Wednesday, August 24, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, August 24

This Day in Goodlove History, August 24

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 News!
Israeli military: Aircraft strike Gaza gunmen


August 24, 2011 04:51 AM EST |



JERUSALEM — Violence along the Gaza-Israel border heated up on Wednesday, with Israeli airstrikes on militant targets and militant rocket fire at Israel.

Israeli media reported that security forces sent down reinforcements to the area. A music festival that was to be held in the southern city of Ashkelon was canceled, conforming with military recommendations against large gatherings in tense security times, the military said.

Israeli aircraft killed a militant from Gaza's Islamic Jihad faction before dawn on Wednesday, Hamas security officials said. They later targeted two militants who had fired two mortars at Israel shortly before. No casualties were reported in that airstrike.

The Israeli military said the dead militant had smuggled weapons into Gaza and was involved in militant activity in Egypt's Sinai peninsula, near Israel's southern border. It did not elaborate.

A militant incursion into Israel from Sinai last week killed eight Israelis. That was followed by Palestinian rocket attacks and Israeli airstrikes that have not stopped despite a cease-fire reached on Sunday.[1]

I Get Email!

Dear Jeffery,

There is a mighty spiritual battle being waged here in Israel today. Satan is really angry! The Restoring Courage rallies are striking at the heart of his plan to divide the Holy City of Jerusalem. The concluding session of this powerful event is scheduled for tomorrow night just steps away from the Kotel—the Western Wall of Herod’s Temple. I am leaving for dinner right now with a number of mayors, diplomats, other leaders, and Glenn Beck. Please pray for tomorrow's prayer event by the Temple site.

The enemies of Israel are threatening to do everything possible to stop this event. Security has had to be greatly increased due to the number and seriousness of the threats being made against this final night of the rally. I am asking you to urgently and seriously pray for the next 24 hours. Pray that God will divinely intervene and send His angels to keep charge over all of us who are involved with Restoring Courage. Pray that the message of love and support for Israel that we are sharing with the world will be heard and change hearts. Pray for strength and safety as we complete this urgent mission to which God has called us.

Check out this video…

Glenn Beck Hosts Mike Evans and Distinguished Guests at Restoring Courage Event in Jerusalem

From: jerusalemprayer | Aug 23, 2011 | 317 views



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This video is an excerpt of Glenn Beck hosting a panel of distinguished guests, including Dr Mike Evans, at theRestoring Courage Event in Jerusalem on August 22nd, 2011. For more details about Mike Evans, go here: http://jerusalemprayerteam.org/AboutDrMikeEvans.asp For more details about the Corrie ten Boom Museum 3D Virtual Tour online, go here: http://tenboom.com/en/

... (more info)



http://www.youtube.com/user/jerusalemprayer#p/a/u/1/sKmFgYuQpfk



Mid Day, August 24, 79 AD: Mount Vesuvius erupts.[2] A billowing cloud of fire and ash shot 12 miles into the sky. Residents of Pompey paniced as molten ash and rock rained down on them. Eighteen thousand escaped to the sea ports where they were rescued by boats. About 2,000 who were trapped in the city died a slow suffocating death.

Also entombed by the eruption was the smaller enclave of Herculenium. But it suffered a different fate. The town was struck by a pyroclastic flow. A wave of pumice and ash mixed with super heated steam that raced down the mountain at over 60 miles an hour. In less than seconds the entire town was covered by twenty feet of volcanic debree. Excavations of the waterfront have revealed the tragic scene. [3]

Between 80 and 85 A.D.

Between 80 and 85 A.D. a group of churches, possibly in or around Ephesus, were beiong overrun by teachers who denied the incarnation and divine sonship of Jesus. They also rejected the doctrine of sin and practiced rampant immorality. John wrote his first letter around this time to counter thses false teachers. 1 John 1:1-3:24.[4]

80 and 85 A.D.

