Wednesday, March 9, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, March 9

• This Day in Goodlove History, March 9

• 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.











Birthdays on this date; Henry Young, Douglas W. Yehle, Mary B. Stewart, Jennie L. Sackett, Catherine McKinnon, W.W. Landfield, Carson Kenny, Dean Johnson, Lucern Holder, Patricia A. Henderson, Clinton Godlove, Minor M. Craig, Lisa R. Bindi



Weddings on this date; Martha M. Reeves and Benjamin Harrison



I GET EMAIL!



In a message dated 2/22/2011 8:42:40 A.M. Central Standard Time,



This guy - David Benton - was on my Daily Bible today. Thought you'd like his approach on American history/constitution and religious history. He shared that the US is the only country still operating under its original doctrine - the Constitution. Of all 192 United Nations, every other county has had revolutions and changes except us. And its all based on religious tolerance and freedom. What does that say? Thought that was pretty cool



http://www.wallbuilders.com/default.asp



Sherri, Wow! Lots of cool historical documents! Thanks for sharing. Jeff



This Day…




March 9, 590: Bahram Chobin is crowned as King Barham VI of Persia. The newly crowned king enjoyed support among Persian Jews since opposing forces under a general named Mahbad “killed the Jewish followers of the pretender to the throne, Bahram Chobin.”[1]

600 C.E.: The Babylonian Talmud was written down about 600 C.E.[2]

[3]

600 A.D.

610: In 610 the Persian King Chosroes II declared war on the Empire. Which for eight years had been ruled by a savage and incompetent usurper, Phocas. [4]

611: When the Persians invaded Syria the Emperor’s forces received no help from the local population. The invaders occupied Antioch in 611.[5]

612 Visigoth Spain, Jews expelled.[6]

613: Persia invades Damascus in 613.[7]

March 9, 1230: Bulgarian tsar Ivan Asen II defeats Theodore of Epirus in the Battle of Klokotnitsa. According to information in the Virtual Jewish Library Jacob b. Elijah wrote a letter in which he reported that two Jews were thrown from a mountaintop for refusing to obey the order of the Czar to put out the eyes of the defeated Greek ruler.[8]

1231

Before the official launching of the Inquisition, Urban II had decreed at the end of the eleventh century that all heretics were to be tortured and killed. The groundwork had been laid. It was Gregory IX (1227-41) who, in his attempt to stamp our heresy, approved the use of force against error in 1231, when he incorporated into canon law the imperial legislation that decreed the burning of convicted heretics by the secular power. In a series of actions from 1231 to 1235 Gregory instigated a formal organization and set of procedures whereby the apprehension and trial of heretics became the major responsibility of papl inquisitors. Gregory put the Inquisition in the hands of the friars, especially the Domimnican and Franciscan Orders, whose relentless pursuit of heretics earned them the nickname Domini canes “the hounds of the Lord.”Gregory is therefore often credited with having established the Inquistition.[9]



March 9, 1244: The Pope ordered the burning of the Talmud.[10]



1244

Eleanor of Castile (1244?-1290) born.[11]



In 1244 The Khawarizmi Turks take Jerusalem and effectively end Christian Rule.[12]

March 9, 1276: Augsburg becomes an Imperial Free City in the Holy Roman Empire. The Jewish presence in Augsburg began during the days of the Romans. Existing records show that a Jewish cemetery and synagogue existed by 1276. The Augsburg Municipal Charter of 1276, determining the political and economic status of the Jewish residents, was adopted by several cities in South Germany. “Regulation of the legal status of Augsburg Jewry was complicated by the rivalry between the religious and municipal powers. Both contended with the emperor for jurisdiction over the Jews and enjoyment of the concomitant revenues.” For more about this ancient Jewish community see http://www.geocities.com/Vienna/Strasse/5960/history.html[13]

1277

In 1247, under the Treaty of Woodstock, Llywelyn had agreed that he held North Wales in fee to the English king. By 1272, Llywelyn had taken advantage of the English civil wars to consolidate his position, and the Peace of Montgomery (1267) had confirmed his title as Prince of Wales and recognised his conquests.

