Friday, August 26, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, August 26

This Day in Goodlove History, August 26

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/



August 26, 1956: In Commemoration of the 55th Wedding Anniversary of

Mary and Gary Goodlove

August 26, 1956 to August 26, 2006

In the News!

Iran's Ahmadinejad: No place for Israel in region
August 26, 2011 06:10 AM EST |

TEHRAN, Iran — Iran's president says there will be no room for Israel in the region after the formation of a Palestinian state.

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's comments reflect his typical anti-Israeli rhetoric, He drew international condemnation when he said in 2005 that Israel should be "wiped off the map."

He spoke at a ceremony Friday following nationwide pro-Palestine rallies marking Quds Day. Quds is the Arabic word for Jerusalem.

The annual demonstration is an occasion for Iranian officials to show their support for Palestinians and condemn Israel.

Ahmadinejad says establishment of a Palestinian state should be the first step in the liberation of entire Palestine.

Iran's Islamic leadership is hostile to Israel and backs anti-Israel groups like Palestinian Hamas.

Gaza group watching Israel's response to new truce


August 26, 2011 05:17 AM EST |



GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — A Gaza militant leader said Friday that his Islamic Jihad group will be watching Israel's response to the latest attempt at a cease-fire, following more than a week of hostilities with Israel.

Muhammed Al-Hindi, a leader of the Palestinian faction, said the Egyptian-mediated truce went into effect Friday.

It's the second attempt to end more than a week of hostilities.The escalation began with an incursion by militants, apparently from Gaza, who crossed on Aug. 18 into southern Israel from Egypt and killed eight Israelis.

A cease-fire late Sunday dissolved with rocket fire from Gaza on southern Israel and retaliatory Israeli airstrikes, in which two dozen Palestinians and one Israeli were killed.

"We are evaluating and monitoring the commitment of the occupation government to the cease-fire," said Al-Hindi, adding that Israel "carries full responsibility for the latest escalation, and for any future violations of this cease-fire."

There was no immediate Israeli government reaction.

A Hamas official said early Friday all key factions had agreed to the latest truce and that the Gaza government and Egypt were trying to get smaller Palestinian factions on board as well.

Hours earlier, an Israeli airstrike killed two Palestinian militants in Gaza following a salvo of rocket attacks on Israel. Palestinian officials said the two were members of Islamic Jihad.

The Israeli military confirmed the airstrike, saying two militants were targeted after they fired mortar shells toward an Israeli border crossing, damaging it.

More than 15 rockets and mortar shells were fired toward Israel on Thursday, the military said.

Two shells hit the border crossing between Israel and Gaza, cutting off electricity and trapping a Palestinian woman and her baby inside the border terminal. An Israeli military commander said he took them to a protected area of the crossing and waited for mortar fire to subside before allowing them to cross into Gaza an hour later.[1]

In a message dated 8/25/2011 2:21:53 P.M. Central Daylight Time, JPT@donationnet.net writes:



I Get Email!

Dear Jeffery,

I’ve just learned that a coordinated attack has been launched by the Jew haters against the videos of the Restoring Courage rallies that we posted on You Tube for the world to see. They are leaving negative feedback and trying to get them pulled from distribution. This is an organized effort to silence any voice that supports Israel.

You can take action to stop this attack today. Simply take a moment to click the links below and express your support for keeping these powerful testimonies that call for the world to support Israel from being removed—then please ask everyone on your email list to do the same.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3hK94BznRg0&feature=email

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TdyMX8PWEuI

Your ambassador to Jerusalem,

Dr. Michael Evans

August 26, 1071: Battle of Manzikert; The Seljuk Turks defeat the Bysantine Army at the Battle Manzikert. This battle took place during the successful conquest of Palestine, or as what the Christians called the Holy Land which lasted until 1080. This left the Moslem Turks in possession of Jerusalem and of Jerusalem and the rest of what Christians called the Holy Land and this is what triggered the Crusades which led to the Christians conquest of the City of David and the slaughter of its Jewish inhabitants.[2]