John Warns against false teachers. Between 80 and 85 A.D., a church body (1:1) was allowing traveling heretical teachers to live and practice in their midst. John wrote his second letter to warn the believers at this church of the dangers of doing so. 2 John 1:1-13.[5]

Galuis shows hospitality to brothers in Christ. John wrote his third letter between 80 and 85 A.D.In it, he commended Gaius for the hospitality he had shown to missionaries. John also wrote to warn Gaius about the evil intentions of Diotrphes, who loved to be first and who had rejected John’s representatives. 3 John 1:1-14.[6]

80-120 C.E.: Despite the apparent history of paternal identification, sometime well after the Babylonian exile Jewish identity came to be determined by the mother and not the father. We do not know exactly where or when this practice started. Both Mishnah Kiddushin (3:12) and Mishnah Yebamot (7:5), presumed to be written circa 80-120 C.E., lay out various criteria as to what consitiutes a valid marriage and the status of the offspring of those couplings. [7]

81 C.E.



The Arch of Titus was built by the emperor in Rome in 81 C.E. to commemorate the suppression of Jewish resistance in Jerusalem[8]

Between 81 and 96 A.D.

Emperor Domitian (reigned 81-96) persecuted seven leading churches in western Asia Minor during his reign. While these churches were undergoing persecution from the outside, they were also plagued by heretics from within, who were leading believers away from Christ. Revelation 1:1-20.[9]

Domitian followed in his father Vespasian’s footsteps and gave direct orders that any of the bloodline of David be executed. Hegesippus related a fascinating story, preserved byu Eusebius, in which two grandsons of Jesus’ brother Jude were arrested, questioned, and released during the reign of Domitian. Hegesippus wrote that they were brought before the emperor Domitian himself, which seems unlikely though it is possible, given the high profile of the Davidic family and the tensions of the times in Palestine. They were asked if they were of David’s line, which they acknowledged, but they insisted they had no political aswpirations and were men of modest means, making a living by farming.[10]



85 to 95 C.E.

Luke. The author of this gospel also wrote the Acts of the Apostles His narrative includes the story of Jesus’s life from his birth to the Resurrection, his ministry to the poor, women and oppressd groups, and his miracles. It focuses on his teachings about salvation anhd fulfillment of Old Testament prophecies.[11]

Between 90 and 95 A.D.

Between 90 and 95 A.D., God gave John a series of apocalyptic visions to warn the Christians of the end times, to assure them of his sovereignty, and to encourage them to persevere in their faith. Revelation 1:1-20.[12]

c.95 C.E. John. The last canonical gospel, John focuses nmore on spiritual themes rather than historical events and emphasizes the divinity of Jesus and his role as the Messiah. He does not include the parables and exorcisms and the Second Coming. However, John recounts private conversations between Jesus and his disciples.[13]

August 24, 410 A.D.: The Roman Empire falls. Rome is invaded. They are the Visigoths. For the first time in 800 years the Eternal city is under siege. For three days Rome is ravaged. Archetectual marvels that stood for centuries are burned to the ground. At the head of the charge is Alerec who once fought on the Romans behalf along its Northern frontier. When he was passed over for a promotion Alerec turned from friend to foe. [14] Rome falls to Germanic tribes called Visigoths. [1] The Visigoths under Alaric begin to pillage Rome for three days. According to tradition, the treasures of the Temples taken by the Romans in 70 now fell into his hands. The Visigoths would move and by the start of the 8th century they had converted to Christianity and established a kingdom on the Iberian peninsula which was “hostile” to its Jewish inhabitants. In 711, Berbers would defeat the Visigoths marking the start of what would be the Golden Ave in Spain for the Jewish people.[15] Alerec died of fever shortly after his historic sacking of Rome. [16]

415 Alexandria, Jews expelled.[17]

415-1009 CE: Hagia Sion Basilica, Church of the Apostiles, Jerusalem.[18]

August 24, 1179: Crusaders are hard at work building a castle at a site called Vadum Jacob. Saladin attacks before the europeans can finish their work. The Muslim army breaks into the castle, defended by about 1500 men. The crusaders are killed. There bodies are dumped into a mass grave.[19]

August 24, 1572

On every front the Catholic Church tried to stem the sweep of Protestantism, but to little avail. All of Scandinavia, England, Scotland, northern Germany, Holland were lost. The revolt spread to France. There is no massacre of Jews in all the medieval centuries to equal the blood bath of St. Bartholomew’s Day (August 24, 1572), when the Catholics within twelve hours slew 30,000 Huguenots in their beds.[20]

On 24th August (August 24, 1609), in the same year, the Bishop took from the assembled chiefs a very strict bond for the observance of these. This land moreover containq1 a sort of confession of faith on the part of the subscribers, and an acknowledgment of the King's supreme authority in spiritual as well as te1nporal matters according to his ' most loveable act of supremacy." McKynnon at this same date, witnesses along with Ewin McKynnon his father's brother, a bond of friendship between Donald Gorme of Sleat, and Rorry MacLeod of Harris.

