Saturday, September 3, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, September 3

• This Day in Goodlove History, September 3
• 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, Paul G. Stickley, Russell Mitchell, Sarah E. McKee, Matilda Mccormick, Dennis W. Hurt, William H. Harrison, James W. Hammon, William F. Goodlove, Joseph L. Goodlove, Cora M. Furguson, Jada M. Cunningham, Helen M. Bobst

Weddings on this date; Alice Gray and Albert D. LeClere, Pearl E. Springer and John H. Kirkpatrick, Kolleen K Carper and Larry A. Hosford
From the editor, from the MGM Grand Hotel, Las Vegas
I wasn’t aware that there was song about Skye, the home of the McKinnons, but this one tells the story of Bonnie Prince Charlie, which the Mackinnons were a part of including the Battle of Culloden Moor.
The Corries sing "skye boat song". From their "Silver collection" album
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=86egt8PDmos

In The News!

UN chief urges Turkey and Israel to mend relations

ROD McGUIRK | September 2, 2011 11:53 PM EST |
CANBERRA, Australia — United Nations chief Ban Ki-moon on Saturday urged Turkey and Israel to mend their relationship for the good of the Middle East peace process after Ankara expelled the Israeli ambassador in the latest fallout over last year's deadly raid on a Gaza-bound aid flotilla.
In addition to expelling the envoy on Friday, Turkey also cut military ties over Israel's refusal to apologize for the raid, which killed nine pro-Palestinian activists, further straining a relationship that had been a cornerstone of regional stability.
The dramatic move came hours before the release of a U.N. report that called the May 31, 2010, Israeli raid "excessive and unreasonable." The U.N. panel also blamed Turkey and flotilla organizers for contributing to the deaths.
The U.N. secretary-general said Saturday that he has been trying to improve relations between Turkey and Israel since the attack.
"I sincerely hope that Israel and Turkey will improve their relationship," Ban told reporters at Parliament House during the first visit to Australia by a U.N. boss since Kofi Annan in 2000.
"Both countries are very important countries in the region and their improved relationship – normal relationship – will be very important in addressing all the situations in the Middle East, including the Middle East peace process," he said, referring to a negotiated Palestinian-Israeli peace pact.
The U.N. report said Israel's naval blockade of Gaza was legally imposed "as a legitimate security measure" to prevent weapons smuggling, but added that the killing of eight Turkish activists and a Turkish-American on one of the six ships in the flotilla was "unacceptable."
Israel insists its forces acted in self-defense and says there will be no apology. Israeli officials pointed out that the report does not demand an apology. Rather, it says "an appropriate statement of regret should be made by Israel in respect of the incident in light of its consequences."
Ban did not comment on the report's conclusions.
"I'm not in position to say any specific comments on the substance of the findings and recommendations of the panel's report," he said. "My only wish is that they should try to improve their relationship and do what they can to implement the recommendations and findings."
Ban met with Prime Minister Julia Gillard and Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd on Saturday during a brief Australian stopover en route to New Zealand, where he will become the first U.N. secretary-general to attend an annual forum of South Pacific island leaders. He will visit the Solomon Islands and Kiribati before he arrives in the New Zealand city of Auckland for the forum.


