Wednesday, February 23, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, February 23

This Day in Goodlove History, February 23

• 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 Goodlove Reunion 2011 will be held Sunday, June 12 at Horseshoe Falls Lodge at Pinicon Ridge Park, Central City, Iowa. This is the same lodge we used for the previous reunions. Contact Linda at pedersen37@mchsi.com

Birthdays on this day: Leo A. Roberts, Phyllis M. Goodlove, Paul A. Faust, George E. Booth

Weddings on this day; Elizabeth F. Miller and James B. McKinnon, Tamezine Nurse and Ebenezer Hemenway, Susanna Woods and William Goodlove, Phoebe Kempf and Samuel Douglas

February 23, 1422: During the conflict between the Hussites and the Dominicans, Pope Martin V issued a Bull favorable to the Jews reminding Christians that their religion had been inherited from the Jews. “The pope forbade the monks to preach against intercourse between Jews and Christians.”[1]

1423

Peter von Hachberg in 1423 in Colmar.[2]

1424: Jews expelled from Fribourg & Zurich.[3]

1425

In the year 1425 Balthasar, the son of the deceased Master Heinrich the ‘physician,’ is received in the city of Freiburg as a surgeon, and his salary is set and then raised in 1433.[4]

1425

Now follows Knefelkamp’s conclusion: With these two names we are probably dealing with two persons whose fathers were called Heinrich. Apparently from the beginning of the 15th century in Freiburg there was a city physician Heinrich von Hachbert who retained this office as a surgeon, whose son was accepted as his successor in 1425. At the same time Heinrich Salmon, another Jewish physician who practiced, could have been brought into connection with the city surgeon Balthasar Gutleben, who probably descended from the family that already produced city physicians in Basel, Colmar and Freiburg.” And in Strassburg, as one may add.[5]

Knefelkamp proceeds concerning several perculiar circumstances: Master Heinrich (Salmon) in spite of his given name, was a Jew and the father of Balthasar Gutleben. At the same time, however, Heinrich von Hachberg and after him his son Balthasar von Hachbergh shoul be regarded as the actual city physicians of Freiburg in the first half of the 15thf century. One has to not e that the only evbidence of a Heinrich with the name of origin “von Hachberg” was found only through anb essay of Baas, which was therefore second hand information. But Bass couled bave come to his own conclusion, just as for example Knefelkamp himself at one point misinterpreted the evidence of Vivelin/Gutleben in Freiburg in the year 1373 to mean Peter Gutleben. Likewise, with Theodor Nordmann the same applies. But even if we were to accept these premises, nothing would be in the way of the assumption that there was only one city physician in the city of Freiburg whose family name Salmon shows him to be a previous Jew, which in addition to that goes well with the fact that he activated the Rottweil court at different times against certain cucstomers or patients. The same body was called upon often, particularly by the Jews on the upper Rhine, in order to have debtors who delayed in paying their financial obligations or did not want to pay back at all, openly dec lared as outlaws, and during this sensitive sanction, to still receive the money owed to them. Finally the significant circumstance that basel, at the time that Gutleben/Vivelin was still active there, often called for the dispatching of the Freiburg city physician Heinrich. This may havbe happened through the recommendation of Gutleben, since he was already rather old at that time and needed the help of one of his sons or a substitute, if for example, in his position as, if one wishes to call it, a field doctor, he could not stay in the city. [Footnote: One of the most important tasks of the city physician pertained to the provision of medical aid to wounded citizens in war.] Additionally, we do not believe that there were two physicians with the common name of Balthasar practicing at the same time in Feiburg in Breisgau. Balthasar Gutleben, interestingly once sent from Freiburg to the city of Strassburg, that is to a former workplace of his grandfather Vivelin!, just as his father Heinrich, could also have gone by the original name “von Hachberg,” as he could havbe been active there in earlier years or even been baptized in Hachberg. Recalling their father, besides their grandfather Master Gutleben, who was still remembered in Freiburg in the 15th century, Heinrich and his son Balthasar von Hachberg were called interchangeably either “von Hachberg” or with the surname “Gutleben,” according to our assumption.[6]

We have proven the existence of a Jewish-Christian family, which over several generations were physicians in the field of medicine in the upper Rhine area, as well as partially in the loan business, whose individual members were found for about a century in the most important cities of the upper /Rhine jurisdiction and were famous not only there for their ability. The history of Gutleben illustrates the high mobility, in a certain areqa, of the physicians on the one hand and of th4e medieval Jews on the other, as well as their high medical standard, but also touches an example of the “conflict of the poor” problem of the existence and the fate of the medieval baptized Jews, which so far has been investigated too little, and certainly not systematically. Even if the train of thought proved uncertain, we provide an amazingly large number of sources for the different generations of the Gutleben family, whereas not all are yet known to us to make use of. Besides, the history of these known healers, according to our impression, coincides with tht e lat eMiddle Ages physicians with the origin designated as “von Hachberg” (Hochberg),” wherby, on this conclusion, a surgeon named Peter von Hochberg carried out his medical profession in the Reich city of Colmar, from the year 1425, where he settled in the Judengasse [Jews Street]. Perhaps one may see him as the son of Heinrich Gutleben von Hachberg, should he not in reality be identical with Peter Gutleben! At his baptism, consequently, Heinrich’s brother, the Colmar city physician Peter Gutleben, could have been the godfather. Certainly, the historian’s ability to recognize, for want of sufficient density of sources, meets his limits here and so must leave the field to pure speculation for the time being.[7]