However, Llywelyn maintained that the rights of his principality were 'entirely separate from the rights' of England; he did not attend Edward's coronation and refused to do homage. Finally, in 1277 Edward decided to fight Llywelyn 'as a rebel and disturber of the peace', and quickly defeated him.[14]

1282

War broke out again in 1282 when Llywelyn joined his brother David in rebellion.

Edward's determination, military experience and skilful use of ships brought from England for deployment along the North Welsh coast, drove Llywelyn back into the mountains of North Wales.[15]

1284

The death of Llywelyn in a chance battle in 1282 and the subsequent execution of his brother David effectively ended attempts at Welsh independence.[16]

Under the Statute of Wales of 1284, Wales was brought into the English legal framework and the shire system was extended. In the same year, a son was born in Wales to Edward and Queen Eleanor (also named Edward, this future king was proclaimed the first English Prince of Wales in 1301).

The Welsh campaign had produced one of the largest armies ever assembled by an English king - some 15,000 infantry (including 9,000 Welsh and a Gascon contingent); the army was a formidable combination of heavy Anglo-Norman cavalry and Welsh archers, whose longbow skills laid the foundations of later military victories in France such as that at Agincourt.

As symbols of his military strength and political authority, Edward spent some £80,000 on a network of castles and lesser strongholds in North Wales, employing a work-force of up to 3,500 men drawn from all over England. (Some castles, such as Conway and Caernarvon, remain in their ruined layouts today, as examples of fortresses integrated with fortified towns.)

Edward's campaign in Wales was based on his determination to ensure peace and extend royal authority, and it had broad support in England. Edward saw the need to widen support among lesser landowners and the merchants and traders of the towns. The campaigns in Wales, France and Scotland left Edward deeply in debt, and the taxation required to meet those debts meant enrolling national support for his policies.[17]

March 9, 1496: The Jews of Carinthia, Austria were expelled (and not readmitted until 1848).[18]

1496-97 Jews from Portugal [to Holland, Brazil and Maghreb] {bear in mind the "official" discovery of Brazil, by Portugal, was in 1500!!}[19]

During 1497, Jews, both children and adults, were physically dragged into church and forcibly baptized. Others voluntarily accepted Christianity in order to remain in the country and escape enslavement to the monarch, the penalty for accepting neither expulsion nor conversion. In the end relatively little emigration under the order occurred, and most Jews became New Christians rather than face enslavement.[20]

1499: Jews expelled from Germany.[21]

1500

Isle of Iona in the Reilig Orain (S. Oran's Chapel),

The altar slab of the Cathedral itself came from MacKinnon's country of Strath. It was one of the finest pieces of marble ever seen, being granulated and pure white. No trace of it now remains. Close to the altar on the north side of the choir, is a tomb stone of black marble quite entire, on which is a very fine recumbent figure of the Abbot MacFingon, as large as life, in his sacred robes, with a crozier in one hand, and the other lifted up to his chin, elbowing two lions at one end, and spurning two at the other. This elegant tomb stone which has always been considered the stateliest in the island, is supported by four pedestals about one foot high, and round the margin is the inscription, "Hic jacet Johannes Macfingone Abbas de Hy [Iona,] qui obiit anno Domini millessimo quingen tessimo [I500], Cujus animae propitietur DEUS altissimus. Amen." [22]

1500

Linguists believe that as many as “age of exploration.” Today only 6,000 spoken languages are left, and perhaps as many as 90 percent of these will be lost by the end of this century. We are losing a language every two weeks through the same migration process that is mixing the world’s genetic lineages. [23]

1500

Go back twenty generations, to about 1500 CE, and there could be, theoretically, over one million ancestors who could have contributed to your nuclear genes. In practice, many of these potential ancestors will actually be the same individuals, whose lines of descent have come down to you along different pathways, crossing between males and females through the generations in an unpredictable way. Tracing the genealogy of all 30,000 genes through this maze of interconnections would be quite impossible.[24]

1500

The Spanish brought horses to America about 1500.[25]

