Monday, December 6, 2010

This Day in Goodllove History, December 6

This Day in Goodlove History, December 6

• 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.



• A point of clarification. If anybody wants to get to the Torah site, they do not have to go thru Temple Judah. They can use http://DownhomeDavarTorah.blogspot.com

• and that will take them right to it.



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; Holly J. Wermager, Mary Spaid, Steven L. Smith, Vickie L. Perius, Kittie McKinnon, Woolsey Godlove, Dixie Godlove, Sarah Gibbis, Daniel B. Duncan, Benjamin S. Duncan Angela D. Cray, James F. Bishop, Carla A. Bader.

Weddings on this date; Jessie B. Winsor and John H. Hannah,

I Get Email!



In a message dated 11/19/2010 6:41:02 A.M. Central



Jeff= So much to RSVP to in your e mail!! 1) I look forward to seeing you on Nov 28 in Evanston= You will get an official flyer about it ASAP= 2) Dec 3 is Chanukah Celebration at Chicago Sinai Congregation=a concert of some fun. Music will be part of the service= might be fun/illuminating!! There will definately be an awesome reception afterwards when we can continue our chat 3) Let me know when you would like to come for a Tuesday lesson= we could start up anytime= in a week or 2 or after the New Year= Andy



Andrew, Thank you for the invitations. I am sorry I missed the concert as my daughters were home that weekend. I am also sorry I missed the Chanukah Celebration in which I truly would have enjoyed. I have to get better about answering my emails quicker. I would like to start up after the first of the year if that works for you. Thanks for all of your help. Jeff Goodlove.



This Day…

December 627: After many moments of anxiety the Crusade was successful. The Persians were decisively defeated at Nineveh in December 627. [1]

629: In 629 peace was established. In August 629 Heraclius celebrated his triumph in Constantinople. The following spring he travelled south to receive back the Holy Cross and to carry it in pomp to Jerusalem. [2]

629: When Heraclius was in Constantinople in 629, receiving congratulatory embassies from as far afield as France and India, a letter is said to have arrived written to him by an Arabian chieftain who announced himself as the Prophet of God and bade the Emperor join his faith... Similar letters were sent to the kings of Persia and Ethiopia AND TO THE Governor of Egypt. [3]

634: The sword struck at the Roman Empire even during the Prophet’s lifetime, with small raids into Palestine. Under his successor, Abu Bakr, the raids grew fiercer, and an Arab army reached the Mediterranean coast at Gaza. Under Omar, who became Caliph in 634, the raids became wars of conquest; and Heraclius, who was in northern Syria, had to take action.[4]

637 A.D. A victory at Kadesiah in 637 gave the Arabs control of Iraq.[5]

638 A.D.: A victory at Nekhavend gave the Arabs the Iranian plateau. [6]

December 639 A.D.: An Arab army entered Egypt.[7]

640 A.D. Babylon (Old Cairo) fell to the Arabs in 640.[8]

642 A.D. The great city of Alexandria fell to the Arabs in 642 A.D.[9]

642 Visigoth Empire, Jews expelled.[10]

643 A.D. Alexandria was recaptured by the Christians for a time in 643 then lost for ever. [11]

663/664

Although resisting the Roman brand of Christianity for many years, especially the date Easter should be observed, the Celts finally succumbed at the Synod of Whitby (663/664) and accepted the Roman customs. [12]

670 A.D. In 670 the Frankish bishop Arculf set out for the East and managed to make a complete tour of Egypt, Syria and Palestine, and to return through Constantinople; but the journey took several years, and he met with many hardships.[13]

682 A.D.

When in 682, Pope Martin I was accused of friendly dealing with the Moslems, he explained that hius motive was to seek permission t send alms to Jerusalem.[14]

691



The golden Dome of the Rock, still the most brilliant jewel of the Jerusalem skyline, was built in 691 on the site form which Muslims believe Muhammad ascended to heaven. The Rock is said to be the stone of Solomon’s Temple on which the Ark of the Covenant stood.[15]

700

The area known as Prussia was inhabited in early times by West Slavic tribes, ancestors of the modern Poles, in the West, and Baltic tribes, closely related to Lithuanians, in the East. Sometime after the seventh century, the area was invaded and settled by pagan German tribes, later known as Prussians.[16]

