Saturday, August 20, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, August 20

• This Day in Goodlove History, August 20

• 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





Egypt To Withdraw Ambassador To Israel Over Ambush


Egyptians shout anti-Israeli slogans as they wave national flags during a protest in front of the Israeli embassy in Cairo, Egypt, early Saturday, Aug. 20, 2011 after Thursday's ambush targeting Israelis near the border between the two countries. Anger rose after Egyptian officials said Thursday's gunbattles killed five Egyptian security personnel. (AP Photo/Mohammed Abou Zaid)

MAGGIE MICHAEL and IAN DEITCH 08/20/11 12:58 AM ET

CAIRO — Egypt said early Saturday it will withdraw its ambassador from Israel to protest the deaths of Egyptian security forces in what it called a breach of a peace treaty, sharply escalating tensions between the two countries after a cross-border ambush that killed eight Israelis.

Retaliatory violence between Israel and the Islamic militant group Hamas also spiked in the aftermath of Thursday's attack, which Israel blamed on Palestinians militants who crossed from Egypt into the Gaza Strip. Israeli airstrikes killed at least 12 Palestinians, most of them militants, in the Gaza Strip, and nine Israelis have been wounded by Palestinian rockets fired into southern Israel.

The Egyptian troops were killed as Israeli soldiers pursued suspected militants who killed eight Israelis on Thursday in the deadliest attack on Israelis in three years.

There were conflicting statements about how the Egyptians were killed, but an Egyptian Cabinet statement said it held Israel "politically and legally responsible for this incident," which it deemed a breach of the 1979 peace treaty between the two countries. It demanded an immediate investigation.

In strong language, it said Israel was to blame because lax security from its side allowed the ambush to take place.

"The Egyptian ambassador to Israel will be withdrawn until we are notified about the results of an investigation by the Israeli authorities, and receive an apology from its leadership over the sad and hasty remarks about Egypt," the Cabinet statement said.

It was the first time in nearly 11 years that Egypt decided to withdraw its ambassador from Israel. The last time was in November 2000 when the Egyptians protested what they called excessive use of violence during the second Palestinian uprising.

The decision to withdraw Egyptian Ambassador Yasser Reda came as hundreds of protesters staged demonstrations in front of the Israeli embassy in Cairo, unfurling a Palestinian flag, throwing fire crackers toward the top floor and calling for expulsion of the Israeli ambassador in response to the killings.

Egypt's official news agency blamed the Israelis for shooting and killing the Egyptian forces while chasing militants who killed eight Israelis in Thursday's ambush across the border in southern Israel.





The Cabinet statement said that Israel had "carried out a random raid that led to the death of three Egyptian soldiers and injury of four others." Egyptian officials have said another Egyptian soldier and a policeman died Friday of wounds from the attack. It was not clear why the Cabinet statement only mentioned three.

The Cabinet accused Israel of trying to "shirk responsibility for the recklessness of Israeli security forces in protecting the borders."

Israeli officials did not immediately comment on Egypt's decision, although the military promised on Friday to investigate the shootings.

An Israeli military officer, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with military regulations, initially said a suicide bomber, not Israeli soldiers, killed the Egyptian security forces. He said the attacker had fled back across the border into Egypt and detonated his explosives among the Egyptian troops.

Israeli media also reported that some of the sniper fire directed at the Israeli motorists Thursday came from near Egyptian army posts and speculated that the Egyptian troops were killed in the cross fire.

It was not possible to reconcile the different versions.

Thursday's attack signaled a new danger for Israel from its border with the Sinai Peninsula, an area that has always been restive but was kept largely under control by former Egyptian leader Hosni Mubarak. The desert area has become increasingly lawless since Mubarak was ousted on Feb. 11 following a popular uprising.

Relations between the two countries have been chilly since they made peace in 1979, but Israel valued Mubarak as a source of stability with shared interests in containing Iran and its radical Islamic proxies in the region.