August 26, 1278: Ladislaus IV of Hungary and Rudolph I of Germany defeated Premysl Ottokar II of Bohemia in the Battle of Marchfield near Dürnkrut in (then) Moravia. All three of these monarchs had dealings with their Jewish subjects. At the Synod of Buda (1279), which was held during ithe reign of King Ladislaus IV it was decreed, in the presence of the papal ambassador, that every Jew appearing in public should wear on the left side of his upper garment a piece of red cloth; that any Christian transacting business with a Jew not so marked, or living in a house or on land together with any Jew, should be refused admittance to the Church services; and that a Christian entrusting any office to a Jew should be excommunicated. Rudolph had a rather “uneven” record in dealing with his Jewish subjects. For example, he continued to enforce the statute originally adopted by Frederick the Valiant, “which afforded protection against persecution and murder” to the Jews of Austria. But then the next year he issued a decree to the citizens of Austria declaring that Jews were ineligible to hold public office in Vienna. In 1254 Premysl Ottokar II issued his charter, an adaptation of one originally issued in 1244 by Duke Frederick II of Austria. Among other provisions it forbade forced conversion and condemned the blood libel. In 1268 Premysl Ottokar II renewed his charter; under which the Jews of Brno were expected to contribute a quarter of the cost of strengthening the city wall. In an undated document, he exempted the Brno Jews from all their dues for one year since they had become impoverished. So, it would seem that the ruler most positively disposed towards the Jews lost.[3]

August 26, 1280: King James I of Aragon (Spain), under the influence of the Dominican Friar Raymond Martini, ordered all disparaging statements regarding Jesus and Mary erased from the Talmud. In addition the Mishneh Torah of Maimonides was condemned to be burned due to references to Jesus in the chapter on the laws of kingship. There is really irony in the decision to burn the works of Maimonides since he was one of the few Jewish leaders of his time who could find a positive value in both Christianity and Islam.[4]

1282: War broke out again in 1282 when Llywelyn joined his brother David in rebellion.
Edward's determination, military experience and skilful use of ships brought from England for deployment along the North Welsh coast, drove Llywelyn back into the mountains of North Wales.[5]

August 26, 1346: Hundred Years’ War. The military supremacy of the English longbow over the French combination of crossbow and armoured knights is established at the Battle of Crecy.[6]

• 1347

• The Bubonic Plague arrived in Europe in 1347, carried aboard trading ships arriving from Asia. During the “Little Ice Age” what came to be called the “black death” found the ideal breeding environment. The bubonic plague was made much worse because people were already weakened because of lack of food.[7]



• Agamut, a Jew, prepares for a dangerous journey. Jews had to have the kinds express permission to be in a town. They were in a way that no other medieval person was, owned and directly depended upon the King or a great noble like bishop. [8]

• At his lord’s bidding, Agumut will venture hundreds of mountainous miles to Venice, where he can purchase luxuries that are unavailable to the common market stalls at his home, but his expedition will also take him into the darkest events in history. [9]



• At the end of the Mongul trade route lies the port city of Caffa. Starting point for merchant ships on route to Italy. In 1347 the Monguls attack the Christian city of Caffa hoping to take this vital trade route for themselves. During the siege the monguls got the plague and had to call off the siege. Before the monguls left they decided to catapult their dead bodies of the victims into the town in hopes of extinguishing everyone inside by giving the plague to their enemies and apparently this is how the plague was communicated from the Monguls to the Europeans. [10]



• The plague hitches a ride on ships bound for Sicily. Below decks the Italians find a shipload of corpses. The few survivors are reported to have “sickness clinging to their very bones. In Sicily, the dying begins.[11]

August 26, 1364

We begin our biographical reconstruction on August 26, 1364. That is when Gutleben the Jew was admitted into Colmar citizenship. However, it is stands out that his profession as a physician is not entered in the register of Colmar citizens. Whether Guleben and Jewish medical practitioner Gottlieb, who at around the same time was in the service of Count Palatine at Heidelberg near the Rhine, were the same person, will perhaps bever be ascertained with complete certainty. [12]

Vivelin/Gutleben

1365-1373 in Basel.[13]

August 26, 1761: Joseph Howard Sr. is reported to have had four children: Margaret born April 4, 1746, Joseph Jr. bornvMarch 13, 1749, Margery born March 17, 1752/3, and Benjamin born August 26, 1761(66).[14]

