Sunday, October 31, 2010

This Day in Goodlove History, October 31

This Day in Goodlove History, October 31

• By Jeffery Lee Goodlove

• jefferygoodlove@aol.com



• Surnames associated with the name Goodlove have been spelled the following different ways; Cutliff, Cutloaf, Cutlofe, Cutloff, Cutlove, Cutlow, Godlib, Godlof, Godlop, Godlove, Goodfriend, Goodlove, Gotleb, Gotlib, Gotlibowicz, Gotlibs, Gotlieb, Gotlob, Gotlobe, Gotloeb, Gotthilf, Gottlieb, Gottliebova, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlow, Gutfrajnd, Gutleben, Gutlove



• The Chronology of the Goodlove, Godlove, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlieb (Germany) etc., and Allied Families of Battaile, (France), Crawford (Scotland), Harrison (England), Jackson (Ireland), LeClere (France), Lefevre (France), McKinnon (Scotland), Plantagenets (England), Smith (England), Stephenson (England?), Vance (Ireland from Normandy), and Winch (England, traditionally Wales), including correspondence with -George Rogers Clarke, George Washington, and Thomas Jefferson.



• The Goodlove/Godlove/Gottlieb families and their connection to the Cohenim/Surname project:

• New Address! http://www.familytreedna.com/public/goodlove/default.aspx



• This project is now a daily blog at:

• http://thisdayingoodlovehistory.blogspot.com/

• Goodlove Family History Project Website:

• http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/g/o/o/Jeffery-Goodlove/



• Books written about our unique DNA include:

• “Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People” by Jon Entine.



• “ DNA & Tradition, The Genetic Link to the Ancient Hebrews” by Rabbi Yaakov Kleiman, 2004.



• My thanks to Mr. Levin for his outstanding research and website that I use to help us understand the history of our ancestry. Go to http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/ for more information. “For more information about the Weekly Torah Portion or the History of Jewish Civilization go to the Temple Judah Website http://www.templejudah.org/ and open the Adult Education Tab "This Day...In Jewish History " is part of the study program for the Jewish History Study Group in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.



• A point of clarification. If anybody wants to get to the Torah site, they do not have to go thru Temple Judah. They can use http://DownhomeDavarTorah.blogspot.com

• and that will take them right to it.



The William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary annotated by Jeff Goodlove is available at the Farmer's Daughter's Market , (319) 294-7069, 495 Miller Rd, Hiawatha, IA , http://www.fdmarket.com/

Birthdays on this date; James Lewis, Carl Q. Langenberg, Julia Hughes, Dianna L. Hosford, Wallace H. Goodlove, Harold L. Godlove, Mary A. Gatewood

I Get email:

In a message dated 10/26/2010 6:18:50 P.M. Central Daylight Time, melech3@mchsi.com writes:



As to Jews and farming; in many places in Europe, Jews were forbidden from owning land. Also, there were prohibitions on Jews hiring Christians to work for them. In a time when farming was a manual activity, this would have been an additional detriment. As to cattle dealers - they were middle men; a position that Jews held in many different places which made them the lubricant for commercial activities. A soybean broker; as soybeans have become more prevalent in the food chain, there has been debate as to whether or not Soybeans (or foods containing them) are Kosher for Passover. Jews- we never run out of questions! Look forward to meeting you some day.

Mitchell Levin





Mitchell, I hope you are all taking precautions and staying safe after the news of the packages found to have been sent from Yemen on Friday. I was watching the large TV screen we have at the merc from the soybean options pit and getting news alerts on my cell phone. As this appears to have been packages being sent to the Chicago area synagogues this hits close to home for the Jewish community here. The calmness and resiliency that I have witnessed is remarkable. No changes were made in Friday night services.

I am not sure about whether soybeans are kosher for Passover or not but the trading of them by Orthodox, and reformed Jews definitely is, except on holidays.:) I likewise look forward to meeting you someday. Jeff Goodlove.