The violence could further damage ties if Egypt's political upheaval and a resulting power vacuum in Sinai allows Gaza militants, who had been pummeled by a punishing Israeli three-week war 2 1/2 years ago, to open a new front against Israel in the frontier area.

Anger rose after Egyptian officials said Thursday's gunbattles killed five Egyptian security personnel. An Egyptian security official said three died Thursday and two others died of wounds on Friday.

"Israel and any other (country) must understand that the day our sons get killed without a strong and an appropriate response, is gone and will not come back," wrote Amr Moussa, former Arab League chief and now a presidential hopeful. He tweeted his statement along with, "the blood of our martyrs which was spilled while carrying out their duties, will not be shed in vain."

Gunmen crossed the border from Egypt on Thursday and set up an ambush along a 300-yard (meter) strip, armed with automatic weapons, grenades and suicide bomb belts, the Israeli military said.

They opened fire on a civilian bus heading toward the Red Sea resort city of Eilat, hitting a number of passengers, then riddled another passing bus and two cars with bullets and rigged a roadside bomb that detonated under an army jeep rushing to the scene. At the same time, Palestinian mortar gunners in Gaza opened fire at soldiers along the Gaza-Israel border fence.

The assailants killed eight people, six civilians and two Israeli troops responding to the incursion. Israel said it killed seven assailants.

Hamas, which controls Gaza, praised the attacks but denied any involvement. Israel holds Hamas responsible for all violence coming from the Palestinian territory and retaliated by striking the group.

"This is a response to the terror attacks executed against Israel in the last 24 hours," the military said.

Israeli aircraft struck several targets in Gaza, killing five Palestinian militants late Thursday and five more on Friday, including a senior member of the Islamic Jihad, according to Palestinian hospital officials. Two civilians were also reported dead.

One of the rockets launched from Gaza Friday smashed through a roof of a Jewish seminary, damaging a synagogue in the port city of Ashdod and wounding six Israelis who were standing outside, Israeli emergency services said. Another hit an empty school while a third, aimed at the city of Ashkelon, was intercepted by the new Israeli anti-missile system known as Iron Dome.

On Saturday, one of those rockets seriously injured two people in the port city of Ashdod, police said.

A senior Israeli military officer who briefed reporters by phone said at least 15 Palestinians from Gaza took part in the assault. He also spoke on condition of anonymity according to military regulations.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visited some of the wounded in the hospital Friday. "We killed the head of the group that sent the terrorists, but this is just an initial response," he said. "We have a policy to extract a very heavy price from those that attack us and that policy is being implemented in the field."

Israel said the attackers had come from Gaza and made their way into neighboring Sinai and from there into Israel. The attack was the deadliest for Israel since a Palestinian gunman killed eight people in a Jerusalem religious seminary in 2008.

Israeli aircraft hit multiple targets in Gaza, the military said. Gaza Health Ministry spokesman Adham Abu Salmia said at least four militants were killed and a dozen injured Friday.

One strike hit a motorcycle carrying senior militants from the Palestinian group Israel says is behind Thursday's violence. Another five militants including the group's leader were killed Thursday night.

At the United Nations, diplomats said that Lebanon blocked the Security Council during a closed meeting on Friday from condemning the terrorist attacks in southern Israel. The United States had circulated a draft press statement to the council, which requires the support of all 15 council nations.

"We think the council needs to speak out on this issue," said the U.S. deputy ambassador, Rosemary DiCarlo. "We find it regrettable that because of one delegation we couldn't issue that in a timely way."

___

Deitch reported from Jerusalem. Associated Press writer Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations and Amy Teibel in Jerusalem contributed to this report.[1]



In a message dated 8/19/2011 6:51:41 P.M. Central Daylight Time, JPT@donationnet.net writes:

I Get Email!

