Saturday, January 1, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, January 1

• This Day in Goodlove History, January 1

• 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.



I Get Email!



In a message dated 12/24/2010 11:52:01 A.M. Central Standard Time,

Hello dear Jeff. H emailed me yesterday to say she looks forward
to working on your material and will contact you soon.

Have a lovely holiday.

L





L, Happy New Year! Thank you for keeping me posted. I really appreciate your help. I hope you are well and are managing the weather we are having. I feel like I am getting older. I have been looking for my glasses for two weeks. I just found them under my chair. Jeff.



This Day…



January 1, 630: Prophet Muhammad sets out toward Mecca with the army that will capture it bloodlessly. At first Mohammed “had hoped to find is main supporters among the Jewish tribes” of Arabia. This can be seen in his early adoption of certain laws regarding fasting and facing Jerusalem during prayer. When the Jews refused to accept him as the final line of prophets that had included Abraham and Moses, he turned against the Jews “in a cruel war of extermination.” Mohammed would die two years after the conquest of Mecca but his legacy lives on to this very day.[1]



January 1296/97

• Princess Joan of Acre[1]- Cts. Gloucester, born 1272 in Acre, Palestine; died April 23, 1307 in Austin Friar's, Clare, Suffolk, England. She was the daughter of 2. King of England Edward I (Longshanks) and 3. Eleanor of Castille, "Cts de Ponthieu". She married (1) Earl/Gloucester3 Gilbert "The Red" 7th Earl de Clare "6th Earl" April 30, 1290 in Westminster Abby, London, England. He was born September 02, 1243 in Christchurch, Hampshire, England/Christchurch, England, and died December 07, 1295 in Monmouth Castle. He was the son of Earl/Gloucester Richard de Clare and Maud de (LACY) LACIE. She married (2) Baron Ralph de MONTHERMER (Earl Gloucester) January 1296/97. He was born in of Tonebrugge, Castle, Kent, England, and died in (35 yrs old).[2]

• Princess Joan of Acre is the compilers 20th great grandmother.[2]


January 1348: In January 1348 the plague enters France through ships entering Marseille. It sails over water to Spain. In Barcelona, sixty percent of the population perishes. [3]



January 1, 1430: The Jews of Sicily were no longer required to attend “conversionist services.”[4]



January 1, 1438: Albert II of Habsburg is crowned King of Hungary. Albert confirmed the privilegium of Béla IV. In 1251 Béla had granted a privilgium to his Jewish subjects which was essentially the same as that granted by Duke Frederick II the Quarrelsome to the Austrian Jews in 1244, but which Béla modified to suit the conditions of Hungary.[5]



January 1492: Nearly eight centuries of Islamic rule in Iberia ended in January 1492, after eight years of battle, when the last Muslim king of Granada, Boabdil, surrendered the keys to the city to Queen Isabella herself. It was the end of Moorish Spain. According to legend, Boabdil gave one glance back at his lost dominion as he fled the city, the moment preserved in the name of a nearby hill, El Ultimo Suspiro del Moro, the Moor’s Last Sigh. The loss of Al Andalus, Andalusia, cut a deep wound in the historical consciousness of Muslims.[6]



January 1,1515: King Francis I succeeds to the French throne. Francis did not have any Jewish subjects since they had been expelled by Charles V at the end of the 14th century and they would not return until 1675 when Louis XIV would grant permission to the Jews living in Alsace and Lorraine, his two newly acquired provinces, to remain in their ancestral homes.[7]



January 1, 1515: Jews were expelled from Laibach, Austria.[8]



January 1, 1527: Croatian nobles elect Ferdinand I of Austria as king of Croatia in the Parliament on Cetin. There were no Croatian Jews in attendance since the Jews had been expelled and there was no record of any Jews living in Croatia after 1526.[9]



In January 1666, Shabbetai arrived in Istanbul and was arrested as a rebel and imprisoned in Gallipoli. The Sultan gave him the choice of conversion to Islam or death; Shabbetai chose Islam and was immediately released. [10]



January 1, 1774: The famous proclamation which Justice Mackay enclosed to Justice St.Clair, and copies of which were posted about Pittsburgh, read as follows:

