Monday, October 10, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, October 10

• This Day in Goodlove History, October 10

• 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.



The William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary annotated by Jeff Goodlove is available at the Farmer's Daughter's Market , (319) 294-7069, 495 Miller Rd, Hiawatha, IA , http://www.fdmarket.com/



Birthdays on this date; Rita C. Wall, Esekia Truax, Frederica J. Schneider, Aaron McKee, Solon Lester, Kathlyn Kruse, Rose M. Holder, Glenn Godlove, Mary L. Craig, Elinor L. Brown

Weddings on this date; Patricia K. Lindsey and Jon Cruse



I Get Email!



In a message dated 10/6/2010 2:21:15 P.M. Central Daylight Time, nsohnworks@aol.com writes:



Jeff,



I apologize for not having gotten back to you before now.



FVJN is meant to be an organization of people who currently consider themselves to be Jewish, and/or who are part of an interfaith family that includes Jewish members. Having said that, we have typically welcomed people to attend events who are interested in learning about Judaism. You also might want to look into the nearby synagogues' functions, classes and lectures, if you are interested in finding more and perhaps more in-depth information about Judaism. (I don't recall if you wrote of where you live: The closest synagogues to FVJN are Temple Bnai Israel in Aurora, Congregation Knesseth Israel in Elgin, Congregation Beth Shalom in Naperville, and Etz Chaim in Lombard. You'll find a link to these, and some other, synagogues, on the FVJN website.



Let me know if I can be of further assistance to you.



Warm regards,

Nancy Sohn





Nancy, Thank you for getting back to me about Fox Valley Jewish Neighbors. I am interested in learning more about Judaism as our unique Cohen DNA shows a direct connection to our ancestors who descend from Aaron. After this discovery we learned that a vast majority of our DNA matches are Jewish, and know of their Cohen ancestry. For that reason I strongly believe that we are connected at some point to the Jewish faith and am interested in learning more. I have visited two of the local synagogues where one was very welcoming, and one was more "resistant". This has been the experience of others including an African community that claimed ancestry, only to meet resistance, until DNA proved their connection. Their DNA was the Cohen Modal Haplotype and the very same that our family has. Some Jewish groups insist on a maternal link to establish whether someone is Jewish but in our case the link is paternal. So for now we say our family is of Jewish Ancestry, and we do not know why there was a conversion or when it occurred. All this aside I want to thank you for leaving the door open to us to learn more at some future events and I will check in to see what might be available so I can post it for others to see who might be interested. Please include me in any email list you may have that might keep me up to date.



Jeff Goodlove/Gottlob/Gottlieb





This day…



October 10, 732:

• The Battle of Poitiers, (or Tour) France is on the front line, in a holy war that will define Europe’s spiritual and political future. The conflict pits the Christian Franks against the Muslim Moores who recently crossed into Christian Spain from North Africa.[1] At the Battle of Tours which was fought near Poitiers, France, the leader of the Franks (modern day French) Charles Martel and his men, defeat a large army of Moors, stopping the Muslims from spreading into Western Europe. This meant that the territory south of the Pyrenees, ie. Spain, would remain in Islamic hands for the better part of the next seven centuries while the rest of Europe would remain in Christians hands for the time being. This demarcation would lead to the development of different variants of Judaism depending on whether the Jews lived in Moslem or Christian dominated parts of Europe.[2]





October 10, 1757



FROM CAPTAIN THOMAS BULLITT AND OTHERS.



SIR

As we are well assured You take pleasure in distinguishing Merit where ever it is found, We beg leave to recommend to Your notice a Person not altogether unworthy of it If we may Judge from the diligence & Fidelity he has shewn in a low Station we may still expect he will support his Character in a higher where he will meet with frequenter Opportunities to exert himself & do Justice to Our Recommendation.

That we may not impose on Your Judgement through Partiality we shall endeavour Justly to draw his Character & Pretensions to preferment.