I am in a nation in mourning


Dear Jeffery,

I am in Israel, a nation in mourning. Families mourn the dead while others keep watch by the bedside of critically injured victims of this week’s brutal terrorist attacks. The world should be rising up in righteous anger at this assault on the innocents of Israel; instead they scarcely notice. No world leader has pointed to this latest and most clear evidence of the implacable hatred of the Palestinians for the Jews as proof of the folly of making concessions in the name of peace. These evil, demonically-inspired anti-Semites will never rest as long as one Jew still clings to life.

In just a few hours, I will speak to the world as your ambassador on behalf of the Chosen People. God opened the door through the invitation of Glenn Beck for me to speak at the Restoring Courage rallies Sunday in Caesarea and Monday in Jerusalem. Oh how my dear Jewish brothers and sisters need courage today! These events will be broadcast to more than 100 nations, and I urge you to make time to watch. You can watch this powerful event on the Trinity Broadcasting Network (TBN) on Sunday evening, August 21, at 10:00 ET, 9:00 CT, 8:00 MT, and 7:00 PT.


Your ambassador to Jerusalem,

Dr. Michael Evans

This Day…



•August 20, 1000: The foundation of the Hungarian state, Hungary is established as a Christian kingdom by Stephen I of Hungary. Archaeological evidence indicates the existence of Jews in Pannonia and Dacia, who came there in the wake of the Roman legions. Jewish historical tradition however, only mentions the Jews in Hungary from the second half of the 11th century, when Jews from Germany, Bohemia, and Moravia settled there. In 1092, at the council of Szabolcs, the Church prohibited marriages between Jews and Christians, work on Christian festivals, and the purchase of slaves. King Koloman protected the Jews in his territory at the end of the 11th century.[2]



• 1000 C.E.



• By the year 1,000 C.E., new communities had developed in North Africa and Spain and in northwestern Europe. At this time, world Jewry began to develop into two distinct exile communities, each based on its common geographical location, cultural influence and rabbinical leadership.[3]



• 1000 A.D. Polynasia. Elsewhere, China is inventing gunpowder. Polynesian’s were navigating the Ocean. They could have reached the United States.[4]



• 1,000 A.D. The Norse reach North America. Leaf Erickson travels from Greenland all the way to the new world. Leaf Erickson was the son of Erick The Red who started the first Norse settlement in Greenland. Leaf was intrigued when another Viking told him there was land west of Greenland. The settlement Leaf gets credit for founding was in New Foundland. It is dated to 1,000 A.D. It is undisputed proof that the Vikings made it to North America.[5]



• 1000 A.D. Its thought by about the year 1000 that Europe became somewhat warmer, that it emerged from a mini ice age. This seems to have made it possible to cultivate land that had previously been quite marginal. Starting around the year 1000 we see a growth in population in western Europe.[6]





• 1000 A.D. to 1100 A.D. Mississippi. Decorative Category: Aztalan Collared. Fingernail impressed. Cordwrapped stick. Tempered with: Grit, fine crushed stone and shell. Found on: Henschel farm.[7]





August 20, 1680: The Spanish fled New Mexico. The Catholic empire had faltered. It was a sign that European religion would not survive unchanged in the New world. [8]



August 20, 1738: Capt. Richard Taliaferro9 [Sarah Smith8, Lawrence Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. abt. 1703 / d. September 27, 1748) married Rose Berryman (b. 1708) on June 10, 1726 in VA.

More about Richard Taliaferro
Colonel in the English and Colonial Armies. Richard owned more than 10,000 acres in Amherst and Nelson Co, Virginia and additional land in Patrick Co. he served as a Colonel in the English and Colonial Armies and attained the rank of Captain. It is said that he met his death while he and his men were crossing the Potomac in a flat boat.