March 9, 1503

In the disturbances in the Isles, which continued during the 16th century, the name of Sir Lauchlan MacKinnon occurs very frequently and he appears, notwithstanding the comparatively small extent of his possessions, to have been a man of consideration in his time. From this time forth the clan took a part in all the political events in which the Highlanders of Scotland were engaged. On March 19,1503-4, (temp. James IV.) MacKinnon is mentioned among other Chiefs in the Acts of Parliament, to be written to, to act against Lachlan MacLean of Dowart and Ewin Allanson of Lochiel forfeited for treason. The Earl of Huntly undertakes to forward MacKinnon's letters.[26]

March 9, 1771: George Washington Journal: Finished writing instruction[27] for Mr. Marcus Stephenson[28]--who was to be the bearer of them. Mr. Dick & the two Mr. Nurses dined at my Brothers today.[29]



March 9, 1771

The County of Bedford was created March 9, 1771.[30] In 1770, Thomas Gist, settled at Mount Braddock, and Captain William Crawford, afterwards burned at the stake by the Indians at Sandusky, Ohio, the former from Maryland, the latter from

Virginia, were made justices of the peace and members of the

courts of Cumberland County. Virginia had not yet extended the

jurisdiction of her courts beyond the Alleghanies. Before this

occurred, however, perhaps as early as 1767, settlements had begun

to the west of the Monongahela, at the mouths of all the larger

streams flowing into that river from the west, ready to move up those

streams towards the head waters thereof; and, beginning as soon

as the proprietary land office was opened on April 3, 1769, there was

such a rush of pioneers into this region that in a year or two it may

safely be said that there was no portion of what was afterwards

erected into Washington County, then extending from the Ohio

River at Pittsburg and the mouth of the Beaver, thence south to

the southern boundary of Greene County, that was not to a more

or less extent occupied by settlers.



The situation made necessary a new county, and on March 9,

1771, Bedford County was erected. By this time there is no doubt

that all portions of the splendid country west of the Monongahela,

and south and east of the Ohio River was well occupied by persons seeking permanent homes.[31]



March 9th 1774



To George Washington FROM MAJOR ANDREW LEWIS.



RICHFIELD BOTETOURT COUNTY March 9th 1774 I



DEAR SIR — Your favour by Mr Young I recd. and am Sorry as Matters have turned out that I did not instid of returning You Your Warants &c. Put them in the hands of the diffrant Surveyers which would have saved you the expence of this Exp s. however this is the Only loss You can sust(mutilated) on that Account As fare as I can judge for I hay keept it a secreat, that those two Surveys You Send ye worth of are Not Part of ye 200000 Acres — My Son Who is Surveyer of this County is Out on Green-Brier Surveying & Will not return from that Quarter for some time. however as I am soon to go out to that place Shall Put Your Warant in his hand and as he will have other Lands to Survey in that Quarter shall desire that he or his Assistant shall go down and Survey Yours in Particular so that if Posable ye Works may be Sent down to You in Williamsburg before the last of the Approching Session of Assembly If you Will take the trouble To look in the Law with regard to ye appointment of Surveyers and theire duty in that Office. You will with me be of Opinion that a Patent Procured on the Works which You desire to be Signed, would be ilegal and Voyd to all intents & purposes If ever it came to be disputed, Not to Mention Anything of the Surveyer forfeting is Bond. Doctr. Connolys Obtaining a Patent in a way similar to what You desire, has made so great a Noise that it is in every bodys Mouth & in Particular the Lawyers who say that it may be set aside at any time, and indeed a man who has a Warant for two thousand Acres has entred the Very Land that ye Docter Obtained a Patent for, & I am told is incuraged & inclined to disput ye matter. So that on the whole My Dr Sir I would advise You by all means to strictly follow ye Steps of the Law that your title afture Obtaining it may be Proof aganst ye Artifices of Designing Men. I have wrote by W Young to Col Preston and desired him in case he should think you and himself unsafe in immediately signing a certificat of ye Work as done by Mr. Crawford to Order one of his Surveyers as they go down to ye Ohio to Survey ye Lands by the Works You have sent him and to send you ye certificat so that you may have it at Williamsburg. Apriel y0 14th day is the time Advertized in the Gazee. for the Diffrant Claiments to met ye Surveyers at ye Mouth of ye Great Kanawa, so that by all Probability an Oppertunity will offer of sending the Field Work to Colo. Preston so that You may have Certificat as above. As soon as I see the Clark of this County I shall direct him to apply to the Apr Court, for we have no Court this Month, for an Order to Value Your Improvements, but whether ye Court will Issue it Blank or not is the doubt, it is Customary to Name ye Persons in ye Order, but a still greater Objection stands in the way. that of having The Men Who Makes ye Valuation Sworen by a Majestrate of this County, and indeed I do not at Present know of any that will be in that quarter about that time. If no such Opportunity should Offer it would be best to have ye Men Sworn before A Justice at Fort Pitt as I understand there are Several in that quarter added to ye didemos of Augusta. ‘this would not be exactly according to Law but it is the only remedde I can think of—