“Whereas, his Excellency John, Earl of Dunmore, Governor-in-Chief and Captain General of the Colony and Dominion of Virginia, and Vice-Admiral of the same, has been pleased to nominate and appoint me Captain, Commandant of the Militia aof Pittsburg and its Dependencies, with instructions to assure His Majest’s subjects settled on the Western Waters, that having the greatest regard to their prosperity and interest, and conviced from their repeated memorials of the grievances of which they complain, that he purposes moving to the House of Burgesses the necessity of erecting a new county, to include Pittsburgh, for the redress of your complaints, and to take every other step that may tend to afford you that Justice for which you solicit. In order to facilitate this desirable circumstance, I hereby require and command all persons in the Dependency of Pittsburg, to assembly themselves there as a Militia on the 25th instant, at which time I shall communicate other matters for the promotion of public utility. Given under my hand, this 1st day of January, 1774.



“John Connolly”



January 1774

Liquor, as now, had a tendency to make pioneer attorneys talkative, and the court early decided that it brought disrespect and contempt for the tribunal to mix liquor and curbstone law, expecially if the utterances might have been made across the Forbes Road at Hannastown and within the sound of the court. At an adjourned session held August 3, 1773, with Justices William Lochry, Robert Hanna, and Arthur St. Clair on the bench, six new actions at law were added on the docket, and one Francis McDade was admitted to practice law in this court. That he did not well behave himself in the office of attorney, is shown by the following record at the January term, 1774, Justice William Crawford again presiding;



“It appearing to the Court that Francis McDade, one of the Attorneys of this Court, the duty of his office not regarding, hath of late at divers times and places, within the jurisdiction of this court, been publicly and notoriously guilty of the shameful vice of drunkenness, at which time and places he did publish several malicious passages highly reflecting on several magistrates of this court and other mischiefs then and there unbecoming the character, duty and office of an Attorney of this Court; It is ordered and considered by the Court that the said Francis McDade, for such, his shameful behavior, be suspended, and he is hereby suspended and precluded from further using the office, duty and business of this Court.”[11]



The pioneers who had whiskey stills on their plantations were continually being haled into court. When Justice William Crawford presided at the January term of 1774, the grand jury found true bills against Thomas Gist, of Gist’s Plantation, and Zachariah Connell, of Stewart’s Crossings. The following records show that the court made a strenuous attempt to regulate the liquor business. “It appearing to the Court that John Barr, one of the tavern keepers of this county, is keeping a disorderly house, it is ordered by the Court that the said John Barr is not to sell any spirituous liquors for the future in the Township of Mt. Pleasant, and that he pay a fine of forty shillings.[12]



January 1774: The Reverend McKinnon was called upon to serve in Frederick Town until January 1774, when Governor Eden presented him to Westminster Parish, Anne Arundel County, Maryland. This very old parish is now known as St. Margaret's.[13]



Ernest Helfenstein recites practically the same version as heretofore quoted, and stated to the compiler that his information was from the manuscript "History" by the Rev. Ethan Allen, in 1872. He added, "Mr McKinnon remained here until 1774, when Governor Eden presented him to Westminster Parish; about the beginning of, or during, the Revolution, he sailed for England, and was lost at sea. The Reverend McKinnon has now (1872) five descendants in the ministry, among whom are the Rev. Joseph Rogers Walker, of South Carolina, and his brother E. Tabb Walker, of Virginia." [14]



January 1775 to 1776

Daniel McKinnon; Rector, St. Margaret's Westminster Parish [15]



St. Margaret's Westminster Parish has had a long and varied history that spans over 300 years and touches almost every aspect of Maryland's history. Daniel McKinnon was listed as a past rector of the church from January 1775 to 1776. The vestry was founded in Westminster Towne (now Cape St. Claire) which came to be known as St. Margaret's Westminster Parish. St. Margaret's SECOND Church- The second church was built between 1731 and 1734 on the East bank of the Severn River on Severn Heights, now called Winchester Station . It was located there because Annapolis became the new capital of Maryland. It was better able to serve the needs of the new community through the French and Indian Wars, and the American Revolution. During the American Revolution, true patriots and Tories, forgetting their differences of state, joined in the common worship of God on Severn Heights.