On This Day…

October 31, 1517

Martin Luther posted his famous 95 theses on the door of the castle church at Wittenberg on October 31, 1517. Precipitated by the papacy’s attempt to finance the building of St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome by the thologically dubious means of selling indulgences.[1] The Medici Pope, Leo X, had authorized John Tetzel, a traveling friar, to sell indulgences in Germany of finance the building of the largest, most ornate church in Christendom. The practice of selling indulgences allowed the Church not only to raise money for buildings cathedrals and hospitals, but also to finance crusades against the Muslims.[2] Copies of the 95 theses were quickly spread throughout Europe and unleashed a storm of controversy. [1][3] Even when Martin Luther broke away from the Catholic Church and at first reached out kindly to the Jews, his benevolence changed to venom when the Jews did not convert as he had anticipated. Luther wrote: “What shall we Christians do with this damned, rejected race of Jews? First , their synagogues should be set on fire…Secondly, their homes should likewise bge broken down and destroyed…Thirdly, they should be deprived of their prayer-books and Talmuds…etc., etc.” [2][4]

1519 Jews Expelled from Regensburg.[5]

1519 Jews expelled from Ratisbon, Germany.[6]

1519

Erasmus’ second edition Novum Testamentum (1519) served as a basis for Luther’s German New Testament (1522)[7]

• 1519: Martin Luther leads Protestant Reformation and challenges the doctrine of ‘Servitus Judaeorum’ “…to deal kindly with the Jews and to instruct them to come over to us”. [8]



• 1520: Pope Leo X allows the Jews (Daniel Bomberg)[1][9] to print the Talmud in Venice.[2][10]

1521: Spain conqueres the Aztecs.[11]

Aztec sculpture of Chicomecoatl. Mexico, 1350-1521.[12]



















Stone sculpture of a deity, probably Xochipilli, Aztec (1350-1521). Mexico.[13]



Aztec artwork, Spanish documents, and archaeology all tell us that sacrice was central to Aztec religion. From mild bloodletting to violent death, sacrifice offered thanks to the gods while maintaining the natural order of the world. Rulers also used the threat of sacrifice to intimidate peoples under their control including Aztec citizens. They also encouraged the beliefd that it was an honor to sacrifice one’s life to help preserve the world and its order.[14]





[15]

Sherri Maxson translates the Aztec calendar at the Field Museum.

October 31, 1753

Governor Robert Dinwiddie, of Virginia, sends a force led by George WASHINGTON TO DEMAND French withdrawal from the Ohio Territory.[16]



George Washington’s diary of the canoe trip with William Crawford (6th great grandfather) and William Harrison, 5th great grandfather)

George Washington’s Journal :

October 31, 1770: Went out a Hunting & met the Canoe at the Mouth of the big Kanhawa distant only 5 Miles makg. the whole distance from Fort Pitt accordg. to my Acct. 266 Miles.[17]



George Washington’s Journal: October 3lst, 1770: —I sent the canoe down about five miles, to the junction of the two rivers, that ~5, tile Kenhawa with the Ohio, and set out upon a hunting party to view the land. We steered nearly east for about eight or nine miles, themi bore southwardly and westwardly, till we came to our camp at the confluence of the rivers. ‘The land from the rivers ap­peared but indifferent, rind very broken ; whether these ridges may not be those that divide the waters of the Ohio from the Kenhawa, is not certain, but I believe they are; if so, the lands may yet be good; if not, that which lies beyond tile river bottoms, is worth but little.



October 31, 1785





October 31, 1850: Martin married Marie UNKNOWN about 1906 in ,,NE. Marie was born about 1864 in Alsace,Lorraine,Germany.



Martin next married Catharina Barbara FRITSCH on April 3, 1877 in Muhlbach,Munster,Colmar,Upper Rhine,Alsace. Catharina was born on October 31, 1850.



Children from this marriage were:

M i. Johann Martin GUTLEBEN was born on May 25, 1879 in Muhlbach,Munster,Colmar,Upper Rhine,Alsace and died in 1900 in ,,NE at age 21.

