Sunday, September 18, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, September 18

• This Day in Goodlove History, September 18

• 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 aakov 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.




Updates are requested.

Birthdays on this date; Amy Winans, Eliza Truax, Shad A. Nunemaker, Eugene W. Newman, Christine M. Munn, David A. Kruse, Peggy L. Jordan, Moses Crawford, Mary Battail, Christine K. Balderston



Weddings on this date; Cora M. Ferguson and Warren H. Winch, Angela D. Denny and Michael Schwan, Dorothy M. Walker and Leland D. Kruse, Rebecca Robertson and John Denny, Mary D. Connell and John A. Carter, Peggy L. Jordan and Harold D. Goodlove

Ayatollah Khamenei, Iran Supreme Leader, Warns Arabs Against West


ALI AKBAR DAREINI 09/17/11 01:54 PM ET

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TEHRAN, Iran — Iran's top leader warned Arab nations swept up in uprisings against autocratic regimes not to allow the U.S. or NATO to influence the types of post-revolution political systems they form.

"Never trust America, NATO, and the criminal regimes like Britain, France and Italy who for a long time divided and plundered your lands," Ayatollah Ali Khamenei told an international Islamic conference in Tehran on Saturday. "Hold suspicion of them and don't believe their smiles. Behind those smiles and promises lie conspiracy and treason."

Iran has sought to portray the popular uprisings transforming the Arab world as a replay of its 1979 Islamic Revolution, which toppled the pro-U.S. shah and brought hard-line clerics to power.

In Iran's view, the collapse of pro-U.S. governments in Egypt and Tunisia was a strong blow to U.S. influence in the region and a new "Islamic awakening."

Khamenei said the U.S. and NATO will try to dominate the future governments of Egypt, Tunisia, Libya and other nations in the Middle East. He urged those nations not to let this happen and to preserve their Islamic traditions.

"Don't allow your enemies to write the principles of your future government for you. Don't let Islamic principles be sacrificed for short-term interests," he told his audience.

Another non-Arab power in the region, Turkey, is trying to sell its own model for balancing Islam and secularism to the transforming Arab world. Turkey currently has an Islamic-based political party governing a secular democracy.

Khamenei, however, urged Arabs to reject Western liberalism and form their governments solely on the basis of Islam.

"To create a system is your big and key job, which is complicated and difficult. Don't let secular or Western, liberal models as well as extremist nationalism ... be imposed on you," he said.

Iran has praised the Arab uprisings, saying the change of governments shows a new Middle East is emerging that will doom Israel and break free of what it calls American interference.[1]



September 18, 31 CE

• 31: Sejanus, Roman head of Praetorian Guard was murdered in the periodic intrigue that wracked Roman government at the imperial level. Born in 20 BCE, Sejanus was in the business of violently dispatching then enemies of the Emperor Tiberias. Sejanus had a reputation as anti-Semite and his patron Tiberius was no friend of the Jews.[1][2]

September 18, 323

323: Constantine the Great decisively defeats Licinius in the Battle of Chrysopolis, establishing Constantine's sole control over the Roman Empire. This victory came between the Edict of Milan (313) which legalized Christianity and the Council of Nicea (325) which was designed to bring conformity to Christian doctrine and practice. This victory by the first “Christian Emperor” would help in the drive to make Christianity the only acceptable religion throughout the Roman Empire.[3]



I Get Email!

In a message dated 9/17/2011 8:59:18 A.M. Central Daylight Time,



Hi. Do either of you know the relationship, if any, between Sarah Pyle who married Wm Harrison Goodlove and Cordelia Pyle who was Wm Harrison G~'s step-mother?

Thanks, Linda



Linda, Sorry, I do not know of any relationship or ancestors of Cordelia Pyle. I do have a line for Sara Pyle to a current Pyle and seen that family book but no Cordelia. Jeff



This Day…

324-640 CE

• In 324 Constantine transferred the capital of the entire empire to New Rome, Constantinople, the site of the ancient Greek city of Byzantum.[2][4]

• Under Bysantine rule (324-640CE), Christianity is introduced in Israel and many anti-Jewish laws are enacted.[1][5] [2]

September 18, 1759

The French surrender Quebec to the British during the French and Indian War.[6]



1760



“One vast and continuous forest shadowed the fertile soil, covering the lands as the grass covers a garden lawn, sweeping over hill and hollow in endless undulation, butrying mountains in verdure, and mantling brooks and rivers from the light of day.”