As settlers spread out over the peninsula, worshipers in the upper part of the parish found it difficult to attend services at Severn Heights. Around 1731, a Chapel of Ease was built near Marley Creek (formerly Curtis Creek), nine miles from Baltimore, on the road to Annapolis. This church is. "Marley's Chapel" was used until 1861, with services being conducted by the associate rector of St. Margarets Church. In December 1903, the remains of the building were demolished, and some of the materials were taken to Glen Burnie to become part of a new church similar in design known today as St. Alban's Episcopal Church. The original location of Marley Chapel was ultimately lost in 1920 when roads were paved and widened. [16]



January 1776: The first considerable body of men recruited in the Monongahela country for the Revolutionary army was a battalion, afterwards designated as the Seventh Virginia. It was raised in the fall of 1775, chiefly thrugh the efforts of William Crawford, whose headquarters for the recruiting of it were at his home at Stewart’s Crossings ion the Youghiogheny, then in the county of Westmoreland, or rather, as the Virginia partisans claimed, in the western district of Augusta county, Va. After raising this regiment, Crawford did not immediately secure a colonelcy, but was commissioned lieutenant-colonel of the Fifth Virginia in January 1776 and in the latter part f the same year became colonel of the Seventh. The regiment which he raised was made up principally of men from the region now embraced in the counties of Westmoreland and Fayette, but no rolls or lists of their names can be given. [17]



January 1776

After eight monthes of such one-sided precision rifle fire, and evergrowing artillery fire, the British abandoned Boston. As quickly as they left, however, Gen. George Washington disbanded most rifle companies to fill his smoothbore-armed infantry regiments, and with good reason.

The Revolutionary War rifle was agonizingly slow to reload, requiring as many as two minutes to pour powder, force a ball down its constricted bore, charge its powder pan and get off an aimed shot. By contrast, the smoothbore musket was that era’s arm of choice despite its inherent inaccuracy; what the smoothbore lacked in range it compensated with firepower, offering up to four rounds per minute. Eighteen century tacticians believed smoothbore armed infantry men won battles by advancing shoulder to shoulder and maintaining drilled discipline while they fired volley after volley after volley.

In contrast to the modern sniper, no matter how carefully a Revolutionary War rifleman stalked, no matter the cleverness of his camouflage or subtly of his firing position, once he fired, his location was instantly detected. For the second a black powder sharpshooter pulled the trigger, his muzzle spewed a six foot sooty plume that lung in the air. Spotting this conspicuous signature, his enemies had almost two minutes for eight volleys and a quick bayonet assault before the rifleman could reload and fire. Further, unlike a smoothbore musket, the rifle lacked a bayonet, forcing the rifleman to rely on his trusty tomahawk to take on his assaulting foes “Indian-style.”This was no small disadvantage.[18]

General Washington well understood these strengths and weaknesses. Therefore, with Boston secured, he transferred most riflemen to his under-strength smoothbore musket regiments, retaining a few detachments to scout or defend the frontier from British Indian raids.[19]



January 1, 1776

The British burn Norfolk, Virginia.[20]



January 1, 1776

The American flag is raised for the first time on land, at Prospect Hill in Sommerville, Massachusetts.[21]



January 1778:







Personal ID:
VA33719




Last Name:
Moore
First Name:
Thomas
Suffix:




Rank:
1st Lieut
Rank Type:
Commissioned Officer
Ethnicity:




Brigade:
Muhlenburg's Brigade
Company:
Captain Benjamin Harrison




State:
VA
Regiment:
13 VA
Division:
Stirling's Division







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

Monthly Muster Roll Status


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

December 1777:
On Roll without Comment

January 1778:
On Roll without Comment

February 1778:
On Roll without Comment

March 1778:
On Roll without Comment

April 1778:
On Roll without Comment

May 1778:

June 1778:



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

Additional Remarks (if any):

Born at "Arcadia" plantation in Kent County, Maryland, on March 7, 1745. He later migrated to Tyrone Township, in Fayette County, Pennsylvania and married Mary Harrison. Commissioned a lieutenant in November, 1776 and eventually promoted to captain. Took Oath of Allegiance at Valley Forge. Served until January, 1780. Following the Revolutionary War, he served with George Rogers Clark in Illinois. In 1802, Moore retired from the Kentucky Militia with the rank of major. Died in 1823 and buried in the Lindsay-Moore Cemetery, Harrison County, Kentucky.[22]




January 1, 1779: Winch, David, Lancaster, Col. Wade's regt. for service at Rhode Island; Capt. Belknap's co.; muster rolls sworn to at East Greenwich, September 28, November 10, and December 30, 1778; enlistment to expire January 1, 1779.[23]



January 1, 1780.





