• This Day in Goodlove History, September 26
• 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.
•
• 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; Caleb Winch, Michael K. Montgomery, Richard Mendoza, Fanny McKinnon, Mary Hume, Bavel I. Grant, Myrle Godlove, Nancy E. Mc Afee, Thomas Armstrong.
Weddings on this date; Lysbeth Post and Jacob d. Truax
Colbert Mocks Rick Perry's Israel Support, Obama's U.N. Photo Gaffe (VIDEO)
With the U.N. General Assembly in session, attempts to bring peace to the world have been largely overshadowed by President Obama putting his hand in front of the Mongolian president's face in a group photo. Many experts say that under a Rick Perry presidency, such gaffes would not happen, as Perry clearly knows the international landscape better than our current president. Those experts are named Stephen Colbert.
Last week, Stephen Colbert cited Rick Perry's unconditional support for Israel as a major reason to support his candidacy. And like many of Perry's positions, one must do some logical gymnastics to surmise why Perry, who hosted a giant Christian prayer service this summer, would be such a strong supporter of that non-Jesus country.
Let Colbert explain to you what's going on at the U.N., and also show a wonderful clip of Perry getting his simcha on.
WATCH:
September 26, 1348: Pope Clement VI issued a Bull contradicting the libel against the Jews stating that they were suffering just like the rest of Europe. Other rulers issued like denunciations but with little effect or no effect.
• 1349, Jews move from Hungary to Ternopol in 1349.[3]
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• 1349, Jews expelled from Hielbronn (Germany).[4]
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• 1349-1360 Jews expelled from Hungary [to Czech].[5]
•
• 1349 Jews expelled from Hungary.[6]
•
• 1349 Jews expelled from Germany to Poland. [8]
•
• 1349-1360
• Jews move from Hungary to Termopol, Russia, in 1349-1360.[7]
• 1349 burning of Jews (from a European chronicle written on the Black Death between 1349 and 1352.
George Washington’s Journal:
September 26, 1772; Went and resurveyed West’s land- some mistake so happening the first time. Mr. Gist and Mr. Val. Crawford went away this morning.
September 26, 1774: On the eighth day—September 26—he started Capt. Crawford off with the land detachment of 500 men and the herd of beef cattle and two days later embarked in boats with his remaining 700 men, leaving behind only a small garrison at Fort Pitt. The Dunmore force camped overnight at Logstown and arrived at Wheeling almost simultaneously with Crawford’s detachment.
Dunmore immediately selected George Rogers Clark, Simon Girty, Simon Kenton and Peter Parchment as his personal spies and couriers, and he also named Ebenezer Zane as his disbursement officer and John Gibson as aide and chief interpreter. Michael Cresap, despite Gibson’s threat to him, was part of Dunmore’s party, having gathered a party of men for the campaign, but he kept a close watch for Gibson and studiously avoided him so they never came face to face.
Instead of immediately putting his troops into motion again to reach the rendezvous with Lewis as speedily as possible, Dunmore dispatched Crawford with his land force of 500 men, 50 packhorses and 200 head of cattle with orders to continue descending the left bank of the Ohio for 100 miles until opposite the mouth of the Hockhocking. There he was to swim his detachment across the Ohio and erect a fortification for the deposit of supplies at the Hockhocking River mouth. Dunmore promised that he and the army would follow in a few days in the boats. The general also sent dispatches, carried by Kenton, Girty and Parchment, to Gen. Lewis with a change in orders that was not immediately made known to Dunmore’s own men: Lewis was not to wait for the northern army but was to ascend the Ohio to a new rendezvous point some 80 nnles above Point Pleasant, at the mouth of the Little Kanawha.
September 26, 1776
Lieutenant General von Hoister had ordered the Erb Prinz Regiment to support the Hessian Grenadier Battalions von Linsing and von Minnigerode, and von Donop’s to support the Grenadier Battalion Block. Von Mirbach’s Regiment followed von Donop’s to the last height on the left of the woods; Ball’s Regiment took position to the left of Mirbach’s; and finally, on its 1eft, the Regiment von Knyphausen, which was to be supported from the rear by the 250 men under Colonel von Heeringen, who had broken camp on the morning of the 26th. .