For some days past we have had repeted advices by travelers that the Creeks Cherokees & Chocktaws have joined in a war aganst Our Southeran Provences, that a Number of familys were cut off that since that first strock several Battles have been fought in the most of which ye Indians had the Advantage. at first I payed but little regard to those reports. but since I wrote ye above I am from certant Information persuaded that it is a Melancoly truth several Persons who has been Eye Witnesses of the dredfull effects of Savage Cruelty, & they further add that five-hundred Creeks are at this time amongst the Cherokees prepared to make a stroke, but where no person can tell. So Allarming is the Accts. that Our Settlers on The Holston & other Rivers in that quarter are Forting up & Scouts are Keept out to watch the approch of ye Enemie. Indeed I am afread that that the Ohio Indians are in the Plot at least I am confident that they were Acquanted of the designs of ye Southeron Indians. And that nothing deters them from Joining the others but theire being so Near Nighbours to Our Settlements below Fort Pitt. They ought to be Strictly Watched from Fort Pitt & if it can be discovered that they are about to Move theire familys they may be expected Open Enemies. If those troubles encress or even continue it will put a stop to Our designs On ye Ohio, I was Obleged to Lay aside this Letter for an hour or two in Order to Make the Governar Acqueanted with the Reports. As Capt. Russell of Fincastle is on his way in behalf of Our Holston Settlements—

I hop to have the Pleasure of seeing You in Williamsburg On the Assembly. Were it not for that Meeting I should have thought, and indeed was fully determined to take a trip down the Ohio, as well to see the Country in general as to have my 5000 Acres Layed off, but how fare we might be Justifiable in laying Ourselves at the Merce of the Savages, as Matters are like to turn Out, is to be considered. however in a short time we shall be able to judge better of their dispositions & conections — I hop to be able to discharge the Acct. You inclosed Me on Our Meeting in May at which time I shall mention my thoughts as to ye Manner W Crawford has Layed of Our Lands Some of us has Suffered exceedingly by the takeing in bad Lands with out his the Least Necessity of so doing only that ye Surveying it to Advantage would have taken a little more time & trouble, I shall be more particular when I see You. I heartily wish that John Smiths Lot which I payed him for had been Patented in my Name or rather that I had been Mentioned in the Patent as Assignee of John Smith. I have been told that he has been tempted by a a Man Who I know to be a Villian to sell it, but perhaps My Not leaveing Smiths Assignment with You may be the cause of Smiths Name being in ye Patent in [mutilated] of mine, this may give me some trouble tho I think [mutilated] loose ye Lands I shall put an end to a letter spu [mutilated] to an unreasonable Lenth. by saying that I am with [mutilated]

Regard Dr. Sir Youre

Most Obedt Servant

ANDW. LEWIS[32]





March 9, 1781: General Lafayette TO GENERAL WASHINGTON.



On board the _Dolphin_, March 9th, 1781.



MY DEAR GENERAL,--Here I am at the mouth of Elk River, and the fleet

under my command will proceed to Annapolis, where I am assured they can

go without danger. They are protected by the _Nesbitt_, of twelve guns,

some field-pieces on board the vessel that carries Colonel Stevens, and

we are going to meet an eight-gun and a six-gun-vessel from Baltimore.

With this escort, we may go as far as Annapolis. No vessel of the enemy

ever ventured so far up, and if by chance they should, our force is

superior to any cruizer they have in the bay. At Annapolis we shall

meet Commodore Nicholson, whom I have requested, by a letter, to take

the general command of our fleet, and if there was the least danger, to

proceed farther down. They are to remain at Annapolis until I send them

new orders.



