 1863.


Tues. August 2, 1864

Cloudy don’t feel very well

All the regiment went on picket in sight

Of Fredric city[29] 3 miles wrote a letter to wildcat grove[30]



Relatives and friends began arriving to greet the returned veterans. The men finally received their back pay on August 2, and the 24th Iowa was officially disbanded. Although the parting was one of melancholy, the return to their individual homes was not joyous for all. Captain Lucas was sobered by the new that his mother had died June 13, tearfully clutching his picture and saying that she would never see her Alexander.[31]



Moved to Davenport, Iowa, July 20-August 2. [32]





August 2, 1865

Relatives and friends began arriving to greet the returned veterans. The men finally received their back pay on August 2, and the 24th Iowa was officially disbanded. Although the parting was one of melancholy, the return to their individual homes was not joyous for all. Captain Lucas was sobered by the new that his mother had died June 13, tearfully clutching his picture and saying that she would never see her Alexander.[33]



Fall 1865

In the fall of 1865 Dr.William McKinnon Goodlove entered the University of Ann Arbor, Michigan, took a regular course of education at that institution, and in 1868 entered the Medical College of Ohio, at Cincinnati, and took a progressive course, granduating 1n1868, and commencing the practice of medicine in the town of Ontra, Shelby Co., Ohio.[34] His father died when he was ten, he entered the Civil war at 15, remaining until the very end in one of the most heavily embattled regiments of Union Army. One of most remarkable untold stories of the Goodlove family.



1865

General Benjamin Lefever was nominated for secretary of state by the Democratic party in 1865.[35]



In memory of those who served in the military.



Lt. (?) John A Plum killed in battle near Pesar (sp) GA.[36] May 14, 1864.

Dr. Benjamin Franklin MCKINNON[37] Civil War Asst[38]. Surgeon 139th & 191st Reg. [39]

Daniel F. Mckinnon[40]: Civil War

Dennis Denny: Civil War[41]

Alfred M. McKinnon: Civil War[42] He died at Chatanooga, Tenn. December 6, 1863.

John Tunis MCKINNON Civil War[43]

JOSIAH MCKINNON: Civil War[44]

Joseph Houston McKinnon:Civil War[45]

William King Crawford (Grandson of Col. William Crawford) Civil War.[46]

Job Kirby[47] New York State regiment (Company G, 104th Regiment, New York Volunteers[48]





• August 2 to August 22, 1914 : The destruction and sacking of the city of Kalisz by the German Empire troops. One of the oldest towns in Poland with a rich historical tradition and monuments of medieval architecture was bombed and burnt down. It was committed on a defenseless open town, which the Russian army had left without fighting.[49]



• August 2, 1914: Major Hermann Preusker, the commander of the second battalion of 155 infantry regiment gave an order to burn the city, as a result of which 95% of the twon was completely destroyed. Most of the houses were burnt to the ground. A significant number of citizens were shot. After the war which before the war had 65,000 inhavitants, left with only 5,000 inhabitants after the August Exodus. [50]







August 2, 1929: It was August 2, 1929, and the National Socialists were filming their third party rally. The first in Nuremburg. 100,000 Nazi’s attended. [51]



• August 2, 1934: The German President, Paul von Hindenburg, dies, leaving the way for Hitler to establish a dictatorship.[52]



August 2, 1939

Albert Einstein writes a letter to Roosevelt telling him that Hitler might be developing an extraordinary bomb, so powerful that it could destroy whole cities, in an instant. Roosevelt immediately set up a committee to speed up American atomic research. Physicists like Enrico Fermi had calculated that even a few pounds of an unstable element like Uranium could cause an explosion of a scale not seen before.[53]



• August 2, 1940: A civilian administration under Gauleiter Gustav Simon is installed in Luxembourg.[54]



• August 2, 1941: The Jews were ordered expelled from Hungarian Ruthiea.[55]



• August 2, 1941: Over 200 Jews were shot in Kovno. (Lithuania)[56]