On January 1 we saw several ships in the fleet which had lost some of their masts in the storm and appeared to be in distressed circumstances. Toward evening the second storm came up, combined with rain, hail, and snow, which continued in the most terrible manner until the forenoon of the 6th. The fleet had become separated in such a way that one could count only twenty sail in the farthest distance. Since the storm came out of the southeast and drove us toward land, the sailors were greatly worried about shipwreck on the Great Bank of Cape Hatteras, which extends over thirty nautical miles into the ocean.

Since a sunbeam fell around noon, an observation was taken and we were at latitude 31° 29’ north, but the wind blew too contrary and very hard. In the meantime, one could make a small coal fire in order to prepare some tea.[24]



On New Years Day (January 1), 1781, the Pennsylvania Continentals, a full quarter of Washingtons army, finally lost faith. They had not been paid in twelve months, yet their government was offering $81 in cash to recruit convicts willing to trade a jail cell for an army jacket. As night fell in Morristown, New Jersey, 1500 soldiers seized artillery, gunpowder, and cannonballs and filed out of camp. They intended to march to Philadelphia, and lay their grievances directly before the Pennsylvania state council, and the Congress. Two officers that tried to stop them were wounded, a third was killed. Word of the mutiny reached the British in New York.



“It is with inexpressible pain that I inform your exellency of the mutiny which took place in the Pennsylvania line last evening. Every possible means of exertion was made to surpress it, but the torrent was to potent to be stemmed.”

General Anthony Wayne







January, 1781- At the start of this year, a mutiny broke out in the rebel army. Between 2,000 and 3,000 men, under the command of General [Henry] Know, left their winter quarters at Morristown in New Jersey. These malcontents moved from Morristown towrd Elizabethtown, took a sevure position on a height, and demanded their many monthes back pay, in hard cash, better uniform items, and better provisions. Therefore, three Hessian and two British grenadier battalions, the Jaegers, and two British light infantry battalions were transferred from Long Island to Staten Island today, in order to be nearer these malcontents. General Clinton himself went to Staten Island, and commenced a correspondence with them. Reportedly our side promised them all their back pay, if they came over to us. However, they refused this offer, as it was never their intention to cross over to us, but they would remain neutral; and return to their homes. These malcontents have been reconciled with Congress and General Washington, and rejoined the rebel army again as the result of promises, exhortations, and being given part of their pay.[25]



When Nathanial Green arrived in Charlotte, North Carolina to take command of the so called Grand Army of the Southern Department of the United States of America, he found only 1500 men. It was, Green reported “but the shadow of an army, in the midst of distress, wretched beyond description.” Barely half the men were properly clothed or equipped, and when Green arrived they had exactly three days supply of food. For every sorry scarecrow Green could muster, Cornwallis had three well fed regulars. Green responded to his predicament, with the most daring strategy of the revolution. Already outnumbered three to on e, he decided to split his force. By the books this was suicide, but Green believed the gamble would save his army. He sent the frontier general west with six hundred men, while he went east with the rest of the army.



When Cornwallis learned that learned that Green had split his pathetic force, he didn’t believe it, but he took the bait and split his army. On New Years Day, 1781, he sent Tarlton and 1000 men to find Daniel Morgan and crush him. Morgan was near the Broad River in South Carolina when an express rider brought word from General Green.

“Colonel Tarlton is said to be on his way to pay you a visit. I doubt not that he will have a decent reception.”

For several days Morgan let Tarlton pursue him, then he turned and made his stand in a place called the Cowpens. It was a sparcely wooded pasture. It looked like the worst possible place for foot soldier to take on cavalrymen. Cowpens also backed up against the Broad River, leaving his men no retreat. But Morgan had chosen this trap on purpose. Almost half his men were raw militia, likely to run at the first pop of a gun. As Morgan observed, “Men fight as much as they find necessary, and no more. When men are forced to fight, they will sell their lives dearly.”