September 26, 1777
At eight o’clock on the morning of September 26th Lord Cornwallis set out for Philadelphia with two English and two Hessian grenadier battalions (von Linsing’s and von Lengerke’s), six 12—pounders, and four howitzers, and arrived et eleven. He posted strong guards in the central part of the city, a battalion of English grenadiers below it on the Delaware, and above it along the Schuylkill, von Linsing’s Battalion, the other English grenadier battalion, and von Lengerke’s. The artillery was divided be¬tween these last two posts.
Two enemy frigates, which have never been to sea and are said to have only part of their complements and no guns, have gone up the Delaware to Bristol along with some other boats, while two other frigates, the Delaware, twenty-eight guns, and the Province, thirty-two guns, have anchored close to the city.
Philadelphia is rather a lovely city of considerable size and is laid out with parallel streets. The public squares are beautiful. For the most part, ordinary houses are moderately large and built of brick in the Dutch style. Classical architecture and its embellishments are met with only in the churches and in a few public buildings, of which the city hall, where Congress has been holding its sessions, is one of the most noteworthy.
The city is very charmingly situated in level, fertile country on the Delaware and Schuykill rivers. At present it is only sparsely populated, because many inhabitants left with the enemy army…
September 26, 1778: (date approximate) In rapid succession, Simon Kenton is condemned to death by the Shawnee. Within hours of his execution he is identified as Simon Butler (a Kenton alias) by Simon Girty who makes an impassioned plea for his release; is released; and adopted (informally) by an old squaw who lost a son. Kenton's high standing among the Shawnee would not last. Kenton's "adoption" only assured him sanctuary in a particular wigwam, not across the Shawnee nation that adoption by a chief would warrant.
September 26, 1779:**. Susannah Smith10 [Francis Smith9, William Smith8, Lawrence Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. 1739 / d. 1823) married Col William Preston (b. 1729 / d. 1783).
A. Children of Susannah Smith and William Preston:
. i. Elizabeth Preston (b. May 31, 1762 / d. February 4, 1837)
. ii. John Preston (b. may 2, 1764 / d. March 27, 1827)
+ . iii. Francis Preston (b. August 2, 1765 / d. May 26, 1835)
. iv. Sarah Preston (b. may 3, 1767 / d. July 3, 1841)
. v. Ann Preston (b. February 12, 1769 / d. 1782)
. vi. William Preston (b. September 5, 1770 / d. January 24, 1821)
+ . vii. Susannah Preston (b. October 7, 1772 / d. July 21, 1833)
. viii. James Patton Preston (b. June 21, 1774 / d. May 4, 1843)
. ix. Mary Preston (b. September 29, 1776 / d. February 4, 1824)
. x. Letitia Preston (b. September 26, 1779 / d. September 13, 1852)
. xi. Thomas Lewis Preston (b. August 19, 1781 / d. August 11, 1812)
. xii. Margaret Brown Preston (b. February 23, 1784 / d. May 4, 1843)
More about Elizabeth Preston
Elizabeth married William Strouther Madison (b. 1752 / d. 1782)
More about John Preston
John married Mary Rayford (b. 1765 /d. 1810). He also married Eliza Ann Carrington (b. 1769 / d. 1839).
More about Sarah Preston
Sarah married James McDowell (b. 1765)
More about William Preston
William married Caroline Hancock (b. 1785 / d. 1847)
More about Mary Preston
Mary married John Lewis (b. 1758 / d. 1823)
More about Letitia Preston
Letitia married John Floyd (b. 1783 / d. 1837). John was Major as a Surgeon in the War of 1812. John was the Governor of Virginia from 1830 to 1834. Receive the Electoral Vote from North Carolina in the 1832 Presidential Race.
More about Thomas Preston
Thomas married Edmonia Madison Randolph (b. 1787 / d. 1847).