-Francis Parkman describes the area of southwestern Pennsylvania, 1760.[7]



1760-1765

Despite all these threats and warnings, the current of intrusive settlement still rolled on, expanding with time, and growing stronger by resistance. In the mean time the Indians are becoming more and more restive and complaining, especially those of the tribes owning the lands, who had their habitations and rovings at some dis­tance off: for, as is often the case with civilized men, those most re­motely concerned utter the earliest and loudest complaints. The settlers generally contrived to keep themselves at peace with the indians here, trading and hunting with them, and even buying settlement rights from them. This was not an unfrequent mode of acquiring rights to squat upon some of the choicest lands. Indeed, nearly all the earliest settlers resorted to it,—Gist, the Browns, and others already named. And it is said that the ancestral Provance in this way got possession of Provance’s Bottom, and James Harrison of the lands on Brown’s run, surveyed in the names of John and Robert Harrison, including where James Wilson now resides; also the Michael Debolt and Adam Sholly tracts, on Catt’s run, now owned by David Johnson and James S. Rohrer, late George Rider. These, and many others of like origin, were purchased and settled about 1760. By the Indian treaties made between that year and 1765, they bound themselves not to sell lands to any others than the King, or the provincial proprietors, an obligation which was not, perhaps, always kept inviolate. Such purchases had no validity as titles; they only enabled the purchasers to acquire thereby, and by their subsequent improvements thereon, some of the best lands. They gave a kind of conventional right, and were looked upon as a grade higher than mere “tomahawk settlements.”[8]



1760 - Daniel I McKinnon became master of Queen Anne Parish school.
1760's Parish register of St. John's, Prince Georges Co. lists Daniel McKinnon’s family, including Eleanor, identified as the illegitimate daughter of Ruth McKinnon.[9]



1760

To Western Virginia — The Frontier: c 1760

After his military service, George moved his family down the Shenandoah Valley into the heart of the Appalachian frontier in what would become West Virginia in 1863. He, however, arrived more than a century earlier. That century would see Cutlips fighting in the AmRevWar, the 1812War, the MexWar, and the war that saw Cutlips fighting and dying on both sides — the AmCivWar.[10]



By 1760, probably 100 Jewish individuals lived in Philadelphia, and religious services were no doubt conducted on a regular basis.[11]



1760

King George III accedes to the British throne.[12]

On March 1, 1768 David Vance's will, dated 18 September (September 18) 1767 was proven in Frederick County, Virginia: In the name of god Amen: I David Vance of Frederick County being of perfect sense and memory thanks be to God for the same. I do make this my last will & testament as followeth. I premises [sic] - I give to my dear & loving wife the plantation whereon I now live during her widowhood and after her death to return to my two sons David Vance Jr. & John Vance and David Vance my eldest son is to have his first choice after the land is equally divided and my son David Vance is to help his brother John Vance build a house on his part of the said land which house is to be as followeth: the body to be 10 round logs 20 feet by 16 in the clear with a good shingle rough and the said David Vance is to be of half cost of clearing 20 acres on his brother John's part of the land and part of the cost of planting an orchard and if my son David shall fail to help to pay or clear the above mentioned 20 acres of land for his brother John then my son David is to pay his brother John Vance 30 pound current money of Virginia. If either of the two brothers David or John should die without heir then to go to the longest living of them & to their heirs forever lawfully begotten of their body and my son David Vance is to give his brother John Vance at the age of twenty one years a plough & plough irons. I desire the three work horses that now is on my plantation where I live may remain there during their lives for the use of the said plantation likewise the plough & harrons. I give to my son Joseph Colvill Vance my land & premises on Paterson Creek in Hampshire County containing about 450 acres moore or less to him & his heirs forever lawfully begotten of his body. Only first the said Joseph Colvin Vance is to pay to his four sisters Mary & Ann & Martha & Gannet forty pounds current money of Virginia each like part at the time he [sic] shall arrive at the age of twenty one years. I give to my dearly loving wife the two best cows on the plantation where I now live during her life. The rest of my moveable estate to be sold & my just debts paid and funeral charges to be paid and if any thing remains over paying the above mentioned expences & just debts then to return to my daughters Mary & Ann & Martha & Jannet - It is my will & desire that my dear & loving wife Samuel Vance Jur. & George Vance may be the Executors of this my last will & testatment. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand & seal this 18th day of September 1767.
[Signature] David Vance
Sealed published & delivered by the above named David Vance for his last will & testatment in the presence of us -Samuel Vance, George (his X mark) Baker, John Goudy, James Anderson, William Goudy
At a court helf for Frederick County March 1st 1768 this last will & testament of David Vance decd. was produced in court by [blank space] Vance the Executrix, Samuel Vance jur. & George Vance the Executors therein named who made oath thereto and the same being proved by the oaths of Samuel Vance & William Goudy witnesses there to is ordered to be recorded and upon the motion of the said Executrix & Executors who having complied with the law certificate is granted them for obtaining letters of administration there of in due form.
[Note: The will spells the middle name of Joseph Vance as both "Colvill" and "Colvin". Later records identify his middle name as Colvill rather than Colvin. The will spells Jannet's name as both Jannet and Gannet. Later records list her name spelled many different ways but always with a J rather than a G.] [13]

September 18, 1772; Went upon the survey and division of Wade’s land between Barry and me. Col. West, Mr. John West of Fairfax, Capt. McCarty and Cpt. Darrel, Commissioners came home with me, as did Val. Crawford, Mr. George West and Chas. West.[14]

