Monday, August 22, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, August 22

This Day in Goodlove History, August 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/

In the New!

Ehud Barak, Israel Defense Minister, Regrets Deaths Of Egyptian Troops



IAN DEITCH and MAGGIE MICHAEL 08/20/11 09:12 PM ET

JERUSALEM — Israel's landmark 1979 peace treaty with Egypt is being tested by a cross-border attack blamed on Palestinian militants. Israel made a rare apology Saturday for the deaths of three Egyptian soldiers after Cairo threatened to withdraw its ambassador.

The attack on Thursday set off a new cycle of Israeli-Palestinian violence. Israeli airstrikes have been answered by Palestinians pelting southern Israel with at least 80 rockets and mortars since Friday. An Israeli was killed Saturday in the desert city of Beersheba, about 25 miles (40 kilometers) from Gaza.

"Israel is sorry for the deaths of the Egyptian policemen during the attack on the Israel-Egypt border," Defense Minister Ehud Barak said after Egypt threatened to withdraw its ambassador to protest the deaths of its soldiers.

The Egyptian government said late Saturday Israel's apology was welcome, but not enough. Still, it reaffirmed Egypt's commitment to the peace.

Israel's apology was a clear move to try to quickly contain the damage to already shaky relations with Egypt. Egypt's threat to take diplomatic action put Israel in the uncomfortable position of having to apologize for violence that was triggered after its borders were breached and its people attacked and killed.

Israeli officials promised to investigate the deaths of the Egyptians and insisted the peace treaty was stable.

"No one had any intention to harm Egyptian security personnel," Amos Gilled, a senior Israeli Defense Ministry official who works closely with Egypt, told Israel Radio.

But even before the clashes on Thursday, the February ouster of longtime President Hosni Mubarak in a popular revolt had unleashed an outpouring of anti-Israel sentiment in Egypt and criticism of the peace treaty. Israeli officials were also growing wary about instability in post-Mubarak Egypt.

Although the military leaders who now rule Egypt have expressed their commitment to the peace accord, Israel is watching closely for signs they might respond to the rising anti-Israel sentiment and distance themselves from the Jewish state.

Top of Form



Bottom of Form

As the country moves through a chaotic and rocky transition to democracy, Islamist groups tightly curbed under Mubarak look headed for a more powerful role in the new Egypt – something else that rattles nerves in Israel.

Mubarak was seen by his people as too sympathetic to Israel, negotiating a highly unpopular deal to supply it with natural gas. Israel, in turn, counted on Mubarak as a trusted, if cool, ally, maintaining the peace despite Egyptian disappointment that a wider agreement could not be reached with Palestinians and other Arab states.

The simmering hostilities in Egypt boiled over after the soldiers died. Egypt said it was a violation of the peace accord.

Israel says the attacks began when Palestinian militants from the Gaza Strip crossed into Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, probably through one of the hundreds of smuggling tunnels under the border, then made their way more than 100 miles (150 kilometers) through the barren desert before crossing into southern Israel. Israel and Gaza both border the Sinai Peninsula.

The militants ambushed Israeli buses and cars with gunfire and a bomb and killed eight Israelis.

Israel and Egypt gave different versions of how the Egyptian soldiers died. Egypt said they were killed in an airstrike. Israel offered conflicting accounts. One account said there was an exchange of fire between its soldiers as they pursued the militants along the border.

A senior Israeli defense official told The Associated Press Saturday night that "initial reports in the investigation show that the terrorists came from Gaza and apparently opened fire on purpose near Egyptian positions in order to bring them into the fighting." He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not allowed to speak to reporters.

The Israel-Egypt and Israel-Palestinian issues are closely intertwined. Egypt has tried for decades to broker a peace accord between Israelis and Palestinians. And in recent years, Egypt has tried to mediate an end to the internal Palestinian split between Fatah, which runs the West Bank through the Palestinian Authority, and the Islamic Hamas, which rules Gaza.

The aftermath of the clashes Thursday showed just how quickly Israeli-Palestinian violence can escalate.

Israeli airstrikes have killed 12 Palestinians, including two children, since Thursday, and Israeli leaders have made it clear that they will not put up with mounting violence from Gaza.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu convened senior ministers and security commanders late Saturday in an extraordinary session to discuss the surge in violence.

In Israel, one person was killed Saturday and dozens have been wounded in the barrage from Gaza, including a 2-week-old baby, hospital officials said. The flurry of exploding rockets damaged buildings all over Israel's south.

It was the heaviest salvo of rockets from Gaza since Israel staged an all-out ground and air operation in Gaza to stop daily rocket attacks in early 2009.