1425 to 1440

Balthasar Gutleben/von Hachberg

1425, nach 1440 in Freiburg i.B.[8]

1426 Jews expelled from Cologne.[9]

February 23, 1455: Traditional date for the publication of the Gutenberg Bible, the first Western book printed from movable type. This revolution in publishing was one of the most liberating events in Western history. Some say that it really marked the beginning of the Modern Intellectual Era of Western Civilization. Soon books would be printed Hebrew giving the People of the Book greater access to books thus further democratizing the concept of learning which is a cornerstone of Jewish civilization. The chapter and verse system finally took hold in copies of the Torah (books not the Scroll itself) as a result of the printing revolution.[10]

February 23, 1484: Over this day and the next, 30 men and women were burned alive, as well as the bones of 40 others at the Inquisitional Tribunal of Ciudad Real.[11]

1485 Jews expelled from Vincenza (Italy).[12]

February 23, 1703/4. Surveyed for Andrew Harrison, Richard Long and Samuel Elliott 813 acres and 120 perches in Essex County . . . in a branch of Goulden Vale and in a line of a petent formerly granted unto Mr. Buckner. Divided into three parts.

Charles Smith, surveyer

Plat showing division to:

Andrew Harrison, 271 acres 40 perches

Richard Long, 271 acres 40 perches

Samuel Elliot, 271 acres 40 perches.

May 10, 1707 Andrew (AH) Harrison

Richrd. (R) Long

Samuel Ellitts

May 10, 1707 Acknowledged.

Also, in the year after his fathers death, Andrew Harrison, Jr. was sued by a firm of merchants from Bristol, England. There are numerous entries in the Essex county order book 1717-1723, part III. It seems to have stretched through six courts with continuances and motions. Andrew ended up losing and having to pay damages of 300 pounds of tobacco, plus lost time for his witnesses, including Richard Long, and some court costs.

February 23, 1770: Trouble began in Boston on February 23, 1770, when a schoolboy named Christopher Snider was shot and killed by an “abandoned wretch” of a Tory during a melee. The boy’s funeral, organized by Samuel Adams, drew thousands of angry citizens.[13]

[14]

Sherri Maxson, my lovely and knowledgeable girlfriend, leads the way on our tour of Boston’s Freedom Trail. (Note the red brick line that marks the entire Freedom Trail.) By coincidence our hotel, the Sheraton at Copley Plaza, turned out to have been in the original boundary of Roxbury, home of Sgt. Jason Winch who was at the Battle of Bunker Hill and the 8 month siege of Boston.



No FTDNA matches were found in Scotland but my 5th great grandfather was from Scotland, and this is his story.

Tragedy of Love Led to Ohioville's Founding[15]

The Isle of Skye, off the coast of Scotland produces men who place duty before personal inclinations.

Such a man was Lord Michael McKinnon, native of the island. He trained his children to adhere to their ideas and sacrifice everything to duty. Early in 1770 two of his sons, Daniel and Joseph, came to America. Daniel, a high Episcopal preacher to George IV of England, was sent by the crown to the church at Philadelphia.

He was a man of decided opinions and did not fit in well with the growing tendency in the colonies to question the crown's authority. He was a staunch royalist and preached his convictions from the pulpit. His belief, however, did not prevent his marriage to Miss Polly Dawson, a lovely colonial girl, who was a member of an ardent Whig family.

For several years Polly was very happy with her ecclesiastical husband. A daughter, whom they named Katie, was born.

The young wife, however, did experience troublesome moments when her family reproached her for her husband’s denunciation of the American cause.

One night Polly retired early. Later she was awakened by angry shouting in the lower hall. She went to the top of wide, shallow stairway and looked down into the hall. Below were a number of men. In the front line, pressing close to her husband, who was standing on the second step, were her father and brother, Daniel. The minister, partially dressed, his thin intelligent face pale in the light of the candleabrum, was speaking quietly.

"I will not take the oath of Allegiance against my king. I am the servant of the church and his majesty is its head. I will not denounce him for a group of people who are rebelling against a just and kind ruler."

Wrathful shouts filled the hall. The colonist surged forward but Reverend McKinnon did not move. Polly's brother looked up and saw his sister standing in the shadows.

"If ye will not take the oath, then ye must go back to England and my sister and her child will stay in America," he shouted.

The minister turned quickly and held out his hand to his wife, who came swiftly down the steps.

"Daniel," she said, "Please take these men and go away. My husband and I will settle this question."

Finally the crowd dispersed and Polly turned back up the stairs, accompanied by her husband. But neither slept that night. Polly pleaded and begged that he take the oath of allegiance, but her husband remained adamant. Finally the girl decided words were useless. She was sad at the thought of leaving her family, but there was no question in her loyal heart but that she must go with her husband. Her family decided otherwise. They forced her to change her mind and she left her husband with these last words ringing in her ears; "If you go with them Polly we will never see each other again."

Filial obligations ruled, however fro Polly and one bleak winter morning Danial McKinnon sailed for England, alone.

Daniel Dawson sold 'all his' possession and together with all his family, Polly and her baby, started west. They crossed the Allegheny mountains of pack mules. Snow and bitter cold combined with the danger of Indian attacks to harass the little party until it reached Fort Pitt. He would either come or send for her. At times Daniel Dawson was conscience-stricken as he watched his sister, but he was certain the family decision was right.