Joseph Howard Jr. is himself listed on Page 9 in the 1776 Census. Margery married Henry Hall on
December 27, 1774 and they are listed on Page 4 of the 1776 Census. Joseph Howard Sr.'s wife,
Margaret Williams died about 1762 shortly after the birth of their youngest son Benjamin. Based on
the foregoing the 1776 Census should only show three individuals for Joseph Howard Sr. (Joseph Sr.,
Benjamin, and Margaret) instead of the five that are listed. No data can be found which explain these
additional persons in the 1776 Census for Joseph Howard Sr. Could the additional male and female
listings be Eleanor and her half-brother Daniel (who married in Anne Arundel County in 1777)?(67)[15]

Also, it should be noted that Joseph Howard Sr. and his wife Margaret had children in 1746, 1749 and
1752/3. Their next child was born in the late summer of 1761. That leaves a period of eight or nine
years between births when no children were born to Margaret. Could Eleanor McKinnon have been
the result of an affair that Joseph Sr. was having during that period?

Joseph Howard Sr. was a wealthy person and a large landholder. This alone made him well respected
in the area. Among his land holdings was "Howard's Inheritance", willed to him by his father, and
consisting of 380 acres of land on or near South River in All Hallows Parish. At the time of Eleanor
McKinnon's birth, Joseph Howard Sr. and his family resided there. The mentioned will also provided
that Joseph Sr. be "instructed in the knowledge of physick" by his father's friend. Dr. Richard Hill(68).
Whether this vocation was pursued was not further researched.

Ruth McKinnon, at the time of Eleanor's birth, was not a simple country girl seduced on a warm
summer's evening. Her husband, Daniel, as School Master, occupied a position of respect. And if he
was in fact the son of Lord Michael McKinnon, he would have commanded even more respect. And,
finally, she had given birth to at least three children: a son (Daniel), Anne and Ruth.

Surprisingly for the times there is no evidence that Ruth McKinnon and Eleanor's father were in
anyway held criminally responsible for their adultery which was considered a serious crime at the time.
The only punishment that can be found is Daniel's publication of the illegitimate birth and the resulting
scandal. Could it be that Eleanor's father was of such influence that the crime was not further
pursued?

All of the above strongly suggests that Eleanor's father was a man of postion and respect
such as Joseph Howard Sr. [16]




On August 26, 1776, the British took the vast majority of Long Island with ease, as the island's population was heavily Loyalist. On August 27, the troops at Brooklyn Heights disintegrated under an unexpected attack from their left flank. In a British effort to earn goodwill for a negotiated peace, they allowed American survivors to flee to Manhattan. Otherwise, the War for Independence might easily have been quashed less than three months after it began.

Born in Rhode Island in August 1742, Greene was elected to the Rhode Island legislature at the age of 28 in 1770. Overcoming his Quaker scruples against violence and warfare, Greene joined a local militia at the outbreak of the American Revolution in 1774 and was promoted to the rank of brigadier general of the Continental Army by Congress in 1775.

At the siege of Boston in March 1776, Greene was assigned to General Washington's brigade and a lifelong friendship between the two men began. Shortly after several American losses in and around New York in the summer and fall of 1776, Greene was promoted to major general of the Continental Army under Washington.

After leading troops into several successful battles, including the Battle of Trenton in December 1776 and the Battle of Germantown in October 1777, Greene succeeded Thomas Mifflin as quartermaster general in March 1778. Greene was named commander in chief of the Southern Army in October 1778; he commanded troops on the battlefield throughout the rest of the revolution. After twice turning down offers to become secretary of war, Greene retired from the military in 1785. Less than one year later, in June 1786, Greene died at his Georgia home.[17]

“August 26, 1776.- During this day we had much trouble, and at night were continually awakended by alrms from the outposts. This was not caused by attacks of the rebels, but mostly by deserters who wanted to come to us; and when the English and the [Hessian] grenadiers heard them approach they at once fired by platoons, if they did not get a immediate answer. Today General von Heister came over to us with six battalions. [18]