As to myself, my dear general, I have taken a small boat armed with

swivels, and on board of which I have put thirty soldiers. I will

precede the fleet to Annapolis, where I am to be met by intelligence,

and conformable to the state of things below, will determine my

personal movements and those of the fleet.



With a full conviction that (unless you arrived in time at Rhode

Island) no frigate will be sent to us I think it my duty to the troops

I command, and the country I serve, to overlook some little personal

danger, that I may ask for a frigate myself; and in order to add weight

to my application, I have clapped on board my boat the only son of the

minister of the French Navy, whom I shall take out to speak if

circumstances require it.



Our men were much crowded at first, but I unload the vessels as we go

along, and take possession of every boat that comes in my way.



These are, my dear general, the measures I thought proper to take. The

detachment is, I hope, free from danger, and my caution on this point

has been so far as to be called timidity by every seaman I have

consulted. Captain Martin, of the _Nesbitt_, who has been recommended

by General Gist, makes himself answerable for the safe arrival of the

fleet at Annapolis before to-morrow evening.



I have the honour to be, &c.[33]



March 9, 1809



John Crawford to George Crawford Know all men by these presents

Recorded November 28, 1809. I John Crawford for myself my

Joseph Darlington heirs assigns for several good

Recorder for Adams County. causes and monies paid to me and other valuable considerations rendered by George Crawford my son I do deliver up in the presence

of these witnesses the following articles viz: one bay mare branded S on the near shoulder two three year old heifers fifteen head of hogs and one bed and bedstead and furniture with other household property and a corner cubboard to the said George Crawford as well as all the right title claim and demand in and to any maintainance coming by a will of my son Moses Crawford deceased which he made in his lifetime and I further relinquish all claim in and to the same and more as apecial for the value of one Dollar in hand paid to me at the signing and delivering of this instrument of writing. Nevertheless quitting all claim or demand in and to the above described property from me and my heirs and assigns to the only proper use and behoof of the said George Given under my hand and seal this 9th day of March 1809~

John Crawford (SEAL)



Signed in the presence of us,

Win. Faultner her

Sally Rowland Mary X Hambelton

Mark

State of Ohio, Adams County.

This day personally appeared John Crawford before me James Moore, a Justice of the Peace for said County and acknowledged the within signing and sealing to be his act and deed for the purpose therein mentioned. Given under my hand and seal this 9th day of November (November 9)1809.

James Moore J. P. (SEAL)[34]



March 9, 1799: Napoleon comes to power as a result of a coup d’etat. Joseph Lefevre was said to have been in Napoleon’s Body Guard Unit.[35]



Spring, 1809



REV. SAUL HENKLE.

The first settled minister of the Methodist Church in Springfield was Rev. Saul Henkle, who came from Hardy County, Virginia in the spring of 1809, on horseback, with his young wife and child, two months old. He moved in the log house built by Archibald Cowry, then occupied as a tavern, and continued to live there until he built his one-story brick house on High street in 1825. where he lived the remainder of his life.

Mr. Henkle was a regularly ordained preacher of the Methodist Episcopal Church, but joined the Protestant Methodists soon after their organization. He was a devout Christian and an exemplary citizen, living to promote the moral and religious welfare of the people in the village and neighboring country. His ministerial life covered a period of twenty-eight years. At every marriage feast and every funeral ceremony, he officiated, and neither would have been complete without him. A funeral in those days was attended with a solemnity unobserved at the present time. The coffin rested upon a simple bier, and was carried on the shoulders of four or six men, walking to the grave. The officiating minister preceded the coffin, and the pall-bearers, the mourners and friends, with,” solemn step and slow, " walked behind in twos. When the procession began to move, the minister would commence the singing of a familiar hymn, in which the rest ,would join, and which they continued until they reached the grave. The usual hymn sung on these occasions was the one beginning "Hark! from the tombs a doleful sound[36] Saul Henkle married Conrad Goodlove and Catherine McKinnon.



