Sunday, August 28, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, August 28

This Day in Goodlove History, August 28

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/

I Get Email…

In a message dated 8/26/2011 10:55:17 A.M. Central Daylight Time,

anon

I'd prefer that you not post this to your blog, but someone who says they are a friend of Israel and then comes up with anti Semitic rhetoric like this lets me know who and what that person really is. I have no love for Glenn Beck and he can go to Israel as much as he wants and stomp and preach but he is not a friend of Jews nor a person interested in the welfare of anyone who is not allied with his reactionary discourse.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/08/25/glenn-beck-jewish-people-_n_936795.html?icid=maing-grid10%7Chtmlws-main-bb%7Cdl12%7Csec3_lnk1%7C89528

Just had to share.

Anon.



Glenn Beck: Jewish People 'Drive Me Out Of My Mind' With Their Constant Talking (AUDIO)



Anon, Thanks for your comment about Beck. I am not for or against Beck, but I did listen to the tape about Jewish people always talking at the same time. I hope not to offend anyone so I will be more careful in the future. I for one thought it was a cultural comment, not an negative comment. Jeff

Glenn Beck: Jewish People 'Drive Me Out Of My Mind' With Their Constant Talking (AUDIO)


First Posted: 8/25/11 01:44 PM ET Updated: 8/26/11 11:43 AM ET

Glenn Beck was in South Africa on Thursday, fresh off his "Restoring Courage" event in Israel. He understandably spent his Thursday show recapping and reflecting on the multi-day extravaganza he had just pulled off.

Beck said that some people who were slated to perform at the controversial event had had to pull out.

"The reason why they canceled is because they were under death threat," he said. "...I don't blame them for [canceling] at all."

Beck also said he had been overwhelmed by one aspect of his trip. "I love the Israelis, he said. "I love the Jewish people. But they drive me out of my mind when they talk over each other. They're constantly talking!"

Beck compared being around Jews in Israel to a family that had eight children. "Eating dinner at their house was like having dinner in Israel," he said. "Everybody is just talking at the same time, you can't even think!"

This Day…

August 28, 388: Magnus Maximus, an Hispanic usper to the throne of the western Roman Empire passed away. During his disputed reign Maximus issued an edict of which censured Christians at Rome for burning down a Jewish synagogue which wascondemned by Bishop Ambrose who said people exclaimed: ‘the emperor has become a Jew’.[1]

August 28, 430: St. Augustine of Hippo passed away. Augustine believed that Jews should be allowed to survive in a Christian world to provide credence to roots of Christianity. But Jews should live at best as “second class” citizens in that Christian world to serve as a reminder of their fall from God’s favor for rejecting Jesus as the Son of God and as proof that God had made the Christians the new Chosen People.[2]

431: With regard to religion, we may note that, in A.D. 431, Palladius was sent from Rome as Primus Episcopus to the “Scotos in Christum credentes;” in A.D. 432, Patrick went to Ireland; in A. D. the British Bishop Ninian converted the Southern Picts; in A.D. 565, the Irish Presbyter, Columbus, converted the Northern Picts, and theirs was called the Culdee Church. [3]

The Emperors tried to preserv uniformity by summoning Eecumenical Councils, Councils to which all the bishops of Christendom werer invited, in the hope that the Holy Ghost would descend on them as it had on the disciples at Pentecost. The Councils would descend on them as it had on the disciples at Pentecost. The Councils achieved unanbimity only because dissident bhishops either refused to vfote or were prevented from voting. After each Council a section of Christendom broke away from the main body. The Arian heretics who seceded in the fourth century fated out in the East. But after the Council of Ephesus in 431 there was a separated Nestorian Church, which soon found its missionaries were to travel into India and into Tartary.[4]