September 18, 1774: The march from that latter post along the Braddock Road to Fort Pitt was begun on September 8, and they arrived at Pittsburgh on September 18. Dunmore immediately began a series of secret conferences with Col. Connolly, along with a private council attended by a number of Indian delegates. It was believed by the assembled men that they would set off downriver from Fort Pitt immediately in the large number of boats that had been assembled and prepared by Col. Connolly, but that did not occur. Ten days passed with Dunmore always giving the impression of being very busily engaged in details, but precious little of significance was accomplished. [15]

September 18, 1776

At a Court Continued and held at Augusta Town, for the district of West Augusta, September the 18th, 1776

Present, Edward Ward, Dorsey Penticost, John Cannon, David Shepherd, Gentlemen, Justices.

John McColloch, Gent, took the Oath appointed by Order of Convention as a Justice.

Present, John McColloch.

Wm. Hawkins, a deputy Sheriff, took the Oath appointed by Order of Convention as a deputy Sheriff.

David Rodgers, Isaac Cox, John McDowell, Richard Yeats,

Wm. Scott, Dan’l Mcfarlen, John McDaniel, George McCormick, Philip Ross, James McMahon, Benja Kuykendall, Wm Lowther, John Evans, David Scott, John Harden, Senr., John Swearengen, Thos. Gaddis, Wm. Harrison, Sam’ 1 Newell, Thos Brown, Thos Freeman, Joshua Wright, Erasmias Bochias.[16]

[Gov. John Page to the Delawares. IU97.] -

WmS.BURGH September 18, 1777



BROTHERS THE DELAWS_I write now to you, by our Brother Col. Geo: Morgan to assure you that the State of Virginia is determined to hold fast the chain of friendship with and support you as she would her own children against all your Enemies as long as the Sun or Moon shall shine & rivers ff6*. The same assurance the Col. will give from all our United States for now . these states of america have broken off the galling Yoke of the English & act for themselves they have been cruelly treated by the English who have grown proud & insolent by the great riches they had acquired in their Trade with our States & by the Assistance we lent them in their Wars with the french & other Nations as you can well remember, began to treat us not like their Children, as we foolishly called ourselves but like their slaves & because we complained of this Brothers & entreated their cruel King to let us enjoy the same Liberty we enjoyed under the old King his Grandfather he insulted us & sent his fleets & armies to frighten us into a Tame submission to his will, we bore long with many cruelties still hoping that we should not be forced to break off from that Nation & shift for ourselves, but at last when they had killed many of our People burned our Houses & had endeavoured to make all the Indian Nations on our frontier butcher our Women & Children, & the very Negroes born in our own Houses cut our Throats, the 13 States laid hold on one strong bright Chain of friendship, & resolved to be as one People for ever and to take up the Hatchet & knock off the hard Chains the English had bound them with & with that Hatchet to clear their way to Liberty & Peace. whoever strikes one of these States strikes all & all will return the Blow the English know this & have felt the weight of it & have therefore told you lies & endeavoured to prevail on you to help them to fight us, but consider well that God almighty has seen their wickedness & heard their Lies & has therefore stretched out his hand to help us & has confounded almost all their cruel Schemes, we trust in God he is now our King & not a weak & foolish Man from him who is King of Kings & Gov’. of all the World we expect support & we call on you yourselves to say whether we have not recd. it from him for how else did it happen But that the English who were so great a Nation with all the fleets & armies they Could raise have not been able in two Years to conquer one of our 13 States how otherwise can it be accounted for that we who had neither arms or Soldiers have now an abundance of both & that in several Battles with them we have Killed many of their Soldiers without loosing a Man we scorn to lie as they do we acknowledge that they have taken some of our Towns & that they still have a large army in one of our States, but we deny that they can ever conquer us or inclose us in a Pen like Bullocks as they falsely told you, our Way is open even on the Sea, where they are Most powerful for we trade with france & Spain Nations great & powerful now as England & as to being penned in by Indians the Cherokees know how unable they were to keep us in & that the English could not have hindered Us from destroying their whole Nation, if we had Chosen it & had not mercifully spared them, they have seen their folly we have forgiven them, & are now friends,[17] Brothers we are not like the English cruel & unrelenting we would forgive even them if they would leave off killing our People we have lately got the better of them in several Engagements & our army is now much larger than theirs so that we hope that they will soon carry them away to their own Country & leave us to ourselves, if they do we will forgive them, & not follow to fight them but trade peaceably with them when they send their People here to buy our Tobacco & Wheat & your skins & furs & many other Things which they will want & which we can let them have for their Goods. I hope I have now opened your Eyes Brothers that you may see your Way clearly & your Ears that you may hear the Truth let them not be stopped again. Hold fast the Chain of friendship with our States & remember that we look upon you as (Brothers). born under the same Sky & living on the same Land & having the same Common Interests. We love you & sincerely Wish Peace & Happiness to all our Indian (Brothers). We do not wish that they should ever fight for us none but the cruel English & their friends wish to see you engaged in a War, they indeed strong as they pretend to be, would prevail on you to help them to fight & I suspect have killed some of your people & then told you ours had killed them trust them not Brothers believe them no more but remember what I have told you & listen to our Brother Col. Morgan. I am yr, friend & Brother

JOHN PAGE Lt. Govr.[18]



[Col. George Morgan to the Delawares. 1U97—A. L. S.]