• August 2, 1942: After twelve days, approximately 75,000 Jews had been deported to the death camp at Treblinka.[57]











• August 2, 1943: Led by a small group of prisoners using primitive weapons and pistols, inmates at Treblinka attacked the guards and burned down the barracks. Between 300 and 500 prisoners escaped although most of them were either captured or turned over by Polish peasants. Though the revolt did not stop all activities, the German government decided to liquidate the camp, which it did in October.[1] [58] Only 67 people are known to have survived the camp. The survivors became the only source of knowledge about Treblinka, because the Nazis all but destroyed it in a frantic bid to cover their tracks. Today there only 2 survivors from the Treblinka extermination camp where 875,000 were killed.[59]



• August 2, 1943: Led by a small group of prisoners using primitive weapons and pistols, inmates at Treblinka attacked the guards and burned down the barracks. Between 300 and 500 prisoners escaped although most of them were either captured or turned over by Polish peasants. Though the revolt did not stop all activities, the German government decided to liquidate the camp, which it did in October.[60]





• August 2, 2004: In a letter to Annie Cline, Judge Jacob Didawick, a grandson of Francis, wrote that his grandfather was 84 when he died.[1][61] This translates as a birth year of 1750 or 1751, which is close to the birth year for Franz Gottlob estimated from HETRINA. HETRINA has three references to Franz. Two of those estimate his birth year as 1752-1753 and one 1754-1755.[2] [62]










September 26, 2009 3:56 PM

On the August 2, 2009 This Day in Goodlove History…


1 comment:



Chris said...

thanks for your painstaking efforts to assimilate this data and post it with footnotes! what a great work!

i may be culling your blog as a resource for my own at http://holokauston.wordpress.com

shalom,
chris
Never Again!



August 2, 2010

While home this weekend I found out that Willard (Bill Goodlove) is ill. Please keep him in your prayers.

Sherri and I were at the LeClere reunion at Buck Creek Park yesterday. There was a pot luck which of course in Iowa, pot luck is where the women show what they are made of. There is no other place where Pot luck can rival any caterer. In Iowa you don’t really have caterers for a special occasions, you have Pot Luck. Also, you don’t really notice it, until you go away from Iowa for a long time, then come back. It is one of the things I miss most. There were 90 plus at the LeClere reunion. No invitations, just word of mouth and the local paper. I had traveled the farthest, Norman Snell was the oldest, and a little tiny baby Leclere was the youngest. It was a good time.

We saw the remains of where the dam broke at nearby Lake Delhi. The water is all gone and it is just a small river now. The locals say that one of the three doors that were supposed to open up to let the water out was partially stuck and did not open all the way. The dam itself did not break, but the road/levy that made up a large part of the dam did. We were told that there was not flood insurance available, due to the county not having done the paperwork. Also the dam was owned by an association, not the county. I used to go to Lake Delhi when I was younger and I hope they can get the dam fixed soon.

One last thing, our family, meaning all of the Goodlove’s males are at high risk to get prostate cancer later in life. In the case of women, it would be breast cancer. I put off getting tested until 52 because, frankly, I thought for sure they would find something. They didn’t. Get tested, and keep getting tested. Jeff



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

[1] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/

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

[3] www.widipedia.org

[4] This Day in Jewish History

[5] M E M O I R S OF C LAN F I N G O N BY REV. DONALD D. MACKINNON, M.A. Circa 1888

[6] Trial by Fire by Harold Rawlings, page 68

[7] On This Day in America, by John Wagman.

[8] America-1603-1789 by Lawrence H. Leder, 1978, pg. 94.

[9] This Day in Jewish History

[10] This Day in Jewish History.