700 A.D.

By the year 700 the Arabs had overrun all the coastlands of North Africa.[17]

711 A.D.: The Arabs occupied Spain.[18]

717 A.D. By 717 the Arab empire stretched from the Pyrenees to central India and their warriors were hammering at the gates of Constantinople.[19]

[20]

781 A.D.: During the eighth century the number of pilgrims to the Holy Land increased. Some even came freom England; of whom the most famous was Willibald, who died in 781 as Bishop Eichstadt in Bavaria. In his youth he had gone to Palestine, leaving Rome in 722 and only returning there, after many disagreeable adventures, in 729.[21]

793 AD: In the first recorded attack of Vikings, in 793 A.D., they raided an undefended monastic community at Lindisfarne in the northeast of England. Alcuin of York, , an Anglo Saxon scholar, recorded the onslaught.. The Anglo-Saxon Chropnicle, a contemporary historical account, records that the Vikings waged some 50 battles and destroyed or ravaged scores of settlements. Dublin, one of the largest Viking cities in the British Isles, became a major European slave trading center, where, historyians estimate, tens of thousands of kidnapped Irtishmen, Scotsmen, Anglo-Saxons and others were bought and sold. [22]

834

When Ailpein, the 68th traditional but 28th authentic King of Scotland, was slain A.D. 834 in battle near Dundee by Brudus King of the Picts from whom Ailpein had wrested the Pictish scepter, he left three sons, the youngest of whom was Prince Gregor, who did not succeed his brothers to the throne.[23]

846: In 846 Moslems had sacked Rome.[24]

855 Italy, Jews expelled.[25]

Kenneth, son of Alpin, King of the Picts, died A.D. 858; that Donald, son of Alpin, King of the Picts, died A.D. 862;[26]

870: When Bernard the Wise from Brittany, visited Palestin in 870, he found Charles the Great’s establishments still in working order, but empty and beginning to decay. Bernard had only been able to make the journey by obtaining a passport from the Moslem authorities then governing Bari, in southern Italy; and even this passport did not enable him to land at Alexandria.[27]

876 Sens, Jews deported.[28]

878

In the year 878, with a young military commander by the name of Alfred (849-899), King of Wessex, later called “The Great.” He is credited with preserving the language by his military exploits against the invading Danes. With a fresh number of recruits, Alfred surprised and overwhelmed the Danes at the battle of Ethandune, causing their withdrawal to the north.[29]

Although it is on certain record that the chief of MacKinnon was seised of property in Skye as well as in the Isle of Mull as early as A. D. 880, we have no authentic account of the history of the clan till we reach A. D. 1314, when the clan MacKinnon fought under the great Bruce at the battle of Bannockburn.[30]

900

We may here remark that there are six other Clans who trace from King Ailpein, and who came into existence, migrated and dispersed about the same period viz., A.D. 900, and their claim to the distinction of being the noblest and most ancient of the Highland Clans has been acquiesced in by the other Clans. Their proud old “S’rioghail mo dhream” (my race is royal) was acknowledged by all, and survived the successive ages of independent Scottish history from the beginning to the end. It is indeed a pity that the distinctive family mottos which now hold place shoul ever have been adopted to the abandonment of that to which they all had a right, and which might have bound them together even to the present day. These Clans are, besides the Mackinnons, Clan Gregor, MacNab, McAulay, MacPhie, Grant and MacQuarrie.

900 C.E.

“Ashkenaz” is mentioned in Genesis and Chronicles as the son of Gomer, who is the son of Yafet, the son of Nowh. In Talmudic tradition, Gomer is known as Germania, and Germania of Edom is Germany. Thus, the area of Europe where jews first settled became known as Ashkenaz, and its inhabitants, Ashkenazim.

As early as 900 C.E., small Jewish settlements formed into a community with unique cultural patterns and communal organization, as well as an independent rabbinical leadership. Jewish communities spread first westward and later eastward, embraced Jewish Ashkenazic customes and culture and remained largely isolated from the dominant Germanic and Slavic medieval Christian society.[31]

900 AD

It so happens that there is a notorious gene called BRCA2 on chromosome 13 and it…helps to tell a story of genealogy. BRCE2 was the second ‘breast cancer gene’ to be discovered, in 1994. People with a certain, fairly rare version of BRCA2 were found to be much more likely to develop breast cancer than is usually the case. The gene was first located by studying Icelandic families with a high incidence of breast cancer. Iceland is ther perfect genetic laboratory nbecause it was settled by such a small group of Norwegians around AD 900, and has seen so little immigration since. Virtually all of the 270,000 Icelanders trace their descent in all lines from those few thousand Vikings who reached Iceland before the little ice age. Eleven hundred years of chilly solituted and a devastating fourteen-century plague have rendered the island so infred that it is a hap0py genetic hunting ground.