- FORT Pitt September 18, 1777

BROTHERS THE DELAWARES—You know that I never deceived you. It is my advice that you take

Care of your young Men, & I hope the Clouds which now interrupts our sight of each other will soon vanish. I intend to go immediately to Philada. to give an account of my Conduct to the great Council there. And I will not fail to assure them how strong you are in good Works. You may depend on their making the Sky clear again if you will assist them as you have done. Immediately after my Arrival there you shall hear from me if it is in my Power. You may expect a Messenger from me about the ?. day of next Novr. when you shall know the Minds of Congress. ‘Till then I desire you will wait with Patience & continue to be strong in good works that we may tie down all those who study to do Mischief.

I commit Mr. Zeisberger &c. to your particular Care. He is sent to you from Heaven for your own Good, therefore be strong & do not let him suffer on any account.

Brothers, I desire you will give good Counsel to our Grand children the Shawanese & repeat this Message to them

I desire your Message to me may [be] directed for me at Philada. & that you will send it open under Cover to Genl. Hand who will read it & then forward it to me at the great Council by Express. - ~

I therefore expect you will speak plain to the? & tell me your whole Minds that Congress may see your Hearts.

I desire you will get Mr. Zeisberger to write for you.

TAIMENEND.[19][20]





[Col. Zackwell Morgan to Gen. Edward Hand, Sept. 18, 1777

1U98—A. LI]

May it please your Excellency—On the 13th. Instant at Coones Fort on the west fork the Indians killed and sculped a woman only 150 yards from the Fort, and Appeared to be Very impudent.[21] Whoever the Inhabitants seem to be Very Willing to Stand (if your Excellency Pleases to let them have Amunition, as what I Recd. I have Distributed to the Different Forts and have not any left I must Request your Excellency to give an order on Col’. Brown for what Quantity you shall think Edaquit for the Defence of the Inhabitants, of this ‘Part of the Country I Expect to be Down in A few days, after I get my Drove of Cattle Delivered, I shall drive in a few days with what Col. Evans[22] can Collect. I am Sir Your most Obedient and Most Hum’. Sarvt.

[Z. MORGAN]



P. S please send by the bearer 3 quir paper

To His Excellency Edward Hand Fort Pit Pr Express[23]



September 18, 1777 For some days past friends have been

returning from the army, and as many are sick, wagons

have been sent to meet them.[24]



SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18: 1784.



At Washington County, Pennsylvania : " September 18.

Set out with Doct r Craik for my Land on Millers Run (a

branch of Shurtees [Chartiers] Creek) crossed the Monon-

gahela at Deboirs [Devore's] Ferry 16 miles from Simp-

sons bated at one Hamiltons about 4 Miles from it, in

Washington County and lodged at a Col Cassons [Canon] on

the Waters of Shurtees Creek a kind, hospitable Man ; &

sensible." Washington's Diary. [25]





September 18, 1793: The Capital, the third point in the federal triangle, has its very origin in a Masonic ceremony. The cornerstone ceremonies are very public affairs. Presiding over this ceremony was George Washington, wearing his masters apron.[26] There is circumstantial evidence that the procedures used by George Washington were more like those of Webb than Preston. The newspaper account of the day specifically mentions that corn, wine, and oil were placed on the cornerstone after it was set in place. Also, Alexandria-Washington Lodge #22 have a wooden triangle and T-square from the 1793 ceremonies, which must have been used to symbolically try the stone.[27]





September 1805

The first trial at the first term of the court, September, 1805, was the case of the State against one Taylor for threatening to burn the barn of Griffith Foos, of Springfield. At the First session of the Supreme Court, held in 1805, the Judges were Samuel Huntington, Chief Justic, and William Sprigg and Daniel Symmes, Associate Judges. The first case tried was the State against Isaac Bracken, Achibald Dowden and Robert Rennick, for assault on an Indian named Kanawa Tuckow. The defendants pleading “not guilty,” and taking issue “for plea, put themselves upon God and their country.” [28]



Col. William Ward, who held a patent for Section 23, laide out, the same year, the town, which he called Urbana, Joseph C. Vance being surveyor. A square in the center of the town was donated for public uses. In the mean time, a log house on Lot No. 174, on East Court street, was made the seat of justice, and used as a court house until 1814, when a brick building was erected in the center of th[29]e public square. [30]

September 1806: Napoleon created Fusiliers of the Imperial Guard in September 1806.
He converted and eliminated the former velite-chasseurs battalion.
The Fusiliers joined the army in 1807. [31]



Conrad and Caty, Gary Goodlove, 2003



Company Pay Roll and Company Muster Roll, Conrad Godlove[32]





Vol. 2, Page 394.