Daniel Morgan invented a new way to teach how to fight to militiamen and it was to know who could do what and then never ask a men to do more than he was physically capable of doing.[26]



In 1781, when ancestor and future President Andrew Jackson (second cousin 8 times removed) was 14, and the Revolutionary war was raging, British soldiers stormed a cabin where he and his brother Robert tried to hide. The boys were taken prisoner for serving as couriers in the continental army. Three words from a British officer would light a fuse in Jackson, that burned for a lifetime. “Clean my boots.”

Jackson, with that insolence that would characterize him his entire life. Jackson said, “I’m a prisoner of war and I demand to be treated accordingly.” The officer took a swipe at Jackson with his sword cutting him in the hand and head which would scar him for life. Andrew and his brother were taken to a squalid British prison camp where they both contracted smallpox. They probably wqould have died there if not for their widowed mother, Elizabeth. She gets the boys out who were by now desperately ill. They have one horse, who the older boy rides who is gravely ill and Andrew walks the entire forty miles home, with small pox. Jackson was delirious. For six months her mother works to keep Jackson alive in their cabin in the Waxah region. Her oldest son died fighting for the continental army. Andrew survived the smallpox but six months later, his mother died of Cholera, leaving Andrew a bitter, tough young orphan.[27]



In 1781, Andrew Jackson (2nd cousin, 8 times removed) worked for a time in a saddle-maker's shop. Later, he taught school and studied law in Salisbury, North Carolina.[28]

Jackson studied law under the highly esteemed attorney, Spruce McCay. Spruce McKay had already taught law to William Richardson Davey, Jacksons hero in the American Revolution.





January, 1783. The peace is concluded, and the United States have been declared independent. Adjutant General Stapleton4 was sent to the Congress to bring about as soon as possible the return of the prisoners of war, who are scattered around the entire country. The American pris­oners of war are to be set free at once.[29]



January 1, 1796: The first slave to be set free in Harrison County was in 1796. The document freeing this slave reads thusly, “Being convinced of the impropriety of perpetual slavery, I do emancipate a male negro bond slave named Isaac, after the first day of January, 1796. Signed, Newton Cannon.” This document was recorded by William Moore, first Clerk of Harrison County Court, 1796.[30]



January 1, 1798: The first Jewish censor was appointed by the Russian government to censor all Hebrew books printed in Russia or imported from other countries. [31]



In January 1803, St. Margaret’s Church on Severn Heights was burned down in an accidental fire. [32]



January 1, 1808: On March 2, 1807 Congress passes an act prohibiting the importation of slaves after January 1, 1808.[33]

1862: During the American Civil War General Grant issues General Order No. 11 (1862), ordering all Jews out of his military district, suspecting them of pro-Confederate sympathy. President Lincoln directs him to rescind the order.[34]



January 1, 1863: President Lincoln issues a preliminary Emanicipation Proclamation, September 22, 1862, calling for all slaves within areas under rebellion to be free on January 1, 1863.[35] On this day in 1863 President Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation became effective.[36]



January 1, 1864: Dr. William McKinnon Goodlove (1st cousin, 3 times removed) reenlisted January 1, 1864 as a soldier in the 57th Ohio Volunteer Infantry, Reenlisted January 1, 1864.[37]



January 1, 1864: The copy of a diary was written by William Harrison Goodlove dated from January 1, 1864 thru December 18, 1864. William Harrison Goodlove left the diary to his son, Earl Lee Goodlove who left it to his oldest son, Covert Lee Goodlove, who resided in Center Point, Iowa. The diary was copied “as written” by Jean (Goodlove) Lorence, daughter of Covert L. Goodlove, April 1987.[38] (It is in the possession of Jay Covert Goodlove.)