His Education, seems to have been a Good Coun­try Education he writes a Good hand & is Acquainted with figures. his Courage We believe is indisputable, his Conduct as farr as We can Judge from many Months Observation is faultless. he was made a Sergt when forces were first levied in this Collony. in which Station he has serv’d with Vigilence & Obedience ever Since. By Majr Lewis's Order he has acted as Commissary for near a twelve Month, as he understands there are some Vacancies at present, And as it is not without president [precedent] he hopes You will remember him, which we beg leave to enforce, as he had some expectancy before.

From this description we hope You imagine the

Person we would recommend to Your Favour is

John McCully.

THOS BULLITT

JOHN EDs LOMAX

Wm FLEMING

FORT YOUNG. WM CRAWFORD

Octobr I0 1757[3] GE0: SPEAKE



George Washington’s Journal:

October 10, 1771: At home all day. Captn. Crawford[4] came here[5] [6]in the Afternoon.[7]



(October 10th),1774: …Before Gen. Lewis had commenced his movement across the Ohio, he was attacked by a heavy body of Shawanese warriors under the chief Cornstalk. The fight (known as the battle of Point Pleasant) raged nearly all day, and resulted in the complete rout of the Indians, who sustained a very heavy (though not definitely ascertained) loss, and retreated in disorder across the Ohio. The loss of the Virginians under Lewis was seventy-five killed and one hundred and forty wounded. Dunmore and Lewis advanced from their respective points into Ohio to "Camp Charlotte," on Sippo Creek, where they met Cornstalk and the other Shawanese chiefs, but as the men of Lewis' command were inclined to show great vindictiveness towards the Indians, Dunmore, fearing an outbreak from them, which would defeat the object he had in view (the making of a treaty of peace with the chiefs), ordered Lewis to return immediately with his force to Point Pleasant.[8]



October 10, 1774



From MS. journals and letter in possession of the Wisconsin Historical Society, it appears that the conduct of the battle was as follows: Andrew Lewis, who as yet thought the enemy to be but a scouting party, and not an army equal in size to his own, had the drums beat to arms, for many of his men were asleep in their tents; and while still smoking his pipe, ordered a detafhment from eash of the Augusta companies, to form 150 strong under Col. Charles Lewis, with John Dickinson, Benjamin Harrison, and John Skidmore as the captains. Another party of like size was formed under Col. Fleming, with Captains Shelby, Russell, Buford, and Philip Love. Lewis’s party marched to the right, near the foot of the hills skirting the east side of Crooked Creek. Fleming’s party marched to the left, 200 yards apart from the other. A quarter of a mile from camp, and half a mile from the point of the cape, the right-going party met the enemy lurking behind trees and fallen logs at the base of the hill, and there Charles Lewis was mortally wounded. Fleming marched to a pond three-quarters of a mile from camp, and fifty rods inland from the Ohio. This pond beng one of the sources of Crooked Creek. The hostile line was found to extend from this pond along Crooked Creek, half way to its mouth. The Indians, under Cornstalk, thought by rushes to drive the whites into the two rivers, “like so many bullocks,” as the chief later explained; and indeed both lines had frequently to fall back, but they were skillfully reinforced each time, and by dusk the savages placed Old Town Creek between them and the whites. This movement was hastened, a half hour before sunset, by a movement which Withers confounds with the main tactis. Captains Matthews, Arbuckle, Shelby, and Stuart were sent with a detachment up Crooked creek under cover of the bank, with a view to securing a rigge in the rear of the enemy, from which their line could be enfiladed. They were discovered in the act, but Cornstalk supposed that this party was Christion’s advance, and in alarm hurried his people to the other side of Old Town Creek. The battle was, by dark, really a drawn game; but Cornstalk had had enough, and fled during the night. [9]



Upon Leaving Pittsburg, where the governor held a council with several Delaware and Mingo chiefs, to whom he recited the outrages perpetrated by the Shawnees since Bouquet’s treaty of 1764, the northern division divided into two wings. One, 700 strong, under Dunmore, descended the river in boats; the other 500 went across the “pan handel” by land, with the cattle, and both rendezvoused, September 30th at Wheeling, 91 miles below Pittsburg. Next day, Crawford resumed his march along the south bank of the Ohio, to a point opposite the mouth of Big Hockhocking, 107 miles farther down. Here the men, the 200 bullocks, and the 50 pack horses swam the Ohio, and just abouve the Big Hockhocking (the site of the present Hockingport) erected a blockhouse and stockade, which they called Fort Gower, in honor of the English earl of that nome. A part of the earthwork can still (1894) be seen in the garden of a Hockingport residence. Dunmore’s party, in 100 canoes and pirogues, arrived a few days later. While at Fort Gower, he was joined by the Delaware chiefs, White Eyes and John Montour, the former of whom was utilized as an agent to negotiate with the Shawnees.[10]