. ROLL OF CAPT. SAMUEL McCord’s COMPANY (CAVALRY.)

(County Unknown.)

;4020fServed from August 16, until September 18, 1812.

. Capt. Samuel McCord . Lieut. Thomas Vance Lieut. James Foley

. Cornet, James Shipman . Sergt. James Roberts Sergt. William McKinnon

. Sergt. Sampson Hubbell . Sergt. Conrad Goodlove . Corp. Jeremiah Curl

. Corp. David Taylor . Trumpeter, William Eals

. Privates. . Privates. . Privates.

. Armstrong, Thomas . Anderson, James . Benson, George

. Clifford, John . Dawson, John . Frazure, Benjamin

. Foley, William . Gibbes, Samuel . Blend, John

. Green, John . Hopkins, Richard . Harr, Daniel

. Harvey, John . Hunter, George . Hodge, William

. Haines, William . Konklin, John . McDonald, James

. McCoy, John . Morris, Thomas . McGrew, Mathew

. Neihle, Lawrence . Smallwood, Walter . Thompson, John

. Vanmeter, Jacob . Welsh, James . Ward, John D.

. Ward, Robert



Roster of Ohio Soldiers in War of 1812 pg 146 vol 2 page 394



I wonder if Samuel McCord could be the son of Simon Kenton. JG 2005



September 1812 William Henry Harrison took command of the Northwestern army of the United States and served during War of 1812.[33]





September 18, 1812

Samuel McCord Company of 1st Col. Robert Bay, Regiment Cavalry, Ohio. Militia of the War of 1812.



Conrad Goodlove and William McKinnon, Sergeant’s.[34]



The War of 1812: First Record of Conrad



The first verified record of Conrad Goodlove that I have found is the “Roster of the Ohio Soldiers in the War of 1812”. This includes a

“Sergt. Conrad Goodlove”. (Ref. 9) This roster, no doubt, was compiled after the war from hand-written records. According to documents received from the National Archives his name was spelled as “Godlove” on copies of Muster Roles and Company Payroll (Ref 9.1, 9.2). These records indicate he was paid for one month and three days; but he evidently served for a longer period which I will discuss later. This roster also includes the name of a Sergt. William McKinnon; In an earlier reference (#6.1) was evidence that “William served in the War of 1812, was an officer, and helped build several blockhouses in the present limits of Logan County”. Seven years after the war Conrad married Catherine, the sister of William McKinnon. Gary Goodlove, “Conrad and Caty” 2003



You may recall that Theophylis McKinnon, the older brother of Catherine, mentioned in his letter to the Pioneer Association Meeting (Ref #7) the following: “My father’s place was the usual drill ground, and I knew every man in the territory. By 1812 the country was so widely settled that there were nine companies, commanded by the following captains: Black, McCord, Vane, Barrett, Lemon, Cox, Kiser, Stewart and one other whose name I have forgotten.”



Caty’s father owned four sections of land and he must have permitted the militia to use a portion of it. According to the Clark County History (Ref 9.4), page 677, “A comparative early settler, and one whose name is well known throughout the township, was Judge Daniel McKinnon, a Virginian, who came to this section in 1808 and settled on the ground where New Moorefield now stands, Sections 3, 4, 9 and 10 corner. “ Therefore, it is quite likely the McKinnon family knew Conrad at least at the time he entered the war of 1812, and that somewhere on the four sections of Moorefield Township Conrad and Caty became very close friends. Conrad was now 25 years old; Caty was 22.[35]



A brief history of the War of 1812 (Ref 9.21) indicates that Hull marched an army the full length of Ohio but lacked confidence in his troops and worried that troops would desert him on the battlefield, he reportedly, surrendered 1400 men to 300 British Regulars. Hull was accused of treason and cowardice and was replaced by William Henry Harrison. In the surrender Hull agreed to send his men home and if any were to be taken prisoner again, they would be killed. Perhaps this would be reason enough for a soldier under Hull to change his name if he continued beyond this date.[36]



The main army of Hull concentrated at Champaign County before setting out for Detroit. [37]



In 1812, Ward, Banes and Foley went to Detroit to recruit Hull's army there. They must have gone with a large force of Kentuckians who passed through the settlement that year under Col. Wickliff, to re-enforce Hull's army, but they arrived just after Hull's cowardly and ignominious surrender. Ward and Foley busied themselves during their lives in amassing titles to lands, in addition to that of their first purchase. They would enter large tracts and make the first payments; then they held it until, by selling a part, they could with the proceeds pay the balance due. When Ward was first married, Moses Henkle, the minister, came to take dinner with him the first Sabbath after he had entered the hymeneal state. They only had one gallon pot in the house; in this they boiled the potatoes, and, after they were done, boiled the coffee in the same pot. Then they baked the bread on the lid of the pot, before the fire, and roasted the wild turkey, which they had saved for the occasion, on a spit in front of the fire, hanging it on a peg driven in the logs above the fireplace. They ate from a table made by sawing off one end of a big log and driving three pegs in it for legs. The chairs were made by Mr. Ward, being the same as the table, minus the legs. [38]