It is a fact which may appear startling to many, but it is not the less evident on that account, that the first traces of that overflowing loyalty to the house of Stuart, for which the Highlanders have been so justly lauded, are to be found in that generation of their chiefs whose education \vas conducted on the High Church and State principles of the British Solomon. There is no room to doubt that the chiefs who followed Montrose in the great civil war, were actuated by a very different spirit from their fathers; and it is well worthy of notice, that this difference was produced in the course of a single generation, by the operation of measures which first began to take effect after A.D.1609. [21]

Winter of 1609-1610

The Winter of 1609-1610 was known as the starving time. It comes after the Indians discover that John Smith has returned to England. John Smith was the one British colonist that the Indians feared and respected. The Indians quickly realize that they can act against the colonist without any fear of repurcusions. Chief Powatan decides that instead of a frontal attack on the colony, he was simply going to starve the colonists out. [22]

On August 24th, 1616, Sir Lauchlan r-McKynnon of Strathordell, Knight, Sir Rorie MacLeod of Dunvegan, Donald Captain of the Clan Ranald, and Lauchlan MacLean of Coll entered into a mutual bond of friendship at Glasgow. [23]

August 24, 1692: In 1692, Mayor Morrey bore a conspicuous part in that

historical controversy respecting George Keith, Thomas

Budd, William Bradford, and others, which shook the very

foundations of the social, political, and religious world here-

about, and attracted attention throughout the American

colonies and abroad. He was one of the judges who

(August 24, 1692) caused the arrest of William Bradford,

printer, and John MacComb, tavern-keeper, for " pub-

lishing, uttering and spreading a malicious and seditious

paper," and who, on the following day, at a " private ses-

sion" of the court, framed the famous proclamation against

" George Keith and his printed address," and caused it to

be read by the common crier in the market-place. And he

was also one of the judges to whom was " transmitted the

New England spirit of persecution, and who was found per-

secuting the true Christian-Quaker in tryal of Peter Boss v

George Keith, Thomas Budd and William Bradford at the

session held at Philadelphia the Ninth, Tenth and Twelfth

Days of December, 1692." [24]

[25][26]



1692

NOTES TO COUNCIL JOURNALS: John Battaile

of Rappahannock, afterwards of Essex county, was a captain

commanding rangers against the Indians in 1692 and was a Burgess

for Essex in the same year.[27]



1692

Elizabeth Smith2 (Major Lawrence 1), married Captain John Battaile, of Essex County, Virginia. “John Battaile, of Rappahannock, afterward Essex County, was a Captain commanding a Company of Rangers, in service against the Indians, in 1692; (Calendar of Virginia State Paper~) was a Member of the House of Burgesses from Essex in the year 1692; [28]





Ø John Battaile is the compilers 8th great grandfather.





1692

1692. This year is memorable, as the date of the outbreak of the celebrated Witchcraft delusion; in the course of which, the lives of many innocent persons were sacrificed to a "blind zeal and superstitious credulity." It is so far connected with our present history, as having caused the emigration, soon after, to this Plantation, from Salem village, now Danvers, of the families of Clayes and Nurse, who, with their descendants, still remaining in the town, have been useful and respected members of the community. They settled about a mile W. from the centre of the Plantation, and the neighborhood has since been known by the name of SALEM END.