Friday, January 1, 1864

At home – coldest day I ever saw. Snow 14 inches deep. Sworn into the United service 1864[39]



January 1, 1865, brought good tidings to a few members of the 24th; furloughs for four officers and 5 per cent of the enlisted men present were approved by General Sheridan. [40]



January 1869: From the onset of the violence used by the Klu Klux Klan General Forest was against the terror. He ordered the Klan disbanded, its records destroyed, its robes burned. Some local Klan’s adhered to the order, many did not.[41]



January 1, 1876

January 1, 1876, William McKinnon Goodlove removed to Rushsylvania and commenced the practice of medicine at that place, and, as might be expected from his diplomas, his library and his experience, his field of labor enlarges, his practice extends.[42] I



1878

Adolf Stoecker, German anti-Semitic preach and politician, founds the ‘Social Workers’ Party, which marks the beginning of the political anti-Semitic movement in Germany.



January 1, 1883: Dr. Robert Levy, arrested on May 12, 1943, in Limoges and deported from Drancy on September 2, 1943, gave the following account:



“We expected to work very hard in the factories, in the coal mines in the quarries, but we did not think our annihilation had been decided upon and was going to be perpetrated for the most part, in cold blood… After a 60 hour horrible trip, our convoy, which left Drancy September 2, 1943, came to a halt. Shouting, the SS opened the padlocked cars filled with their pitiful. Cargo of frightened old men, women scared to death, crying children and exhausted men. But all those people were glad to arrive at their destination, to breathe the pure air after the contaminated stench of the freight cars, to stretch their legs and arms which had been bent by the atrocious and uncomfortable trip. This is the selection: women, children, those ovber 50, the sick, are placed on the right. The women who do not want to be separated from their husbands weep. The mothers accompanied by little children are happy, for they are not separated…”[43]



On board Convoy 59, on September 2, 1943 was Chila Gotlib, born January 1, 1883 from Seidlitz, and Malka Gotlib, born February 14, 1878 from Varsovie. (Warsaw, Poland.)[44]





January 1, 1892

The receiving station for immigrants at Ellis Island opens in New York Harbour.[45]



January 1, 1897

(Pleasant Valley) Little Ralph Goodlove is the guest of Mrs. Lottie Penly.[46]



January 1, 1898

Miss Jessie Goodlove, Mr. Carl and Miss Mary Wiley are spending the holidays at their respective homes.[47]



January 1924: A severe financial crisis breaks out in France in January; makes France more dependent upon American capital and more willing to find a cooperative solution to the reparations problem (rather than extraction reparations alone and through violence). [48]



• 1927
DNVP, pushed by its pragmatic (economic) wing, reenters government in January 1927 but leaves again in February 1928. Unemployment rises but reaches no dramatic levels. Quiet year in Weimar politics.[49]



January 1, 1936: In preparation for the first mass roundup of Jews in the Unoccupied Zone, Henry Cado, the Associate Director General of National Police, on Bousquet’s instructions, sends regional prefects a detailed confidential letter defining those categories of Jews to be arrested and those to be exempted.



Prisoners are to be transferred to the Occupied Zone for deportation by September 15. The foreing nationalities sought are the same as those targeted by the Parisian roundups,. Those to be arrested are foreign Jews who arrived in France after January 1, 1936, whether serving in foreign workers groups, held in camps or in supervised residence centers, or at large. Exempt from arrest are those over the age of 60 or under 18 and those who have served in the French or Allied armed forces, as well as members of veteran’s families. Additional exemptions are specified for those who have French children or a French spoiuse, those whose spouises are of nationalities other than those sought, pregnant women, the sick and disabled, those whose work has economic importance, and those who have rendered outstanding service to France or who are well known for their cultural works. If a member of a family is exempt but wishes to accompany the others into deportation, he or she may; and parent sho are arrested may leave their children under age 18 in the Unoccupied Zone. Cado requests prefects to prepare by August 16 lists of those to be arrested, and he orders them to prevent the emigration of any deportable Jews, evben those possessing exit visas.



Cado’s list of exemptions is relatively large, and when estimates of the numbers of Jews subject to arrest reach Vichy, Bousquet annuls most of the exempt categories to be certain that he can meet the commitment he has made to the Germans.[50]



• January 1, 1939: The Measure for the Elimination of Jews from the German Economy is invoked, banning Jews from working with Germans.[51]



• January, 1939 : “The result (of a war) would not be a victory of Jewry, but the destruction of the Jewish Race in Europe.”

