Sunday, May 22, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, May 22

• This Day in Goodlove History, May 22

• 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.



“Jacob’s Legacy, A Genetic View of Jewish History” by David B. Goldstein, 2008.



• 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 details for the GOODLOVE FAMILY REUNION were mailed Apr 9, 2011. If you haven't received the information and want to attend, please e-mail 11Goodlovereunion@gmail.com to add your name to the mailing list. RSVP's are needed by May 10.

Goodlove Family Reunion

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Pinicon Ridge Park, Central City, Iowa

4729 Horseshoe Falls Road, Central City, Iowa 52214

319-438-6616

www.mycountyparks.com/County/Linn/Park/Pinicon-Ridge-Park

The plans at the 2007 reunion were to wait 5 years to meet again. But hey, we are all aging a bit, so why wait: Because it was so hot with the August date, we are trying June this year. We hope that you and your family will be able to come. This is the same location as 2007 and with the same details. The mailing lists are hard to keep current, so I’m sure I have missed a lot of people. Please ask your relatives if they have the information, and pass this on to any relative who needs it.

Horseshoe Falls Lodge 8 AM to 8 PM. We will set up and clean up (although help is nice).

Please sign the Guest Book. Come early, stay all day, or just for a while.

Food- Hy-Vee will cater chicken & Ham plus coffee/iced tea/lemonade. Please bring a vegetable, appetizer, salad, bread or dessert in the amount you would for any family dinner. For those coming from a distance, there are grocery stores in Marion for food and picnic supplies.

Dinner at Noon. Supper at 5 PM. Please provide your own place settings.

Games-Mary & Joe Goodlove are planning activities for young & ‘not so young’. Play or watch. The Park also has canoes and paddle boats (see website for more information).

Lodging- The park does have campsites and a few cabins. Reservations 319-892-6450 or on-line. There are many motels/hotels in Marion/Cedar Rapids area.

The updated Family tree will be displayed for you to add or modify as needed.

Family albums, scrapbooks or family information. Please bring anything you would like to share. There will be tables for display. If you have any unidentified Goodlove family photos, please bring those too. Maybe someone will bhe able to help.

Your RSVP is important for appropriate food/beverage amounts. Please send both accepts & regrets to Linda Pedersen by May 10.

Something new: To help offset reunion costs (lodge rental/food/postage), please consider a donation of at leat $5 for each person attending. You may send your donation with your RSVP or leave it ‘in the hat’ June 12.

Hope to hear from you soon and see you June 12.

Mail

Linda Pedersen

902 Heiler Court

Eldridge, IA 52748

Call:

563-285-8189 (home)

563-340-1024 (cell)

E-mail:

11goodlovereunion@gmail.com

Pedersen37@mchsi.com



I Get Email!



In a message dated 5/16/2011 7:44:31 P.M. Central Daylight Time, JPT@donationnet.net writes:





Dear Jeff,

God's Word declares that not one tear of His children falls to the ground. David said, "Put my tears in thy bottle. Are they not in thy bottle?" (Psalm 56:8)

The tears of the Godly are so precious to Him that He preserves them. If God preserves your tears, He will preserve you from your fears.

I've preached the Gospel in downtown Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. I was told if I did, I could have my head cut off. Before I began preaching, I said that we would sing. The only problem is that I can't sing. Standing behind me was a precious African-American soldier who began to sing, "His eye is on the sparrow; I know He watches me." As he sang, tears ran down his face. I wept for joy knowing that the God who sent me to minister to the broken-hearted had numbered every hair on my head.

Be encouraged today. Every tear you've shed you've shed worshipping the Lamb, every tear of affliction and stress, every tear over lost souls, every tear over the Jewish people is preserved by God.

Many years ago, the prime minister of Israel, Menachem Begin, asked me to host a group meeting with him in New York. I brought twenty-three partners to join me in prayer. Four of them read scriptures from the Psalms. He wept as we read and prayed because he had recently lost his beloved wife. As we comforted him, he said, "Weeping lasts for the night, but joy comes in the morning." He stood, looked around the room, and said, "The spirit I sense in this room is the spirit of the redemption of Israel." At those words, everyone in the room wept.