Children of Richard Taliaferro
and Rose Berryman:
+ . i. John Taliaferro (b. April 7, 1723 in Caroline Co. VA)
. ii. Sarah Taliaferro (b. June 7, 1727)
. iii. Benjamin Taliaferro (b. November 1, 1728)
+ . iv. Zachariah Taliaferro (b. August 29, 1730)
. v. Richard Taliaferro (b. February 15, 1730)
. vi. Charles Taliaferro (b. July 17, 1735)
. vii. Beheathland Taliaferro (b. August 20, 1738)
. viii. Peter Taliaferro (b. February 12, 1739)
. ix. Elizabeth Taliaferro (b. November 2, 1741)
. x. Rose Taliaferro (b. November 2, 1741)
. xi. Mary B. Taliaferro (b. October 6, 1743)
. xii. Francis Taliaferro (b. December 9, 1745)
. xiii. Richard Taliaferro (b. Sepember 2, 1747)[9]




Tuesday August 20, 1754

George Washington wrote to Lt. Governor Dinwiddie urging him to provide funding for the pay and clothing of the Virginia Regiment. Washington reported that his troops "are now Naked, and cannot get credit even for Hatts and are Teazing the Officers every Day to furnish them with these and other necessarys." [10]



August 20, 1776: It is indicated by one of the last orders entered, quoted above, that the "Goal" which on August 20, 1776, less than a month before.

Shepherd and Canon had been ordered to have erected, was not

yet completed so as to safely hold the prisoners committed to it,

or that, although the jail which, as usual at the time, occupied the

first floor of the 24 by 14 feet building, with a "petition" in the

middle, might have been sufllcient for its intended use, yet the

room in the second story where the court was held, with the

stairway approach on the outside, was not yet ready for business;

for, after ordering a venire for a grand jury for the next November

term, the court adjourned until the next morning at 6 o'clock!

Six o'clock in the morning would be an early hour in these days

for the holding of court. [11]



August 20, 1776: We have seen from the records of the old Virginia Court for

the District of West Augusta, held at Pittsburg, that on August 20,

1776, an order was made for the building of a jail, including a

court-room "at Catfish Camp;" that the same day the court was

adjourned "until the third Tuesday in September next to Catfish

Camp," and that both orders were changed by erasing "Catfish

Camp" and substituting therefor "Augusta Town." And we have

further seen that on September 17, 1776, that court was held at

Augusta Town.







Where Was Catfish Camp?



It has already been noted that in the Atlas Universel by M.

Robert, published at Paris in 1757, there is a Map of this section

of Western Pennsylvania as a part of Louisiana, then embracing

all the lands watered by the Mississippi and its tributaries as

claimed and then occupied by France. On this map. No. 98 of the

series, is laid down Pierre Rouge, (or Redstone) Creek; Chartiers

Creek, so named from Peter Chartiers, a half-breed Indian trader;

and a small stream entering into Chartiers Creek, well up toward

the source of the latter, is named upon another old map of that

period, "Wissameking." This is the stream which fiows from the

Eiast and around the southwest corner of the present borough of

Washington. The name Wissameking is one of the Indian names

in the Delaware tongue for Catfish. The French map referred to

purports to have been based upon surveys made by Joshua Fry and

Peter Jefferson, of "The most Inhabited Parts of Virginia," pub-

lished in 1754, which map of Fry and Jefferson was constructed from

surveys made by Christopher Gist in 1751, as before mentioned.

Thus we have "Catfish Run" known as such to the world as early

as 1751. [12]





August 20, 1777 — between Wards and Sharps Islands.[13]





TO GENERAL WASHINGTON.



(ORIGINAL.)



Mrs. Ruffin's, August 20th, 1781.



MY DEAR GENERAL--Independent of the answer to your letter of the 15th,

I have been very particular in a second letter intrusted to Col.

Moriss. But at this moment wish to send you minuted and repeated

accounts of every thing that passes in this quarter.



The enemy have evacuated their forts at Troy, Kemp's Landing, Great

Bridge, and Portsmouth. Their vessels with troops and baggage went

round to York. Some cannon have been left spiked up at Portsmouth; but

I have not yet received proper returns.