More about Margaret Preston
Margaret married John Preston (b. 1781 / d. 1864)
September 26, 1780
The long column that rode out of Sycamore Shoals was, in Dykeman’s word, “an army without uniforms. Many of their hunting shirts were of fringed bucksking while others were of homespun linsey-woolsey, ‘clumsily made, bouse faxhion, reaching to the knees and gathered up, tied around the waist’ Their breeches and gaiters were opf rough, home-dyed cloth. Long hair was tied back in a queue beneath their wide-brimmed hats. They were an army little encumbered with baggage, unaccompanied by a suppy train. Each man had a blanket, a cup, and ‘a wallet of provision’…principally of parched corn.” There were, of course, rifles, powder horns, and “possible bags” with hunting necessaries.
September 26, 1783
Fayette County, Pennsylvania created Sept. 26, 1783 from Westmoreland County.
September 26, 1783
Fayette County Courthouse is located at 61 East Main Street, Uniontown PA 15401; phone: 724-430-1200.
Organized September 26, 1783; named in honor of the Marquis de Lafayette; occupied prominent place in Indian, Revolutionary, and later wars. On Jacobs Creek, a mile and a half above the point where it empties into the Youghiogheny River, stands the ruins of the first furnace for the production of pig iron, west of the Allegheny Mountains; the furnace was put in blast November, 1790, and was known as the Alliance Iron Works, operated by William Turnbull and Peter Marmie of Philadelphia; it continued in blast until 1802 using the native ores from the neighboring hillsides, and charcoal burned from the surrounding forests; in 1792 the company cast four hundred six-pound shot for the Fort Pitt Arsenal at Pittsburgh. Coal mining and coke are now the chief industries. Connellsville coke is known throughout the industrial world.
Aboriginal inhabitants were the Shawnee Indians, who made various earthworks and burial mounds, along the Monongahela and Youghiogheny Rivers before their migration southward; it was part of the "Hunting Grounds" of the Iroquois Confederation; the " Indian Title" was extinguished by treaty at Fort Stanwix, 1768. In 1749 Nemacolin, a Delaware Indian, guided Colonel Thomas Cresap from Wills Creek, Cumberland, Maryland, to the mouth of Dunlap's Creek, where Fort Burd was erected in 1759, on site of "Redstone Old Fort, " an Indian earthwork, now Brownsville; this was called Nemacolin's trail, and was the best course for the Ohio Company to reach the Ohio River. It was followed by Washington, with Christopher Gist, to the French forts in 1753, the first actual step here, in conflict with France. During the "French and Indian War" Fayette County was the scene of some of the most thrilling events in American history. In 1745 Washington's expedition to gain possession of the Ohio Valley followed this trail to drive the French from "The Forks" (Pittsburgh); he advanced to Gist's Plantation at Mount Braddock, then retreated to The Great Meadows, Fort Necessity, marked by tablet at Mount Washington, where he was defeated by the French under M. Coulon de Villers; previous to this, Washington had met a detachment of French soldiers under M. Coulon de Jumonville, in which Jumonville was killed, grave marked by tablet; first blood shed in French and Indian War.
In 1755 Major General Edward Braddock's expedition against Fort Duquesne followed Nemacolin's trail to Mount Braddock, thence over Catawba trail, which enters Fayette County at mouth of Dunkards Creek; northward through Uniontown, crossing the Youghiogheny (Stewarts Crossing) at Connellsville, on through Mount Pleasant to Westmoreland County, Hunkers, Circleville, to McKeesport; crossing the Monongahela, then recrossing below at mouth of Turtle Creek. General Braddock, mortally wounded in the battle of the Monongahela, was carried back over the road he had opened to a point on the Cumberland Road, National Pike, where he died and was buried; Washington read the Episcopal burial service over him; grave marked by monument, erected by officers of his old regiment, the "Cold-stream Guards of England." Braddock's Road became the main highway for settlers of Southwest Pennsylvania and Kentucky; the entire course is full of historic interest; sites of encampments, blockhouses and Indian forts; some are marked.