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This Day…
September 32 A.D.
Jesus made another trip to Jerusalem during his last year of ministry (around September 32 A.D.) to celebrated the Feast of Tabernacles.
September 3, 301
San Marino, one of the smallest nations in the world and the world’s oldest republic still in existence, is founded by Saint Marinus. During World War II the 15,000 people of San Marino provided a refuge for 100,000 fleeing the fascists, including a large number of Jews.
303-313: Severe persecutions of Christians occurred from 303 to 313 under Deocletian.
September 3, 1189: A Jewish deputation attending coronation of Richard the Lionheart was attacked by the crowd. Pogroms in London followed and spread around England.[1] Richard was not an anti-Semite. In fact he moved to stop the riots. Unfortunately Richard was so busy with the third Crusade and fighting to hold his lands in France that he had no time to protect the Jews. [2]
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.
September 3, 1260: The Mamluks defeat the Mongols at the Battle of Ain Jalut in Palestine, marking their first decisive defeat and the point of maximum expansion of the Mongol Empire. The battle was fought in the Jezreel Valley in the Galilee. It seems a little strange to those who connect this geography with David and Goliath to think of the Mongols of the Kahns fighting to control Eretz Israel. The Mamluks were Moslems, an Islamic Egyptian dynasty restored the city with buildings that still stand today. Their immediate connection with the Jewish people can be traced to one of the founders of the Egyptian Caliphate, Saladin who allowed the Jews to return to Jerusalem. After 1260, inland Jewish communities such as Safed grew replacing coastal communities such as Acre in importance. The battle was the high water mark for Mongol attempts to conquer the land that came to be known as the Ottoman Empire.
1261: In a court case in Barkshire in southern England in 1261 a man by the name of Robert, son of William LeFevre was an outlaw and was brought before the court and the clerk of the court changed his name to Robert the Hood.
1263

Opposite Kyle of Lochalsh and the Skye Bridge, Caisteal Maol sits on a small island just to the east of Kyleakin. The name of the village comes from 'kyle' - the narrow strait of water between Skye and the mainland - and 'akin' after the Norwegian King Haakon IV who sailed through here in 1263 on his way to defeat at the Battle of Largs which ultimately decided the ownership of the Hebrides.
September 3, 1386
It is little of time after the Jews of Strasbourg were again submitted to ecclesiastical laws of exception. They had refused to discharge their taxes towards the Wenzel emperor, supported by the municipality of Strasbourg. To punish them, Wenzel gave into force, September 3, 1386, the old laws, which imposed to the Jews the port of a special costume, and the use of servants and Christian nurses prohibits to them.
The economic conditions were very precarious at this time, the Black Death having reappeared with various recoveries until the beginnings of the 15th century. It seems that hatred against the Jews again broke out in Strasbourg. The city condemned the community to pay, into 1347, a fine of two thousand books for a reason which remains obscure, but that Koenigshofen regarded as unjust.

1388 Jews expelled from Strasbourg.
The fact that the expulsion of the Israelites from Strasbourg did not take place in the year 1388, as is commonly assumed, but very likely began in 1390, says nothing against the fact that Gutleben fulfilled his agreement in the Alsatian metropolis until the its expiration in 1389, especially in view of a new outbreak of the plague which was recorded at that time in Strasburg. From this fact, moreover, one vcan indirectly infert that the physician was not taxed alon with his fellow Jews for the biannual assessment. Therefore he enjoyed freedom from taxes in Strassburg.
September 3, 1529: Siege of Vienna begins as Suleiman II begins his attack on the city. The Siege of Vienna of 1529,as distinct from the Battle of Vienna in 1683, represented the farthest Westward advance into Central Europe of the Ottoman Empire, and of all the clashes between the armies of Christianity and Islam might be signaled as the battle that finally stemmed the previously-unstoppable Turkish forces (though they continued their conquest of the Austrian-controlled parts of Hungary afterwards).
1530: Tyndale’s Pentateuch and Jonah.
September 3, 1651
The fate of the gallant but unfortunate Montrose did not, however, induce the MacKinnons to forsake the royal cause. In 1650, we find Lachlan MacKinnon, chief of the clan, receiving letters of service to raise a regiment of his clan, of which he was, of course, appointed colonel, and, leading them south, he joined the army of Charles II and fought with distinguished bravery at the battle of Worcester, September 3rd, 1651 The only advantage gained by the Royalist troops on this disastrous field, was the successful charge made by Charles himself at the head of his Highland clans. The English militia were driven back behind their guns, the latter captured and had Leslie, with the Scottish cavalry, supported the movement by a vigorous charge, the day might have been won, for Cromwell was at this juncture separated by the Severne from one have of his army, and the rest were in such confusion that they would have been compelled to lay down their arms; Leslie, however, for some unexplained cause, hung back and Cromwell, restoring order amongst his troops, led them in a mass, outnumbering their opponents by two or three to one, upon the unsupported little band of Highlanders; these, however, contested every inch of ground as the retreated in good order towards the walls of the town. It was at this juncture that the life of the King was saved by the chief of MacKinnon, and in recognition of this service, Charles II created him a Knight Banneret on the field of battle. Soon after this, the Royal troops were taken in rear, and being hemmed in between two forces, were almost annihilated. It is uncertain whether MacKinnon was taken prisoner or escaped, but he is known to have eventually returned to his estates in Skye and to have been alive as late at 1688.
Abt. 1650
Samuel Winch born.