Know this; what you and I are doing is the most precious thing to God.



Your ambassador to Jerusalem,

Dr. Michael Evans







Created: Tuesday, May 10, 2011 7:13 p.m. CDT

FONT SIZE:



Charged with misconduct, Elgin police officer resigns

By AL LAGATTOLLA - alagattolla@kcchronicle.com

Comments (No comments posted)

An Elgin police officer has resigned after he was charged with placing evidence at a crime scene.

Sycamore resident Michael Sullivan, 53, was indicted Tuesday by a Kane County grand jury on three counts of official misconduct, each a Class 3 felony, and two counts of obstruction of justice, each a Class 4 felony.

Elgin Police Chief Jeff Swoboda said Sullivan was placed on administrative leave on May 1, after he informed officials of what he had done. He is accused of planting false evidence at a crime scene of a robbery on April 26. Kane County State's Attorney Joe McMahon said the charges in the robbery have been dismissed.

Sullivan resigned on May 3. He spent nearly 10 years with the department.

One of the counts of official misconduct alleges that Sullivan planted the evidence "with the intent to obtain a personal advantage for himself, that being an assignment to a division other than patrol in the Elgin Police Department." Swoboda said Sullivan had taken a test in hopes of becoming a sergeant.

If convicted of the most serious charges, Sullivan could be sentenced to between two and five years in the Illinois Department of Corrections. Sullivan also could be sentenced to probation.

Swoboda said having a police officer accused of misconduct was upsetting.

"Michael Sullivan's actions are inexcusable," Swoboda said. "They discredit the exceptional work of this department and this community and will not be tolerated."

McMahon said the arrest addresses the actions of an individual and should not reflect poorly on the Elgin Police Department.

"Such allegations are taken seriously because, if true, they threaten the foundation of our criminal justice system," McMahon said.

After the indictment, Associate Judge James Hallock signed a warrant for Sullivan's arrest. Elgin police said arrangements are being made for Sullivan to surrender to authorities.

Though the April 26 robbery case was dismissed, Swoboda said he does not anticipate that to happen with other cases in which Sullivan was involved.

"He told us about his actions, which is why we believe this is an isolated case," Swoboda said. "However, as a precautionary measure, we are completing a review of all cases involving Sullivan."

http://www.kcchronicle.com/2011/05/10/charged-with-misconduct-elgin-police-officer-resigns/a1v0s58/







Believing that this is an isolated case of planting false evidence is like believing that Michael Sullivan’s infidelity with a neighbor, a married woman with children, was an isolated case, which it wasn’t. Why do you think he left his previous job, as a school principal, got a divorce, relocated to Elgin and became a police officer? Misconduct is nothing new to Michael Sullivan. More to come. Jeff Goodlove





This Day…

May 22, 334 BCE: The Macedonian army of Alexander the Great defeated Darius III of Persia in the Battle of the Granicus. This was the first step of a “journey” that would lead to the turning Egypt and Asia Minor (a territory that included Jerusalem and Judea) into bastions of Hellenistic culture. This would create a collision course with Jewish values that would lead to the Maccabee Revolt followed by decades of internicine fighting that would really not come to an end until the Second Temple was destroyed.[1]

332 B.C.: The Hellenistic period that the followed the construction of the Second Temple (from Alexander’s conquest ofr Judea in 332 B.C.E. t the establishment of the Hasomonean monarchy in 141 B.C.E.) brought profound changes to religious practice among the Jews. Jews were torn between maintaining their identies and assimilating themselves into Hellensistic culture. For a while, it appeared they could do both. Under the Seleucid Kinhg Antiochus III, the priests were officially recongnized as community leaders and accorded exalted status in Jerusalem.[2]

[3]

332 to 30 BC.