The melancholy delusion referred to, commenced in Essex County--the chief seat of its violence--February 1691-2, in the family of Mr. Parris, a minister of Salem Village, and soon spread into other parts of the Colony. It was communicated to this country from England, where several years before had been published Glanvil's Witch Stories, and the trials of the Suffolk Witches, books which circulated in New England, and with the added authority of so great a man as Sir Matthew Hale, who countenanced the superstition, made a deep impression upon the minds of the grave people who dwelt amidst the gloom of the wilderness, and were harassed by continual privation and danger. Among the numerous families who suffered from this infatuation, were the two above named. March 1, 1692, Rebecca, wife of Francis Nurse, and Sarah, wife of Peter Clayes, of Salem Village, were committed with others to the prison in Boston, on the charge of witchcraft. The fate of the former was singularly unhappy. At her trial the jury could not agree in a verdict, and on the second return to the Court had not found her guilty. Persisting, however, in her refusal to answer certain questions, about an expression she had used, her silence was made constructive proof of guilt, and she was accordingly condemned to death. She was excommunicated July 3, from the old church of Salem, and on the 19th of the same month was hung. Many testimonials were given of her good character and domestic worth, without effect. The 31st of the following month, the wife of Mr. Clayes was removed to the Ipswich prison; but the fury of the delusion abating, she escaped with her life, having, as tradition says, been conveyed by night to Framingham. Mary Easty, a sister of Rebecca Nurse, (as was Sarah Clayes), also Abigail Williams, probably the sister or niece of Mr. Clayes, appear to have been implicated, in the course of events. It is painful to reflect, that this delusion was encouraged by men of high distinction in the Colony, both in the church and state. One of them (Judge Sewall) afterwards bewailed his participation in it, and asked "pardon of God and man." [29]



The gradual increase of settlers at Lanham and the E. part of Framingham, on the borders of Sudbury, some of whom probably attended public worship in that town, without bearing their due portion of town charges, led the selectmen of that place, in 1691, to apply to the General Court for relief. The following order was accordingly passed.



"At an adjournment of the Gen. Court of their Maj. Colony of the Mass. Bay, in Boston, March 8, 1691-2:



"In answer to the petition of the selectmen of Sudbury, ordered: that the outdwellers adjoining unto the said Town, comprehended within the line beginning at Matth. Rice's, from thence to Cornet Wm. Brown's, Corporal Henry Rice's, Thomas Drury's, Tho. Walker, Jun., John How, and Samuel Winch's (not belonging to any other towne), be annexed unto the Town of Sudbury, and continue to bear their part of all duties, and partake of all priviledges there, as formerly, until further order."[30]



1692

"This was apparently the second emigration of Andrew Vance to America as we find in a letter dated June 19, 1955. Dr. Charles A. Vance of Lexington, Ky., a descendant of Andrew Vance wrote as follows:



"The fourth son of John and Mary Vance of Coagh, was Andrew Vance. He brought his bride, Jane Newell, to America in 1692 coming to Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, and set up a mercantile establishment. When their third child was born the mother and infant died and were buried there near their home in Lancaster Co., Pa. Then he took Willie and Sarah home to his parents in Ireland. While there he like other pioneers, took another wife, Jane Hogue, and she bore him eight children, among them being Samuel..."[31]



Ø Andrew Vance is the compilers 8th great grandfather.



August 24, 1767: **. Dorothy Peyton Smith10 [Robert Smith9, Charles Smith8, Lawrence Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. abt. 1730) married Joseph Wyatt (b. 1728).

A. Children of Dorothy Smith and Joseph Wyatt:
+ . i. Sarah Smith Wyatt (b. 1759)
+ . ii. Nancy Wyatt (b. November 17, 1760)
. iii. Peyton Wyatt (b. November 15, 1763)
. iv. Joseph Wyatt (b. August 24, 1767)[32]





August 24, 1773; Three Scotchmen called of land in Carolina, The above persons prosecuted their journey towards Carolina in pusuit of this Scheme, proposing also to view the lands on the Ohio and see mine. (By cash sent by Gilbert Simpson to Capt. Crawford to pay ye assessment of my land in Youghioghany L 11-15-Pensa.) There before they returned with their report to Scotland. I rid to the Ferry. Doeg Run and Mill plantations.[33]



In 1773, Lord Dunmore, then Governor of Virginia, paid a visit to Crawford at his house upon the Youghiogheny, the occasion being turned to profitable account by both parties: by the Earl, in getting reliable information of desirable lands ; by Crawford, in obtaining promises for patents for such as he had sought out and surveyed. The next “Lord’s War,” a conflict between the Virginians on the one side, and the Shawanese and Mingoes, principally, on the other. In this contest Crawford was a prominent actor;—first as captain of a Company in a scouting expedition, building, subsequently, a fort at the present site of Wheeling; afterward as major in command of troops belonging to the division of the army which deseended the Ohio to the mouth of hocking river, in what is now the State of Ohio. The only fighting done in the Indian country after the bloody battle of Point Pleasant on the tenth of October, was by a detachment under Crawford, in what is now Franklin county, Ohio, where he surprised and destroyed two Mingo villages, securing some prisoners as well as a considerable amount of plunder, and rescuing two white captives.