Mid 17th Century
Lancelot Vance (Vans) was a doctor and active at the siege of Londonderry where he died. He married Euphemia Murray and they had five children: Patrick, James (Lord Mayor of Dublin), John of Coagh, and two daughters who married a Wright and a Johnson.

Towards the middle of the 17th century the confiscation of more Irish land under Cromwell increased the migration to Ulster where they were joined by many English and Scotch Lowlanders. These Ulstermen were the ones who defended Londonderry against James ll, and who, in modern times, have resisted Home Rule. They had no sympathy for the Quakers except on the point of religious liberty, and that feeling was mutual. They were Presbyterians and Calvinists, and not opposed to war, as were the Quakers. As for the Indians, they held that the Old Testament commands the destruction of all the heathen. They liked to be by themselves so they pushed on to the frontiers, took the Indians land, and exterminated them, so they were always in trouble with the Indians as well as with the government of Pennsylvania. They settled principally in five counties of western Pennsylvania—Westmoreland, Fayette, Greene, Washington, and Allegheny.

1650-60
Andrew1 Harrison was probably born between 1650-60, as in 1710 his sons William2 and Andrew2 were of age to hold land he deeded them and his daughter Elizabeth2 had married a Munday . ... We have no knowledge of Eleanor Harrison's maiden name nor date of death.
 Andrew Harrison is the compilers 8th great grandfather.
 August 31, 1703: **. Lawrence Taliaferro9 [Sarah Smith8, Lawrence Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. 1682 in Stafford Co. VA / d. abt. May 1726 in Essex Co. VA) married Sarah Thornton (b. December 17, 1680 in Gloucester Co. VA) on August 31, 1703 in Richmond, VA.
 A. Children of Lawrence Taliaferro and Sarah Thornton:
. i. Francis Taliaferro
. ii. John Taliaferro
. iii. Sarah Taliaferro
. iv. William Taliaferro
. v. Elizabeth Taliaferro
. vi. Mary Taliaferro
. vii. Alice Taliaferro

 September 3, 1703:**. Mary Taliaferro9 [Sarah Smith8, Lawrence Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. 1686 in Powhatan Plantation, Essex Co. VA / d. abt. 1780 in Snow Creek, Essex Co. VA) married Col. Francis Thornton (b. January 4, 1680 in Gloucester Co. VA / d. June 28, 1738 in Essex Co. VA) on September 3, 1703 in Snow Creek, Essex Co. VA.

More about Francis Thornton
1st Justice of Caroline Co; Justice of Essex in 1723-26 and Burgess for Spotsylvania Co. VA. Col. of his Majesty's Militia for Spotsylvania Co. maybe January ,4 1682 from Family Bible Records.
 A. Children of Mary Taliaferro and Francis Thornton
+ . i. Francis Thornton (b. 7 Apr 1704 in Essex Co. VA / d. 1749)
+ . ii. Alice Catlett Thornton (b. 1707 in Essex Co. VA)
+ . iii. Elizabeth Thornton (b. 1710 / d. 1774)
. iv. Sarah Thornton
. v. William Thornton
+ . vi. Mary Thornton (b. 1706 / d. 1757)
+ . vii. Mildred Thornton (b. abt. 1721)
. viii. Eliza Thornton
+ . ix. John Thornton (b. 1712 / d. 1777)
. x. Reuben Thornton (b. 1712 / d. 1768)

 September 3, 1709

 The Carolina colony grants 13,500 acres to two new groups of immigrants from Germany and Switzerland.
September 3, 1752: Eleven days (September 3-13 inclusively vanish as the calendar was adjusted forward so that September 14 followed September 2. This does not directly affect Jewish history, but it is worth noting since it accounts for some of the seeming discrepancies in providing dates for events.