August 28, 1189: The Crusaders begin the Siege of Acre under Guy of Lusignan. This two year long seige was part of the Third Crusade which is known as a confrontation between Richard I aka the Lionheart and Saladin. The siege followed the Crusader defeat at the Battle of the Horns of Hittin but was followed by victories by the Crusaders near Jaffa. In the end, the Moslems kept Jerusalem, the Jews of England suffered under the rule of Prince John in the absence of the Crusading Richard and Jewish population of Eretz Israel suffered further depradations and despoilation. [5]

1190: Saladdin takes over Jerusalem from Crusaders and lifts the ban for Jews to live there. Saladin is remembered as the ruler who readmitted the Jews to Jerusalem in 1190 (4950) as ecstatically recounted by the Jewish poet Al-harzi.[6]

August 28, 1453: Zbigniev Olessnicki, Bishop of Cracow and a heretic hunter named Capistrano, began a six month long campaign to stir up King Casimir against the Hussite heretics and the Jews of Cracow. [9][7]

1454 Jews expelled from Wurzburg.[8]

1454/1455

When printing was invented, the first book to come from the press of Johannes Gutenberg of Mainz, Germany, in 1454/1455 was Jerome’s Latin Vulgate.[9]

1454

The Teutonic Knights were overthrown by the Prussians with help from Poland and Lithuania in 1454. Prussia was divided into Royal Prussia in the west and Ducal Prussia in the east. Royal Prussia was incorporated into Poland providing it with a corridor to the Baltic Sea (the “Danzig Corridor”). Ducal Prussia became a Polish territory. At this time, the port city of Danzig (modern day Gdansk) was designated a “free city”.[10]

August 28, 1636:

Dan Harrison writes on 4/17/1999:

I was poking around on the online FamilySearch Ancestral File and came across the following information on Andrew Harrison, Sr. (Andrew is in the Harrison Repository at http://moon.ouhsc.edu/rbonner/harrison/d0055/g0000087.html#I1018 )

It lists Eleanor Ellitt as the wife of Andrew Harrison, Sr.; born abt. 1642 in New Kent, VA.

It lists Eleanor's parents as Samuel Ellitt and Elizabeth ?

It lists Andrew Harrison, Sr.'s father as Andrew Richard Harrison, born abt 1611 in London, England; died 1667 in London, England; Married August 28, 1636 in St. Giles, Cripplegate, London, England to Margaret Barber.

There is also an entry listing Andrew Harrison, Sr.'s father as Richard Harrison. Both entries list Margaret Barber as Andrew's mother.

Margaret Barber born abt. 1615 St. Giles, Cripplegate, London, England; died 1676/1677 in London, England. [11]

Wednesday August 28, 1754

A Mohawk Indian, Moses the Song, brings another letter and a map from Major Robert Stobo to George Croghan. The map detailed the size of Fort Duquesne. The letter gave information on how popular and important several French prisoners were that were in prison in Williamsburg Virginia. Essentially upon Stobo's advice, Lt. Governor Dinwiddie decided not to exchange those prisoners for Stobo and his compatriot Captain Jacob Van Braam. [12]



August 28, 1776: Washington’s forces numbering 9,000 men were forced to retreat into a culdesac on Brooklyn Heights with their backs to the East River, directly opposite the tip of Manhattan Island. It was into this desperate situation that Glover’s 24th Regiment was ordered on August 28, 1776.[13]

Washington, realizing he could not permit a major portion of his army to be bottled up and captured, put into effect secret plans for their evacuation. On the evening of August 29, having already assembled a sizable flotilla of small craft of many descriptions, he assigned Col. Glover the formidable task of ferrying the 9,000 colonial

Treoops with their equipment across the mile wide East River to Manhattan. The exodus had to be carried out under blackout conditions and with a minimum of noise to avoid alerting the British. Despite a strong ebb tide and variable winds, when dawn came only a small rear guard was left on Long Island.[14]