October 10, 1774

After the battle of Point Pleasant, October 10, 1774, General Lewis marched his division of the Virginia forces, according to orders received on the 9th, to join Lord Dunmore’s division on the Pickaway plains. From this point the plan of action was to push forward and destroy the Indian towns. Upon their arrival, however, they found that the Shawnees had already sued for peace, and a treaty was in progress at Camp Charlotte, which was speedily effected. For the successful termination of the War Lord Dunmore received many letters of thanks and congratulation from the Virginians (American Archives, 4th series, vol. i. p. 1019), although later, probably on account of his attitude in the beginning of the Revolution, they questioned so seriously his motives in the management of this Indian War.



It is well known that Logan, the Mingo chief, was not present at the treaty of Camp Charlotte, and that it was there that his famous speech is supposed to have been delivered to Lord Dunmore by Gibson. If so, its eloquence evidently made no impression on Major Crawford, for he does not refer to it.][11]



Tuesday, October 10th, 1775



Nicholas Cresswell Journal: Allegany Mountain—Left V. Crawford’s, whom I believe to be a scoundrel. Set out with Mr. Zac. Connel for Winchester. Lodged at the Great Meadows at one Lynch’s Tavern in company with Colnl. Lee, Colnl. Peyton, Colnl. Clapham, Colnl. B1ackburn, Colnl. McDonald and Mr. Richard Lee. All of them Commissioners from the Virginia Convention, for settling the accounts of the last Indian War. A set of niggardly beings. Great want of beds, but I am well content with the floor and my blanket.[12]



October 10, 1776

+[13]

On the 10th of October (October 10) 1777, a packet arriving in the fleet brought letters from Europe dated in the month of June. It also brought the news that the rebels had made an attack on Staten Island, Long Island, and Kings Bridge on the 22nd of (August 22) August, but were driven back with some loss.[14]



October 10, 1777

In spite of repeated attacks on our batteries, during which …Captain von Stamford [15] … particularly distinguished (himself), our undertaking is progressing so well that we have hopes of hearing shorly of its final success.[16]



October 10, 1780

Congress passes a resolution calling for the states to cede their western territories for the creation of new states.[17]



October 10, 1811: The army of ancestor and future President ,William Henry Harrison, reached the site of modern Terre Haute, Indiana on October 3 where they camped and built Fort Harrison while they waited for supplies to be delivered. A scouting party of Yellow Jackets was ambushed on October 10 causing several casualties and preventing the men from continuing to forage. Supplies quickly began to run low.[18]



Mon. October 10, 1864

White frost fixed camp moved camp at

1 am 3 miles north of Strasburg on cedar

Creek went 5 miles foraging got nothing

Got into camp after night[19]



October 10, 1872: All this family, except the infant, is buried at the Buffalo cemetery, Michael died October 10, 1872, and the widow (Margaret Gottlieb/Godlove) followed him August 30, 1873. [20]



• Ferdinand Gottlieb, born October 10, 1875 in Bosen. Resided Bosen. Deportation:

• 1942, Auschwitz. Declared legally dead.[21]





October 10, 1880:

In Convoy 30 of September 9, 1942, there was a clear predominance, in decreasing order, of Poles, Germans, and Austrians. More than 100 children under 17 were among the deportees.