• Adolf Hitler [52]



• In the corruption of the whole generation of German youth, through the propaganda of Nazism in schools. But people thought this was a German problem, that this was a limited problem, that we have our own problems, we have our unemployment. The same is true today, but they do not connect the dots. They don’t connect the acts together. They don’t see that Islamic fundamentalism is a global problem. [53]



• 1939 : “If Jewry should plot another world war in order to exterminate the Aryan peoples of Europe, it would not be the Aryan peoples which would be exterminated, but Jewry.”

• Adolf Hitler[54]

• `````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````

• Early 1939: In a survey taken in early 1939, 66 percent of those surveyed in the U.S. objected to a one-time exception to allow 10,000 refugee children to enter outside the immigration quota limits.[55]



January 1941:



October 1940 to January 1941

The deaths of people badly cared for, undernourished, and exposed to the elements during the rigorous winters of 1940, 1941 and 1942, were in fact deliberate assassinations. The Vichy government, “anti-France”, in the words of Dr. J. Weil, whose work on concentration camps is considered authoritative, has shown itself guilty of these crimes. What other name can be given, for example, to the mortality in the camp of Gurs? There were 15 deaths in October, 1940; 180 in November; 270 in December; 140 in January, 1941…



At Gurs on November 26, 1940, Julius Gottlieb, born December 24, 1852 from Ebernburg, died.



Also at Gurs on March 23, 1941 Johanna Gottlieb born May 24, 1859, from Ebernburg, died.[56]



• January 1, 1943: Dutch Jews are no longer permitted to have private bank accounts, and all Jewish money is put into a central account.[57]



January 1, 1979

Jacqueline Means becomes the first woman Episcopal priest in the United States.[58]



1979: Joseph Mengele, known as the “Angel of Death,” primarily for the brutal experiments he performed on live prisoners, escaped to South America where he died in 1979.[59]



1980s

Even as new manuscripts have continued to emerge from the desert, archaeologists in modern day Israel, Palestine, and Jordan are uncovering sites that were unknown or unexcavated just a few years ago. Since the 1980’s, a number of major archaeological digs have been active in Sepphoris and Tiberias, cities built or rebuilt by Herod Antipas, the governor of the Galilee at the time of Jesus. The Galilee was one of the most densely populated regions in the entire Roman Empire, and Sephhoris was the market hub for a network of agricultural villages. It was rebuilt after its near complete destruction following a Jewish uprising against the Romans in 4 B.C.[60]



None of the modern efforts, including the attempt to color code Jesus’s sayings according to their supposed authenticity, has been more productive than the attempt to recapture the Jeiwshess of Jesus and his world. Geza Vermes, a retired professor of Jewish studies at Oxford UIniversity, set the tone about 30 years ago with his Jesus the Jew, which located Jesus as a first century Galilean who exemplified “charismatic Judaism of wonder working holy men such as the first century B.C. Honi and Jusus’s younger contemporary, Hanina ben Dosa.” Other scholars have focused on the political tinderbox that was first century Palestine in order to understand how Jesus came to be viewed as such a threat.[61]





January 1, 2005: We stopped by the Trenton Memorial on New Years (January 1. 2005) morning and as we peered through the window, to our surprise a man who name was Henry, peered out and asked if we would like to ride the elevator to the top. We had to sit down and finish our coffee, as we were quite stunned that here, on a national holiday, there was a man who didn’t take a day off. This was what made our visit unique and unforgettable. Henry took us up the monument in the smallest elevator I’ve ever been in and as we learned as we reached the top, one of the oldest. Henry informed us to not let the door blow shut at the top, as a crane would have to bring us down.

I believe that Henry, who was in his mid seventies, takes a great deal of pride in his job. The memorial was immaculate, considering the neighborhood, and as we left Henry was caring for the grounds. The point of this conversation is that this is not only the time on our trip that someone has shown up, as a volunteer, and taken time to help tell the story. The story of the place and what happened there. There were many places where people have shown up to help tell the story of the people who lived there. Those are the people I would like to thank. Those people who understand the importance of telling the story, and passing it along for the next generation. JG.



[62]

Mary and Gary Goodlove visit The Battle of Princeton, January 1, 2005.