August 28, 1777

On the 28th at four o’clock in the morning the greater part of the army marched toward Elktown in the following order: (1) the foot jãgers and an officer and twenty mounted jãgers; (2) the two battalions of English light infantry; (3) the Queen’s Rangers; (4) Ferguson’s sharpshooters; (5) the two battalions of English grenadiers; (6) an artillery brigade; (7) the three Hessian grenadier battalions; (8) an artillery brigade; (9) the English Guards; (10) the 1st and 2d brigades of English infantry, and the wagons with the military chest, tools, hospital, ammunition, and provisions; (11) three troops of English dragoons; (12) the mounted jagers; and the 71st Highland Regiment. -

The rest of the army remained on Turkey Point under command of General von Knyphausen.[15]



August 28 — The army departed Turkeypoint and marched to Elktown which had been deserted by all the inhabitants. We had no reports about the enemy, and no maps of the interior of this land, and no one in the army was familiar with this area. After we had passed the city, no one knew which way to go. Therefore, men were sent out in all directions until finally a negro was found, and the army had to march according to his directions. [16]



August 28, 1777

From the first movements of the British in advance, active skir­mishing, sometimes of considerable bodies, took place. On the twenty-eighth the Americans took between thirty and forty prisoners, and twelve deserters from the navy and eight from the army came into .their camp. These stated the British forces to be in good health, but the horses as having suffered from the length of the voyage. [17]



Perhaps this is where “Francis” Conrad Gotlib is captured and later deserts. JG

1777

CONRAD GOTLIB (his mark), deserted the Brittish Army at the head of the Elk in 1777. Labourer

Signed Aug 17, 1782. [18]

August 28, 1777: Bro. Bader sent Adam Orth with a letter to

Colonel Grubb, and while on the way met the latter mounted,

as he was viewing the empty house offered to him yesterday.

He would not read the letter, because the orders could not

be changed. He also remarked that he could not ride

through the town in safety, on account of the feeling

against himself. Adam Orth, Baltzer Orth and George

Buehler discussed the situation of affairs with us when

it was decided that they should return to town and use

their utmost efforts to prevent the prisoners being con-

fined in our house ; that it was against all laws, against our

wishes, and could only be accomplished by force. They

met Colonel Grubb and for hours endeavored to induce him

to change the order, that they would provide two houses or

rent a large one in town and pay for the necessary changes.

But it was all of no avail and they came back at night, with

the news that the prisoners would arrive the following day.

The officers promised that a guard would be detailed to

protect the house and also a body guard for the pastor and

family, if he desired it. [19][20]



August 28, 1780

The first sessions of the County Court, held by these last

named Justices or some of them, was held at Fort Dunmore, on

February 21, 1775; and from this date there were, west of the

Alleghanies, not only two different sets of magistrates, with their

subordinate officers, constables, assessors, and organized companies

of militia, over the same people in the Monongahela valley, but

within a few miles of each other had been established two different

courts regularly (or irregularly) administering justice under the

laws of two different governments.



These conditions, with these Virginia Courts exercising judicial

powers in the same territory with the courts of Pennsylvania, con-

tinued until August 28, 1780, after which no Virginia court was ever

held within the limits of Pennsylvania, the general assembly of

Pennsylvania having ratified on September 23, 1780, the Baltimore

agreement as to where the boundary lines between the two states

should be run, as they were finally run and marked on the grouna

in 1784 and 1786.



As the Virginia adherents were no doubt largely in the

majority, the Westmoreland County Court seems to have done

much the smaller amount of business than did the Virginia courts,

during the concurrent existence of both; indeed, there was a period

of two years, from April Term 1776 to April Term 1778, during

which there were no sessions at all of the Court of Common Pleas

for Westmoreland County, while the Virginia courts were in

session regularly. Hereafter our attention will be confined to the

Virginia courts, and chiefly to the Court for the District of West

Augusta.