March 9, 1820: The revolutionary military leader and de facto Spanish leader, Riego of Spain issued a decree ending the Inquisition. This decree was apparently not accepted by everybody since people continue to suffer under the Inquisition until 1826. The Spanish Inquisition was actually only brought to an end on July 15, 1834.[37]



Wed. March 9[38], 1864 (William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary by Jeff Goodlove)

Commenced raining while getting breakfast

Had to eat in tent. Was on fatige an hour

Rained all afternoon. Got news about Cal Newman and Duttons[39]



March 9, 1865

Arrived at Morehead City, North Carolina on March 9.[40]

It then moved to Morehead City, North Carolina, in which state it performed heavy duties for some time, helping on the transportation between Goldsboro[41] and Raleigh.[42] General Sherman, in his successful mover through the Carolinas, had shifted his supply base to Morehead City. The 24th Iowa was detailed to guard and unload ships at the new supply base. For a month the regiment toiled to keep supplies flowing to Sherman’s army of 80,000 men. The work was exhausting, but the sandy beaches provided a diversion on days off. There were plenty of fresh oysters to eat, and although the sand at times blew and drifted like snow in Iowa, it provided a comfortable bed to sleep on. Although an occasional game of baseball was played, most of the regiment became beach combers, looking for shells. Captain Lucas shipped a large valise of his favorite finds back to his brother in Iowa.[43]



Meanwhile, an increasingly desperate John M. Worth was writing to his brother, Jonathan, beseeching him to intercede with Governor Vance and see that something be done to relieve the conditions of near anarchy in Randolph County:

“ want to urge with all my power I can that Gov. Vance send a man as promised to take care of what I have been calling the better class of deserters. If he does not do it we are all gone…The County is full of all sorts of folks moving from Sherman and we are being swallowed up. If the Gov. will send at once a man authorized to enlist the deserters I shall have a little hope except I am bothered with all sorts of trouble sick, wounded and hungry, robbers and Rangers and every other sort of trouble. “



March 9, 1905: Heinz Gottlieb, March 9, 1905 in Leipzig. Wedding, Iranian Str 2; 91st
Resident Berlin. Deportation: from Berlin June 16, 1943 Theresienstadt. Death:
October 3.1943, Theresienstadt. [44]





March 9, 1918

Some say it began in Fort Riley Kansas when soldiers burned tons of manure. A gale kicked up, a choking dust storm spread over the land. A stinging, stinking yellow haze. The sun went dead black in Kansas. [45] No one knows, exactly how many peo;e died during the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic. During the 1920s, researchers estimated that 21.5 million people died as a result of the 1918-1919 pandemic. More recent estimates have estimated global mortality at anywhere between 30 and 50 million. An estimated 675,000 Americans were among the dead.[46]



March 9, 1922: Declaration against its opponents. He reiterated support for the establishment of the Jewish Homeland in Palestine while cautioning against letting Jews who were Bolsheviks settle in Palestine.[47]



March 9, 1943: The Nazis continued the transport of Greek Jews from Salonika to Auschwitz. Salonika was an ancient Jewish community. It became a haven for Sephardic Jews when they fled Spain at the end of the fifteenth century. It was renowned center for kabalistic studies.[48]



March 9, 1945



More than 300 B29 Superfortresses attacked Tokyo. Altogether they dropped 100 tons of incinerary bombs on the city. The attack caused a firestorm which destroyed the old wooden houses. When it was over hardly a building remained standing. A hundred thousand people had died.



March 9, 2010



I GET EMAIL!



I heard from my good friend Tim Shew who recently was doing a clinic at our old H.S. with our former music director Jim Kimmel. Tim will be in Chicago doing a clinic in late March and we plan to get some Tennis in.



Thought for the day…



While doing research in the area where Conrad Goodlove settled in Ohio there was a chance meeting of a local historian who informed us that his family arrived in the area about the same time as Conrad and that his family was and still is Jewish. He said that Jews had joined the Methodist Church in the area because of its focus on the “Old Testament”. Conrad Goodlove was married at this church to Catherine Mckinnon by Saul Henkle. Jeff Goodlove





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

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

[2] Biblical Archaeology Review, January/February 2011, Vol 37, No 1. Page 51-52.