Two Icelandic families with a history of frequent breast cancer can be traced back to a common ancestor born in 1711. They both have the same mutationh, a deletion of five ‘letter’s after the 999th ‘letter’ of the gene. A different mnutation in the same gene, the leletion of the 6,174th ‘letter’, is common in people of ?Ashkenazi Jewish descent. Approximately eight per cent of Jewish breast-cancer cases under the age of forty-two are attributable to theis one mutation, and twenty perc cent to a mutation in BRCA1, a gene one chromosome 17. Again, the concentration points to past inbreeding, though not on the Icelandic scale. Jewish people retained their genetic integrity by adding few converst to the faith and losing many people who married outsiders. As a result, the Ashkenazim in particular are a favourite people for genetic studies. In the United States the Committee for the Prevention of Jewish Genetic Disease organizes the testing of schoolchildre’s blood. When matchmakers are later considering a marriage between two young people, they can call a hotline and quote the two anonymous numbers they were each assigned at the testing. If they are both carriers of the same mutation, for Tay-Sachs disease or cystic fibrosis, the committee advises against the marriage. The pratical results of this voluntary policy, which was criticized in 1993 by the New York Times as eugenic, are already impressive. Cystic fibrosis has been virtually eliminated from the Jewish population in the United States.

So genetic geography is of more than academic interest. Tay-Sachs disease is the result of a genetic mutation comparatively common in Ashkenazi Jews, for reasons that will be familiar from chromosome 9. Tay-Sachs carriers are somewhat protected against tuberculosis, which reflects the genetic geohgraphy of Ashkenazi Jews. Crammed into urban ghettos for much of the past few centuries, the Ashkenazim were especially exposed to the ‘white death’ and it is little wonder that they acquired some genes that offer protection, even at the expense of lethal complication for a few.

Although no such easy explanation yet exists for the mutation on chromosome 13 that predisposes Ashkenazios to develop b reast cancer, it is quite possible that meny racial and ethnic genetic peculiarities do indeed have a reason for their existence. In other words, the genetic geographuy of the world has a functional as well as a mapping contribution to make to the piecing together of history and pre-history



No. 6.—William CRAWFORD TO George WASHINGTON

December 6, 1770.



DEAR SIR :—Agreeable to your desire, I have bought the Great Meadows[32] from Mr. Harrison, for thirty pistoles, to be paid to Mr. Jacob Hite; and enclosed is an order on you from Mr. Harrison in favor of Mr. Hite, and the bill of sale filled up by Mr. McLain. I also unclose a draft of the land, to be run as you think proper. Any alteration you want done, please to let me know, and I will see it done when Mr. McLain comes up next summer.

I intend to go to Fort Pitt in a day or two. The snow that fell the time you left my house continued on the ground with the help of some’ more ever since, so there was no looking at the land with the caution you desired.[33] I shall send you a full account by my brother, who is to be up by Christmas, if I can have the ground clear of snow long enough to have it done; at any rate, I will see it next week. Colonel Croghan is at Fort Pitt still, and I under­stand is to stay the chief part of the winter[34]. I wish you a merry Christmas. I am, etc.

P. S.—Mr. Hite has an order on you for the same amount. One only is to be paid. [35]



December 6, 1771 At home alone all day. In the afternoon Mr. Phil. Pendleton came.[36]







No. 11._George WASHINGTON TO William CRAWFORD[37]



MOUNT VERNON, December 6, 1771.



DEAR Sir:—The inclosed I write to you in behalf of the whole officers and soldiers, and beg of you to be attentive to it, as I think our interest is deeply concerned in the event of your dispatch.