The interest taken by Crawford in this war operated greatly to prejudics Pennsylvania friends against him; for among them the conflict had been an exceedingly unpopular one. Crawford, who, at first had sided with Pennsylvania in the boundary controversy subsisting between it and Virginia, now, took part with the latter; so he was ousted from all offices held by him under authority of the former province. [34]



“August 24, 1776: .- A hot day. The rebels approached twice, fired howitzers and used grape and ball, so that all our artillery had come up. At noon I slept a little, and was waked by two cannon-balls which covered me with earth. The rebels have some very good marksmen, but some of them have wretched guns, and most of them shoot crooked. But they are clever at hunters wiles. They climb trees, they crawl forward on their bellies for one hundred and fifty paces, shoot, and go as quickly back again. They make themselves shelters of boughs, etc. But today they are much put out by our green coats,[35] for we don’t let our fellows fire unless they can get good aim at a man, so that they dare not undertake anything more against us. [36]



August 24th, 1777

On the thirtieth they (the British) reached the capes of Delaware Bay. Here learning the obstructions that had been placed in the river, they set sail for Chesapeake Bay, which they entered about the middle of August, on the twenty-fourth of which month they effected a landing at Turkey’s Point, near the head of Elk (now Elkton.)[37]



August 24, 1777

On the twenty-fourth of August, Washington marched through Philadelphia, passing down Front street, and up Chestnut Street, about seven in the morning, and proceeded without delay to Chester.

From this time Washington was incessantly engaged in tho­roughly reconnoitering the country between Philadelphia and the Chesapeake.[38]




Independence Hall Association

Washington Watches Howe


August 1777



In August, 1777, with about two hundred of his new levies, Crawford joined the main army under Washington, who was then near Philadelphia He rendered efficient service in the preliminary movements which resulted in the battle of BrandyWine, and in that contest not only took an active and prominent part, but came near being captured. He was also, it seems, in the battle of Germantown[39]. Just before this, General Joseph Reed wrote Washington that he had Colonel Crawford with him, “a very good officer.”[40]





http://www.ushistory.org/march/phila/elk_3.htm

1777 Linsing’s First Grenadier Battalion participated in the landing at the head of the Elk River that led to the battles of Brandywine and Germantown and the occupation of Philadelphia. [41]



August 24, 1814.

The British commanded by General Robert Ross rout an American force of General Windor, at the Battle of Bladensburg, just 6 miles from Washington, during the War of 1812.[42] It will be one of the most embarrassing military conflicts of the entire war. [43]

August 24, 1814 would go down as one of the blackest days in American history. It began with a humiliating defeat at Bladensburg, Maryland, and ended with the destruction of the nation’s capital.[44] The British capture Washington, D.C., setting fire to several buildings, including the Capital and the White House, during the War of 1812.[45]









The Hegira

From Virginia to Ohio

The campaigns of St. Claire and Harrison ( a Virginian) in the Northwest territory during the war of 1812 had brought back an intimate knowledge of that country to every section of Virginia, and fear of the Indians had been reduced to a negative quantity by the terrible drubbing St. Claire had given them at Vincennes. Every family in western Virginia were talking about the fertile valleys of Ohio and the beautiful prairies of Indiana, and certainly half of them resolved to go to that new country. People inured to the frontier life are always the first to move on when the community begins to fill up with settlers. They want elbow room. Newly wedded farmer folks can get a start easier in a new country where land is cheap, so the younger half of the Spaid family resolved to go to Ohio. What induced the aged parents (both were then sixty years old) to go with these children we cannot tell, for they had a good farm, a large house, and three of their children were married and lived in the community. The four Spaid families (William married in a year or two) established their homes at the junction of the Seneca and Buffalo forks of Wills creek. They owned four farms in a row; Mary Hellyer's was the easternmost; then Elizabeth Secrest's; then Michael Spaid's; and William's farm adjoined Michael's on the west. We had forgotten to say that Elizabeth had married Henry Secrest, Mary married George Hellyer, and Christina married Captain James Anderson, before this migration to Ohio. A few years after coming to Ohio, Nancy, the youngest daughter married William Frye and they located up the Buffalo fork about three miles from the brothers and sisters. It seems that the parents did not locate on a farm themselves but lived in a log hut on Michael's farm.