331 B.C. The Macedonian Greeks, led by Alexander the Great, bring an end to the Persian Empire.

By the time Alexander the Great was welcomed into Babylon in 331 B.C., he had already conquered the entire eastern Mediterranean including Egypt. Alexander died in Babylon only 8 years after he captured the city, so his period of ascendance in the Near East was brief, and his imprint on the archaeological record is very light.

Alexander established garrisons and built new towns modeled on Greek city-states. For a short time Babylon was the capital of the eastern empire, continuing as the center of traditional learning (especially astronomy), with existing institutions and population remaining in place. Greek supplemented the existing local languages, and Hellenistic art, a fusion of classical and Near Eastern traditions, dominated the Near East. [4]

May 22, 337: Birthdate of Constantine, known as the first Christian Emperor of the Roman Emperor for legalizing the practice of Christianity in the Roman Empire. As the following entry shows, Constantine not only promoted Christianity, he was instrumental in the creation of hostile environment for the Jewish people. “Constantine instituted several legislative measures regarding the Jews: they were forbidden to own Christian slaves or to circumcise their slaves. Conversion of Christians to Judaism was outlawed. Congregations for religious services were restricted, but Jews were allowed to enter Jerusalem on Tisha B'Av, the anniversary of the destruction of the Temple. Constantine also supported the separation of the date of Easter from the Jewish Passover stating in his letter after the First Council of Nicaea: "... it appeared an unworthy thing that in the celebration of this most holy feast we should follow the practice of the Jews, who have impiously defiled their hands with enormous sin, and are, therefore, deservedly afflicted with blindness of soul. ... Let us then have nothing in common with the detestable Jewish crowd; for we have received from our Saviour a different way." Theodoret's Ecclesiastical History 1.9 records the Epistle of the Emperor Constantine addressed to those Bishops who were not present at the Council: "It was, in the first place, declared improper to follow the custom of the Jews in the celebration of this holy festival, because, their hands having been stained with crime, the minds of these wretched men are necessarily blinded. ... Let us, then, have nothing in common with the Jews, who are our adversaries. ... avoiding all contact with that evil way. ... who, after having compassed the death of the Lord, being out of their minds, are guided not by sound reason, but by an unrestrained passion, wherever their innate madness carries them. ... a people so utterly depraved. ... Therefore, this irregularity must be corrected, in order that we may no more have any thing in common with those parricides and the murderers of our Lord. ... no single point in common with the perjury of the Jews."[5]



May 22, 1176: Murder attempt by the Hashshashin (Assassins) on Saladin near Aleppo. This attempt on the Muslim Warrior-King was part of the on-going clash between sects of Islam. From the Jewish point of view, Saladin’s survival is good news. After capturing Jerusalem from the Crusaders, Saladin allowed the Jews to return to the City of David during a century long ban imposed by the Christians. The event was eloquently described by the Jewish poet Al-harizi in 1190. Saladin reportedly hired Moses Maimonides to serve as his personal physician.[6]





1176

After fourteen years in captivity for cattle rustling Chatillon was ransomed for the huge sum of 120,000 gold dinars, he emerged in the grip of an even more passionate hatred of Muslims, and he was greedier and more bloodthirsty than ever.[7]



May 22, 1370: After killing a rich Jew in Brussels, Belgium, the perpetrators tried to cover their tracks by accusing the Jews of host desecration. The perpetrators escaped in the ensuing confusion. A few hundred Jews were killed and the rest banished from the country. A holiday was declared by the local churches.[8]



1370-1377

As will be shown, we can assume the correctness of this thesis of Weyl and Ginsburger. However the newst partial volume of the Germania Judaica, a detailed lexicon of towns for the medieval history of the German Jewish communities, in spite of citing the Ginsburger study, does not mention in the article abouyt Colmar the evidence of Gutleben in this city any more than the Jew Eberlin of Colmar who was well acquainted with Gutleben/Vivelin, and who after all could have been the ancestor of the Basel patrician family line of Eberler’s gen. [genealogy?] Grunenzwig. In the article about the town “Basel,” on the other hand, there is a relativiely extensive passage about the city physician Gutleben who lived there, but also without the slightest reference to his earlier professional work in Colmar. At the same time it is surprising that the Germania Judaica says nothing of the fact, as Moses Ginsburger has asserted, that Master Gutleben was the son of the physician Master Josset from Freiburg in Uchtland who was employed in Basel from 1370—1377.[9]