I believe, from what I have lately heard, that there is no doubt now of the charter government[38] taking place on the Ohio; but upon what terms, or how the lands will be granted to the people, I have not been able to learn. I should be glad, however, if you would endeavor to keep the tract you surveyed for me till such time as we can tell where, and how, to apply for rights; or, if you did anything with McMahan[39] on my account, I will abide by that. As soon as the tract at the Great Meadows is enlarged, I should be glad to have the surveys returned to the office, and to get a plat of it myself; as I am determined to take out a patent for it immediately.

I cannot hear of any reserve in favor of Colonel Croghan; for which reason I do not care to say anything more to him on the subject of a purchase until matters are upon a more permanent footing, since no disadvantage can follow to him, after leaving him at liberty in my last letter to sell the tract he made me an offer of, to anybody he pleased. I should be glad, however, to hear from you how he goes on in his sales, and what is said and thought of his claim; in short, what chance there appears to be of his getting it; for I suppose his right to the lands he claims must either be confirmed or rejected by this time, and known at Pittsburgh before now. I should be glad to hear from you by the first opportunity in respect to these several matters. In the meanwhile, I remain, with my best wishes to Mrs. Crawford, yourself and family, dear sir, your assured friend and servant.[40]



December 6, 1774







His MAJESTIES Writ for adjorning the County Court of Augusta from the Town of Staunton to Fort Dunmore, and with a new Commission of the Peace and Dedirnus and a Commission of Oyer and Terminer and Dedimus from under the hand of John, Earl of Dunmore, his Majesties Lieutenant and Governor in chief, bearing date the Sixth day of December One Thousand Seven Hundred and Seventy four, directed to Silas Hart, James Kockhart, John Dickinson, John Christian, Daniel Smith, Archibald Alexander, John Poage, Felix Gilbert, Abraham Smith, Samuel McDowell, George Moffett, Sampson Matthews, Alexander McClenachan, William Bowyer, Alexander Robertson, John Gratton, John Hays, Thos. Hugart, James Craig, Elijah McClenachan, John Frogg, JonahDavidson, William Tees, John Skidmore, George Croghan, John Campbell, John Gibson, William Crawford, John Stephenson, John McCullough, John Cannon, George Vallindigam, Silas Hedge, David Shepherd and William Goe, Gentlemen.[41]



December, 1774

In December, 1774, he had been commissioned by Dunmore a justice of the peace and a justice of Oyer and Terminer for the county of Augusta, the court to he held at Fort Dunmore (Pittsburgh). He did not qualify, however, for these offices, until after lie had been super­seded in those held by him under Pennsylvania authority.

• Augusta county, as claimed by Virginia, included Crawford’s ‘ home upon the Yougbiogheny; afterwards it was in the District of West Augusta, and finally in Yohogania county, until Virginia, in 1779, relinquished her claim to Southwestern Pennsylvania. Crawford not only took office under Virginia, but he became an active partisan in extending the jurisdiction of his native province over the disputed territory. Some of his acts were doubtless oppressive, though he soon atoned for them in his patriotic course upon the breaking out of the Revolution. The partisan feeling in his breast immediately gave place to the noble one of patriotism. He struck hands with Pennsylvanians in the cause of liberty.[42]







“December 6, 1777 - At two o’clock this morning we learned that the army had engaged with the enemy and as the firing did not last very long, it is to be imagined that it was with their outposts. [43]



December 6, 1790[44]: On December 6, 1790, the First Congress met in Philadelphia and continued to be the capital city for the next ten years. [45]



1796 - December 6 - Benjamin Harrison, Morgan Vanmatre, Jeremiah Robinson, John Wall, Sr. and Henry Coleman, Trustees of Cynthiana, conveyed Lot 10 in Cynthiana to George Reading. Consideration $10 paid to Robert Harrison, proprietor of said town. Acknowledged Harrison Court December 1796 by Wall, Robinson and Coleman. [46]