August 26th, 1777 business was

begun in earnest, and among other important matters, certain

gentlemen were appointed to make a tour of the different districts

of the very large county of Yohogania to "Tender the Oath of

Allegiance and Fidelity to the Commonwealth of Virginia to all

free Male Inhabitants; agreeable to an Act of Assembly entitled an

act to oblige all free Male Inhabitants, above a certain age, to give

assurance of allegiance to this State, and for other purposes Therein

Mentioned:" See 9 Henning's Statutes, 281. These gentlemen were

Matthew Ritchie (the ancestor of the A. S. Ritchie family of Wash-

ington); Samuel Newell; John McDaniel; Andrew Swearingen;

Isaac Cox; Benjamin Kuykendall; William Goe; Thomas Freeman;

Zachariah Connell; Benjamin FYye; Richard Yeates; and John

McDowell. And on this day was made the following order:



"Ordered: That Isaac Cox, Oliver Miller and Benjamin Kirk-

endall, be appointed, or any two of them, to Contract with proper

person or persons, to build a Goal and court house in the following

manner, and at the following place, Vizt: The Goal and Court

House are to be Included in one whole and Intire Building, of sound

round Oak, to go Twenty four feet Long and Sixteen feet wide;

two Story high; The lower Story to be eight feet high, Petitioned

in the Middle; with Squeared hewed Logs with Locks, and bears

(bars) to the door and Windows, according to law, which shall be

the Goal. The upper story to be five feet high in the Sides, with a

good Cabbin Roof, with Convenient seats for the Court & Bar,

and* a Clark's Table, to remain in one room, with a pair of stairs

on the outside to Assend up to said Room, which shall be the place

for holding Court; with two floors to be laid with strong hewed

logs; the whole to be Compleat and finished in one month from

the date hereof. The said Building to be Erected on the planta-

tion of Andrew Heath at Such Convenient place as the said Isaac

Cox, Oliver Miller and Benjamin Kirkendall, Gentlemen, or any

two of them shall think Proper."



The place where this court-house was erected has lately been

well identified for the writer by Mr. R. T. Wiley of the Elizabeth

Herald, Elizabeth, Pa., and by Mr. Samuel W. Stewart, of Highland

Station, E. E., Pittsburgh, as upon the farm now of George Gilmore,

Jefterson Township, Allegheny County, Pa., a short quarter of a

mile back from the west side of the Monongahela Ri^er, on the

brow of the first terrace back of the bottom lands; about one

mile from the boundary line of West Elizabeth, in plain view of

East Elizabeth and Lock No. 3; about one hundred yards south of

Mr. Gilmore's house, and near the upper corner of what is known

as Lobb*s old graveyard. The title to the land upon which it stood

can be traced back from George Gilmore through his father, Ben-

jamin Gilmore, McNutt heirs, Jacob Guest, John Pennell, and

Richard Heath, to Captain Henry Heath, one of whose five sons

was Andrew Heath, occupying the land, though not under a known

record title. Mr. Samuel J. Heath, a lineal descendant of Andrew

Heath, living on another part of the Heath plantation, places the

court-house, not on the Gilmore farm, but at the same corner of

the old Lobb graveyard, and nearer thereto.



Thus we see that the court-house of Yohogania County on the

Andrew Heath farm was of the same length of that erected at

Augusta Town for the District of West Augusta, and two feet

wider. The order for the erection of the court-house at Augusta

Town does not specify that there should be a court-room above

the jail, but this must be taken as implied, for all the first court-

houses erected in the wilderness were of this construction, having

the jail on the first floor, with a "petition" in the milddle, and the

court room on the second floor, with an outside stairway by which

to "assend" to it. [19]



August 26, 1777

Washington mentions in his correspondence heavy rains upon the twenty sixth of August, which injured the arms and ammu­nition, the last rain spoken of prior to the eleventh of September; on the latter date, therefore, the waters of Brandywine creek must have been low, and the fords shallow, as is usually the case at that season.[20]



August 26 & 27— The army remained in place while the necessary baggage was put ashore and everything made ready for the march.



August 26-30, 1777

Waldeck and Hessian prisoners of war were moved from Lancaster to Lebanon, Pennsylvania, and quartered in the Moravian parsonage.[21]

Records of Moravian Congregation at Hebron, 1775-1781.