October 10 , 1880: The list of Deportees on Convoy 31 included Joseph Gottlieb, born October 10, 1880, and Mato Gottlieb, born April 21, 1893. Both were from Poland.[22]



• Klara Gottliebova born October 10, 1881. Ev- October 28, 1944 Osvetim

• OSVOBOZENI SE DOZILI[23]







• Frantiska Gottlobova born October 10, 1894. Transport AAo- Olomouc, Terezin 8. cervence 1942

• Bc- October 25, 1942 Maly Trostinec. [24]





• October 10, 1941: Marshal Walther Von Reichenau instructed his troops that, “The solder must fully understand the need for severe but just atonement of the Jewish subhumans.” The German army was a willing accomplice in the slaughter of the Jews. Yet, methods would soon be established by the roaming Eisengruppen to circumvent the need to involve German soldiers. Gas vans became an often used method.[25]



• October 10, 1941: Thousands of Slovak Jews are sent to labor camps at Sered, Vyhne, and Novaky.[26]



• October 10, 1941: Slovak, Bohemian, and Moravian Jews are forced from their homes and into ghettos.[27]



October 10, 1943:

Convoy 60 included 564 males and 436 females. One hundred eight were children under 18. The routine telex (XLIX-52) was signed by Rothke. It established that on October 7, at 10:30 AM, a convoy of 1,000 Jews left Paris/Bobigny with the Meister der Schupo, Schlamm, head of the escort. On October 13, Hoss, Commandant of Auschwitz, telexed to Rothke (XLIX-53) that on October 10 at 5:30, the convoy actually arrived.



When they arrived in Auschwitz, 340 men were selected and went to Buna, the I.G Farben synthetic rubber plant at Auschwitz. They were assigned numbers 156940 through 157279. One hundred sixty nine women remained alive and were given numbers 64711 through 64879. The rest, 491 people, were gassed.



In 1945, less than two years later, 31 of the 509 selected had survived. Two of the survivors were women.



Professor Waitz, who was on this convoy, gave an account of the voyage from Drancy to Auschwitz:



“The voyage in closed cattle cars began at Drancy on October 7, 1943. In each car, one or two pails of water and a sanitary bucket; 95 to 100 persons squeezed together, without sufficient provisions. In two infirmary cars, where there are some straw mattresses on the floor, are the old, those recovering from typhoid or pneumonia, pregnant women, women with infants, ets., and nine screaming women who were taken from an insane asylum by the Germans.

“It is difficult to care for people in these infirmary wagons as the medicine is in an ordinary car and we are not allowed to go pick it up during the stops. During one stop, I try to obtain heart medicine for one old man who is fainting repeatedly; the German NCO tells me: ‘Let him croak, he’ll be dead soon anyway.’



“During another stop, I request water for the sick, and another NCO answers: ‘It’s useless to give them any, they’ll be finished soon.’

“After three days and three nights of travel, the train arrives at a station platform on October 10, 1943, around three in the morning, and remains standing there until dawn.”



On board Convoy 60 was Mosiek Gottlibowicz, born December 12, 1888 from Wilezyn, Russia.[28]



• October 10, 1943: At the Sobibor death camp, a revolt is planned by Jewish laborers and Jewish Red Army POWs.[29]



• October 10, 1944: Fourteen men from the Sonderkommando who escaped during the revolt of October 7 are found. They are tortured along with many other picked up during the prior two days. But none gave away the locations of the hiding survivors. None of the men would survive the interrogation.[30]



• October 10, 1944: Four additional women involved in smuggling explosives used in the October 6-7 uprising at Auschwitz are arrested, including an inmate named Roza Robota. Fourteen men from the camp’s Sonderkommando unit also are arrested. The sole surviving conspirator, a Greek Jew named Isaac Venezia, will later die of starvation after Auschwitz inmates are evacuated by their captors to Ebensee, Austria.[31]





• October 10, 2009

• I get email!

Hi Jeff. Your Aug 28 e-mail listed a wedding for Ursula Armstrong and John A. Lorence. We are still searching for info of my Dad's Armstrong family. Can you give me a year and possibly location for this wedding. I checked your family tree maker site, but didn't find an Ursula Armstrong; I did find two other Armstrong women from Kansas who had married into the Goodlove/Godlove family. To date I don't have a connection to Kansas with my Armstrongs.Hope this finds you well. Has your daughter left for college yet? That has to be a change for you...As ever, Linda

--

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

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

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

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

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

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

Hope this answers some of your questions.