1370-1390

Soon after these events, Lachlan of Duart and Eachin of Lockbui, Sons of Maqqillimore (MacLean), came to live in Skye in the reign of Robert II., A.D. 1370-90 but the usual consequence of a stranger entering into the country of another clan followed, and a bitter feud took place between them and the chief of the MacKinnons, which led to one of the most daring actions which has ever been recorded of any Highland chief. The Lord of the Isles had set out on some expedition to the mainland in a single galley, or as some think, to return to his castle of Ardtornis from hunting. He desired the MacLeans and MacKinnons to follow him, and the MacLeans resolved upon taking this opportunity of avenging many injuries which they had received from MacKinnon, or, as some suppose, to curb the rising influence of the MacKinnons. they killed the chief while in the act of mounting into his galley. Afraid of the vengeance of the Lord of the Isles for this deed of treachery, they proceeded to follow up their act by one more daring, and accordingly set sail after him. No sooner had they overtaken his galley than they at once boarded it and succeeded in taking the Macdonald himself prisoner in the very centre of his islands, and within sight of many of his castles.[10]

1370

Why did the Basel magisytrate not elect the fellow citizen Gutleben himself to the position of city physician in 1370?[11]

1370 to 1373

Perhaps, since the latter was at that time not yet a medical practitioner, and for that reason does not appear in the sources as “Master Gutleben the physician” before this time; furthermore, he will have learned this profession from 1370-1373 as a student of his father and finally practiced it for the first time in Freiburg in Breisgau.[12]

May 22, 1377: Pope Gregory XI issues five papal bulls to denounce the doctrines of English theologian John Wycliffe. Wycliffe’s doctrines were part of the heresies threatening Papal authority through out northern Europe. This is the same Pope Gregory who had ordered the burning of Jewish books a year earlier in 1376, an act that might be seen more as a way of enforcing Papal authority and the primacy of the Roman Catholic Church.1760(7th of Sivan, 5520): Second Day of Shavuot.[13]

1378

Now at the beginning of 1378 Gutleben again acquired the right of citizenship in Colmar also, and had a house there near the Augustine monastery. As we shall see, medical practitioners who were solidly employed by a city worked not only in one place, but cared for patients in the farether reaches of the surrounding area. Such double residence is not surprixing, especially as Gutleben, as shall be shown, along with his activity as a physician, was engaged in money lending and probably had a few credit customers in Colmar. Gutleben probably stayed in his upper Alsace residence often in spite of his obligations in Basel. This was probably aloso one of the reasons why the Basel magistrate in March 1379 received a request from Mathis, Eberlin’s son, to allow him to live in Colmar again, bhut the application was not granted. Meanwhile, Mathis was even banished from Basel also, as someone had found him guilty again of ridiculing Christianity in respect to jeering at the Good Friday liturgy of the church. After the city gates of Basel and Colmar remained closed to him, he was known to settle down with his wife Ester in Bern.[14]

1370s: Eberlin from Gebweiler seems at first to have moved to Basel not until the end of the seventies of the 14th century, whereas Nordmann’s dwellings stem from the previous decade. Then if one brings in for comparison Ginsburger’s history of the Basel Jews, where some can be found, although not as extensive an account about the topography of the Jewish settlement in Basel, it becomes clear without a doubt that Nordmann has mixed up the two Alsatian Eberlins.[15]