George Washington, September 3, 1755

Williamsburg, September 3, 1755

First; That each Captain shall, by beat of Drum or otherwise, Rise Thirty men; Each Lieutenant Eighteen; and each Ensign, Twelve men.

Secondly: That no Officer shall list any Men under Sixteen, or above Fifty years of age: Nor are they to list men under five feet four Inches high, unless they are well made, strong, and active; then, and in that case, they will be received.

Neither are they to list any men who have old Sores upon their legs, or who are subject to Fits; which will be inspected into by the Surgeons, upon their arrival at Quarters: and such as are found to come under these Articles, will be discharged: and the Officers have no allowance made.

Fourthly: That, when each Recruiting Officer has listed his Complement of Men, he is immediately to repair to the Place of Rendezvouz; which I hope, and expect, will be by the first day of October next; bur if in case the whole should not be complete by that time; it is then my Orders, that each Captain shall forthwith send one of his Subalterns with all the Recruits, to thequarters assigned him, and remain with the other Subaltern to complete his Company, with all imaginable Diligence. There will be a Field Officer to receive, review, and examine the Recruits that are brought in; who will have power to reject and discharge, such as come under the above Articles.

Fifthly: That, for each Recruit that is passed by such Field Officer, the Officer who Listed him, shall receive two Pistoles, and an allowance of eight-pence per day for Subsistance, form the day of his attestation, to the day of hs being received into the Regiment.

Sixthly; That all Recruits, so soon as they are Listed, are to take the Oaths provided for that purpose; which is to be attested by the Magistrate who administered them.
Their Stature, Complexion , and so forth is to be taken also, and entered b the Recruiting Officer in a Book kept for that purpose.

Seventhly: That no Officer shall bring in any charge against his Men for Necessaries; Each man being to receive full Clothing, on his arrival at the place of Rendezvous.

Lastly: That when you are on the Recruiting Service, and on your March: you are to observe the same good Order and Discipline, as in Camp or in Quarters; and you are to conform yourself, in every respect, to the Rules and Articles of War. Given under my hand etc.

All the Officers then present received the foregoing Instructions, and money for Recruiting; and some of them were appointed to act ‘till further Orders, as followeth: Viz. To Captain Spotswoods Company, Lieutenant Lomax and Ensign Garter, were ordered to do Duty as Subalterns: and to Captain Harrison; Lieutenant John Hall; Ensign Nathaniel Thompson. To Captain Lewis; Lieutenant Peter Steenbergen; Ensign Edward Hubard. To Captain Peachy, Lieutenant John Williams; Ensign William Dangerfield, To Captain Bell, Lieutenant John Campbell; Ensign William Fleming, To Captain McKenzie, Lieutenant James Baker, Ensign Leonard Price.

All were ordered by their Instructions, to Rendezvous as followeth:

Fredericksburgh; Captain Spotswood, and Company, Captain Harrison, and Company, Captain Lewis, and Company. Winchester;Captain Bell, and Company; Alexandria; Captain Peachy, and Company; Captain McKenzie, and Company.

The other Subalterns then present, videlicet; Lieutenant’s Brockenbrough, Lowry and King: Ensigns, Millner, Dean and Weedon; who were not appointed to any particular Companies, were ordered to Rendezvous at Fredericksburg; Lieutenant Lowrty; Ensign Weedon; Alexandria; Lieutenant Brockenbrough, Lieutenant John King, Ensign John Dean.