Israel is also concerned about an upsurge in Islamic militant activity in Sinai since Mubarak's fall. But no Israeli official has gone on record faulting Egypt for the way it is policing Sinai, where mountainous desert terrain and permeable borders have beckoned to extremists, contraband smugglers and African migrants for years.

Last week, Egypt moved thousands of troops into Sinai as part of a major operation against al-Qaida inspired militants who have been increasingly active since Mubarak's ouster. Since Mubarak was toppled, the natural gas pipeline running through Sinai has been sabotaged five times, disrupting supplies to Israel and Jordan.

Under Mubarak, the killings of troops would have elicited criticism on the front pages of Egyptian dailies. In post-Mubarak Egypt, however, youth activists on social networking sites spread calls for demonstrations in front of the Israeli embassy.

Thousands of protesters gathered outside the embassy in Cairo for a second day on Saturday, demanding the expulsion of the Israeli envoy who is now vacationing abroad. A Palestinian flag was unfurled at the site, and some of the demonstrators threw firecrackers at the building. A protester climbed up the building and took down the Israeli flag, drawing cheers from the crowd.

A dozen armored vehicles were stationed in the area and soldiers formed a cordon in front of the main gates to prevent any protesters from reaching the embassy building.

In Jordan, the only other Arab country at peace with Israel, about 150 protesters called Saturday for cancellation of the 1994 treaty and expulsion of the ambassador.

____

Michael reported from Cairo. AP writer Tia Goldenberg in Jerusalem also contributed to this report.

I Get Email!

In a message dated 8/21/2011 9:55:38 A.M. Central Daylight Time, action@honestreporting.com writes:



New York Times: It Started When Israel Fired Back
August 21, 2011 15:50 by Simon Plosker

[Translate]

Why is it that the New York Times still cannot distinguish the moral

differences between Palestinian terror

and Israeli measures to defend its citizens?

Take a look at this headline and accompanying photo from the NY Times’ August 20 story:



Why did the NY Times purposely choose an emotive image of a Palestinian child’s funeral?

Particularly as Israel was also burying its dead as a result of a terror attack.

This sort of misplaced moral equivalence is typical of the NY Times which also states

(emphasis added):

Israel blamed The Popular Resistance Committees for Thursday’s attack and killed its

top commanders in an airstrike later that day, igniting cross-border exchanges after

months of relative quiet under an informal cease-fire with Hamas.

So who exactly “ignited” the violence? According to the NY Times it wasn’t those who

carried out Thursday’s terror attack but Israel for responding. In addition, the term “cross-border

exchanges” implies, once again, some sort of moral equivalence between Palestinian rocket attacks

on Israeli civilian targets and Israeli responses.

Send your considered comments to the New York Times – letters@nytimes.com –

remembering to include your address and phone number if you want it to be published.








This Day…

August 22, 1191

On August 22, 1191, the Crusader King who had come so piously to restore the Promised Land to Christianity and to Jesus had the 2,700 Muslim prisoners tied together. They were marched out of the city on the road to Nazareyth, where thay were arrayed on a plain between the forward position of the Christian army on the Tell Aiyadida and forward position of the a Muslim army on Tell Keisan. And there, one by one, they were slaughtered. “For this be the Creator blessed!” wrote the chief poet of the Crusade.[1]

• August 22, 1654: The first Jew sailed for New Amsterdam from Holland aboard the Peartree and landed on August 22. Jacob Barsimson was considered the first Jewish immigrant. Other dates have been given for this sailing. Regardless, the official date of the start of the Jewish community comes later in 1654 when 23 Portuguese Jews landed in New Amsterdam.[3][2]





[August 22, 1774—Monday]





The expedition led by Col. Angus McDonald against the Shawnees at Wapatomica (?) turned out to be great disappointment to all the whites on the frontier.

For many weeks during the early summer, men had gathered at Fort Pitt to take part in the campaign, their hopes high that they would resoundingly defeat the Indians and force them so away into the northwestern wilderness that the Ohio River Valley would become safe for their continued claiming and development. It hadn’t turned out quite that way.

In early July, McDonald had arrived at Fort Pitt with a few hundred men and found enough others gathered there to swell his force to nearly 400. Among the men on hand were Simon Kenton, George Rogers Clark, William (?[inn), Jake Drennon John 1-lardi n, the Greathouse brothers the T~,ii1jnsons and McCullochs and Lan Cs. Simon Girty was there as well, with the rank of ensign, and he and Kenton met and got along so well together that they made an oath between themselves of perpetual friendship Girty had only shortly before been released from the guardhouse in Fort Pitt, where he had been temporarily incarcerated by newly promoted brevet Col. Connolly for voicing sentiments that were in sympathy to the plight of the Indians.