1. Ellis, Franklin, ed. History of Fayette County Pennsylvania, with Biographical Sketches of Many of Its Prominent Men, 1882, L.H. Everts & Co., Philadelphia
September and October 1783
The men of the Waldeck Regiment arrived in Korbach and many were released. Others, who remained with the regiment under a new designation, the 5th Battalion, were to serve later in the Dutch army and even saw service in South Africa where they fought against the English.
September 26, 1809: The Common Pleas Court has its first session in the new Greene County Courthouse on the southeast corner of Main and Greene Streets. (XDG, p 5, 4/22/2003)
The infantry of the Guard also acquired more foreign elements. The Velites of Florence received Guard status in 1809, those of Turin in 1810. In 1813 the battalions of Velites were increased to 800 with Young Guardsmen who spoke Italian.
Napoleon enlarged the Young Guard several times.
In 1809 were formed the following regiments:
- - - 1st and 2nd Tirailleurs-Grenadiers, in 1810 renamed to 1st and 2nd Tirailleurs
- - - 1st and 2nd Conscrit-Grenadiers in 1810 renamed to 3rd and 4th Tirailleurs
- - - 1st and 2nd Tirailleurs-Chasseurs, in 1810 renamed to 1st and 2nd Voltigeurs
- - - 1st and 2nd Conscrit-Chasseurs, in 1810 renamed to 3rd and 4th Voltigeurs
According to the Decree issued in December 1810 each of the new regiments was to form an elite company of 200 men called corporal-voltigeurs (in voltigeurs battalions) and corporal-tirailleurs (in tirailleurs battalions).
1809
administrative org.
Foot Grenadiers
(First in command: Marshal Davout)
(Second in command: General Dorsenne) Foot Chasseurs
(First in command: Marshal Soult)
(Second in command: General Curial)
- Regiment of Grenadiers
(Colonel Michel)
- Regiment of Fusiliers-Grenadiers
- 1st Regiment of Tirailleurs-Grenadiers
- 2nd Regiment of Tirailleurs-Grenadiers
- 1st Regiment of Conscripts-Grenadiers
- 2nd Regiment of Conscripts-Grenadiers
- Regiment of Chasseurs
(Colonel Gros)
- Regiment of Fusiliers-Chasseurs
- 1st Regiment of Tirailleurs-Chasseurs
- 2nd Regiment of Tirailleurs-Chasseurs
- 1st Regiment of Conscripts-Chasseurs
- 2nd Regiment of Conscripts-Chasseurs
Joseph Leclere was said to have been one of Napoleon’s bodyguards.
1809-1830
David Vance was Auditor of Champaign County, Ohio 1809-1830.
Mon. September 26, 1864
In camp resting got some tobacco of the
Rebs. Our reg train gard got plenty of forage
September 26, 1895
Oscar Goodlove returned home from Missouri last Monday.
September 26, 1918
(Pleasant Valley) Wilma Goodlove entered school this week.
September 26, 1919: Buck Creek Methodists were under no immediate threat of losing “their” territory to neighboring consolidated districts. Nevertheless, they realized that if they laid out a consolidated district carefully they could preempt the territory of those districts not yet “awake” to the inevitability of this educational innovation. What was occurring in nearby Fayette County seemed to provide ample evidence that this would be a prudent strategy. There was no indication that Hopkinton could resuscitate a consolidation movement or that the Delhi district would expand southward.
• September 26, 1937: The Palestine Post reported that the Polish government published warning posters against disturbances of any kind and arrested large numbers of hooligans who took part in the recent anti-Jewish excesses. A Polish delegation which visited Madagascar reported that there were large areas of potentially fertile lands for a possible Jewish settlement.
• September 26, 1940: Center of Jews (UHU) (Ustredna Zidov) was founded in Bratislava, Slovakia to organize Jewish life. The UHU was a government apparatus to determine the fate of Jews in that county. UHU disbanded all 175 Jewish organizations in Slovakia.