The hesitancy of Conrad to enter the war is an issue of debate. Why did he wait until the war was approaching the end? If Conrad had become acquainted with William McKinnon prior to the war, McKinnon may have influenced Conrad because of the tragedy of McKinnon’s grandfather, William Harrison, and great grandfather William Crawford in the Sandusky Campaign. Daniel McKinnon, on whose land the militia had trained, was a long-time friend of the Harrison’s and the Crawford’s and may have approved his enlistment only when there appeared to be a need for local “block-houses”. And the fact that the government was issuing Bounty Land Warrants as incentives may have been a final incentive to gain cheap land, a sizable pay for the task of building block-houses. Perhaps all of these factors were involved. According to Conrad’s testimony to the notary public he “volunteered at Urbana, Champaign County, Ohio, and marched from there to Upper Sandusky, Ohio, and thence to the Rapids and was in actual service about 90 days”. Based on my research the “Rapids” would have been the “Rapids” of the Maumee River now at Grand Rapids, Ohio.



I plan to search enlistment records to determine if Conrad actually entered service into the War of 1812 as Conrad Godlove, then changed it during the war to Goodlove. This would be a big moment in my genealogy work. I plan to check military records at the National Archives and at Columbus, Ohio.[39]



We intended to visit the new Clark County History Center at Springfield but it was closed for President’s Day. We intend to return someday to this.

We drove to Zanesville hoping to visit the Zane Grey memorial. It was closed for the season.

At the Ohio History Center in Columbus we were focusing on military and land records which might show the signature of Conrad “Godlove”-- no luck. At this point I became resolved that the final source is the archives at Washington, D.C. We need to locate the signature of Conrad on enlistment paper for the War of 1812 to confirm whether he entered the war as Godlove or Goodlove.[40]



At the age of twenty three Joseph Vance organized an independent rifle company andwas elected its captain. During the War of 1812 his company became part of the state militia, and thereafter Vance rose progressively from captain, major, and colonel to brigadier general.

Vance’s qualities for leadership were soon evident to the voters of Champaign County and in 1812 they elected him to the lower house of the eleventh general assembly. He was reelected to the twelfth, fourteenth, and eighteenth assemblies (1813-1814, 1815-1816, and 1819-1820). In his first term he voted regularly for measuresf in support of the war. In the crucial bank question he supported the United States Bank against the state of Ohio.[41]



There are on file in the Adjutant General’s office, at Columbus, only nine of the rolls of 1812 and they contain little else than the names of the members. One of these is the roll of Capt. Joseph Vance’s company of riflemen, which was organized at Urbana. As the list embraces some names which were well known in this county then, it is here inserted:

Captain, Joseph Vance, Lieutenant, William Ward; Ensign, Isaac Myers; Sergeant, David W. Parkinson; Sergeant, Charles Harrison; Sergeant, James Ward; Sergeant, Reuben McSherry.

Privates-Randal Sargeant, David Henry, Bennet Tabar, John Dawson, Samuel Slower, Joseph Gutridge, George Sanders, John Lewis, John Rigdon, John Ford, William Sargent, Lord Thomas, John Wiley, Francis Stevenson, Britton Lewis, John W. Vance, Thomas Ford, William Stevens, Andrew Thorp, John Ross, Zebulon Cantrill, Henry Mathew, William H. Fyffe, John Taylor, [42]

September 18, ?: His March 26, 1855, letter (Ref#20) on the second page he testified “that he has heretofore made application for Bounty Land under the Act of September 28, 1850, and received a land warrant for forty acres of land which he entered upon land at Defiance Land Office, Ohio, and received a patent therefore and has since disposed of said land and has therefore legally disposed of said land warrant and land and cannot now return the same.”

I believe the explanation for the second application for Bounty Land had to do with the information on the mustering out rate and the documents on file with the government office (Ref #9.1 & 9.2) showed he terminated on the 18th of September (September 18) whereas he has claimed he served as a “volunteer” until November 25th. It appears he did obtain an additional warrant for 120 acres. Whether he used this to purchase the Iowa property as well as the sale of land near the Defiance, Ohio, land office, I have not been able to determine to date. Another possible theory regarding the 40 acres “entered on” at Defiance, Ohio, is that after receiving warrant #24784 for 40 acres dated December 4, 1850, he sold the property in Clark County to Eli Arbogast April 1, 1853 (see Deed in Ref #14) and also sold the 40 acres “entered on” at the Defiance Land Office before departing to Iowa.