[11] [Robert Torrence, Torrence and Allied Families (Philadelphia: Wickersham Press, 1938), 323]

[12] Proposed descendants of William Smith

[13] THE BATTLES OF TRENTON AND PRINCETON BY WILLIAM S. STRYKER

[14] Meeting a day later than scheduled, the olbeers and representatives officers who were present accepted William Crawford as surveyor for the veterans bounty lands and resolved that GW should make a journey to the Ohio Valley with Crawford and Dr. James Craik to locate the best areas for the surveys. It was also agreed that the costs involved would be divided proportionately among the officers according to their original ranks, the field ofhcers paying the most and the subalterns the least. GW was empowered to begin collecting the money immediately (minutes of the officers of the Virginia Regiment. ~ Mar. 1771. DLC~GW: Ledger A, 322).

[15] George Washington Papers at the Library of Congress, 1741-1799: The Diaries of George Washington.

The Diaries of George Washington. Vol. II. 1766-70. Donald Jackson and Dorothy Twohig, eds.

Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1976.

[16] Stewart’s Crossing (frequently written in the plural) was so called from the circumstance of William Stewart having lived near the place in the year 1753 and part of 1754, when he was driven away by the French,. It was Crawford’s home, situated on what, at that (late, was known as Braddock’s road, the place on the Youghiogheny where Braddock crossed on hjs maich against Fort Duquesne (afterward Fort Pitt), in 1755. It was in Augusta county, Virginia, as claimed by that province; subsequently, in the district of West Augusta; and, finally, in Yoholiogania (not Youghiogheny) county, until 1779, when Virginia relinquished her claim to that section. As claimed by Pennsylvania, it was, at that date, in Bedford (formerly a part of Cumberland); afterward in Westmoreland; and, finally, in Fayette county—where the town of New Haven is now located, opposite Connellsville, forty-three miles from Pittsburgh.

[17] Christopher Gist. He made the first settlement within the province of Pennsylvania west of the Alleghany mountains. This was in 1752. His home was on Braddock’s road, not very far south from Stewart’s Crossing, on the left side of the Youghiogheny, at what is now known as Mount Braddock, Fayette county, Pennsylvania.

[18] So called from David Tygart, who, with Robert Foyle, was the first occupant of West Virginia, west of the mountains; his settlement was the site of the present town of Beverly, Randolph county; it was destroyed by the savages in November, 1753.

[19] Captina creek empties into the Ohio on the right, twenty-one miles below the present city of Wheeling, West Virginia.

[20] Pipe creek empties into the Ohio on the right, between six and seven miles above the mouth of Captina.

[21] The Washington Crawford Letters, by C.W. Butterfield, 1877

[22] William Crawford was born about 1722, in Virginia whence he removed to the frontier in early manhood. He learned surveying from Washington, and in 1755 was an ensign of Virginia troops serving throughout the French and Indian War and thaqt of Pontiac (1763). In 1765 he removed to the Youghiogheny and was one of the earliest and most influential settlers, accompanying Washington down the Ohio in 1770. In Lord Dunmor’s War, he made three expeditions toward the Indian territory, in the second of which he built Fort Fincastle. He was major in Dunmore’s division, and commanded a side expedition which destroyed the Mingo towns. He was colonel of a Virginia regiment in the Revolution, and in 1782 led an expedition against the Wyandot at Sandusky, when he was captured, and tortured to death at the stake. Dunmore’s War, 1774 by Reuben Gold Thwaits, and Louise Phelps Kellogg, 1905, Pg. 103

[23] The Journal of Nicholas Cresswell, 1774-1777 pg. 99

[24] On this day in America by John Wagman.

[25] George Rogers Clark Papers 1781-1784 James Alton James, Ed.

[26] This Day in Jewish History.

[27] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/

[28] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/black-hawk-war-begins

[29]

(Fredrick City) Events leading to the Civil War, and the war itself, touched Frederick deeply. It was here that the Maryland Legislature met when it was decided the state would not secede from the Union. The city was a natural crossroads for troop movements. Frederick residents were pressed many times to provide supplies for troops, and many families in the city as well as the state were divided in their loyalties. The Battle of the Monocacy south of town saved Washington from being taken by the Confederate Army. http://www.cityoffrederick.com/text%20only/about/about.htm

[30] William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary by Jeff Goodlove

[31] Longley, Annals of Iowa (April, 1895), p. 56; Hoag Diary, Aug 2, 1865; Lucas, Iowa Historical Record (July, 1902), p. 551. The disbanding of the 24trh was a state act as opposed to their Federal discharge in Savannah. ( The History of the 24th Iowa Infantry by Harvey H Kimball, August 1974, page 209.)