And received the following orders.
September 3, 1768

The Solomon Burkham family, seeking more security, settled on the Youghiogheny River not very far above its mouth at the Monongahela, close to the little blockhouse built by Jacob Beeson and being called Beeson’s Fort, adjacent to the claim recently made by a well-known young soldier, Capt. William Crawford.
Among those who came to the Redstone area was a 21—year—old man from the settlement his own grandfather had daringly established on the South Branch Potomac River 67 years ago. Accompanying him were his two younger brothers, Silas and Jonathan, a few Negro slaves, several other young women and his own new wife. This young man had wooed and won a lovely girl a year younger than he, Elizabeth Mcculloch, and they had been married last February. Now the newlyweds were establishing themselves near the mouth of Redstone Creek. But it was, he warned, a temporary place for them only. Despite the potentially extreme danger involved, he was intent upon settling on the very shore of the Ohio River far below Fort Pitt. That was no place to take his young wife until he had at least staked his claims and built a cabin. But come next spring, he and his brothers—and perhaps a few hardy volunteers with them—would head for the area in question and make his dream a reality. Then, he promised, he would come back for her, He was a very determined young man who never made promises lightly and who was every bit as hardy a pioneer as his grandfather had been, after whom he had been named.
He was Ebenezer Zane.

September 3, 1777

The enemy advances as high as the red lion. They were met by our advanced party under Col. Crawford - the engagement was pretty hot. Several on each side were wounded and some slain Strong reinforcements were sent which obliged our men to give grounds. The enemy returned. Our Division (General Stevens) went to our alarm post stayed a few hours and returned to camp Pitched our Tents and slept hartily




Micheal Cecere, author of “They behaved like soldiers” gives a talk at Trenton, January 2, 2005. Gary Goodlove received a signed copy.

September 3, 1777
On the third of September Cornwallis, now joined by Knyphansen, moved forward and encamped above Pencader. A severe though brief encounter occurred between his division and Maxwell’s regiment of foot. The British stated their loss at three killed and nineteen wounded, and that of the Americans at forty killed and wounded; but while the loss of the latter seems to be correctly given, it would appear that that of the former was much greater. A woman who came from their camp the next day said that she had seen nine wagonloads of wounded brought in. Maxwell’s riflemen were thinly posted and poured a well-directed fire into the solid ranks of the advancing columns, having formed, in fact, a kind of ambuscade.
September 3, 1779: South Carolina took action towards independence from Great Britain four months before the Continental Congress declared independence and five months before South Carolina learned of the declaration. Rutledge possessed quasi-dictatorial powers as president and commander in chief of the new state. In 1778, he resigned the post in protest over proposed changes to the state constitution. Rawlins Lowndes took over the presidency and instituted the changes Rutledge found objectionable. The executive power changed from a presidency to a governorship and veto power was taken away from the executive. The Senate became a popularly elected body, and the Church of England no longer held status as the state church. However, after the changes had been made, Rutledge was elected governor in 1779, a post he held until 1782.
William Henry Drayton drafted the 1778 constitution that was opposed by Rutledge. The ardent Whig died while serving Congress in Philadelphia on September 3, 1779, at age 37. Rutledge lost much of his personal wealth during the British siege of Charleston, but survived to see the new century dawn before his death in 1800.
Henry Laurens only served as vice president of South Carolina until June 1777. He was elected to the Continental Congress in January of that year and became the president of Congress under the Articles of Confederation on November 1, 1777, a position he held until December 9, 1778. Beginning in 1780, Laurens served 15 months of imprisonment in the Tower of London after being taken captive on a Congressional mission to Holland. He spent the last years of his life in retirement on his plantation, where he lived until his death in 1792.
The Paris Peace Treaty (September 3, 1783)
(Great Britain recognizes the independence of the United States)