The party remained at Fort Pitt until spring. In the meantime, Dawson had been hunting for a suitable place to farm. At last he found it, high on the hills overlooking the Ohio River, between Little and Big Beaver creeks. Early in April he brought his family and sister to their new home. They were the first settlers in what is now Ohioville.

The young wife waited anxiously for those long expected "mail days". But no mail arrived from England. Daniel McKinnon was keeping his promise. One day years later Joseph McKinnon, the younger brother who had chose to remain in America, came to visit his sister-inlaw. He told Polly her husband had been made a bishop in the church and was a favorite of the king. He would never return to America.

From then, until her death, Polly heard no more of her husband. She was buried in the Ohioville cemetery.[16]

In 1776, Daniel McKinnon was lost at sea returning to England. No traces of passengers or crew were ever found. JG



George Washington to Gilbert Simpson, February 23, 1773, Account Book 2

Mount Vernon, February 23, 1773.

Mr. Simpson: As the Negro Fellow I bought In Alexandria will by no means consent to leave this Neighbourhood and as you did not seem Inclind to take him without I have sent a young Fellow which I bought last Spring in his room. In coming from Boston here he got Frost Bit and lost part of his Toes which prevents his Walk’g with as much activity as he otherwise would but as they are quite well, and he a good temper’d quiet Fellow I dare say he will answer the purpose very well. I also send you a fine, healthy, likely young Girl which in a year or two more will be fit for any business, her principal employment hitherto has been House Work but is able, or soon will be to do any thing else.



These Negros along with the one you carry out had better be valued by the same Appraisers; for the Cost of them is nothing to the purpose as I bought them with my own Money and for ready Cash noways Connected till apprais’d with our joint Interest I have wrote to Mr. Craven Peyton to act in my behalf, you and he therefore may agree on proper Persons to appraise these Negros but your Waggon Horses, and other things which have not a regular and fix’d value of themselves.

Inclose you have a List of such Articles as are furnish’d from my own Store and Smiths Shop; the prices affixd are as low as I could buy at in any of the Stores for ready Cash. Lund Washington who is now going up to Alexandria will Inclose you an Acct. of what things he will get there with the prices of each respective Article all of which I hope will not only get safe to your hands but safe to the Land of Promise; for which the Sooner you Imbark After the Weather will permit the Better as you will have more of the Spring before you to prepare for the Summers Crop.

I have wrote to Captn. Crawford to assist you with any thing you may want and I will see him paid. Vale. Crawford I am perswaded will also aid you in any matters in his power and I would advise you to lay in your Provision of Corn &ca. upon your first getting out as it is more than probable the prices of them will Increase as the Spring advances.

Let me have a List of all the Articles you furnish with the sev’l Prices annexd that I may be acquainted with our respective Advances and be enabled thereby to State the Accounts. I do not recollect any thing more at present to add except in general to advise you to look beyond a year or two and not suffer any present or immediate convenience in clearing Land or doing other things to break in upon any regular or settled Plan which may be beneficial hereafter; for this reason it is I would recommend it to you to examine the Land well and begin to Build and clear in that part of it which is most likely to answer the general end and design of your going there; so in like manner concerning your Houses letting those you do Build be good of their kind and in the end you will find them the cheapest. I heartily wish you your health, ad Succes and am Yr. Friend, etc[17]



February 26, 1773

It must be remembered that of February 26, 1773, Westmoreland county had been erected, covering all the territory of southwestern Pennsylvania, and the seat of justice was placed at Hanna’s town, about four miles from the present Greensburg. The establishment of government and courts of justice over this territory necessitated increased taxation upon the lands of the pioneers; and, as the greater number of them had come over the mountains from Maryland and Virginia, by way of Braddock’s road, it was not a matter of great difficulty to equal the number of patriotic Pennsylvanians by the number of Virginianb partisans from our own settlers. It may be noted that Captain William Crawford, he who was burned at the stake by the Indians at Sandusky in July, 1782, was a Pennsylvanian, being one of the justices of peace, and justices of Bedford, when first organized in 1771; but afterwards espoused the cause of Virginia in the boundary controversy, and in 1775, when presideing judge of the Westmoreland county court, his judicial office was taken from him, as he had then accepted the appointment of justice under Lord Dunmore.[18]



Then followed a series of arrests and counter-arrests, long continued, resulting in riots and broils of intense passion. Every one who, under color of an office held under the laws of Pennsylvania, attempted any official act, was likely to be arrested and jailed by persons claiming to hold office under the government of Virginia. Likwise were Virginia officials liable to arrest and imprisonment by Pennsylvania partisans.[19]

February 23, 1774; George Washington’s Journal: At home all day. Mr. Robert Adam came to dinner and Mr. B. Fairfax and (ancestor) Capt. Crawford came to dinner. The whole staying all night.[20]

February 23, 1775

At a Court Con’d and held for Augusta County February 23rd 1775…Ordered that…(ancestors) Wm. Harrison…Isaac Mason…Geo Rodgers Clark…are humbly recommended to his Excellency, the Governor, as proper persons sons to be added to the Commission of the Peace for this County…[21]

February 23, 1778

A stranger arrives at Valley Forge. He is sent by Benjamin Franklin. The Stranger is an unlikely volunteer. His name is Baron Friedrich Wilhelm Augustus Von Steuben, a General in the mighty Prussian army.[22] He was neither a Baron, nor a General. George Washington did not care.[23] Friedrich Wilhelm Rudolf Gerhard August, Freiherr von Steuben, a Prussian military officer, arrives at General George Washington's encampment at Valley Forge on this day in 1778 and commences training soldiers in close-order drill, instilling new confidence and discipline in the demoralized Continental Army.