Luther Spaid says his grandfather bought all this land and gave each child a farm. Each family lived in a log house in the woods, and all of them had to work like the mischief to clear out fields to raise gardens and crops. The oak timber was the best in the world, and to split enough rails to fence in their "clearings" was not so big a task. Game was plentiful at that time, and the streams were full of fish. The year of the Hegira was 1819 in the autumn, and in June, 1821, the Elizabeth Cale Spaid died and was buried at Hopewell, a little cemetery on a hill less than a mile west of William's farm. It was the only cemetery in that section at that date, for Mt. Zion cemetery was started in 1828, and Buffalo still later. She was sixty-two years old at the time of her death, but we never heard what caused her death. Nor can we tell anything definite about her, though the writer well knew Aunt Nancy and Uncle William and could have gotten all sorts of information from them, but at that time was less interested in family history.

Some time after the Elizabeth’s' death George Spaid married Barbara Albin, the widow of James Albin, a Revolutionary soldier who had gone from Hampshire county to Ohio many years before the Spaids. They continued to live in a cabin on the farm of Michael Spaid. One day in the summer of 1833 Barbara and Margaret (Michael's wife) went to a neighbors for an all day quilting party, leaving Christina, Michael's oldest daughter, to care for the children and prepare dinner. She was to call her grandfather when dinner was ready to come eat with them. He lived down over a bank from Michael's home in a sheltered cove only a short distance away. When dinner was prepared Christina went to tell her grandsire dinner was ready. A rail fence with bars separated the two cabins, and when the sixteen year old girl reached the bars she found the old man lying dead with his cane lying across his chest. Knowing that it was nearly dinner time, he had evidently started for the son's home and was stricken with heart failure, on the way. Everything indicated that he had died without a struggle. He was buried by the side of Elizabeth at Hopewell and an excellent dressed sand-stone monuments mark their graves. His is proving the better stone and every word is discernible as may be seen in the picture. The Grandmother's gravestone is now scaled off so that part of the epitaph cannot be read. Fortunately the writer copied it thirty years ago. Barbara, his widow, went to live with her daughter, Mrs. Peter Jordan, about ten miles away, and lived to a great age, but when she died, was brought and buried by the side of her first husband, James Albin, at Hopewell.



** The author of this book was descended from Michael Spaid[46]



the truths of the Gospel in the township was the Rev. Robert Miller, an American by birth, but of Scotch descent. His grandparents emigrated from Scotland in 1738. His father served in the Revolutionary war, in which he lost his life. Robert was born in Prince George County, Maryland, August 19, 1767. He moved to Virginia in 1793 and in 1797 removed to Kentucky. He came to this State and township in 1812, and settled on land now occupied as a site for the new Moorefield Methodist Church. He was a Methodist preacher by profession-one of those dauntless, energetic Methodist preachers that characterized that denomination in early pioneer days. He was the prime mover in the organization of the Moorefield Church, in 1812, for which he preached a number of years. He was twice married, having four daughters and five sons (two of the latter afterward became ministers) by his first wife, and three boys and one girl by the second wife.[47]





1812
REV. Robert MILLER, b. Prince George Co, MD Aug 19, 1767, Methodist Preacher, d. 1834
married twice
1st wife: 4 daughters, 5 sons

2nd wife: 3 boys, 1 girl
Grandparents immigrated from Scotland 1738. Father died serving in Rev. War. Moved to VA 1793> KY1797>OH 1812




August 24, 1814



In 1814, after two years of inconclusive fighting, Great Britain aimed to score a knockout blow against the upstart United States. By now the British were on the verge of defeating Napolean Bonaparte’s France. Caught up in the death struggle between these two powerful empires, the United States had, in 1812, come to blows with Britain over neutrality rights on the high seas. Preoccupied with the war in Europe throughout 1812 and 1813, Britain mounted a halfhearted campaign in America.