September 3, 1783: The American Revolutionary War ends with the signing of the treaty of Paris. The majority of Jews in the Colonies had supported the American cause. The treaty ensured them and their progeny a life in “the last best hope of man.”
September 3, 1783: On September 3, 1783, the Treaty of Paris was signed by representatives of the United States, Great Britain, Spain and France, officially bringing an end to the Revolutionary War. It also formalized Great Britain's recognition of America's independence.
The treaty established the Mississippi River as the western boundary of the new United States; allowed U.S. fishermen to troll the waters off Newfoundland, Canada; recognized the legitimacy of pre-war debts owed by Americans and Britons; and promised to reunite American Loyalists with property seized from them during the war. The American and Britons were satisfied with the agreement. However, western Indians who had allied themselves to Britain discovered that their land had been handed over by the British to the Americans without consultation or compensation. As they had neither lost their battles nor negotiated a treaty with the Americans, they continued to fight until 1795. Spain assisted southern Indians as they fought to protect their land from encroaching Georgians.
North of the Ohio Valley, the British maintained their forts at Niagara and Detroit, despite their promise to withdraw in the Treaty of Paris. They argued that Americans had breached the treaty by failing to return Loyalist property and pay British creditors as promised. American willingness to trade with revolutionary France further angered the British, and increased their promises of British aid to aggrieved Indians. The British only retreated from the Northwest Territory following the negotiation of the controversial Jay treat with Britain, which was ratified in 1795.

September 3, 1784: George Washington’s Journal: Having business to transact with my Tenants in Berkeley ; & others were directed to meet me at my Brothers (Col. Charles Washington's 1 ), I left Doct r Craik and the Baggage to follow slowly, and set out myself about Sun Rise for that place where after Breakfasting at Keys 8 ferry [on the Shenandoah] I arrived about 11 O'clock distant ab 1 17 Miles. Col Warner
Washington, 2 M r Wormeley, Gen 1 [Daniel] Morgan, M r Trickett and many
other Gentlemen came here to see me.
September 3, 1804: Benjamin Harrison, Gent., of Harrison County, conveyed to Samuel Rawlings of same, 100 acres in Harrison County. Beginning on Nailor's line at the northeast corner of Widow Curry's land, etc. Consideration £20. Witnesses - Michael Rawlings, Robert Rankin, John Boney. Proved September 7, 1801 by Rawlings and Rankin. Acknowledged in Harrison County September 3, 1804 by Benjamin Harrison. (Harrison County Deed Bk. 1, p. 825)

New Madrid District, Upper Louisiana
Gen. Benjamin Harrison was among the most prominent men of the New Madrid settlement. He came from Kentucky where he had distinguished himself in the border wars. He was a man of property, a slave owner, and had a large family. He fully entered into the plans of Col. George Morgan* and proposed to bring a large number of settlers into the country. His sons, Lawrence and William, were among Morgan's followers. Another son, Benjamin, Jr. was also at New Madrid. With Gen. Harrison came Benjamin Hinkston, his son-in-law and son of the celebrated John Hinkston (or Hinkson) who himself came to New Madrid from Kentucky. In 1802 while Gen. Harrison was absent on a trip to Kentucky, George N. Reagan forced his son to surrender a negro slave, claimed as part payment of land bought of Reagan, but afterward Harrison recovered the slave by suit. (Houck, v. 2. p. 125)

*The influence of Col. George Morgan in bringing many of his old companions in arms from Pennsylvania to the Spanish province of Louisiana induced Gen. Benjamin Harrison, of Pennsylvania, and Col. John Harrison, who had settled in Kentucky to come to the new country with him. Both the Harrisons afterwards removed from New Madrid to the Ste. Genevieve District. (Houck, V. 3, p. 83)



September 3, 1824: John married Catherine BRAESCH, daughter of Jean Martin BRAESCH and Anne Marie JESSLE. Catherine was born on September 3, 1824.
Children from this marriage were:
6 M i. Rev. John GUTLEBEN was born on June 29, 1847 in Muhlbach,Munster,Colmar,Upper Rhine,Alsace and died after 1920 in Fruitvale,Alameda,CA.
John married Madeleine Frederique HELMSTADER (d. December 17, 1908) on October 26, 1871.
7 M ii. Martin GUTLEBEN was born on June 29, 1850.
Martin married Marie UNKNOWN about 1906 in ,,NE.
Martin next married Catharina Barbara FRITSCH on April, 3, 1877 in Muhlbach,Munster,Colmar,Upper Rhine,Alsace.
8 F iii. Catharina GUTLEBEN was born on April 21, 1853 in Muhlbach,Munster,Colmar,Upper Rhine,Alsace.
Catharina married Mathias BRAESCH on May 1, 1877 in Muhlbach,Munster,Colmar,Upper Rhine,Alsace.
1824
Theopolis McKinnon voted for Adams in 1824.