August 26, 1777 Today the prisoners are to arrive here and

will be placed in the churches and school houses. Some of

our enemies want them put in our clergy-house.[22]

August 26, 1806 - At a public sale the land was struck off to the highest bidder - Richard Jones Waters for 420.00. Witnesses to the deed - George Ruddell, J. Culbertson. Acknowledged December 19, (1806?) by George Wilson, Sheriff. [23]

August 26, 1813: Zachariah Connell, the founder of the town of Connellsville, came here a few years later than the settlement of William McCormick, whose brother-in-law he was, having married Mrs. McCormick’s sister, Ann Crawford. He came to this section of country soon after 1770, and stopped at the house of his future father-in-law, Capt. (afterwards Colonel) William Crawford. After his marriage, which was probably in 1773, he lived for some time on the west side of the river, but afterwards, at a time which cannot be exactly fixed (between 1773 and 1778), moved to the east side of the stream and located on a tract of land which was designated in his warrant of survey as “Mud Island,” which included the present site of the borough of Connellsville. He built his log cabin facing the river, on or very near the spot where the Trans-Allegheny House now stands, on Water Street. There he lived for many years, until he removed to the stone house which he had built at the corner of Grave Street and Hill Alley. After the death of his wife, Ann Crawford, he married a Miss Wallace, a sister of “Aunt Jenny” Wallace, who was long and well known in later years as the keeper of the toll-bridge across the Youghiogheny River. The later years of Mr. Connell’s life were devoted to the care of his real estate. He became an ardent Methodist, and donated the lot on which the church of that denomination was built. He died in his stone house on Grave Street, Aug. 26, 1813, aged seventy-two years, and was buried near the residence of John Freeman, where his remains still rest near those of his two wives, and where a broken slab marks the last resting-place of the founder of Connellsville. By his first wife Mr. Connell was the father of four children, of whom two were sons,—Hiram and John. The former lived and died in Connellsville, the latter removed to the West. Of the two daughters, one married William Page, who became a Methodist preacher, and removed with his wife to Adams County, Ohio, about 1810. The other married Greensbury Jones, an exhorter, and emigrated with him to the West. The second wife of Mr. Connell became the mother of two daughters, who respectively became the wives of Joseph and Wesley Phillips, sons of John Phillips, of Uniontown.[24]

August 26, 1814: The British Column leaves Washington for Benedict albeit a bit bewildered. [25]

August 26, 1937: Richard Gray, Marion Iowa, became a resident of Linn County, 1840, source, Marion Sentinel, August 26, 1937, page 5.

August 26, 1837: How Linn County Got its name: Linn County was named for Lewis Fields Linn, senator from the state of Missouri, who was born November 5, 1795, near the present city of Louisville, Kentucky. He was the grandson of Col. William Linn of the Revolutionary war. Both his grandparents fell victims to the scalping knives of Indians. His father was once taken captive by Indians, but freed himself and his companion after tomahawking several of the Indians as they lay sleeping at night.[26]

August 26, 1860: Harriet, dau. of G. and Winnie Crawford, died August 26, 1860. Aged 26 years, 24 days. [27]

Fri. August 26, 1861:

In convalescent camp yet. Heavy cannonade-

Ing in the evening got some pears and cider

Feel some better[28]



August 26, 1903: The forged “Protocols of the Elders of Zion” were serialized in a Russian Publication.

This document has been a favorite among anti-Semites since then.[29] The first publication of ‘The Protocols of the Elders of Zion’ was hoax in St. Petersburg, Russia (by Pavel Krushevan).[30]

August 26, 1920: the 19th Amendment providing for female suffrage was passed by Congress and sent to the states for ratification. On August 18, 1920, Tennessee became the 36th state to ratify the amendment, achieving the required three-fourths majority of state ratification, and on August 26 the 19th Amendment officially took effect.[31]

August 26, 1932: The Controller of the Currency orders a moratorium on the foreclosure of first mortgages during the Depression.[32]