Baron von Steuben, as he is better known, was the son of a military engineer and became a Prussian officer himself at the age of 17. He served with distinction and was quickly promoted from infantry to Frederick the Great's General Staff. In 1763, at age 33 and with the rank of captain, he was discharged for unknown reasons. His title of freiherr, or baron, came with his subsequent post as chamberlain (or palace manager) to the petty court of Hohenzollern-Hechingen in Swabia, or the southwestern Holy Roman Empire, in what is now Baden-Wuerrtemberg. Employed by an indebted prince, von Steuben searched for more lucrative employment in foreign armies. The French minister of war recommended von Steuben to Benjamin Franklin as a resource to the Continental Army in 1777. Franklin in turn passed on word of Steuben's availability to George Washington, and by February 23, 1778, he was among the desperate Continentals camped at Valley Forge.

Von Steuben, who did not speak English, drafted a drill manual in French, which Alexander Hamilton and Nathanael Greene then translated into English. The Prussian drill techniques he shared were far more advanced than those of other European armies, let alone those of the ragtag Patriots. The ego-crushing methods of modern boot camp were practiced among the shoeless soldiers of Valley Forge with remarkable efficacy. Most important for 18th-century battle was an efficient method of firing and reloading weapons, which von Steuben forced the Patriots to practice until it became second nature.

Before von Steuben's arrival, colonial American soldiers were notorious for their slovenly camp conditions. Von Steuben insisted on reorganization to establish basic hygiene. He demanded that kitchens and latrines be put on opposite sides of the camp, with latrines facing a downhill slope. (Just having latrines was novelty to the Continental troops who were accustomed to living among their own filth.)

On the merit of his efforts at Valley Forge, Washington recommended that von Steuben be named inspector general of the Continental Army; Congress complied. In this capacity, von Steuben propagated his methods throughout the Patriot forces by circulating his Blue Book, entitled Regulations for the Order and Discipline of the Troops of the United States.[24]

February 23, 1778: The delegates of Pensylvania laid before Congress a letter signed Thomas Wharton Junr., president, dated in Council, Lancaster, February 23, 1778, requesting to be furnished with the following papers, viz.[25]

"The instructions of the Board of War to their superintendents of provisions; the plan laid down by the superintendents for the purchase, &c. of provisions; the instructions for the millers, dated the 11 January last; a letter from the superintendents to the Board of War, dated 11 February instant; a letter dated 12 February, instant signed Robert Lettis Hooper, deputy quarter master general, to the purchasers under the superintendents:"

Ordered, That the Board of War furnish the delegates of Pensylvania with copies of the above papers, or such of them as are in the office of the Board of War and Ordnance.

A letter, of the 24 January, from S. A. Otis, at Boston, was read.[26]

The committee to whom were referred the letter of the 8 instant, from General Washington, and sundry other letters which passed between him and General Howe, relative to the exchange of prisoners and other matters, brought in a report, which was read.

The committee to whom were referred the letters and papers from the committee of Congress at camp, brought in a report, which was taken into consideration, and, after some time spent thereon, the farther consideration thereof was postponed to the afternoon.

The Committee on the Treasury brought in a report; Whereupon, Ordered, That a warrant issue on the treasurer in favour of Captain Pesky, for twenty-six thousand dollars, in discharge of William Palfrey, Esqr., pay master general, his order, for that sum, on the president of Congress, dated camp, the February 23 instant in favour of Colonel E. H. Lutterlogh, deputy quarter master general, and endorsed by him to the said Pesky: the pay master general to be accountable:[27]

The commissioners of accounts at the treasury report,

That there is due to the administrators of Samuel Allen, deceased, for hire of his waggon and team from the 4 September to the 4 December, 1776, is 92 days, at 22/3 dollars, 245 30/90 dollars; and for the four horses, waggon, geers and cloth, which by certificates, appear to have been detained in the service after his decease, and never returned to his heirs, &c. appraised at 408 dollars, which last sum is to be charged to the account of the quarter master general; also for expences incurred on York Island, as by account and certificate, 7 62/90 dollars, amounting in the whole to 661 2/90 dollars:

That there is due to John Campbell, the sum of 1,243 30/90 dollars, for Colonel George Morgan's order on the President of Congress, in favour of Colonel William Crawford, being for provisions stored at Fort Pitt, which order is assigned over to said Campbell; the said Colonel George Morgan to be accountable:

That there is due to Simon and Campbell, the sum of 302 dollars, for arms sold to Colonel William, Crawford, for the use of the 13 Virginia regiment, as per Colonel Crawford's order on the Treasury Board: the said Colonel Crawford to be accountable:[28]

Ordered, That the said accounts be paid.

Three o'Clock, p. m

A letter of the 7th, and one of the 14 [29], from Major General Heath, at Boston, were read, the former enclosing copies of sundry letters that passed between him and Lieutenant General Burgoyne, and a letter from Lord Napier and Lieutenant Colonel Anstruther:1

Ordered, That they be referred to a committee of three:

The members chosen, Mr. [Oliver] Wolcott, Mr. [James] Lovell, and Mr. [Elbridge] Gerry.