Anna Catharina GUTLEBEN was born on May 30, 1880 in Muhlbach,Munster,Colmar,Upper Rhine,Alsace.

Anna married Ferdinand MEIERJURGEN on November 29, 1905 in NE. Ferdinand was born about 1880.[18]





Mon. October 31, 1864

Mustered for pay at 7 am[19] got a letter

From F. Hunter[20][21]



October 31, 1895

Oscar Goodlove was unloading a load of lumber last Tuesday, when his horses became frightened and ran down 4th street and around onto 5th, back on main to 4th street and around onto 5th, back on main to 4th again, and when they passed Jenkins livery barn Billy Keithley caught them by the bits and went with them when they went around the corner, running them into the hitching post by Tom’s blacksmith shop and stopping them without injury to either horses or wagon. It was very courageous of Billy’s part.[22]



October 31, 1900: On board convoy 29 was Isaac Gottlieb born October 31, 1900, in Dzwatoszycs, Poland. [23]



The convoy contained 435 women and 565 men. The age is unknown for 130 women and 145 men. Among the 725 deportees whose age we know, 122 were children under 17 (71 girls and 51 boys). The largest age group among the men was the late thirties (157 in this group); among the women, the thirties (87 were between 31 and 40.)



This list is on onionskin. It was typed partly with blue carbon and partly with black, and is in very poor condition. It is divided into seven sublists.



1. Drancy—111 names. Among them were single people, including children, couples; and families.

2. Various camps==29 names. These were twenty four men, women, and children from Le Vernet and five from Gurs.

3. Belfort==9 names, all Dutch.

4. Unoccupied Zone—283 names. Family and first nbames were given, without any not of age or nationality. There were many families and many children.

5. Volunteers—32 names, without date of birth. Some had to have been children. The majority came from the camp of Rivesaltes.

6. Les Milles camp—488 names. One page with 16 names (number 524 to 540) is missing; 81 names are crossed out. The page covered letters SZ to WE. Many children were on this list.

7. Last minute departures—77 names from various camps in the south. Among them were families. Among these last minute departures there were undoubtedly mothers who fought to leave with their children from whom they had been separated.



On September 7, 1942, Ernst Heinrichsohn composed the telex (XXVb-155) which his superior officer Heinz Rothke signed. It announced to Eichmann, to the IOnspector of Concentration Camps, and to Auschwitz that convoy D 901/24, carrying 1,000 Jews, left the station at Le Bourget/Drancy at 8:55 AM under the supervision of Sergeant Kruger.



The convoy arrived in Auschwitz on September 9. Before arrival, an undetermined number of men were selected in Kosel (see Convoy 24). In Auschwitza itself, 59 men were selected and given numbers 63164 through 63222; 52 women were given numbers 19243 through 19294. The rest were immediately gassed.



The registry of the Ministry for War Veterns shows 12 survivors, all men. In Belgium we found nbames of 22 additional deportees, also all men, who returned to Belgium in 1945 without going first through France. Thus there were 34 survivors of record.[24]





October 31, 1907

Mr. and Mrs. William Goodlove attended the reception given for the minister of Prairie Chapel at his home in Marion, Saturday.[25]



• July 10, 1940 to October 31, 1940: The Battle of Britain.



October 31, 2009



I get Email!

From Jay;

First games of Lee's Senior year regular season:

He's playing both defenseman on JV and left wing forward on Varsity.

Tonight's score:
JV CR 2 Dubuque 1
Varsity: CR 4 Dubuque 2 (check the stats later this weekend, Lee got an assist and will be on the Varsity stats!)

http://www.midwesthighschoolhockey.com/

The new owners of the CR Roughriders donated about $9,000 to buy new uniforms for all CR teams and we all changed our names to the Rough Riders. Pretty Cool. I'll send pics when I can get one.