August 26, 1937: Mr. and Mrs. Earl Balderston of Alburnett visited Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Herman Falcon. (The Marion Sentinel, Marion Iowa, Thursday August 26, 1937,



August 26, 1937

Forty-Seventh Annual Reunion This Week

[33]

• August 26, 1937: A new wave of anti-Jewish terror had broken out in Bialystok district of Poland, resulting in more than 50 Jews being injured, some of them seriously. In one instance Polish rioters gouged out the eyes of Leib Koza, a Jewish carter. In understanding the Holocaust, one must understand that anti-Semitism did not arrive in Eastern Europe only with the coming of the Nazis.[34]





• August 26, 1937: The Council of People’s Commissars for Ukraine approved plans to settle 1,525 Jewish families and 1020 individuals in Biro-Bidjan, and 350 Jewish families in Crimea. This reflected a challenge that the Soviet Union faced in dealing with what was the Nationalities Problem in general and Jews and Zionism in particular.[35]



• August 26, 1938: In Vienna, the Central Office for Jewish Emigration (Zentralstelle fur Judische Auswanderung) is set up under Adolf Eichmann.[36]



Convoy 24, August 26, 1942.



Convoy 24 had 1,000 deportees. Almost half (400) were children under the age of 12. The German breakdown by nationality of 948 of the deportees is : 296 French; 179 Poles; 97 Germans; 54 Austrians; 31 dutch; 5 Russians; 5 Romanians; 2 Turks; 2 Greeks; 13 stateless; and 257 undetermined.



Fritz Gotlieb, born July 10, 1931, age 11 from Siegen, Austria, was on board Convoy 24.



There were about 320 children younger than 12. A breakdown by year of birth is:



Born in 1940, 3. Born in 1939, 23. Born in 1938, 18. Born in 1937, 26. Born in 1936, 24. Born in 1935, 26. Born in 1934, 26. Born in 1933, 29. Born in 1932, 40. Born in 1931, 54. Born in 1930, 51.



The list is in very poor condition. Each name had to be examined under a magnifying glass, but even this minute examination did not reveal all the details. The list is divided into five sublists.



1. Pithiviers camp. These were mainly the children who were rounded up on July 15 and 16 in Paris and who, for the most part, were separated from their parents. The 28 pages of lists from Pithiviers show the family name, first name, date and city or country of birth, and city of residence. The list is divided by boxcar; it starts with Car 6.

Car 6. 47 names. There were 35 adults and 12 children.

Car 7. 33 Children and 1 adult. The young children had only one man to comfort them during this trip.

Car 8. 40 children and 7 adults.

Car 9. 47 Children and 6 adults.

Car 10. 19 Children and 1 adult.

Car 11. 27 Children and 4 adults.

Car 12. 36 children and 4 adults.

Car 13. 48 children without any adults.

Car 14. 37 children and 5 women. Among them were very young children without…[37]

Car 15, 28 children and 7 adulsts.

Car 16, 14 children and 28 adults.

Car 17, 6 children and 35 adults.

Car 18, 28 adults.

Car 19, 20 names, almost all were young mnen in their late teens.

Car 20, 10 children and 8 adults.



Last minute additions, of which of 74, 42 were children.[38]



August 26, 1942: At 2:30 am in the morning the German Schutzpolizei in Chortkiv in the western Ukrain starts driving Jews out of houses, splits in groups of 120, packs them in freight cars and deports 2000 Jews to Belzec death camp. Five hundred sick Jews and children were murdered on the spot.[39]

August 26, 1942: Seven thousand stateless Jews in the Vichy Free Zone of France were rounded up. Many of these people were refugees from Nazi conquests in Eastern Europe. The Vichy Government was very prompt in turning Jews over to the Nazis.[40]

August 26, 1942: Nazis closed all synagogues and schools in the Kovno (Lithuanian) ghetto.[41]

August 26, 1942: After being unloaded at the Treblinka death camp, a Jew named Friedman uses a razor blade to cut the throat of a Ukrainian guard. SS guards retaliate by immediately opening fire on the other newly arrived deportees. [42]

August 26, 1942: Thousands of Jews from Miedzyrec, Poland, are deported to the Treblinka death camp.[43]

August 26, 1942: Nearly 1000 Belgian Jews including 232 children are deported to the East.[44]

August 26, 1942: 518 Jewish children deported from Paris are gassed at Auschwitz.[45]



August 26, 1943: The Jewish community from Zawiercie, Poland, is destroyed at Auchwitz.[46]



August 26, 1943: A young Jewish woman, one of the 24 who a unwilling guest at an SS “party’ at Janowska, Ukraine, labor camp the previous night , is shot during an escape attempt.