Congress resumed the consideration of the report of the committee on the letters and papers from the committee at camp; and, after debate,

Ordered, That the farther consideration thereof be postponed till to morrow.

Adjourned to 10 o'Clock to Morrow.[30]





February 23, 1796

William GOODLOVE

BIRTH: UNKNOWN

DEATH: UNKNOWN

Family 1: Susanna WOODS

MARRIAGE: 23 Feb 1796 [S25856]

In a message dated 11/18/00 7:28:29 PM Central Standard Time, JEFFERYGOODLOVE writes:<<

I am looking for information you might have regarding Susanna Woods and William Goodlove, who appeared to have married in 1796.

>>



Jeff,



I am afraid that I won't be much help. I was surprised to discover that I even had this couple in my data and then had to figure out why. It turned out it was because Archabald Woods married Elizabeth Shackleford, Shackleford being one of my

surnames. Anyway, below is a tree for the Woods family. The information came from Kentucky Family Archives, Vol. V, (Kentucky Genealogical Society, 1974), p. 303, Family group sheet contributed by Sue Nite Raguzin, 5008 Briarbrook,

Dickinson, TX 77539.



Sorry that I can't be of more help.



Sara Tarpley



Descendants of William Woods



1 William Woodsb: Unknownd: Unknown

.+Susannah Wallaceb: Unknownm: Unknownd: Unknown

.2 Archibald Woodsb: January 20, 1749 in Albemarle County, Virginiad: December 13, 1836 in Madison County, Kentucky

.....+Mourning Harris Sheltonb: 1756m: August 5, 1773d: UnknownFather: William Shelton, Jr.Mother: Lucy Harris

.....3 Lucy Woodsb: October 25, 1774 in Albemarle County, Virginiad: 1854

.........+William Capertonb: Unknownm: December 13, 1790d: Unknown

.....3 William Woodsb: March 22, 1776d: July 8, 1884

.........+Mary Harrisb: Unknownm: January 12, 1802d: Unknown

.....3 Susanna Woodsb: June 13, 1778d: October 2, 1851

.........+William Goodloveb: Unknownm: February 23, 1796d: Unknown

.....

ID: I02909

Name: William GOODLOVE 1

Sex: M

Birth: UNKNOWN

Death: UNKNOWN

Reference Number: 2910



Marriage 1 Susanna WOODS b: 13 JUN 1778

Married: 23 FEB 1796 1[31]

February 23, 1807: The British Parliament voted overwhelmingly in favor of abolition of the slave trade. This victory was due in large measure to the decades’ long efforts of William Wilberforce. This is the same William Wilberforce who helped found Christ Church Ministries Jerusalem (CMJ) in England in 1809. Wilberforce and other leading evangelicals such as Lord Shaftesbury believed that the Jewish people had to be restored to their ancient land in order to pave the way for the return of Jesus. From the 1840s on the Society built in Jerusalem a School of Industry for training Jewish believers in basic trades; an Enquirers House, a Hebrew College, and a modern hospital for Jewish people as well as Christ Church.[32]

February 23, 1808 - On the 23rd of February last I perform'd a ceremony of Matrimony between Benjamin Harrison son of Benjn. and Mary, whose maiden name was Newel, of the one part, and Polly Stephenson daughter of Marcus Stephenson and Nancy, whose maiden name was Hinkson, of the other., both of the settlement of Obrasoe - Given under my hand this 6th day of March 1808 (March 6, 1808).

Isidore Moore J P[33]



February 23, 1815: WILLIAM HARRISON6 MCKINNON (NANCY5 HARRISON, SARAH4 CRAWFORD, WILLIAM3, JOHN2, WILLIAM1) was born November 29, 1789 in Pennsylvania, and died September 25, 1861 in Logan Co., OH. He married KITTIE FOLEY February 23, 1815 in Clark Co., OH. [34]

The first child of Daniel McKinnon and Nancy Harrison was named William Harrison McKinnon who you will learn served with Conrad Goodlove in the War of 1812. He was named after William Harrison,

Nancy’s father, of the ill-fated Sandusky Expedition. (Ref.#6.4)[35]

Nancy Harrison, daughter of William Harrison killed at Sandusky, had married Daniel McKinnon in December of 1788. Their first son, William, who later serves in the War of 1812 with Conrad Goodlove, was born in November, 1789, in Westmoreland County later changed to Fayette County. [36]

February 23, 1817



UNITED STATES, 1779.

To Colonel William Crawford

To six hundred and fifty four rations

(In part) Certificate from E. J. Irwin 218 dollars



Signed William Crawford

Co. of Washington, D.C.

Benjamin Wells duly qualified deposeth and sayeth that above bill dated 1779 is the signature of the late

Col. William Crawford.



Signed Benj. Wells



Sworn and subscribed to before me as a Justice of the Peace in the county aforesaid. Given under my hand this 23rd day of February

1817.

James M. Varnum[37]

1816 or 1817

About 1816 or 1817, a place of worship was established nearby for the Indians. (Banks of the Sandusky River at Upper Sandusky, Ohio.).[38]

February 23, 1836: James McKinnon married Elizabeth F. Miller. [39]

February 23, 1836: President Santa Anna of Mexico raises an army of 6,000 men to defend his concept of a central government for Mexican territories, including Texas.[40]

February 23, 1836: The Mexican Army commanded by General Santa Anna begins a siege of the Alamo.[41] A Harrison died there too but it is not known if he was a relative.