[32] UNION IOWA VOLUNTEERS, 24th Regiment, Iowa Infantry: http://www.itd.nps.gov/cwss/template.cfm?unitname=24th%20Regiment%2C%20Iowa%20Infantry&unitcode=UIA0024RI

[33] Longley, Annals of Iowa (April, 1895), p. 56; Hoag Diary, Aug 2, 1865; Lucas, Iowa Historical Record (July, 1902), p. 551. The disbanding of the 24trh was a state act as opposed to their Federal discharge in Savannah. ( The History of the 24th Iowa Infantry by Harvey H Kimball, August 1974, page 209.)



[34] History of Logan County and Ohio, O.L. Baskin & Co., Chicago, 1880, page 692/

[35] The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans: Volume VI L.

[36] Son of Sally Ann Mckinnon. Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett p. 56.3

[37] DR. BENJAMIN T. McKINNON, physician and farmer; Lewistown; was born in Clark Co., O., Oct. 24, 1834; was the youngest son of Judge McKinnon, of Clark Co., O.; moved to Bloomfield Tp. when a boy, and has spent his life in Washington and Bloomfield Tps.; on the 29th of February, 1860, me married Charlotte, youngest daughter of Maj. Hanford, the first white settler of the tillage of Lewistown. Mrs. McKinnon, was born at the same place they now live, June 14, 1839. The doctor has attended to the two-fold duty of physician and farmer, and here the many friends and relations of the family meet and renew old friend ships. Among the relatives is a brother-in-law, Dr. McWorkman, principal of the St. Louis School for the Blind, and an old resident of the county, who is a regular visitor. Dr. and Mrs. McKinnon have two children-Hattie Pearl and Willard L. The center building of the house now occupied by Dr. McKinnon was built before the war of 1812, and was occupied by a noted friendly Indian, named Lewis, from whom the town of Lewistown was named. The house was also used as a " council chamber" by the Red men, and many are the tales of blood its old walls could relate, were they gifted with speech. Lewis lived there at the time of the cruel murder of Thompson and his son, but he was away at. the time. The murderers were hid there during the day and night succeeding that affair by Lewis' squaw, who was hostile to the whites, and when a party in pursuit of the redskins asked her if she had seen any hostile Indians, declared she had not. But, after the war, the whites were told by Polly Kaiser, a little white girl, a captive from Kentucky, who was living with Lewis' squaw at the time, that five of the red devils were in the upper room when the white pursuers were there. Mrs. McKinnon has in her possession a plaster cast, or "false face," as it is called, supposed to have been taken from a famous Indian named Babtista. A gentleman of good authority says he has seen Babtista, and that it is not ugly enough for that savage: he thinks it is a likeness of the famous "Big Turtle." Note: On Babtista, see comments of Theophilus McKinnon. (Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett pg. 56.12) History of Logan County, 1880, Chicago, pages 736,737.

[38] There are living in the upper Miami valley in Logan county today about one hundred descendants of Col. Crawford, who was so cruelly murdered at the upper Sandusky council in the troublous times before the savages sere subdued. Col. Crawford was a contemporary of Gen. Washington, and his daughter Sally married Major William Harrison. Nancy, the daughter of the Harrisons, married Daniel McKinnon, and their son, Judge William Harrison McKinnon, married Kitty Foley of Clark county. Dr. B. F. McKinnon, the son of Judge and Mrs. McKinnon, married Charlotte, the daughter of Major Hanford, and their home was a gift from the bride's father, being the same house that has for a long time been known as the Price hotel. Their daughter Harriet was born, and from it Dr. McKinnon went to the United States Medical corps, the first volunteer of the Civil war from Lewistown.