My Aunt Winifred Goodlove Gardner told me that she remembered hearing it said that Catherine had stayed with an Aunt Mary in Kentucky for some time in her childhood. That Aunt Mary, no doubt, was Mary Harrison Moore whose gravesite my wife, Mary, and I found in an abandoned graveyard near the village of Poindexter (located about 3 miles from Cynthiana, Kentucky). We walked through farm fields to locate it. The stone fence surrounding it is still nearly complete but it is now covered with trees. (See picture Ref.#8) Tom Moore lived neighbors to the families of Lawrence Harrison and William Crawford in Fayette County, PA, and moved with the Harrisons to claim his 2000 acres which was laid out by Ben Harrison at the same time as the 4000 acres was laid out in Harrison County, Kentucky, for William Harrison who was killed by Indians on the Sandusky Expedition. According to the story, William Harrison was in Kentucky recruiting “sharp-shooters” when he fell in love with the Bluegrass Country and sent for his brother, Ben, to claim it for him. The Harrison’s role in early Kentucky history has lived on in history books and memorials which I will cover briefly in a later chapter.[47]

Gerol “Gary” Goodlove

Conrad and Caty, 2003



1797 Lt. John moves to Adams County, Ohio.[48]

1797

Page 155, no. 2971, Warrant no. 19, John Crawford (heir) 175 acres. On the Waters of Eagle Creek. Dated 1797.[49]



1797

Virginia organized three county seats of government; Ohio County, with court being held at Black’s cabin until a court house could be constructed. The records of Ohio County being removed later to Wheeling about 1797 (now West Virginia), and where they are to this day.[50]

In 1797, Andrew Jackson was elected U.S. Senator as a Democratic-Republican. He resigned within a year.[51]





1802 – December 6 - Acknowledgment of Debts at New Madrid: Benjamin Harrison, Sr. to Richard Jones Waters - for William Hinkson, his son-in-law, Benjamin Harrison, Jr. and Lawrence Harrison, his sons, and Peter Lewis. The debts amounted to $1,428.50 which Harrison, Sr. agreed to pay in two installments in 1803. As security he mortgaged a tract on Lake St. Francois purchased from George Ruddell, a negro man Joe, negro man Tom, negro woman Lucey (two last have for some time past been in the custody of William Hinkson and live in his family), 1 dun horse, 1 yoke of work oxen 3 years old, 1 walnut desk. [52]

1802 - December 6 - Mortgage at New Madrid: William Hinkson to Benjamin Harrison, Sr. To cover his share of the above debt, due on or before Dec. 6, 1803, Hinkson mortgaged to Harrison, 2 horses., 4 cows with their calves, 2 heifers, 20 hogs, a weaver's loom, 1 chest, 2 beds, bedsteads and furniture, 1 gun. [53]

December 6, 1804: - April 9, 1802 Litigation at New Madrid: Benjamin Harrison, Sr. vs. George N. Reagan. Suit re sale of two pieces of land by Reagen to Benjamin Harrison, Jr. Matter arbitrated and Harrison., Sr. ordered to pay expenses December 6. 1804. [54]

1803

In addition to the owners of slaves already mentioned, there are found the the names of persons registering slaves in Fayette County in and prior to 1803;

Hannah Crawford, widow.[55]

1803

John Crawford’s record in the Ohio State Auditor’s office; 1803, No. 2862, 300 acres to John Beasley, Vol. 3, page 342. , No. 2679, 175 acres to John Beasley, Vol. 3.[56]



In 1803, James Foley, a native of Virginia, born 1779, came to the county, selected land in Moorefield Township, upon which he settled permanently in 1805.



1803-1805
James FOLEY, b. 1779 in VA. d. 1864, age 84
Marr in 1808 to Mary MARSH b.1784 VA
Griffith, Catherine, Susan, John & James
1st Co. Commissioner in 1818, also served Legislature, two terms








Catherine Godlove was born in 1803 in Hardy County.



I must have overlooked or not located any military involvement or occupation of Daniel McKinnon, Sr. Prior to 1803 at which time Daniel, Sr. would have been age 36 when he moved to Clarke County, Ohio, with daughter Catherine, then six years of age. Since he came into possession of four sections of land consisting of 640 acres per section in Clarke County, I am suggesting we may find it was “Bounty Land” received for military pay.[57]



On December 6, 1816 Francis Godlove entered a claim for a land patent from the Commonwealth of Virginia. This land, 78 acres on the drains of North River and the north side of Bucks Hill, adjoining his 100-acre tract, was surveyed on June 8, 1818 and patented August 17, 1820 to “Francis Godlop.”[58]



December 6, 1830: Andrew Jackson's (2nd cousin 8 times removed) second annual message to Congress, in which he discusses Indian removal.[59]