February 23, 1861

Abraham Lincoln Inaugurated as the sixteenth President of the United States.[42] Perhaps a McKinnon had a hand in helping Abe along the way.

Our Theopolis McKinnon said in 1880 said, “I claim to be the first man who named “Honest Old Abe” for President.”[43] This claim has some merit, but needs more research. Theopolis, was also from Kentucky, and the following story adds an interesting connection.

Abraham Lincoln, while a teenager borrowed a book from a neighbor, as he did often from anyone in the area who had a book, as there was no library in the area. When not reading it, he laid it away in a part of the cabin where he thought it would be free from harm, but it so happened that just behind the shelf on which he placed it was a great crack between the logs of the wall. One night a storm came up suddenly the rain beat in through the crevice, and soaked the borrowed book through. The book was almost utterly spoiled. Abe felt very uneasy, for a book was valuable in his eyes, as well as in the eyes of its owner.

He took the damaged volume and trudged over to the neighbors in some perplexity and mortification.

“Well, Abe, what brings you over so early? said the neighbor. “I’ve got some bad news for you,” answered Abe, with lengthened face. “Bad news! What is it?”

You know the book you lent me, the “Life of Washington?”

“Yes, yes.”

“Well, the rain last night spoiled it,” and Abe showed the book, wet to a pulp inside, at the same time explaining how it had been injured.

“It’s too bad, I vum! You’d ought to pay for it, Abe. You must have been dreadful careless!”

“I’d pay for if I had any money. ”

“I’ll do whatever you think right.”

So it was arranged that Abe should work three days for Neighbor, “pulling fodder,” the value of his labor being rated at twenty five cents a day. As the book had cost seventy five cents this would be regarded as satisfactory. So Abe worked his three days and discharged his debt.[44]

The neighbor Abe borrowed the book from was from old Josiah Crawford.[45].

Theopolis’ claim of being the originator of the saying “Honest Abe” for president is interesting because of the McKinnon/Crawford/Washington connection. It is possible that Theopolis did come up with that saying, as William Crawford and George Washington were lifelong friends. It is not surprising that an ancestor would have the book “Life of Washington.” I think I would like to find that book. I have not made the connection from Josiah Crawford to our Crawford at this point, but in time I would not be surprised if I do.



February 23, 1861: President-elect Abraham Lincoln arrives in Washington amid secrecy and tight security. With seven states having already seceded from the Union since Lincoln's election, the threat of civil war hung in the air.

Allen Pinkerton, head of a private detective agency, had uncovered a plot to assassinate Lincoln when he passed through Baltimore on his way to the capital. Lincoln and his advisors disagreed about how to respond to the threat. Some, including Pinkerton, wanted Lincoln to slip secretly into Washington, which would mean skipping an address to the Pennsylvania legislature in Harrisburg. Lincoln did not want to appear cowardly, but he felt the threats were serious.

Lincoln agreed to the covert arrival. With Pinkerton and Ward Hill Lamon, his former law partner, Lincoln slipped out of the hotel in Harrisburg on the evening of February 22. He wore a soft felt hat instead of his customary stovepipe hat, and he draped an overcoat over his shoulders and hunched slightly to disguise his height. The group boarded a sleeper car and arrived in Baltimore in the middle of the night. The trio slipped undetected from the Calvert Street station to Camden station across town. There, they boarded another train and arrived without incident in Washington at 6:00 a.m. On the platform, the party was surprised when a voice boomed, "Abe, you can't play that on me." It was Congressman Elihu B. Washburne, a friend of Lincoln's from Illinois. Washburne escorted Lincoln to the Willard Hotel.

A myth arose that Lincoln had dressed as a woman to avoid detection, but this was not the case. He did draw considerable criticism in the press for his unceremonious arrival. Northern diarist George Templeton Strong commented that if convincing evidence of a plot did not surface, "the surreptitious nocturnal dodging...will be used to damage his moral position and throw ridicule on his Administration." Lincoln later regretted the caper and commented to a friend "I did not then, nor do I now believe I should have been assassinated had I gone through Baltimore..." Regardless of how he had arrived, Lincoln was safely in Washington, ready to assume the difficult task ahead. [46]

Tues. February 23, 1864

Quite warm finished our tent drilled awhile. 11 indiana[47] left for home[48]

February 23, 1942: The Struma, a ship loaded with Jewish refugees refused entry to Palestine, sinks off the coast of Turkey; 768 passengers drown and 1 survives.[49] The Struma, a ship chartered to carry Jewish refugees from Axis-allied Romania to British-controlled Palestine during World War II, with its engine inoperable, was towed from Istanbul through the Bosporus out to the Black Sea by Turkish authorities with its refugee passengers aboard, where it was left adrift.[50]

February 23, 1943: Hans and Sophie left a suitcase filled with copies of yet another leaflet in the main university building. The leaflet stated, in part: "The day of reckoning has come, the reckoning of our German youth with the most abominable tyranny our people has ever endured. In the name of the entire German people we demand of Adolf Hitler's state the return of personal freedom, the most precious treasure of the Germans which he cunningly has cheated us out of." The pair were spotted by a janitor and reported to the Gestapo and arrested. Turned over to Hitler's "People's Court," basically a kangaroo court for dispatching dissidents quickly, the Scholls, along with another White Rose member who was caught, were sentenced to death. They were beheaded--a punishment reserved for "political traitors"--on February 23, but not before Hans Scholl proclaimed "Long live freedom!"[51]

“On February 23, 1943, SS-Obersturmbannfuhrer Kurt Lischka, commander of the Paris SD-Security Police, informed his Brussels counterpart that ‘the Paris Police Commissioner was notified through my intervention on February 14, 1943, that as a reprisal, 2,000 Jews between the ages of sixteen and sixty-five were to be arrested and shipped to the concentrationcamp for Jews at Drancy.’