Col. McDonald and Connolly quickly got the men organized into companies, after which McDonald left Connolly in charge of a small garrison at Fort Pitt and marched the majority to Wheeling, arriving there on July 24. Capt. William Crawfords advance force of 200 men was at that time just putting the finishing touches to Fort Fincastle, which enclosed about three—quarters of an acre, and there were 30 settler’ cabins in the cleared land between the fort and the forested bluffs to the east. Jonathan Zane, Thc inas(?) and Joseph Nicholson and Tady Kelly were commissioned to guide the army through 90 miles of wilderness to Wapatoinica. A majority of Crawford’s force joined MeDonalds for the march into the Ohio country, with Crawford and the remainder left behind as a garrison for the new fort.

Note:

Fort Fincastle was built in the shape of a parallelogram, with a blockhouse at each corner and stout pickets eight feet high from one blockhouse to another. Within the enclosure of three-quarters of an acre were a storehouse, barracks room, garrison wells and a number of cabins for use of families. The principal entry was a gateway on the east side. The blockhouses were square, heavy, double storied buildings with the upper story projecting over the lower about two feet all around. They also projected slightly beyond the stockade, commanding all approaches so no lodgement could be made against the pickets to set them on fire or scale them. They were also pierced with loopholes for rifle fire. The roof sloped equally from each side upward and was surmounted at the peak by a quadrangular structure called the sentry box—an elevated post providing an extensive view on all sides. Usually the sentry box was occupied by two or three of the best riflemen during times of attack. The fort itself was situated a quarter mile above the mouth of Wheeling Creek, on the site of present Wheeling, Ohio Co., W.Va…[3]







August 22, 1776: Approximately ten thousand American troops (a scourge of illness had laid low many others) opposed some thirty thousand trained enemy troops, although Washington’s forces were later augmented by additional militia. With his small force, Washington had to defend a front of more than fifteen miles, from western Long Island to upper Manhattan. Howe could strike with his full force anywhere he chose, and he chose Long Island, with the American positions on rocky Brooklyn Heights as his objective. On August 22, in a smooth operation, he put ashore fifteen thou­sand men and equipment in a matter of hours. Later Washington described the Battle of Long Island to Hancock, without quite admitting that it had been a near disaster.[4]



August 22, 1776

No sooner did Sir William Howe find his army collected than he prepared to attack the Americans. The British advanced guard, under Sir Henry Clinton, with the Hessian chasseurs and grenadiers, commanded by Colonel von Donop, crossed the Narrows to Long Island on August 22, 1776. A diary, published in a magazine at Frankfort-on-the-Main in the following year, gives a graphic account of this operation and of those that followed:

“August 22.-We weighed anchor and lay close over Long Island. The ships of war came wthin range of the shore and pointed their cannon at the beach. At eight in the morning the whole coast swarmed with boats. At half-past eight the admiral hoisted the red flag, and in a moment all the boats reached the shore. The English and Scotch, with the artillery, were first disembarked, and then the brigade of Colonel von Donop (the only Hessians there). Not a soul opposed oru landing. This was the second blunder of the rebels since I have been in America. Their first mistake was when we disembarked on Staten Island, for they might then have destroyed a good many of our people with two six-pounders, and now they might have made it very nasty for us. We marched on, equally undisturbed, through Gravesend, and reached Flatbush towards evening. Three hundred riflemen had been there a little while before us. We sent a few cannon shots after them, set out our pickets, and slept quietly all night. I got two horses as booty, one of which I sent to the colonel and gave the other to my St. Martin for a pack-horse. [5]



August 22, 1777 — near Turkeypoint, opposite Georgetown, and really so close to the land of Chester County that the fleet could very easily have been fired upon.[6]



August 22, 1777







August 22, 1777: Smith under an arrest when he knew he was executing the Generals orders for which he has been acquitted by a General Ct. Martial & for afterwards attempting to Vindicate his Conduct by giving in false Evidence to the Court declaring he did not know he was acting as Brigade Major to Genl. Muhlenburg at that time, Acquitted Brigade Major Swaine charg’d with repeated neglect of Duty, particularly in not attending for orders the 17th Inst in proper time, by which means His Excellency’s Intentions who had order’d Straw & Rum to be furnish’d the Men were entirely frustrated & the Soldiery, particularly the Sick, was left expos’d to the Inclemency of the Wheather in a much greater degree for the want of those necessaries — Found guilty of repeated neglect of Duty & not guilty of the remaining part of the charge, Sentenc’d to be reprimanded in Gen’ orders— The Commander in Chief regrets that he is so frequently oblig’d to censure Off” in Gen orders for neglect of Duty & other offences and wishes earnestly that by an attentive & punctual discharge of their Duty they would save him from a task so painful & disagreeable, Officers shd. in their conduct set examples before the men of Diligence & a strict compliance to every order—