On December 6, 1830, in his annual message to the nation—now commonly referred to as the president's State of the Union address—Jackson praised Congress for putting into law an Indian removal policy that he had recommended for over a decade. In addition, in this speech he attempted to provide Congress and the public with justifications for why Native Americans in the East needed to be removed beyond the reach of American settlement.[60]

December 6, 1847

Representative Abraham Lincoln of Illinois takes his seat in the House of Representatives.[61]



1848

Theopolis McKinnon voted for Taylor in 1848.[62]



1848: At the end of his second term Joseph Vance retired to his farm in Urbana. Although he did not hold regular office again, he served as a delegate to the national Whig convention in Philadelphia in 1848 and as a representative of his district to the Ohio Constitutional Convention of 1850-1851. He took a leading part in the debates and was chairman of the committee on public institutions. On his way home from attending sessions of the convention in Cincinnati in December 1850, he suffered a stroke of paralysis and was forced to give up his duties. He died at his home near Urbana on August 24, 1852.[63]



1848: The Washington Monument’s architect, Robert Mills, a freemason, based his design on an ancient Egyptian symbol of power, the obelisk. It is 555 feet. [64]



December 6, 1863

Alfred M. McKinnon, born 1839. (Compilers second cousin, 3 times removed) He died at Chatanooga, Tenn., from the effects of the wounds received in battle at Mission Ridge (December 6, 1863); was a member of the 1st 0. V. I. He appears as a student in Clark Co OH in 1860. [65]



John Joseph Harrison died during the Civil War died in Georgia, in a Civil War prison. Was this Andersonville, Georgia? These records need to be checked. (The compilers 3rd cousin, 4 times removed.)[66]



Tues. December 6[67], 1864

A nice day had monthly inspection[68]



Luisa Gottliebova born December 6, 1869. Bv- October 15, 1942[69] Exemption lived to (Czech translation)





• Ida Gottlieb, nee Wolf born December 6, 1880 in Hagenbach. Resided Altenbamberg. Deportation:

• 1940, Ziel unknown. Auschwitz. Missing. [70]





December 6, 1883: Christian Theophil GUTLEBEN was born on December 6, 1883 in Fontanelle,Washington, NE and died on May 10, 1968 in , Contra Costa,CA at age 84.

Christian married Emma Wilhemina WOLKENHAUER on November 30, 1911 in Fruitvale,Alameda,CA. Emma was born on March 17, 1885 and died on November 4, 1983 in ,Contra Costa,CA at age 98. [71]



December 6, 1900

Miss Fannie McAtee began school Monday in the Boulder District. (Winton Goodlove’s note: She was Earl Goodlove’s first wife.[72]



December 6, 1904:

On board Convoy 64 on December 7, 1943 was Fanny Gotlib born December 6, 1904 from St. Denis.[73]



In 1945 there were 50 survivors, two of them women.[74]



December 6, 1917

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Wilkinson Sunday, December 2, a daughter.[75]



December 6, 1917

(South Side) One day last week while out hunting, Harold Goodlove captured a fox.[76]



• Alice Gottlieb, born December 6, 1918 resided Frankfurt am Main. Deportation: 1942, Majdanek/Lublin[77]



• After visiting Majdanek and seeing first hand what the Germans had done, W.H. Lawrence wrote in the New York Times, “I am now prepared to believe any story of German atrocities no matter how savage, cruel and depraved.” [78]







About 1940…







• Berta Gotlob nee Perlhafter was born in Zamberk in 1880 to Benjamin and Rosa. She was a housewife and married to Eduard. Prior to WWII she lived in Czechoslovakia. Berta perished in the Shoah. This information is based on a Page of Testimony (displayed on left) submitted on April 26, 1999 by her niece.



December 6, 1941

• Great Britain declares war on Romania.

• A Soviet counteroffensive begins outside Moscow.[79]



• December 6, 1942

• The German Authorities order the Jewish leadership of Tunisia to recruit 2,000 Jews for forced labor. Eventually, 5,000 are placed in labor camps.[80]



December 6, 2009



Jeff,



Here's a link to the Basketball website and schedule. http://sites.google.com/site/warriorwomenbasketball/varsity-schedule-2

Jay



Mom and Dad are in Alabama... I told dad last night he should buy a crimson tide hat since they beat Florida last night and will probably be National Champs!