“On February 24, Rothke reported to Lischka on a conversation with Sauts, the chief of staff of Police Commissionner Leguay, about ‘the solution of the Jewish problem in France, and the Italians’ attitude toward the Jewish problem.

‘Sauts replied to me that the arrest of 2,000 Jews by the French police in the zone formerly and presently occupied in order to effect the measures of reprisals ordered by threw Paris Commander [Lischka] was underway. Before February 23, more than 1,500 able bodied Jews between the ages of sixteen and sixty-five, in each precinct. They were found either at liberty (registered addresses or not) or in the reception centers of the Social Service for Foreigners, or even in orphanages such as Chateau de la Hille in Haute-Garonne. Two contingents of one hundred persons were sent from the Noe and Vernet Camps directly to Gurs…

‘From all corners of the old unoccupied zone persons arrested were sent as swiftly as possible to the camp at Gurs. The total number of newcomers was far from enough, and so a significant number of those already at Gurs had to be included.

‘First Deportation- The screening for the first deportation, on February 26, was more rapid than careful. Everyone, as his name was called, was earmarked for deportation right away, even the sick and infirm. The only nationalities exempted were Hungarians and Turks. For the first time [from Gurs] Belgians, Dutch, Luxenburgers, and Greeks were included. The first convoy consisted of 975 men.

‘Second Deportation- The second deportation took place on the night of March 23. It numbered 770. Naturally it included a sizable number of former army volunteers, men who had been wounded in action, and even some who had been decorated.

‘The number of deportees thus far was 1,745, but the required number was 1,850. Consequently, the quota had to be filled en route. According to some information I have not been able to verify, it appears that four hundred persons who had been rounded up at Nerxon were put on the train that left Oloron on March 3. At any rate, it appears that the number of 1,850 was considerably exceeded.

“Among the countless testimonies from Jews as to their personal sufferings, we found one from a Hungariran interned at Gurs that confirms the above report:

‘Deportations began in early February 1943. A large number, about 150, of guards suddenly appeared. They were assigned to the blocks of huts in which were penned internees from other camps, especially for the one of Nexon. The deportation was to include all men of German, Polish, Austrian and Czech nationality up to the age of sixty five. At that time I was sixty four years , nine and a half months old; but fortuanately I was able, on the strength of my birth certificate, to pass myself off as a Hungarian, and in the general confusion the details were never checked out. ‘Among the deportees were a large number of Poles and Czechs who had fought in the French army or in the Foreign Legion. These too were handed over to the Germans. The fellow in the bed next to mine, a Germnan rabbi, Dr. Rosenwasser, was to be sixty five in six days, but he was deported just the same.

‘The deportation went on for two days. Two guards came after each of the ‘called’ and forced him to pack in five minutes, so impossible a task that many possessions were left behind.

‘ The internees destined for deportation were taken under heavgy guard to Block E, each carrying his belongings. Those who were allowed to remain in the hell of Gurs were invied by the deportees as the luckiest of men. All through the night you could hear women weeping in despair, for many had not time even to say good-bye to their sons and husbands. Several could not find outr whether their husbands had been deported. My wife did not sleep a wink for two nights for fear that I had been deported. On the day after the deportation the women were allowed to visit our block, and their sobs and cries when they saw their husbands’ beds empty were dreadful to hear.”[52]

February 23, 1945: As the Soviet Army approached Schwarzheide, in the Dresden (Germany) area 300 Jews who had been moved from Berkenau to the Schwarzheide factories were shot. The German camps of Belsen, Dachau, Buchenwald, Mauthausen, Sachsenhausen and Ravnebruck became the destination of thousands of evacuated Jews from all the other camps[53]

1956. The February 23 issue of the Christian Science Monitor had a long, favorable article about the Craft.

Also in 1956…

Northeast Conference on Masonic Education formed.

The High Synod of the Greek Orthodox Church petitioned the Ministry of the Interior to withdraw government recognition of the Craft.

The Church of the Nazarene stated it was opposed to the Craft.

Freemasonry and the American Indian, by William r. Denslow, was published.[54]

February 23, 2010

I Get Email!

Jeff

Interesting, Never thought of it that way. i thought they received their reward by having their actions witnessed and those with true faith would be rewarded in heaven. Your explanation is good. Much more pragmatic and literal. I always thought of this passage as a metaphore(?).

Pete

Thanks Pete! There’s just one more thing…and that is that all this leads right into Mathew 6:9, possibly one of the most quoted verses of all time…but why is it different in my bible from the verse we say at church? How can it be so different? Who changes it, and why does it seem to be different in every church I go to?

I am reading from “New revised standard edition…

Mathew 6:9-13



“Pray then in this way:

Our father in heaven,

Hallowed be your name.

Your kingdom come.

Your will be done,

On earth as it is in heaven.

Give us this day our daily

bread.

And forgive us our debts,

As we also have forgiven our

debtors.

And do not bring us to the time of trial,

but rescue us from the evil one.