Delays are always dangerous, & in the Military service often attended with the most fatal consequences, especially must they be so—in Officers on whom the Distribution of Gen’ orders depends — The GenL at the same time thanks those Officers whose regard for the good of the service leads them to bring delinquents to Justice & assures them that such conduct will ever meet his warm approbation and adds positively that for any future remissness in Brigade Majors in any part of their Duty He will certainly suspend them till the pleasure of Congress respecting them be known as there is no possibility of conducting the affairs of an Army without the greatest punctuality in the performance of the Duties of their Department —

George Bignal of 10th V Regt charg’d with Desertion, No witnesses appearing against the Prisoner, The Court order’d him to be releas’d from his confinement for the present

— Adam Close of 6th V Regt. charg’d with Desertion, No witnesses appearing against the Prisoner, The Court order’d him to be sent to his Company—John Brumtler of 10th V Regt. charg’d with Sleeping on his Post while on Centry over Prisoners, Pleaded guilty & was sentenc’d to receive Twenty Lashes on his bare back —

— Edward Mealy of Captain Thos. Birds Company, charged with Desertion order’d by the Court to be sent to his Company James Byrne of Col. Stewarts Regt. charg’d with Desertion, order’d by the Court to be sent to his Compy

As the Congress never have & the Gen’ is persuaded never do Intend to give Rank to any of the Waggon Masrs. in this Army, ex­cept the Waggon Mast Gen’, They are order’d not to Assume the title of Majors Captains &c. but to be Distinguish’d by the names of Division or Brigade Waggon Masrs. as the case may happen to be, Waggon Masrs. are useful in every Army & will be supported in all their Just Priviledges, but the way for them to obtain respect is by a diligent & faithful discharge of their respective Duties without favour or Affection to any one—This order is to extend to Persons in every other Department who have not rank given to them by their Commissions or appointments by Congress — The Commander in Chief has the happiness to Inform the Army of a Signal Victory obtain’d at the Northward — A part of Gen’ Burgoynes Army abt. 1500 in number was Detach’d towards New Hampshire with a Design to possess themselves of Bennington. Brigr. Genl. Stark of the State of New Hampshire with about 2000 men mostly Militia Attack’d them, Our Troops behav’d in a brave & Heroic manner they push’d the Enemy from one Work to another thrown up on advantageous ground & from different Posts with Spirit & fortitude until they gain’d a compleat victory over them — The following is a List of the Prisoners, Kill’d & Wounded Vizt. 1 Lt Col. 1 Major 5 Captains 12 Lts. 4 Ensigns 2 Cornets 1 Judge Advocate 1 Baron 2 Canadian offrs. & 3 Surgeons 37 Brittish So1drs. 398 Hessians, 38 Canadians & 151 Tories taken Prisoners — The number of Wounded exclusive of the above are about 8o, The number of the Enemy who were Slain has not been ascertain’d but is suppos’d to be about 2oo.—Their Artillery consisting of 4 Brass field pieces with a considerable quantity of Baggage likewise fell into our hands, Our loss consists of about 20 or 30 kild & per­haps 50 wounded—The Army is to march to morrow morning if it shd. not rain—precisely in the time & manner appointed in the orders of Yesterday —

The two Divisions which go to Corryells ferry, will march in this order — Gen! Greene’s first then Gen Stephens’s & then the baggage of both Divisions in the same order as the Divisions march, Genl Greene will order an advanc’d Guard from his Division & Gen! Stephens a rear Guard from his Division — Each Guard to be under the Command of a Field officer. The officer commanding the rear Guard wilt Detach a Subaltern & 30 Men to follow in the rear of the Baggage to pick up all Stragglers who escape the rear Guard & to see that the Sick & lame are not neglected but properly dispos’d of among the Waggons—[7]





War Office, August 22, 1782



Sir:I acknowledge the receipt of your favor of the 25th of May and am much obliged to you for the assistance you have kindly afforded towards the transportation of the stores for General Clark. The unfortunate affair of Colonel Crawford will, I fear, greatly encourage the enemy and be attended with unhappy consequences, unless timely guarded against.