• The remaining 23 women are subsequently murdered.[47]





August 26, 1956: In Commemoration of the 55th Wedding Anniversary of

Mary and Gary Goodlove

August 26, 1956 to August 26, 2006



August 26, 2010

Note from the editor. It is no wonder it has been so difficult finding where we come from. Being a Hessian mercenary soldier of Jewish ancestry in America after the revolution, must have been like today telling someone that you were a Moslem Taliban, at 9/11. Jeff Goodlove



August 26, 2010

One of the most recent DNA matches last name is “Katz”.

“Katz, often, but not always, is an abbreviation of Kohen-Tzedek (“righteous priest”). Another common name of Kohanim is Kaplan— derived from the same root as the word chaplain, a religious leader and Polish for priest. The Kohen family name Rappaport is believed to have originated with the family of 16th century Rabbi Avraham Menahem HaKohen Rapa, of Porto, Italy. The name Aaronson is often derived from son of Aaron the High Priest.

There are many other variations of Kohanic names.[1]”



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

[1] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/huff-wires/20110826/ml-israel-palestinians/

[2] This Day in Jewish History

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

[4] This Day in Jewish History

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

[6] This Day in Jewish History

[7] HISTI, Little Ice Age: Big Chill, 11-20-05

[8] The Plague, HISTI, 10-30-05

[9] The Plague, HISTI, 10-30-05.

[10] The Plague, HISTI, 10-30-05.

[11] The Plague, HISTI, 10-30-05.

[12] The Guleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 1.

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

[14] 66 FamilySearch Ancestral File v 4.19 (AFN: 1563 - F73)

[15] Maryland State Archives. Register of Queen Anne Parish, M 389, Page 97 original or Page 341 revised

[16] http://washburnhill.freehomepage.com/custom3.html

[17] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/nathanael-greene-takes-command-of-long-island

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

[19] The County Court of West Augusta

[20] The Battle of Brandywine, by Joseph Townsend

[21] Waldeck Soldiers of the American Revolutionary War, Compiled by Bruce E. Burgoyne

[22] Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography

[23] (New Madrid County Deed Bk. 2, p. 85) Chronology of Benjamin Harrison compiled by Isobel Stebbins Giuvezan. Afton, Missouri, 1973 http://www.shawhan.com/benharrison.htm

[24] http://www.historicpa.net/bios/2z/zachariah-connell.html, History of Fayette County, Pennsylvania : with biographical sketches of many of its pioneers and prominent men Philadelphia: L.H. Everts & Co., 1882, pages 365-366. View the image of this page online - Free Trial Search Hundreds of 1880s-1890s Pennsylvania County History Books for biographies and historical information on your ancestors. View the book page images on line and print them out for your genealogy file! Free Access to the old history books - plus birth & death records, census images and ALL other records at ancestry.com

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

[26] The Marion Sentinel, August 26, 1937.

[27] (Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett pge. 454.21)

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

[29] This Day in Jewish History.

[30] www.wikipedia.org

[31] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/supreme-court-defends-womens-voting-rights

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

[33] The Marion Sentinel, Marion, Iowa, Thursday, August 26, 1937

• [34] This Day in Jewish History.



[35] This Day in Jewish History.

• [36] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page1761.

[37] Memorial to the Jews, Deported from France 1942-1944, page 209.

[38] French Children of the Holocaust, A Memorial by Serge Klarsfeld, page 389-390.

[39] This Day in Jewish History.

[40] This Day in Jewish History.

[41] This Day in Jewish History.

[42] This Day in Jewish History.

[43] This Day in Jewish History

[44] This Day in Jewish History.

[45] This Day in Jewish History.

• [46] This Day in Jewish History.



• [47] This Day in Jewish History.

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