For if you forgive others their trespasses,

your heavenly Father will also forgive you;

but if you do not forgive others,

neither will your Father forgive your trespasses”



Jeff



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

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

[2] Die mittelalterliche Arzte-Familie,, Gutleben” page 93.

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

[4] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 6.

[5] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 6.

[6] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 6-7.

[7] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 7.

[8] Die mittelalterliche Arzte-Familie,, Gutleben” page 93.

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

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

[11] Thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com

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

[13] The Complete Guide to Boston’s Freedom Trail, by Charles Bahne, page 26.

[14] Photo by Jeff Goodlove, November 14, 2009

[15] By Lucille T. Cox
Milestones, Vol 9 No 4--Fall 1984



[16] (Tragedy of Love Led to Ohioville's Founding, by Lucille T. Cox, Milestones Vol 9 No 4--Fall 1984.)

[17] The George Washington Papers at the Library of Congress, 1741-1799

The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources, 1745-1799. John C. Fitzpatrick, Editor.--vol. 03

[18] (From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969, pages 125-127-128.

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



[20] Washington writings. From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969, page 120-121)

[21] MINUTE BO0K OF THE VIRGINIA COURT HELD FORT DUNMORE (PITTSBURGH) FOR THE DISTRICT OF WEST AUGUSTA, 1775—1776. Richard W. Loveless 1970

[22] Moments in Time, Valley Forge: The Crucible, 7/02/2003.

[23] The Revolutionary War, MIL, 8/10/2005.

[24] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/friedrich-von-steuben-arrives-at-valley-forge

[25] [Note 1: 1 This letter is in the Papers of the Continental Congress, No. 69, I, folio 473.]

[26] [Note 2: 2 This letter is in the Papers of the Continental Congress, No. 78, XVII, folio 285.]

[27] [Note 1: 1 This report is in the Papers of the Continental Congress, No. 136, II, folio 113.]

[28] [Note 2: 2 This report is in the Papers of the Continental Congress, No, 136, II, folio 103.]

[29] [Note 1: 1 The letter of the 7th is in the Papers of the Continental Congress, No. 57, folio 145. That of the 11th is on folio 215.]

[30] Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774-1789



[31] Sources:

Title: Kentucky Family Archives, Vol. V

Publication: Kentucky Genealogical Society, 1974

Note: Family group sheets from contributors. Depends upon accuracy of sources.

Repository:

Note: Tennessee State Library and Archives, Nashville, Tennessee

Call Number:

Media: Book

Page: p. 303

Text: Family group sheet contributed by Sue Nite Raguzin, 5008 Briarbrook, Dickinson, TX 77539.

Source: W.H. Miller, History and Genealogies of Harris, Miller, 1907.

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

[33] (Ste. Genevieve County Marriage Bk. A, p. 2) Chronology of Benjamin Harrison compiled by Isobel Stebbins Giuvezan. Afton, Missouri, 1973 http://www.shawhan.com/benharrison.html

[34] http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/t/r/u/Angela-D-Trusty/GENE7-0005.html

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

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

[37] The Brothers Crawford, Scholl

[38] From River Clyde by Emahiser page 221.

[39] Vol. 16, page 145. Typescript Record of Marriages in Clark County 1816-1865, compiled under a DAR-WPA project. (MIcrofilm copy available through LDS). Volume and page numbers from Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett Page 112.47 Record Books provided by Mrs. G. W. (Sylvia Olson), 1268 Kenwood Ave., Springfield, OH 45505, 28 June 1979.

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

[41] On This Day in America by Wagman.

[42]Civil War Journal, Woman at War, HIST, 1994

[43] Theopolis McKinnon, August 6, 1880, History of Clark County, page 384.

[44] Cc.gatech.edu/people/home/idris/

[45] (statement of Mr. Lamon).

[46] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/lincoln-arrives-in-washington

[47] 13th A.C. Hospital

New Orleans

Jan 23rd 1864



Dear sister it with the love of an abscent brother that I seat myself this pleasant morning to answer your kind letter of Jan 5th which I received yesterday I was very glad to hear from you and to hear that you was well I can inform you that my health is getting better fast and I do hope these few lines may find you still in good health

I will now tell you that my Regiment has not gone to texas they have moved to Madisonville 25 miles from new Orleans where they are to stay till our time is out and I think they ought to have a little rest for they have done service enough for one regt Well sister the weather here is warm and every thing looks like spring We have had some very Cold weather here for this Climate but it did not last long I have heard nothing from sam since I wrote to you but I hope he is well I have wrote to lige often but got no answer from him

Well keziah there is so little going on here that I have no news to write only to keep ou informed of my health I think I will soon be able for duty again and I will be glad for I am tired of this place but thank god the time is not long till I can come home to stay and then I will see if I Cant do some thing for myself I will be able to by me a team I Have had to spend a large sum since I have been sick if I had kept my health I could have saved about five hundred dollars but I will have two or three hundred as it is

Give my love and best respects to all and write

Your loving brother

D Torrence

Direct to 13th A.C. hospital

Ward 2 A. C.

Civil War Letters of Davis Torrence, 1861-1864 – 11th Indiana

http://www.geocities.com/indiana11th/davistorrenceletters.htm?200610

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

[49] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1770.

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

[51] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/nazis-arrest-white-rose-resistance-leaders

[52] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 392-394.

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

[54] FOUNDATION FOR TOMORROW, From 1914 to 1999

No comments:

Post a Comment