---

Jay, Thanks! I'm looking forward to Lauren winning all of her games, except against Kennedy! :) Yes they are all the way in Alabama and dad forgot his hearing aid and mom forgot her curlers! Next stop Florida!

Jeff



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

[1] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 12

[2] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 12

[3] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 13

[4] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 15

[5] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 16

[6] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 16

[7] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 16

[8] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 16

[9] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 16

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

[11] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 16

[12] Trial by Fire by Harold Rawlings, page 26.

[13] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 24.

[14] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 24.

[15] Heritage:Civilization and the Jews by Abba Eban. 1984, page 99.

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

[17] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 16

[18] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 16

[19] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 162

[20] Heritage: Civilization and the Jews, 1984, page 126.

[21] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 24.

[22] Smithsonian, October 2010, page 66.

[23] M E M O I R S OF C LAN F I N G O N BY REV. DONALD D. MACKINNON, M.A. Circa 1888

Page 9.

[24] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 49.

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

[26] M E M O I R S OF C LAN F I N G O N BY REV. DONALD D. MACKINNON, M.A. Circa 1888

[27] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 24.

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

[29] Trial by Fire, by Harold Rawlings, page 21.

[30] M E M O I R S OF C LAN F I N G O N BY REV. DONALD D. MACKINNON, M.A. Circa 1888

[31] DNA and Tradition, The Genetic Link to the Ancient Hebrews, Rabbi Yaakov Kleiman, 2004, pg. 90.

[32]The Great Meadows were four miles east of the Laurel Hill, and ten miles east of the present Uniontown, Fayette county, Pennsylvania,—on the National road, forty-two miles from what is now Cumberland, Maryland. Here, in April, 1754, Washington built Fort Necessity, which was surrendered to the French in July following.

[33]Washington left Mount Vernon on the 5th of October, 1770, on his journey to the Ohio river, reaching the home of Crawford on the 13th. On the next day, in his journal, which has been frequently published, he wrote:

”At Captain Crawford’s all day. Went to see a coal-mine not far from his house, on the banks of the river [Youghiogheny]. The coal seemed to be of the very best kind, burning freely, and abundance of it.” On the next day he says: “Went to view some land which Captain Crawford had taken up for me near the Youghiogheny, distant about twelve miles [in what is now Fayette county. Pennsylvania; Perryopolis is located upon this land]. ‘This tract, which contains about one thousand six hundred acres, includes some as fine land as ever I saw, and a great deal of rich meadow. It is well watered, and has a valuable mill-seat, except that the stream is rather too slight, and, it is said, not constant more than seven or eight months in the year; but on account of the fall and other conveniences, no place can exceed it. In going to this land, I passed through two other tracts, which Captain Crawford had taken up for my brothers Samuel and John. I intended to have visited the land which Crawford had procured for Lund Washington this day also, but time falling short I was obliged to postpone it. Night came on before I got back to Crawford’s, where I found Colonel [Adam] Stephen.” . . . On the 16th he wrote: “At Captain Crawford’s till the evening, when I went to Mr. John Stephenson’s [Crawford’s half-brother], on my way to Pittsburgh, and lodged.”

Crawford accompanied Washington down the Ohio to the mouth of the Great Kanawha, After an examination of the land some distance up the latter stream, they returned, reaching Crawford’s home on the 24th of November. Washington left for Mount Vernon the next day, the ground being covered with snow; hence the allusion to “the snow that fell,” in the above letter.



[34] George Croghan, a native of Ireland, first settled upon the Susque­hanna, where, in 1746, he was engaged in the Indian trade. He after­ward was agent for Pennsylvania among the Indians upon the Ohio and its tributaries, lie erected a fort at the site of the present Slur­leysburg, Huntingdon county, Pennsylvania. Early in the French War he was a captain; but, in 1756, he threw up his commission and repaired to Sir William Johnson, who appointed him a deputy Indian agent of the Pennsylvania and Ohio Indians. After Pontiac’s War, he lived at his settlement upon the east side of the Alleghany river, four miles above Fort Pitt., where, as Sir William’s deputy, he continued very efficient. Here, Washington visited him on the 19th of October, 1770.