Jeff Goodlove



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

[1] The Dark Ages, History International, 3-4-2007

[2] This Day in Jewish History

[3] Letters to Washington and Accompanying Papers, by Stanislaus Murray Hamilton VOL. IV pgs. 209-210

[4] William Crawford had surveyed the lands between the Great and Little Kanawha rivers for the Virginia Regiment, and he was now bringing in his rough field notes from which finished drafts were to be made with GW’s help (Crawford to GW, 2 Aug. 1771). See Diaries, 3:61—62.

[5] William Crawford had surveyed the lands between the Great and Little Kanawha rivers for the Virginia Regiment, and he was now bringing in his rough field notes from which fmished drafts were to be made with GW’s help (Crawford to GW, 2 Aug. 1771, DLC:GW). When the two men completed that task several days later, there were 10 surveys covering 61,796 acres, less than a third of the 200,000 acres that, according to the order of the council, had to be included in 20 surveys (VA. EXEC. JLS., 6:438--39). But Crawford reported that few of the tracts could be much “enlarged with rich Land” because the countryside was “generally so Craggy, Steep, and Rocky” that fertile farming areas could be found only in isolated narrow strips along the rivers and creeks (Crawford’s surveys, nos. 2—10, dated June 1771, are in DLC:GW; a copy of his first survey, dated June 1771, is at the University of Pittsburgh). Besides the surveys for the Virginia Regiment, Crawford apparently brought GW a personal survey for a 515-acre tract on the Ohio near Captina Creek (survey, June 20, 1771, DLC:GW) and one for some land about 16 miles from Fort Pitt (Crawford to GW, 2 Aug. 1771, DLC:GW).

[6] The Diaries of George Washington, University Press of Virginia, 1978

[7] George Washington Diaries, An Abridgement, Dorothy Twohig, Ed. 1999

[8] Dunmore's War: A Transcription from Crumrine's History[8]. The following transcription was submitted by Gaylene Kerr of Houtson, TX for inclusion at the Genealogy in Washington in May 1999. Bibliographic Information:

History of Washington County, Pennsylvania With Biographical Sketches of Many of Its Pioneers and Prominent Men, Boyd Crumrine, L. H. Everts & Co. (Philadelphia, 1882), Chapter VI., pp. 66–74.

[9] Chronicles of Border Warfare by Alexander Scott Withers, (Reuben Gold Thwaites notation) 1920 edition; pgs. Pg. 170.

[10] Chronicles of Border Warfare by Alexander Scott Withers, (Reuben Gold Thwaites notation) 1920 edition; pgs. Pg. 179.

[11] The George Washington Papers at the Library of Congress, 174 1-1799 Letters to Washington and Accompanying Papers. Published by the Society of the Colonial Dames of America. Edited by Stanislaus Murray Hamilton.--vol. 05

[12] The Journal of Nicholas Cresswell, 1774-1777 pg. 124

[13] Journals of the Continental Congress, Volume 6

[14] Revolution in America, Confidential letters and Journals 1776-1784 of Adjutant General Major Baurmeister of the Hessian Forces. Pg 122

[15] –von Stamford, Grenadier Battalion von Linsingen.

[16] Letters from Major Baurmeister to Colonel von Jungkenn, Written during the Philadelphia Campaign, 1777-1778 Edited by Bernhard A. Uhlendorf and Edna Vosper pg. 27

[17] On This Day in America by John Wagman.

[18] Widipedia

[19] William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary.

[20] "The Spade Family in America", author Abraham Thompson Secrest. Published privately November 1920, Columbus, Ohio.

[21] [1] Gedenkbuch, Opfer der Verfolgung der Juden unter der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft in Deutschland 1933-1945. 2., wesentlich erweiterte Auflage, Band II G-K, Bearbeitet und herausgegben vom Bundesarchiv, Koblenz, 2006, pg. 1033-1035,.

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



[22] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, Page 269.

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

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

[25] This Day in Jewish History.

[26] This Day in Jewish History.

[27] This Day in Jewish History

[28] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 450

[29]This Day in Jewish History

[30] This Day in Jewish History

[31] This Day in Jewish History

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