But now, in 1814, imminent victory in Europe allowed Britain to send a vast naval armada and army westward to deal with the contentious, out gunned Americans. The British planned a three pronged offensive, one out of Canada armed at Lake Champlain and the Hudson Valley, one in the Chesapeake states, and the Hudson Valley, one in the Chesapeake states aimed a t Baltimore and Washington D.C,. and the third aimed at the coastal South.

The northern prong failed in the face of American naval strength on the waters of upstate New York. The Chesapeake prong initially succeeded, the British defeating a force of pitifully led and trained American militia forces at the August 24, 1814, Battle of Bladensburg. Unopposed, the Redcoats strolled into Washington and burned the tiny capital city to the ground.[48] Dolly Madison refused to leave the White House until she removes George Washington’s Portrait painted by Gilbert Stuart.[49]

August 24, 1852: At the end of his second term Joseph Vance (compilers 2nd cousin, 7 times removed) retired to his farm in Urbana. Although he did not hold regular office again, he served as a delegate to the national Whig convention in Philadelphia in 1848 and as a representative of his district to the Ohio Constitutional Convention of 1850-1851. He took a leading part in the debates and was chairman of the committee on public institutions. On his way home from attending sessions of the convention in Cincinnati in December 1850, he suffered a stroke of paralysis and was forced to give up his duties. He died at his home near Urbana on August 24, 1852.[50]

August 24, 1857

The New York branch of the Ohio Life Insurance and Trust Company fails, beginning a national financial panic.[51]



1858-1859

General Benjamin LeFevre attended Miami university, 1858-59: and studied law at Sidney, Ohio, but subsequently engaged in farming.[52]

August 24, 1861

Godlove, Benjamin J. Age 21. Residence Yatton, nativity Ohio. Enlisted August 24, 1861. Mustered September 6, 1861. Wounded severely in leg January 8, 1862, near Charlestown, Mo. Wounded severely in left foot May 16, 1863, Champion Hills, Miss. Transferred to Invalid Corps, February 15, 1864. No further record.[53]



Wed. August 24, 1864

Received a letter from A.R. Hodgkin[54]

Some little fighting today[55]



August 24, 1927: On board Convoy 76, on June 30, 1944 was Simon Gottlibowicz, born August 24, 1927 from Sluxca.[56] Simon’s assembly point was Drancy, and his last known address was 6, rue Melingue, Paris 19.[57]

In 1945 there were 182 survivors. One hundred and fifteen of them were women.



• Gottleib, IIse Sitta

• June 28, 1921 in Kassel, Wohnhaft Borken I, Hessen, Deportation: 1942, Auschwitz, Todesdaten: August 24, 1942, Auschwitz[58]

August 24, 1944

Then French Units, followed by the U.S. Fourth Division forge ahead from the south into the Paris city center.

The Germans surrender.[59]



August 24, 1967: Jessie Pearl Goodlove(July 15, 1882-August 24, 1967) married Ri­chard Allen "Dick" Bowdish, September 17, 1908, at the home of the bride’s parents. Richard died in 1967. They had a daugh­ter, Mary Catherine, born October 13, 1915, and a son Albert, born May 1, 1918. Dick and Jessie lived on the home farm of her parents, which they bought in 1913, until their retirement to Colorado. They wanted to be near the home of their daugh­ter and husband, Merrill Jordan (Bk. I, F-32). Albert married Pearl Engstrom and both were missionaries in India until re­tirement. It is interesting to note here that William’s son, Willis, mar­ried the granddaughter of Levi Brown Andrews who had also served in the Civil War. (Bk. IL, F-3). Also to note that George B. Aikin (Bk. II, F-I) had also served in the Civil War and to wonder if the paths of these three men had ever crossed or had they ever met during their enlistments. George B. Aikin and William FL. Goodlove were great grandfathers, respectively, of Winton Goodlove, and Levi B. Andrews was his great, great, grandfather.[60]





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[1] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/huff-wires/20110824/ml-israel-palestinians/

[2]

[3] The Most, Incredible Disasters, HIST, 3/15/2000

[4] The One Year Chronology Bible, NIV, page 1611 and 1612.