1378 to 1417: After the Papal court returned to Rome, the Church was divided by the creation of antipopes. Known as the Great Schism, the period lasted from 1378 to 1417. Two rival popes ruled at the same time, the first two being Urban VI in Rome and Clement VII in Avignon. Urban was violent, drank heavily, and told a cardinal who remonstrated with him that: “I can do anything, absolutely anything I like.” Like two mad bulls, the rival popes bellowed away at each other. All of Christendom was scandalized, and unbelievers scoffed at the sight of two competing “Vicars of Jesus Christ” anathematizing and excommunication each other, raising armies and slaughtering helpless women and children, each for his own enhancement. As the Great Schism unfolded, displaying the ugly state of the papcy, it only confirmed the accuracy of Wycliffe’s uninhibited assessment of Church corruption. [16]

1378: Wycliffe’s tract, De Veritate Sacrae Scripturae (On the Truth of Holy Scripture), which he completed in about 1378, “shook the fourteenth-century English social structure to its roots. In this tract, Wycliffe refutes in the most scholarly opf terms the time-honored doctyrine of ‘mediate dominion.” This is the blief that people can learn Bible truth only through the medium of a priest or some other Church authority. Man’s relationship with God is “immediate,” Wycliffe contended, and as there should be no barriers between God and his children, there should be no barriers between God’s Word and His children. Wycliffe asserted that no priest had more right to the Word of God than an ordinary layperson. [17]

So far, with respect to the 1380’s, no sources regarding Gutleben have become known from any other city or region. We may assume that he remained active in Strassburg until the end of his contract. A correspondence record from the Strassburg City Archive, undated, unfortunately, undoubtedly stems from this time and shows the Jewish physician Gutleben residng in the cathedral city, in correspondence with his co-religionist Ismael, a former member of the Strassburg Jewish community, who was obviously staying in Augsburg and had fallen into trouble. [18]

1380 to1383: Vivelin/Gutleben in Colmar.[19]

1381: Master Gutleben worked only a few years in the position of Basel’s city physician and received at the end of the year 24 fl. at the most. Starting in 1381, he at first is not mentioned any more in the Basel records; he seems to have left the city at that time.[20]



May 22, 1710

He was one of the most influential men in his day, was a member of the legislature and was a senior representative of the town of St. John’s in the famous assembly convened on May 22nd, 1710, when he made himself prominent in the his opposition to the tyranny of the execrable Governor Parke, who that same year met with a tragic fate. being torn in pieces by the populace in the streets of St. John's. On this occasion Government House was burned down. and the new Governor, General Hamilton, took up his residence at the house of Dr. MacKinnon. On Hamilton’s recall, General Douglas was appointed, and his conduct nearly produced another rebellion. He persecuted General Hamilton and tried to seize Dr MacKinnon, who however escaped to England, only there to be committed to prison on the instance of Governor Douglas.[21]





May 22, 1760

1760 James Connell[22] was born, Frederick Co., VA, May 22, 1760 to Ann and James Connell. Elizabeth Vance Matthew’s husband dies.[23]





May 22, 1780

The 22d. At ten o’clock in the evening the jägers and the English and Hessian grenadiers, under General Kospoth, marched out beyond Ashley Ferry to support the light infantry in case of necessity. [24]



JAMES SULLIVAN TO George Rogers CLARK, May 22, 1781.



[Draper MSS., 51J54.—L. S.]



SULLIVANS STATION 22d of May 1781.

DEAR SIR. Since my last by Col° Floyds express, I have engaged a sufficient number of hands, to compleate nearly all the boats you wanted, but I am much Distressed, for want of the necessary Gaurds and fattaiegs [fatigues], Mjr Slaughter refusing, to furnish either which put me under the necessity, of applying to Col° Floyd, for a Guard from the Millitia. I wish you woud Consider us, and send some good man in his place, as you may Depend nothing can be done for the good of the State untill he be removed.

After eating up alimost everything, I furnished he & his Lousey Corps is near starving, & so shall remain for me. I hope you will bring Coarking for the Boats as there is none to be bad here, My kind love to Collonells Craford & Harrison, & there good fameleys, I hope you will believe me to be sir,

Your most Obedt Humbl Servt

JAMES SULLIVAN



P. S. please present my Compliments to Capt Ben: Harrison & family J. S.

[Addressed:] The Honbl Brigadier Genl Clark at Pittsburg pr express[25]



George WASHINGTON TO IRVINE.