Mary and I visited the Ohio State Library and the Ohio State Historical Society in February, 2002, after attending the booth of our Agri-Safety, Inc. (wholesale agricultural safety supplies) at the National Farm Machinery Show. In search of records of Bounty Land Warrants we located an old handwritten log pertaining to warrant number 15231 which appears in Ref. #24: It was issued to Conrad

Goodlove. (Ref #___)



We also located an old handwritten copy of the roll of Samuel McCord, Regiment, Ohio Calvary, militia for the War of 1812.

Ref.# _________.[43]

Based on my research it was at least after March 26, 1855, that William Harrison Goodlove left Clark County, Ohio, with his father for Iowa. Conrad’s signature of that date was notarized verifying his presence in Clark County. [44]



In addition, others of Francis’ children went to southeast Ohio: Sarah Cheshire to Hocking Co. (by 1850 the sons of Sarah had established residences near John in Perry Co.); Margaret Spaid and Joseph Godlove in Guernsey Co. (Joseph then went to Delaware Co., Ind).



October 28, 1852



September 18, 1862: 24th Regiment, Iowa Infantry

Organized at Muscatine and mustered in September 18, 1862. Moved to Helena, Ark., October 20-28. Attached to District of Eastern Arkansas, Dept, Missouri, to December, 1862. 3rd Brigade, 1st Division, District of Eastern Arkansas, December, 1862. 2nd Brigade, 2nd Division, District of Eastern Arkansas, Dept. Tennessee, to February, 1863. 2nd Brigade, 12th Division, 13th Army Corps, Dept. Tennessee, to July, 1863. 2nd Brigade, 3rd Division, 13th Army Corps, Dept. Tennessee, to August, 1863. and Dept. of the Gulf to June, 1864. District of LaFourche, Dept. Gulf, to July, 1864. 3rd Brigade, 2nd Division, 19th Army Corps, Dept. of the Gulf and Army of the Shenandoah, Middle Military Division, to August, 1864. 4th Brigade, 2nd Division, 19th Army Corps, Army Shenandoah, to December, 1864. 3rd Brigade, 2nd Division, 19th Army Corps, Army Shenandoah, to January, 1865. 3rd Brigade, Grover's Division, District of Savannah, Dept South, to March, 1865. 1st Brigade, 1st Division, 10th Army Corps, Army Ohio, to April, 1865. District of Savannah, Ga., Dept. South, to July, 1865.



September 18, 1862: William T. Rigby;
Born in Red Oak Grove, Iowa, on November 3, 1841. He was appointed 2d Lieutenant in Company B, 24th Iowa Infantry on September 18, 1862 and was promoted to captain on October 2, 1863. He was mustered out as a captain on July 17, 1865. After the war he entered Cornell College (Iowa). He was a farmer for a number of years and in 1895 was appointed Secretary of the Vicksburg National Military Park Commission on March 1 1899 and was subsequently elected Chairman on April 15, 1902. Rigby served in that capacity as the 1st resident commissioner of Vicksburg National Military Park until his death in Vicksburg on May 10, 1929. Captain Rigby and his wife are intererred in the Vicksburg National Cemetery.[45]

September 18, 1873

The failure of the brokerage firmJay Cooke & Company triggers the financial panic of 1873.[46]


September 18, 1890: Berta Gottleib, born Bornheim, September 18, 1890 in Stockheim. Resided Borken i. Hessen/Bez Kassel. Deportation: 1942 Auschwitz. Declared legally dead.[47]

September 18, 1932: Third cornerstone of the United States Capital laid, September 18, by Grand Master Reuben A. Bogley of the Grand Lodge of the District of Columbia.

United States government Washington Bi-Centennial Commission, Honorable Sol Bloom, Chairman, published Washington's Home and Fraternal Life, and sent reproduction of Burdette painting of Washington to every lodge in United States.[48]

September 18, 1939: Economic sanctions are promulgated against the Jews in Lodz.[49]

September 18, 1941: The Jewish community of Shirvint, Lithuania, was massacred by the Nazis, 1941. [50]

September 18, 1942: On September 18, 1942, actively aided by Eleanor Roosevelt and the President’s Advisory Committee on Political Refugees, the State Department cabled its consuls in France authorizing 1,000 visas and instructing the consuls to waive virtually all the usual red tape involved to hasten the process. [51]

I Get Email!

September 18, 2010

In a message dated 9/5/2010 8:12:48 P.M. Central Daylight Time



Jeff,







I enjoy your history very much. Samuel Godlove was my great uncle. I found the same record about him & made a special trip to visit his grave site [I now live in Pa, but was born in Wellman, Iowa]. When I found Samuel grave stone, I wondered how many Godlove’s had visited?



Samuel’s brother Benjamin [my Great Grandfather] also served in the Civil War in another regiment. As you must know, there were a number of Godlove in the CSA Calvary. Hope they were not the ones who shot him. My line of Godlove emigrated in Va about 1790.