The new justices embraced in the commission of the peace

for the District of West Augusta, as held at the first day's session

of that court on February 21, 1775, were, in the order in which

their names were given, as follows: George Croghan, the deputy

Indian agent at Pittsburgh; John Campbell, of Pittsburgh, or near

thereto, owning a mill-seat at the mouth of Campbell's Run (so

Imown to this day) just below the railroad station at Carnegie;

John Connolly of Pittsburgh, the principal representative of Lord

Dunmore in this country; Edward Ward, who had surrendered to

the French and Indians the Virginia fort building at the Forks of

the Ohio on April 17, 1754; Thomas Smallman, of Pittsburgh;

Dorsey Pentecost, lately removed from the Forks of the Youghio-

gheny to the East Branch of Chartiers Creek; John Gibson, of

Pittsburgh, bi other of George Gibson who was afterward the father

of Chief Justice Gibson of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania;

Captain William Crawford, afterwards burned at the stake by the

Indians at Sandusky, Ohio, in 1782; John Stephenson, one of the

half-brothers of Crawford; John McCoUoch, of now West Liberty,

Ohio County, Virginia, the father of Major Sam. McColloch, who made

the famous leap on horseback from the Wheeling hill; John Canon

who laid out the town of Canonsburg; George Vallandigham, of the

Noblestown neighborhood, the grandfather of the notorious Clement

L. Vallandigham of Ohio; Silas Hedge and David Shepherd, both

of what is now Elm Grove in Ohio County, Virginia, near Wheeling;

and William Goe, from what is now Fayette County, north of

Brownsville, an ancestor of the Bateman Goe family of Pittsburgh. [21]



August 28, 1787

On August 28, 1787, John Crawford sold to Isaac Meason, “Stewarts Crossing” on the Youghiogheny. Recorded November 5, 1787.[22]

August 28, 1833

England abolishes slavery.[23]

Sun. August 28[24], 1864

Started to the reg. went 1 mile west of

Harpers ferry camped staid all night[25]



• August 28, 1896: Bedriska Gottliebova born August 28, 1896. Bn- September 22, 1942 Maly Trostinec.



• Transport Bf – Praha

• 866 zahynulych

• 133 osvobozenych

• 1 osud nezjisten [26]





August 28, 1902

Willis Goodlove and wife are rejoicing over the arrival of a new little daughter. (Winton’s note:Bess) [27]



• August 28, 1924:

• Linda, Love your book, “Our Grandmothers”. I recommend it to anyone who wants to know more about their family history. It has a lot of info that I did not have!

Regarding your email about Ursula Armstrong and John A. Lorence...John Anthony Lorence (Frank, Frantisek, Lorenc) was born May 16, 1901, and died September 1989 in Cedar Rapids, Linn Cnty, IA. He married Ursula Armstrong, August 28, 1924 in Cedar Rapids, IA, daughter of Frank Armstrong and Edna Valenta. She was born May 27, 1906 in Tipton, Iowa.

John Anthony Lorence is buried in Cedar Memorial, Cedar Rapids Iowa.

Child of John Lorence and Ursula Armstrong is Jack Junior Lorence, born February 4, 1927, Cedar Rapids, Ia.

Jack Junior Lorence (John Anthony, Frank, Frantisek Lorence) was born February 4, 1927 in Cedar Rapids, Ia. He married Jean LaRose Goodlove October 15, 1949 in Center Point, Ia., daughter of Covert Goodlove and Berneita Kruse. She was born April 13, 1931 in Linn Cnty, IA. Jack Junior Lorence graduated 1944 from McKinley H.S. bet 1944-1946 was in the Navy. Jean Larose Goodlove was a school secretary at Linn Mar in Marion.

Jack and Jean (my aunt and uncle) were instrumental in the transcription of the original William Harrison Goodlove diary and visited many of the battle grounds that William Harrison Goodlove was at. This information of their visits should be in the edition of the diary.

Hope this answers some of your questions.