In 1824 Joseph Vance (2ND cousin 7 times removed) Won his third term by an overwhelming vote of 4,342 to 16 for his opponent. From then on into the thirties he rarely had an opposing candidate in his district.
In his third term he was made chairman of the committee on military affairs and chairman of the board of visitors of the Military Academy at West Point. He also was instrumental in securing the passage of bills for granting subsidies to the Ohio and the Miami canals. Active in the antislavery movement in these years, Vance allied himself with John Quincy Adams in opposing the so called Gag resolution and in advocating the right of petition. He was defeated for reelection in 1834 in a close race with Samuel Mason.

1824
By 1824, the Democratic-Republican Party had become the only functioning national party. Its Presidential candidates had been chosen by an informal Congressional nominating caucus, but this had become unpopular. In 1824, most of the Democratic-Republicans in Congress boycotted the caucus. Those who attended backed Treasury Secretary William H. Crawford for President and Albert Gallatin for Vice President. A Pennsylvanian convention nominated Andrew Jackson (1st cousin 8 times removed) for President a month later, stating that the irregular caucus ignored the "voice of the people" and was a "vain hope that the American people might be thus deceived into a belief that he [Crawford] was the regular democratic candidate." Gallatin criticized Jackson as "an honest man and the idol of the worshippers of military glory, but from incapacity, military habits, and habitual disregard of laws and constitutional provisions, altogether unfit for the office."[17]


Statue of Jackson as General in front of Jackson County Counthouse in Kansas City, Missouri
Besides Jackson and Crawford, Secretary of State John Quincy Adams and House Speaker Henry Clay were also candidates. Jackson received the most popular votes (but not a majority, and four states had no popular ballot). The Electoral votes were split four ways, with Jackson having a plurality. Since no candidate received a majority, the election was decided by the House of Representatives, which chose Adams. Jackson denounced this result as a "corrupt bargain" because Clay gave his support to Adams. Later Adams appointed Clay as Secretary of State. Jackson's defeat burnished his political credentials; however, many voters believed the "man of the people" had been robbed by the "corrupt aristocrats of the East."
Sat. September 3, 1864
Moved camp at work all day got news of the fall of atlanta Gen. Sherman corn

September 3, 1897
The sociable at Mr. Goodlove’s was not largely attended on account of the threatening weather.
September 3, 1939 : The SS executed 26 Jews in the Polish frontier town, Wieruszow. Their fate resaged the fate of all the Jews of Poland.

September 3, 1939: France and Great Britain declare war on Germany.


September 3, 1940
Prefects are given the authority to intern all persons deemed threats to national security.
• August 31-September 3, 1941: Eight thousand Vilna Jews are killed in Ponary.

• September 3, 1941: The Germans hung three Jewish brother in Dubossary. Ubossary was in Moldavia which was part of the Soviet Union at this time. Six hundred elderly Jews of Dubossary were thrown out of their homes, brought into eight synagogues, where each house of worship was then burned to the ground. Six Jews who refuse to serve on the Jewish Council at Dubossary, Ukraine, are publicly hanged.

• September 3, 1941: The first experimental gassing at Auschwitz is carried out on Soviet prisoners of war.
• Auschwitz guards herded hundreds of Soviet POWs and sick inmates into the crudely sealed basement of Block 11, the dreaded punishment barrack; a guard threw in pellets of Zyklon B and shut the doors. They were the first people gassed at Auschwitz.

• September 3-6, 1941: Two ghettos are established in Vilna.
• September 3, 1942: Melanie Gottliebova born February 27, 1863. Teresin September 3, 1942
• OSVOBOZENI SE DOZILI

September 3-4, 1942: The last transports of Belgian nationals are sent from Antwerp to the Malines camp.
September 3, 1943: Allied forces cross the Strait of Messina and invade southern Italy.
• September 3-4, 1943: The last Jews of Belgium are deported as part of Operation “Iltis.”

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