I have got some intelligences by the way of this servant I have once

mentioned. A very sensible fellow was with him, and from him as well as

deserters, I hear that they begin fortifying at York. They are even

working by a windmill at which place I understand they will make a fort

and a battery for the defence of the river. I have no doubt but that

something will be done on the land side. The works at Gloster are

finished; they consist of some redoubts across Gloster creek and a

battery of 18 pieces beating the river.



The enemy have 60 sails of vessels into York river, the largest a 50

gun ship and two 36 frigates.--About seven other armed vessels, the

remainder are transports, some of them still loaded and a part of them

very small vessels. It appears they have in that number merchantmen,

some of whom are Dutch prizes. The men of war are very thinly manned.

On board the other vessels there are almost no sailors.



The British army had been sickly at Portsmouth, the air of York begins

to refit them. The whole cavalry have crossed on the Gloster side

yesterday evening, a movement of which I gave repeated accounts to the

militia there; but the light infantry and main body of the militia are

at this place, Gen. Wayne on the road to Westover, and we may form our

junction in one day. I keep parties upon the enemy's lines. The works

at Portsmouth are levelling. The moment I can get returns and plans l

will send them to your Excellency. The evacuation of a post fortified

with much care and great expense will convince the people abroad that

the enemy cannot hold two places at once.--The Maryland troops were to

have set out on Monday last. There is in this quarter an immense want

of clothing of every sort, arms, ammunition, hospital stores, and horse

accoutrements. Should a maritime superiority be expected, I would

propose to have all those matters carried from Philadelphia to the head

of Elk.



The numbers of the British army fit for duty I _at least_ would

estimate at 4500, rank and file. Their sailors I cannot judge but by

intelligences of the number of vessels. In a word this part affords the

greatest number of regulars and the only active army to attack, which

having had no place of defence must be less calculated for it than any

garrison either at New York or in Carolina.



With the highest respect and most sincere affection, &c.[14]



August 20, 1781. Today the Fourth Class of militia assembled

they are to guard the prisoners in Lancaster. [15] Records of Moravian Congregation at Hebron, 1775-1781.



FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 1784



At Mount Vernon : " I thank you for your favor of the

16th of June by the Marquis de Lafayette, who arrived here

three days ago." Washington to Count de Rochambeau.



Lafayette arrived at New York on the 4th of August, after a passage of

thirty-four days from France. He remained a short time in New York to

receive the congratulations of the citizens, and also in Philadelphia, and

then hastened forward to Mount Vernon, which place he reached, as stated

on the 17th. He stayed at Mount Vernon twelve days. [16]



August 20, 1794: General "Mad" Anthony Wayne overwhelmingly defeats the Indian confederacy at Fallen Timbers, essentially ending the hostilities along the Ohio River.[17]



August 20, 1833

Benjamin Harrison, twenty-third President of the United States, is born in North Bend, Ohio.[18]



Crisman, Wm., enlisted August 20, 1863, wounded, discharged June 10, 1864.


Sat. August 20, 1864

Rained and quite cool J Cookus[19] came back

To camp reg reported to be at Berryville

10 miles from here [20][21]





August 20 1908

(Front Page) 23rd Annual Linn County Veteran’s Association meeting in Central City this week. Listed in the names: W. H. Goodlove, Co. H, 25th Iowa Infantry, Central City. (Three columns in the article. Very interesting, (Winton Goodlove )



August 20, 1919: Grant did not have to try very hard to create interest in consolidation. Although Delaware Cpounty had already experienced its rash of consolidations in 1915, other counties in eastern Iowa had just begun theirs during the summer and fall of 1919. Residents of rural Fayette County, the county immediately to the northwest of Delaware County, for example, jumped on the consolidation bandwagon in August 1919. The movement spread rapidly to other localities in northeast Iowa throughout the fall. [22]