Jeff Goodlove



-

On August 28, 1942 Convoy 25 left Drancy, France for Auschwitz with 285 children. On board was Salomon Gottlob born December 2, 1934 in Anvers, France age seven, and his sister Tama Gottlob, born May 17, 1940, age 2. Their home was L.de demark. (5) Prison, Orleans. Prior to deportation to Auschwitz they were held at Camp Pithiviers[28]. Pithiviers is of global historical interest as one of the locally infamous World War II concentration camps where children were separated from their parents while the adults were processed and deported to camps farther away, usually Auschwitz. [29]

Also on board was Bension Gotlob, born November 11, 1901 from Pologne, France, and Regina Gotlop born November 25, 1898 from Tarnow, Poland.[30]

August 28, 1942: In Geneva, Gerhart Riegner cables Rabbi Stephen S. Wise in New York and Sidney Silverman in London about Nazi plans for the extermination of European Jewry. The United States Department of State holds up delivery of the message to Wise, who finally receive it from Silverman on August 28.[31]



August 28, 1942: Ernst Gottlieb, born November 15, 1923 in Kassel. Resided Borken i. Hessen/Bez. Kassel. Deportation 1942, Auschwitz. Date of death: August 28, 1942, Auschwitz. [32]

August 28, 2010

Rochelle, recently I had in inquiry about the progress of the translation of the Gottlober works. I appreciate the effort that you have already put forth in this project and was wondering if you were interested in doing some more translating? Also, I was wondering if there was a way that we could compensate you for your time and effort in the project. Perhaps we could agree on a fee structure that would work for you. Abraham Baer Gottlober is an important Russian Jewish writer that lived in a period that is largely forgotten and I would like to bring that time back to life for the family and others who would like to learn about his writing. As a DNA link, a Cohen, a Jew, and writer, Abraham Baer Gottlober has a great deal to tell ancestors, and others. With your help perhaps we could pass his writings along to others to learn and enjoy, now and in the future. I hope to hear from you soon. Jeff Goodlove



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

[1] This Day in Jewish History

[2] This Day in Jewish History

[3] 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

[4] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 11.

[5] This Day in Jewish History

[6] www.wikipedia.org , This Day in Jewish History.

[7] [9]This Day in Jewish History.

[8] http://christianparty.net/jewsexpelled.htm

[9] Trial by Fire by Harold Rawlings, page 30.

[10] http://www.kolpack.com/packnet/prussia.html

[11] http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~harrisonrep/Harrison/d0055/g0000087.html#I1018

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

[13] The Northern Light, November 1982, Volume 13, #5, George Washington’s Amphibious Commander by H. Sterling French. Page 14.

[14] The Northern Light, November 1982, Volume 13, #5, George Washington’s Amphibious Commander by H. Sterling French. Page 14.

[15] Diary of the American War: A Hessian Journal by Captain Johann Ewald pgs. 75-76.

[16] Journal kept by the Distinguished Hessian Field Jaeger Corps during the Campaigns of the Royal Army of Great Britain in North America, Translated by Bruce E. Burgoyne 1986

[17] The Battle of Brandywine, by Joseph Townsend

[18] Names of Persons who took the Oath of Allegiance to the state of Pennsylvania, between the years 1777 and 1789: by Thompson Westcott, Clearfield Company, pg 87.

[19] Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography

[20] Records of Moravian Congregation at Hebron, 1775-1781



[21] Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography.

[22] Item 363, Book A. page 176. Recorder of Deeds Office, in Fayette County, PA (Uniontown.)From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser. 1969 p.173)

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

[24] After returning to Charlestown [August 28, 1864], the “Army of the Shenandoah” began preparations to march into Early’s headquarters at Winchester [September 3, 1864]. (Pvt. Miller, 24th Iowa Volunteer, http://home.comcast.net/~troygoss/millbk3.html)

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

[26] Terezinska Pametni Kniha, Zidovske Obeti Nacistickych Deportaci Z Cech A Moravy 1941-1945 Dil Druhy

[27] Winton Goodlove papers.

[28] “Memorial des enfants deportes de France” de Serge Klarsfeld

[29] Wikipedia.org

[30] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France 1942-1944 by Sergv Klarsfeld page 221.

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

• [32] [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,.

• [2] Gedenkbuch (Germany)* does not include many victims from area of former East Germany).


No comments:

Post a Comment