Thanks again & keep up the good work

Cousin John



John, Thank you for your nice comment. It is nice to meet a descendant of Benjamin. Was Marion W. Godlove your ancestor? I was wondering if you could help me out with your lineage as I might be missing a few things. Do you have a picture of Samuel's grave? I would like to learn more if you have any additional information about the Godlove's. Jeff Goodlove





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[1] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/09/17/ayatollah-khamenei-west_n_967468.html?icid=maing-grid10%7Chtmlws-main-bb%7Cdl2%7Csec3_lnk1%7C96588

[2] [1] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/

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

[4] [2] [1] http://www.friends-partners.org/partners/beyond-the-pale/english/04.html

[5] [1] Your People, My People by A. Roy Eckardt, page 16.

[6] On This Day in America by Johh Wagman.

[7] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969, page 53.

[8]

[9] Letter from JoAnn Naugle, 1985

[10] The “MONONGAHELA OF OLD Or HISTORICAL SKETCHES OF SOUTHWESTERN PENNSYLVANIA TO THE YEAR 1800 By JAMES VEECH Reprinted with a New Index GENEALOGICAL PUBLISHING CO., INC. BALTIMORE 1975. p. 87.

[11] Jewish Life in Pennsylvania by Dianne Ashton, 1998 pg. 4.

[12] The Complete Guide to Boston’s Freedom Trail by Charles Bahne, page 5.

[13] Ancestry.com

[14] (From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969, page 120.)

[15] The That Dark and Bloody River , Allan W. Eckert

[16] VIRGINIA COURT RECORDS IN SOUTHWESTERN PENNSYLVANIA, Records of the District of \Vest Augusta and Ohio and Yohogania Counties, Virginia 1775-1780 By BOYD CRUMRINE Consolidated Edition With an Index by INEZ WALDENMAIER Baltimore GENEALOGICAL PUBLISHING Co., INC. 1981 pg. 566.

[17]“For a good account of the Cherokee War of 1776 see Roosevelt, Winning of the West, i, chap. xi.—ED.



[18] Frontier Defense on the Upper Ohio, 1777-1778 by Reuben Gold Thwaites, LL. D. and Louise Phelps Kellogg, Ph. D. Wisconsin State Historical Society pgs. 88-91

[19]This was Colonel Morgan’s Indian name, given to him by the Delawares. It was probably the same as the modern Tammany.—ED.

[20] Frontier Defense on the Upper Ohio, 1777-1778 by Reuben Gold Thwaites, LL. D. and Louise Phelps Kellogg, Ph. D. Wisconsin State Historical Society pgs. 91-92

[21]For a detailed account of this incident see Thwaites, Withers’s Chronicles, pp. 2,8, 219.—ED.

[22] For this officer see Rev. Upper Ohio, p. 234, note 78.—ED.

[23] Frontier Defense on the Upper Ohio, 1777-1778 by Reuben Gold Thwaites, LL. D. and Louise Phelps Kellogg, Ph. D. Wisconsin State Historical Society pg. 93

[24] Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography

[25] Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography

[26] Secrets of the Founding Fathers, HISTI, 6/29/2009

[27] http://www.masonicworld.com/education/files/jun03/evolution_of_the_cornerstone_cer.htm

[28] History of Champaign County Ohio, Chicago, W. H. Beers and Co. 1881. page 210.

[29] History of Champaign County Ohio, Chicago, W. H. Beers and Co. 1881. page 210.

[30] History of Champaign County Ohio, Chicago, W. H. Beers and Co. 1881. page 210.

[31] http://napoleonistyka.atspace.com/IMPERIAL_GUARD_infantry_1.htm

[32] Conrad and Caty, Gary Goodlove, 2003



[33] http://www.in.gov/history/markers/515.htm

[34] Conrad and Caty, Ref. Gary Goodlove, 2003



[35] Gerol “Gary” GoodloveConrad and Caty, 2003

[36] Gerol “Gary” Goodlove Conrad and Caty, 2003

[37] History of the State of Ohiol

[38] HCCO



[39] Conrad and Caty by Gary Goodlove.

[40] Gerol “Gary” Goodlove Conrad and Caty, 2003

[41] The Ohio Historical Society, S. Winifred Smith, ohiohistory.org/onlinedoc/ohgovernment….

[42] Gerol “Gary” Goodlove; Conrad and Caty, 2003

[43] Gerol “Gary” Goodlove Conrad and Caty, 2003

[44] Gerol “Gary” Goodlove Conrad and Caty, 2003





[45] (Photo Album: First Commissioners, Vicksburg NMP.) http://www.nps.gov/vick/scenic/h people/pa 3comm.htm


[46] On this Day in America by John Wagman.

[47] [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] [2] Gedenkbuch (Germany)* does not include many victims from area of former East Germany).

[48] Foundation for Tomorrow

[49] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1762.



[50] http://www.ou.org/about/judaism/bhyom/sept.htm

[51]The Abandonment of the Jews, America and the Holocaust, 1941-1945 by David S. Wymen page 37.

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