• September 26, 1941 : The SS shot 412 men, 615 women and 581 children in Kovno. (Lithuania) The Jews were described as sick people and carriers of epidemics.
• September 26, 1941: Jews of Swieciany, Lithuania, are massacred in the nearby Polygon Woods. Several hundred young Jewish men manage to escape.
• September 26, 1941: In Ejszyski, Lithuania, the killing of Jews that had begun on Rosh Hashanah came to an end. Almost four thousand Jews were killed. About 300 Lithuanians voluntarily participated in the killing “actions” undertaken by Einsatzgruppe A in the Baltic region, which annihilated about 90 percent of the Jewish population. Only 30 Jews from Ejszyski survived the war.
• September 26, 1942:Sophie Gottlieb, nee Guthermann, born September 12,1864 in Archshofen . Resided Berlichingen, Germany. Deportation: to Stuttgart. August 22, 1942, Theresienstadt September 26, 1942, Treblinka.
• September 26, 1942: Instructions were issued to the Swiss Police statin, “Refugees on the grounds or race alone are not political refugees”. This meant that thousands of Jews would now be sent back from the border. Swiss behavior regarding the Nazis and the Jews paints a peculiar picture. The supposedly neutral Swiss would be more or less responsive to Nazi requests based on what was happening on the batlefields of Europe. In 1942 the Germans were in control of Western Europe and were blitzing their way across Russia so a ruling like this is not surprizing. The Swiss would not surrender most of the money deposited by Jewish refugees until a half century had gone by; and then only after litigation and political pressure.
• September 26, 1942: SS Lieutenant General August Frank advises camp administrators that jewelry and other valuables seized from Jews should be sent to the German Reichsbank, and that razors and other practical items should be cleaned and delivered to front-line troops for sale to them. Proceeds will go to the Reich. Further, confiscated household items are to be distributed to ethnic Germans.
• September 26, 1942: Brussels Jewish leader Edward Rotbel is deported to Auschwitz. Several hundred Dutch Jews are gassed there.
• September 26, 1942: German railway officials meet in Berlin for two days to plan track upgrades and additional trains in order to hasten deportations of Jews.
• September 26, 1942: For three days search parties of German and Ukranian police capture 1000 of 2000 Jews who escaped from the Tuchin (Ukraine) Ghetto on September 24. Some Jews are taken to Tuchin’s Jewish cemetery and shot, while most are killed where they are found in the forest.
• September 26, 1943: Following the liquidation of the Vilna Ghetto, Abba Kovner led his resistance group on a dangerous trip through gutted buildings and dank swamps to the forests of Poland where they could continue the fight against the Nazis and their Estonian allies.
• September 26, 1943: One day after official instructions arrived ordering the deportation of the Jews of Rome the Nazis demanded that Ugo Foa, president of the Union of Italian Jewish Communities, have the Jews hand over 110 pounds of gold within 36 hours or 200 Jews would be deported.
•
September 26, 1943: At the Novogrudok, Belorussia, labor camp, Jews complete secret work on a tunnel dug under the wire. Of the 220 Jews who use the tunnel to attempt escape, 120 are killed or captured.
• September 26-28, 1944: On this day of Yom Kippur, 1000 young boys are assembled at Auschwitz in the presence of Dr. Josef Mengle. Any boy whose head does not reach a board Mengele has nailed to post is set aside for gassing.
September 26, 1994: What makes you think there was only one cross burning in the Buck Creek area? There were plenty of them. Mrs Myron Zumbach, Coggan, Iowa, telephone interview.
SEPTEMBER 26, 2009 3:56 PM
On the August 2, 2009 This Day in Goodlove History…
1 COMMENT:
Chris said...
thanks for your painstaking efforts to assimilate this data and post it with footnotes! what a great work!
i may be culling your blog as a resource for my own at http://holokauston.wordpress.com
shalom,
chris
Never Again!
I Get Pictures!
September 26, 2010
Jacqulin (on right) with classmate.
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