HEAD QUARTERS, NEWBURGH, May 22, 1782.



— I have been favored with your two letters of the 20th of April and 2nd of May and am much obliged by your vigilance and attention.

An extract respecting the removing and supporting of the Indians, I have transmitted to the secretary at war, and desired him to take measures-for the relief and comfort of those distressed wretches.[26]



Friday morning, May 24, 1782

The volunteers had not all crossed the river until Friday morning, the 24th, they then distributed themselves into eighteen companies, choosing their captains by vote. There were chosen also, one Col. Commandant, four field and one brigadier Major.

Theire were four hundred and sixty-five that voted.[27]



May 22, 1805: For ancestor and future President, William Henry Harrison's involvement in sending a group of Indian chiefs to Washington, see the following sources: Pierre Chouteau (Agent of Indian Affairs, Saint Louis) writes to Harrison regarding the Indian chiefs who had arrived in St. Louis from Fort Mandan. Chouteau asked Harrison for instructions for conducting the chiefs to Washington. There are numerous references to taking Indians to Washington to meet the "father." Pierre Chouteau to Wm. H. Harrison, St. Louis, May 22, 1805, Messages and Letters, Esarey, ed., 128-30. (B00603)



May 22, 1843: The first pioneer bound of the Oregon Territory leave Elm Grove Missouri.[28]



1844

Theopolis McKinnon voted for Clay in 1844.[29]



May 22, 1847

May 22,1847, Logan County OH Deed Book Q?, pge 572. Daniel McKinnon, Sr., and Mary Ann, his wife, sold to their son, James B. McKinnon. $300. 157.52 acres. NW qtr. Sec 36, Twp. 3, Range 14.[30]



June 15, 1847, Logan County OH Deed Book Q, p. 573. John Hill and

Barbara his wife sold to Daniel H. McKinnon, Jr. $150. part of

NW qtr of Sec 4, Twp 1, Range 8 East. 40 acres.[31]







Sun. May 22, 1864

Marched 12 miles camped on miss river

At morganza landing[32] very hot day

Received a letter from home on May 10

Wrote home no 4[33]



May 22, 1865

The following day some members of the 28th Iowa killed twenty one bloodhounds owned by Judge William Butler, who reportedly had frequently used them to catch fugitive Union soldiers escaping from prison as well as runaway slaves. Butler had taken the oath of allegiance, and the attack on his kennel brought an order restricting all regiments to camp. Rigby charged that the judge had become a drinking partner of the leading officers, and a few of the boys had a better idea of justice that respect for high Confederate officials or a few southern mongrel curs.[34]



May 22, 1904: Rebecca Gotlibowska, born May 22, 1904 from Krasnopol, (P), Poland was on Convoy 15.[35]



This convoy was composed of 1,013 deportees, 588 women and 425 men. Over half of the women were between ages 34 and 50. The list shows that some of them were deporteed with their children. One counts 176 girls between 13 and 21, and 93 boys between 13 and 19. Half (216) of the men were between 39 and 49.



The list is in a particularly deporable condition. It indicates family name, first name, date and place of birth, nationality, and the city where the deportee had resided. It is classified according to barracks, noyt alphabetically.



The Germans specified 895 people by nationality: 672 Poles; 86 Russians; 16 Germans; 5 Frenchmen; 2 Czechs; 2 Turks; 2 Rumanians; 1 Austrian; and 108 undetermined.



On August 5, SS Heinrichsohn wrote and signed the telex announcing the departure that same day of a convoy of 1,014 Jews from the station at Beane-la-Rolande, destined for Auschwitz. He noted that the head of the convoy was Stabfeldwebel Ringel. The recipients of Heinrichsohn’s telex were Eichman in Berlin, the Inspector of Concentration Camps at Oranienburg, and Commandant of Auschwitz.



Several documents pertain to this convoy. They are dated July 23 (XXVb-91); July 29 (XXVb-103); July 30 (XXVb-108); and August 12 (XXVb-105).