In consequence of a representation of the designs of the enemy against your post, government have directed that orders should issue for the immediate march of seventy-five men properly officedred from Frederick and the like number from Berkely [counties, Virginia]. A body of seventeen hundred men are also ordered to be in constant readiness to march at a moment’s warning to your relief should the enemy actually attempt the investiture of your fort. To enable you the more readily to assemble this number of men, I enclose you the appointment made agreeably to which orders have been issued to the different county lieutenants. Happy in having opportunity to contribute to the strength and security of your garrison, I would request you to inform me of anything in my department in which I can assist you, and beg you freely to command me.[8]





August 22, 1794

George Cutlip: Augusta Co. VA Land Grant 1794[9][10]


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

George Cutlip 93 acres Augusta County Examined

Henry Lee Esquire, Governor of the Commonwealth of Virginia, To all To whom these presents shall come, Greeting. Know ye, that in consideration of the Ancient composition of Ten shillings Sterling paid by George Cutlip into the Treasury of this Commonwealth, there is granted by the said Commonwealth unto the said George Cutlip, a certain Tract or Parcel of Land, containing Ninety three Acres, by Survey bearing date the thirteenth day of February one thousand seven hundred and eighty three, lying and being in the County of Augusta, on some of the Head branches of Jackson's River, on the North side of a Mountain, and joining Ingram's land on the south, and is bounded as followeth to Wit. Beginning at two large spanish oaks on Ingram's line and Running thence, South eighteen degrees West one hundred and forty poles to two chesnuts on Cartwrights line on a hill side, thence South Seventy degrees East one hundred and three poles to a Spanish Oak, Ash and Hickory on a Hill side, thence North thirty eight degrees East one hundred and four poles crossing several Hills to three Red Oaks on the side of a deep hill and corner to Ingram's land and with a line of the same, North fifty five degrees West one hundred and forty six poles to the Beginning, With its appurtenances; To have and To hold the said Tract or Parcel of Land, With its appurtenances to the said George Cutlip and his Heirs forever. In witness whereof the said Henry Lee Esquire, Governor of the Commonwealth of Virginia, hath hereunto set his Hand, and caused the lesser Seal of the said Commonwealth to be affixed at Richmond on the twenty second day of August in the Year of Our Lord, One thousand Seven hundred and Ninety four, and of the Commonwealth the Nineteenth.
Henry Lee[11]


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August 22, 1864

Union troops occupy over a mile of the Weldon Railroad south of Petersburg, Virginia, cutting off the confederate supply line.



Mon. August 22, 1864

Battle still going on 2 miles east of

Charlestown at 7 am[12]



August 22, 1889

W. H. Goodlove and wife attended a reunion of the old settlers at the residence of Ormus Clark Wednesday, August 21 at Central City. (Stated that he came to Iowa in 1854).[13]



• August 2 to August 22, 1914 : The destruction and sacking of the city of Kalisz by the German Empire troops. One of the oldest towns in Poland with a rich historical tradition and monuments of medieval architecture was bombed and burnt down. It was committed on a defenseless open town, which the Russian army had left without fighting.[14] A DNA matches ancestors are from Kalisz. It had a large established Jewish population.



• August 22, 1942: Sophie Gottlieb, nee Guthermann born September 12,1864 in Archshofen. Resided Berlichingen. Deportation: from Stuttgart August 22, 1942, to Theresienstadt. Sent September 26, 1942, Treblinka[15]





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[1] Richard the Lionheart and Saladin in the Third Crusade, James Reston, JR.

[2] [3] This Day in Jewish History.

[3] That Dark and Bloody River, Allan W. Eckert

[4] The Founding Fathers

[5] Of Hessians. According to Bancroft these regiments crossed on the 25th.

[6] 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





[7] Valley Forge Orderly Book of General George Weedon, 1777-1778 pg. 12-16

[8] Washington-Irvine Correspondence by Butterfield, pages 275-276.

[9] Posted by Regena Cogar rlcogar@bellsouth.net on Fri, 04 Feb 2000

[10] VA Grants: Book 30, page 394 -- Library of Virginia Digital Collection: Land Office Patents and Grants



[11] Surnames: CUTLIP, INGRAM, CARTWRIGHT.
NOTE: Transcriber's comments are in brackets [ ].
NOTE: Image format copyrighted by the Library of Virginia.
http://www.lva.lib.va.us/dlp/index.htm

[12] William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary

[13] Winton Goodlove papers.

[14] Wikipedia.com

[15] [1] Gedenkbuch, Opfer der Verfolgung der Juden unter der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft in Deutschland 1933-1945. 2., wesentlich erweiterte Auflage, Band II G-K, Bearbeitet und herausgegben vom Bundesarchiv, Koblenz, 2006, pg. 1033-1035,.

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