August 20, 1919: A Movement towards consolidation of rural schools is agitating almost every part of Fayette County. No less than six proposed consolidated districts are now under discussion, aand within a few weeks, when the present rush of farm work is over, there are likely to be formal and legal steps taken to put some of the projects to the test of sentiment in elections in therespective localities…The sudden movement to pre-empt territory by six different localities at onece springs in all probability from the neighborhood that is slow about staking out its district lines will find itself compelled to take what is left…Consolidation is upon us; the community that is not awake to this thing may wake up some day in the not distant future to find its territory in another consolidated district…[23]



August 20, 1941

The second mass round-up of Jews in Paris begins, on orders issued by German military authorities at the request of the Gestapo’s Jewish affairs Department. Arrests are made by Paris police over a five day period at polic stations designated by the Germans with the Paris prefect’s approval but without Vichy government authorization. The 4,232 Jews arrested, all men aged 18 to 50, are of various nationalities, and more than 1,000 are French. Forty of the French prisoners are prominent Paris lawyers who are arrested on specific orders of the Germans.

The August arrests lead to establishment of the principal French internment camp for Jews at Drancy, a Paris suburb, in a huge housing project whose reinforced concrete buildings were not complete when the war began and construction was halted. The Drancy camp is guarded by French gendarmes and directed and administered by French authorities. Drancy has been used a a camp since 1939, first by the French to intern Communists and then by ther Germans for French prisoners of war and for British and other civilian internees. It is surrounded by a double barbed wire enclosure with watchtowers. Food and medicical supplies, provided by the Paris Prefecture of Police, are now at levels that result in malnutrition and, at times, starvation. Beginning in March 1942. Drancy will become the principal camp for the concentration and assembly of Jews for deportation to extermination centers in the East.[24]

[25]



• August 20-24, 1942: Eighteen thousand of the 20,000 Jews of Kielce are deported to Treblinka.[26]





• August 20, 1942: Karel Gottlieb born June 17, 1907. Bb- August 20, 1942 Riga.

• Zahynuli, Transport AAw – Praha. Terezin 3. srpna 1942. 924 zahynulych

• 74 osvobozenych 2 osudy nezjisteny. [27]





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

[1] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/08/20/egypt-to-withdraw-ambassa_n_932018.html

[2] This Day in Jewish History

[3] DNA & Tradition, The Genetic Link to the Ancient Hebrews, by Rabbi Yaakov Kleiman, 2004, pg. 89

[4] Who really discovered America, HIST, 6/22/2010.

[5] Who really discovered America, HIST, 6/22/2010.

[6] The Dark Ages, HISTI, 3/4/2007

[7] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI. July 23, 2011. Photo by Jeff Goodlove.

[8] God in America, American Experience, DVD,

[9] Proposed Descendants of William Smith

[10] http://www.nps.gov/archive/fone/1754.htm

[11] The County Court of West Augusta

[12] The County Court of West Augusta.

[13] [1] Journal kept by the Distinguished Hessian Field Jaeger Corps during the Campaigns of the Royal Army of Great Britain in North America, Translated by Bruce E. Burgoyne 1986



[14]

[15] Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography

[16] Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography

[17] Th Memoirs, Correspondence and Manuscripts of General Lafayette



Author: Lafayette

e chronology of Xenia and Greene County Ohio.http://fussichen.com/oftheday/otdx.htm



[18] On This Day in America, by John Wagman.kk

[19] Cookus, Joseph. Age 29. Residence Mt. Vernon, nativity Virginia.Enlisted Aug. 7, 1862. Mustered Sept. 3, 1862. Taken prisoner May 16, 1863, Champion’s Hill, Miss. Paroled. Mustered out July 17, 1865, Savannah, Ga.

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



[20] after three days the army withdrew again to Bolivar Heights between Halltown and Harper’s Ferry and entrenched. The fortifications ran along the tops of three seir

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

[22] There Goes the Neighborhood, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 177.

[23] There Goes the Neighborhood, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 177.

[24] French Children of the Holocaust, A Memorial, by Serge Klarsfeld, page 25.

[25] History International

[26] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1773

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


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