[3] The Oriental Institute Museum, Photo by Jeff Goodlove, January 2, 2011

[4] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 11.

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

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

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

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

[9] Trial by Fire, by Harold Rawlings, page 42.

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

[11] "Eleanor of Castile," Microsoft’ Encarta’ Encyclopedia 2000. b 1993-1999 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

[12] The Templar Code, HISTI, 5/17/2006

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

[14] http://www.royal.gov.uk/HistoryoftheMonarchy/KingsandQueensofEngland/ThePlantagenets/EdwardILongshanks.aspx

[15] http://www.royal.gov.uk/HistoryoftheMonarchy/KingsandQueensofEngland/ThePlantagenets/EdwardILongshanks.aspx

[16] http://www.royal.gov.uk/HistoryoftheMonarchy/KingsandQueensofEngland/ThePlantagenets/EdwardILongshanks.aspx

[17] http://www.royal.gov.uk/HistoryoftheMonarchy/KingsandQueensofEngland/ThePlantagenets/EdwardILongshanks.aspx

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

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

[20] A time for Planting, The First Migration 1654-1823 by Eli Faber 1992 pg. 6-7.

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

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

[23] Deep Ancestry, Inside the Genographic Project by Spencer Wells, page 4-5.

[24] The Seven Daughters of Eve by Bryan Sykes, page 186

[25] The Field Museum.

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

[27] (From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969, page 118.)

[28] Marquis Stephenson was the younger half-brother to Valentine and William Crawford.

(From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969, page 118-119.)

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

Marcus Stephenson of Frederick County was a half brother of William Crawford. Mr. Dick is probably Charles Dick of Fredericksburg, who owned land on Patterson’s Creek in Hampshire County ( Va. Gaz., P&D, 17 Oct. 1771). THE TWO MR. NURSES: James Nourse (l73l--1784) and his son Joseph Nourse (1754--1841), who lived at Piedmont, about two miles east of Harewood. James Nourse was born in Herefordshire, Eng., and in 1753 married Sarah Fouace in London. They left London with their nine children in 1769 and settled at Piedmont a year later (LYLE, 8--I 0, 24)

[30] History of the County of Westmoreland, Pennsylvania, with Biographical Sketches of its many Pioneers and Prominent Men. Edited by George Dallas Albert. Philadephia: L.H. Everts & Company 1882.

[31] Thie County Court of West Augusta

[32] Letter to Washington and Accompanying Papers, by Stanislaus Murray Hamilton VOL. IV pgs. 347-351

[33] Memoirs, Correspondence and Manuscripts of General Lafayette,

Author: Lafayette

[34] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, p, 252.

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

[36] ." HCCO

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



[38] March 9, 1864:President Lincoln appoints Gen. Grant to command all of the armies of the United State succeeds Grant as commander in the west. www.civilwar.com/timeline



[39] Dutton, Isaac B. Age 35. Residence Springville, nativity Ohio. Appointed Second Lieutenant Aug. 7, 1862. Mustered Sept 2, 1862. Resigned June 29, 1863

http://iagenweb.org/civilwar/books/logn/mil508.htm



[40] (Supplement to the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies. Part II Record of Events Volume 20 Serial no. 32. Broadfoot Publishing Company Wilmington, NC 1995.)



[41] The North Carolina Railroad built by the state, 1851-56, from Goldsboro to Charlotte on Eastern terminus a few miles north. 581 West Ash Street in Goldsboro.

(Goldsboro Travel & Tourism Brochure.)

[42]History of the 24th Infantry http://www.geocities.com/pentagon/quarters/1860/history.htm

[43] (History of the 24th Iowa Infantry by Harvey H Kimball, August 1974, page 199.)

• [44] [1] memorial book, victims of the persecution of the Jews under the Nazi dictatorship in Germany 1933-1945. Second and much expanded edition, volume II, GK, edit and herausgegben the Federal Archives, Koblenz, 2006, pg. 1033-1035.
(2) The judishchen victims of National Socialism
"Their names like never be forgotten!"Listen

“Ihre Namen mogen nie vergessen werden!”

[45]American Experience, Influenza 1918, 10/29/2009

[46] 1918.pandemicflu.gov/the_pandemic

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

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

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