[63]

Sherri and Dennis Maxson, January 1, 2010.





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

• [2] [1] Notes for -Princess Joan of Acre- Cnts. Gloucester: Countess of Gloucester and Hertford. Her father had arranged for her to be married to Amadeus of Savoy, but she had already secretly married to Ralph, a member of the Kings household.

• [2] Family Tree Maker, Jeff Goodlove

• [3]The Plague, HISTI, 10-30-05.

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

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

[6] Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People, page 178.

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

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

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

[10] A History of God by Karen Armstrong page 328.



[11] Annals of Southwestern Pennsylvania by Lewis Clark Walkinshaw, A.M. Volume II pgs. 22-23.

[12] Annals of Southwestern Pennsylvania by Lewis Clark Walkinshaw, A.M. Volume II pg. 28.

[13] (William Stevens Perry, D.D. Historical Collections of American Colonial Churches, p. 345).

[14] (Ernest Helfenstein, The History of All Saints' Parish in Frederick Co., Maryland, 1742-1932, pp. 21-25.) Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett, pp. 224.5-224.6

[15] (http://www.st-margarets.org/rectors.htm)



[16] (http://www.st-margarets.org/history3.htm)



[17] The History of Fayette County, Pennsylvania with Biographical Sketches of many of its Pioneers and Prominent Men. Edited by Franklin Ellis Vol. 1 Philadelphia: L. H. Everts & Co. 1882

[18] The American Rifleman, May 2009, page 41.

[19] The American Rifleman, May 2009, page 42.



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

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

[22] Sent by John Moreland email May 12, 2010.

[23] Ancestry.com. Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors in the War of the Revolution, 17 Vols. [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 1998. Original data: Secretary of the Commonwealth. Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors in the War of the Revolution. Vol. I-XVII. Boston, MA, USA: Wright and Potter Printing Co., 1896.

[24] Diary of the American War, A Hessian Journal by Captain Johann Ewald pgs.191-196.

[25] Journal of a Hessian Grenadier Battalion, Translated by Bruce E. Burgoyne

[26] The Revolutionary War, A Harvest of Victory., Military Channel.

[27] Andrew Jackson, HISTI, 11/18/2007

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

[29] Diary of the American War, A Hessian Journal by Captain Johann Ewald

[30] Cynthiana Since 1790 by Virgil Peddicord, page 5.

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

[32] (http://www.st-margarets.org/history3.htm)



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

[34] www.wikipedia.org

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

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

[37] William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary by Jeff Goodlove

[38] On the front page of the transcription.

[39] To boost enlistment in Federal armed forces, a system of bounties was developed very early. Men who volunteered to serve for ninety days in 1862 received $25 from Uncle Sam, while those who signed up for a year got twice as much. Riswing throughout the conflict, the bounty paid to a five year volunteer after March 1863 was $400. It is not known what bounty William Harrison Goodlove received. Civil War 2010 Calendar

[40] A History of the 24th Iowa Infantry by Harvey H Kimball, August 1974, page 189.

[41] Klu Klux Klan: A Secret History.1998 HIST.

[42] History of Logan County, Ohio. 1880 pp.691-692

[43] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 448.

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

[45] On This Day in America.

[46] Winton Goodlove papers.

[47] Winton Goodlove papers.

[48] http://www.colby.edu/personal/r/rmscheck/GermanyD4.html

[49] http://www.colby.edu/personal/r/rmscheck/GermanyD4.html

[50] French Children of the Holocaust, A Memorial by Serge Klarsfeld, pages 45 and 46.

[51] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page1761.

[52] Obsession, Radical Islam’s War Againt the West.

[53] Obsession, Radical Islam’s War against the West.

[54] The Abandonment of the Jews, David S. Wyman page 53.

[55] The Abandonment of the Jews, America and the Holocaust, 1941-1945 by David S. Wymen page 8.





[56] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 612, 619.

• [57]Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1775

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

[59] Daily Herald, November 1, 2010, Section 1 page 3.

[60] US New and World Report, Secrets of Christianity, April 2010. Page 8.

[61] US New and World Report, Secrets of Christianity, April 2010. Page 17.

[62] Photo by Jeff Goodlove

[63] Photo by Jeff Goodlove

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