[5] The One Year Chronology Bible, NIV, page 1616.

[6] The One Year Chronology Bible, NIV, page 1617.

[7] Jacobs Legacy, A Genetic Virew of Jewish History, by David B. Goldstein, page 76-77.

[8] Heritage:Civilization and the Jews by Abba Eban, 1984, page 61.

[9] The One Year Chronology Bible, NIV, page 1617.

[10] The Hidden History of Jesus, His Royal Family, and the Birth of Christianity, The Jesus Dynasty, by James D. Tabor, page 302.

[11] U.S. News and World Report, Secrets of Christianity, page 36.

[12] The One Year Chronology Bible, NIV, page 1617.

[13] U.S. News and World Report, Secrets of Christianity, page 36.

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

[15] [1] Engineering an Empire, The Byzantines, HISTI, 2006.

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

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

[18] The Naked Archaeologist, What Happened to the JC Bunch, Part 1, 8/8/2008.

[19] Islam: History Society and Civilization, DISC, 2/20/2004

[20] Jews, God and History by Max I. Dimont, 1962 pg. 230.

[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] Secrets of Jamestown, Save Our History, HIST, 11/27/2004

[23] 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

[24] (See " New England Spirit of

Persecution," etc., by George Keith. Printed by William

Bradford, in 1693.)

[25] 1 Article by Judge Pennypacker in PENNSYLVANIA MAGAZINE, Vol.

XV. p. 345.

[26] Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography

[27] !Va. Mag. of Hist. & Biog. Vol. 33, Jul or Jan., 1925, p. 299

Va. Council Journals.

[28] (Journal) and was Justice in Essex.” t t Virginia Magazine, vol. 3, PP. 1-2.

[29] (*) I M. H. Coll. x. GenealogyLibrary.com Main Page Page 33

[30]A History of Framington, Massachusetts, http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/_glc_/3256/3256_33.html

[31] Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett, p. 1820.3

[32] Proposed Descendants of William Smith

[33] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969, page 120.)

[34] Washington Crawford Letters, by C. W. Butterfield

[35] The chasseurs wore green coats with crimson trimmings.

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

[37] The Battle of Brandywine, by Joseph Townsend





[38] The Battle of Brandywine, by Joseph Townsend



[39]Col. William Crawford is listed as having served in the 5th Virginia Regiment, Feb.13, 1776 and the 7th later that year. His Campaigns included Germantown. October of 1777 found Washington and his Americans near Germantown, where he continued to worry the enemy. After a few weeks of rest, he moved in on the enemy troops in that locality. The beginning was successful when another fog gave way to another retreat.

(From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969, page 142)

[40] The Washington-Crawford Letters, by C. W. Butterfield

[41] JF

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

[43] First Invasion: The War of 1812, HISTI, September 12, 2004.



[44] First Invasion: The War of 1812 9/12/2004 HISTI

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

[46] http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~rosemarypro/spaid/beginning.htm

[47] HCCO

[48] Military History Magazine, May/June 2008 page 28.

[49] First Invasion: The War of 1812, HISTI, 9/12/2004

[50] The Ohio Historical Society, S. Winifred Smith, ohiohistory.org/onlinedoc/ohgovernment….

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

[52] The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans:

Volume VI

[53]10th Iowa Volunteers, Company E.

http://www.rootsweb.com/~iahardin/civilwar/10th_inf/10th-inf-g.htm

[54] Hodgkins, Anson R. Age 24. Residence Springville, nativity Wisconsin. Enlisted Aug. 8, 1862. as Fifth Sergeant. Mustered Sept. 3, 1862. Wounded May 16, 1863, Champion’s Hill, Miss. Promoted First Sergeant Sept. 10, 1863; Second Lieutenant March 21, 1864. Mustered out July 17, 1865, Savannah, Ga. http://iagenweb.org/civilwar/books/logan/mil508.htm

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

[56] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 577.

[57] French Children of the Holocaust, A Memorial, by Serge Klarsfeld, page 356.

• [58] [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,.

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

[60] Winton Goodlove:A History of Central City Ia and the Surrounding Area Book ll 1999

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