Excerpt form Memoirs of Mieami Valley, pp. 282-283

Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett p. 56.13-56.14

[39] OVI ! Compiled by JoAnn Naugle, 4100 W St. NW #513, Washington, Dc. 20007 !

[40] B:13 Oct, 1831 d: May 1887, Married Nancy Lavinia Hill and Jane Sharp. (The compilers 1st cousin, 4 times removed.)

[41] Rosella Ward Wegner has a copy of the military records for Dennis Denny's service in the Civil War. Attached to the records is the following list of engagements in which Dennis Denny served (unverified except for one, denoted by *). Dennis started out as a Sgt. and ended service as a 1st Lt. : Shiloh, Tenn. Perrysville, KY. Stone River. Liberty Gap. Chickamauga, GA. Orchard Knob, Tenn. Lookout Mt. Mission Ridge. Bussard Roost, GA. Rocky Face Ridge. Reseca(This is in the records, he was wounded here*). Adairsville. Cassville. Dallas. Burnt Hickory. Kenesaw Mt. Nickajack Creek. Chattahoochie River. Peach Tree Creek. Others.

[42] Alfred M. McKinnon, born 1839. He died at Chatanooga, Tenn., from the effects of the wounds received in battle at Mission Ridge (December 6, 1863); was a member of the 1st 0. V. I. He appears as a student in Clark Co OH in 1860. Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett page 112.5

[43] John T., born 1845 according to 1850 census where he is named John L. John T. was in the Civil War as a member of the 132nd O. I.. Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett, page 112.5.

[44] JOSIAH MCKINNON (NANCY5 HARRISON, SARAH4 CRAWFORD, WILLIAM3, JOHN2, WILLIAM1) was born 1804 in Clark Co., OH, and died February 20, 1837 in Logan Co., OH. He married CATHERINE GRIFFIN June 4, 1826 in Clark Co., OH.

[45] B: abt 1841 D:1918. (Theophelus, Daniel, Daniel, John,)The compilers 1st cousin, 4 times removed.

[46] (John, Col. William) Born 1829 and died 1901 Girard, Kansas. He lived in western Indiana 1838-1851. In IL 1851-1858, then back to IN and served in the Indiana Militia in the Civil War. He moved to Crawford Co., Kansas in 1868.

[47]Job Kirby, son of William Kirby, was born in 1816, and came to America with his mother in 1849. He was unmarried, and when the Civil War broke out, he enlisted in a New York State regiment (Company G, 104th Regiment, New York Volunteers), and went to the front. After one year of service he was taken prisoner by Confederates. He was paroled, but his patriotism led him back into the army and he was taken prisoner a second time. He was held in a stockade at Salisbury, North Carolina, where from exposure and neglect he died and was buried February 1, 1865, aged forty-eight years (The Career of a Family, History of William and Esther Kirby and their Family up to the Present time (December, 1914) by John Kirby, Adrian, Michigan. Page 10.)

[48] Gary Goodlove Archives

[49] Wikipedia.com

[50] Wikipedia.com

[51] Third Reich, The Rise, 12/14/2010 HIST

[52] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page1760.

[53] History’s Turning Points, The Atomic Bomb, HISTI

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

[55] This Day in Jewish History.

[56] This Day in Jewish History

[57] This Day in Jewish History.



[58] This Day in Jewish History

[59] Daily Herald, November 1, 2010, page 12, section 1.

[60] This Day in Jewish History

[61] [1] Typescript of letter received from Ashley Teets, August 2, 2004. This letter has circulated in the Godlove family for years. I do not know if the original exists. James Funkhouser j.a.funkhouser@worldnet.att.net

[62] [2] Jim Funkhouser

1 comment:

  1. thanks for your painstaking efforts to assimilate this data and post it with footnotes! what a great work!

    i may be culling your blog as a resource for my own at http://holokauston.wordpress.com

    shalom,
    chris
    Never Again!

    ReplyDelete