[35] The Washington-Crawford Letters, C. W. Butterfield, 1877



[36]The purpose of Pendleton’s visit was to get the contract for the land that GW had agreed to sell him on 6 June. GW signed it on the following day, witnessed by Lund Washington, Valentine Crawford, and Jacky Custis (CctMMCH)

The Diaries of George Washington. Vol.3. Donald Jackson, ed.; Dorothy Twohig, assoc. ed. The Papers of George Washington. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1978.

[37] Captain Crawford was born in Westmoreland County, Virginia, in 1722; had served in the Virginia Regiment with Washington in 1758, and took an active part in Pontiac’s War of 1763. He first went to the Youghiogheny to perfect his settlement in the summer of 1765, and the next year brought his wife and three children across the mountain to their new home. Washington first wrote him to pick out some good land for purchase in 1767, and also sought the aid of Colonel John Armstrong, at Carlisle, to secure surveys from the Penns for these western lands, as early as 1767, and also sought the aid of Colonel John Armstron, at Carlisle, to secure surveys from the Penns for these western lands, as early as 1767. Colonel George Croghan sought to sell Washinton larger tracts than Washington wanted, and was very insistent about it, and the former declined to purchase. As late as December 6, 1771, despite his seekin of land rights from the Penns, and even after Crawford became a justice in the courts of Bedford County, Washington disclosed the designs of Virginia by his letter to Crawford. Annals of Southwestern Pennsylvania by Lewis Clark Walkinshaw, Vol. I pg. 355

[38]By “the charter government” is here to be understood the government of Virginia. Washington’s idea was, that its jurisdiction wou’d soon be extended to the Ohio, with power to grant lands, etc. which, as yet, had not been the case.

[39] Dr. James McMechen (whose name is found frequently written McMahan or MeMahon) was an early settler upon the Ohio.

[40] The Washington Crawford Letters, C. W. Butterfield, 1877

[41]

[42] The Washington-Crawford Letters, C. W. Butterfield

[43] Lieutenant Rueffer, Enemy Views by Bruce Burgoyne, pgs. 244-245.

[44] On This Day in America by John ‘Wagman.

[45] Philadelphia, Art Color Card Distributors.

[46] (Harrison County Deed Bk. 1, p. 209) BENJAMIN HARRISON 1750 – 1808 A History of His Life And of Some of the Events In American History in Which He was Involved By Jeremy F. Elliot 1978 http://www.shawhan.com/benharrison.html



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

[48] The Brothers Crawford, Allen W. Scholl, 1995

[49] Ohio State Land Office, in the capital building at Columbus. From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969 p. 183.

[50] (From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969, pages 128.)

[51] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Jackson

[52] (New Madrid Archives #1082 Chronology of Benjamin Harrison compiled by Isobel Stebbins Giuvezan. Afton, Missouri, 1973 http://www.shawhan.com/benharrison.html

[53] (New Madrid Archives #1083) Chronology of Benjamin Harrison compiled by Isobel Stebbins Giuvezan. Afton, Missouri, 1973 http://www.shawhan.com/benharrison.html

[54] (New Madrid Archives #1340) Chronology of Benjamin Harrison compiled by Isobel Stebbins Giuvezan. Afton, Missouri, 1973 http://www.shawhan.com/benharrison.html

[55] History of Fayette County, Pennsylvania, by Franklin Ellis, 1882

[56] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969. p. 186.

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

[58] James Funkhouser (View posts)
Posted: 9 Jul 2005 11:35AM




[59] http://www.milestonedocuments.com/document_detail.php?id=49&more=timeline

[60] http://www.milestonedocuments.com/document_detail.php?id=49&more=timeline

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

[62] Theopolis McKinnon, August 6, 1880, London, Ohio. History of Clark County, page 384.

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

[64] Secrets of the Founding Fathers.

[65] Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett page 112.5

[66] Karen Garnett, Ancestors of Forrest R Garnett, (Not Published), 452.12.

[67] President Lincoln names former Secretary of the Treasury, Salmon P. Chase, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.

[68] William Harrison Goodlove Iowa 24th, Civil War Diary by Jeff Goodlove

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



[70] [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).

[71] Descendents of Elias Gotleben, Email from Alice, May 2010.

[72] Winton Goodlove papers.

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

[74] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 477

[75] Winton Goodlove papers.

[76] Winton Goodlove papers.

[77] [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).

• [78] This Day in Jewish History.



[79] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1769

• [80] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1774

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