When they arrived at Auschwitz on August 7, 214 men were selected for word and received numbers 57103 through 57316. The 96 women selected received numbers 15711 through 15806. The other 704 deprtees were immediately gassed.

To the best of our knowledge, there were only 6 survivors from this convoy in 1945.[36]





May 22, 1913

W. H. Goodlove put down a new cement sidewalk in front of his house on the east side. This makes a cement walk clear across the block to Main Street.[37]



May 22, 2010



Dear Jeffery,





I am very interested in your blog concerning January 28, 1777....the American REvolution. I was wondering where you acquired the data for that missive. Several of my line are named and I would like to follow up on verifying what you have written. Please let me know where you found the information and names.



Sincerely,



Rebecca







Rebecca, Thank you for inquiring about the blog. The following artical comes from the Annals of Southwestern Pennsylvania by Lewis Clark Walkinshaw, Vol. II pgs.111-114. What are the names that you are looking for? I might have more information. Jeff Goodlove



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

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

[2] Jacob’s Legacy, A Genetic View of Jewish History, by David B. Goldstein

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

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

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

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

[7] Warriors of God by James Reston Jr, page 19.

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

[9] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 1-2.

[10] 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

[11] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 3.

[12] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 3.

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

[14] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 3.

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

[16] Trial by Fire by Harold Rawlings, page 37.

[17] Trial by Fire by Harold Rawlings, page 45.

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

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

[20] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 3.

[21] 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

[22] John Connell was born on May 22, 1760 in Frederick County, Virginia. During his early childhood his parents moved to the vicinity of Stewarts Crossing in the Youghiogheny Valley of Pennsylvania. Though raised in a rugged frontier country, he received a good education for that day. Like others of William Crawford’s family, he was acquainted with George Washington, Lord Dunmore and other important visitors who came into that region. Tradition states that John, when still a boy, though large for his age, incurred the disgust of his elders by running away from home to join the militia.

During John’s early youth, his mother became a widow and as the oldest son, he was required to assume the responsibilities of manhood. When a young man, he moved to the western part of the county and lived at Augusta Town, which later became Washington, Pennsylvania.

During the Revolutionary period, he served as a private with the Washington County Militia.

Though John Connell and all of Effie McCormick’s children, (except Ann McCormick) and all of Sarah Harrison’s children were not named in their grandfather Crawford’s will, Col. William Crawford did secure land on the Ohio River for John Connell and made settlements for others of his family, prior to writing of his will, which was drawn up just before departure of the Sandusky Expedition. (From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, p.255.)



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





[24] Diary of the American War, A Hessian Journal by Captain Johann Ewald pgs.242-243

[25] George Rogers Clark Papers, Vol. III 1771-1781, James Alton James, Editor, pg 556



[26] Washington-Irving Correspondence, Butterfield, page 120.

[27] Narrative of Dr. Knight.

[28] On This Day in America by John Wgaman

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

[30] LOGAN COUNTY DEEDS FOR MCKINNON Provided by Helen G. Silvey

Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett Page 112.39

[31] LOGAN COUNTY DEEDS FOR MCKINNON Provided by Helen G. Silvey

Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett Page 112.39

[32] On the 22d his (Banks) army reached Morganza Bend.

(Roster of Iowa Soldiers in the War of the Rebellion Vol. III, 24th Regiment-Infantry ftp://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgienweb/ia/state/military/civilwar/book/cwbk 24.txt.



Fortress Morganza-After his failed Red River Campaign, General Banks camped his Union army at Morganza. A large fort was constructed on the site which served the Union army until the end of the war. (Civil War Military Sites) http://www.crt.state.la.us/tourism/civilwar/milsites.htm



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

[34] Rigby Journal, May 28, 1865; Hoag Diary, May 22, 1865; Longly, Annals of Iowa (April, 1895, p. 51 (The History of the 24th Iowa Infantry by Harvey H Kimball, August 1974, page 205.)

[35] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld. Page 128.

[36] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld page 125.

[37] Winton Goodlove Papers.

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