We head to Quad Cities for 12:00 games on Saturday and 10:30 on Sunday.

Hawks are on at 11:00 vs. Indiana... GO HAWKS

Sorry, I couldn't find Brian's email.


Gazette writeup, Lee's Hockey Team pic on page 4

The Gazette 10/31/2009, Page B03
New-look prep team on C.R. ice


By Jeff Johnson

The Gazette

CEDAR RAPIDS — He was cool with being interviewed and videotaped, but Matt Larson had a request first.

HOCKEY

“Hey, can I go change into our new uniform?” the Cedar Rapids RoughRiders captain asked.

No, not those RoughRiders. These are the high school RoughRiders the Midwest High School Hockey League season with a home game last night against Dubuque, then travel to the Quad Cities today and Sunday to Quad Cities.

You might remember them as the Cedar Rapids Mustangs.

The new owners of the United States Hockey League RoughRiders are taking much more of a hands-on approach with the youth hockey pro grams at the Cedar Rapids Ice Arena. All team nicknames have been changed to RoughRiders.

New jerseys were purchased for the high school team, and players are ex cited about them. “I think the biggest change is the boys finally are able to come home to a rink that they know is theirs,” said first-year head coach Chad Horner. “You look at this place now, The Stable, all the green painting. And now with the name, I think there’s a real sense of

► ROUGHRIDERS, PAGE 4B

________________________________________
Chad Horner

Prep coach

Liz Martin/The Gazette

The RoughRiders high school hockey team, including Quin Kavanaugh (face visible), huddle in the locker room after the first period of its game against the Dubuque Devils last night at the Cedar Rapids Ice Arena. The Riders won, 4-2.

Second part of article...
The Gazette 10/31/2009, Page B04
Continued from ROUGHRIDERS on Page B03


From Jeff
What, no penalty time for Lee? Can’t wait to go back to Dubuque!



From Sherry,

Here is my order -
I'd like to get:
403 Reindeer Votive $10
404 Gingerbread man Votive $10
405 Snowman Votive $10
Total $30 (shipping, tax?)

From Jeff
Umm, Sherry, that is what I was going to get you for Christmas, or Hanukah, or whatever it is we will be celebrating this year. J The University of Illinois School of Engineering thanks you!

From Susan
I look forward to the days in history when Jews are not being killed, maimed, deported or tortured. Today is one of those days. I marvel at how we survived.

From Jeff
It is a testament to their faith. Thank you.





Shirat Shalom, Elgin where I was welcomed with open arms in 2009. I intend to go back.



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

[1] Trial by Fire by Harold Rawlings, page 72.

[2] Trial by Fire by Harold Rawlings, page 72

[3] [1] Groller Encyclopedia of Knowledge, vol. 11, pg 405

[4] [2] Jewish Jewels, March 2008

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

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

[7] Trial by Fire by Harold Rawlings, page 68

[8] www.wikipedia.org

• [9] [1] The Changing Face of Anti-Semitism From Ancient Times to the Present Day, by Walter Laqueur, page 59.

[10] [2] www.wikipedia.our

[11] True Caribbean Pirates, HISTI, 7/9/2010

[12] The Field Museum, Photo by Jeff Goodlove 12/27/2009

[13] The Field Museum, Photo by Jeff Goodlove, 12/27/2009

[14] The Field Museum, Photo by Jeff Goodlove, 12/27/2009

[15] The Field Museum, Photo by Jeff Goodlove 12/27/2009

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

[17] GW’s calculations on the distance from Fort Pitt to the mouth of the GreatKanawha at present-day Point Pleasant, W.Va., agree substantially with thoseof Capt. Harry Gordon, chief engineer of the Northern Department in NorthAmerica. In Gordon’s table of distances it is logged as 266¼ miles (Pownall,

Topographical Description, i66).

[18] Descendents of Elias Gutleben, Alice Email, May 2010.

[19] October 31. Mustered At Martinsburg, West Virginia.

[20] Dr. Franklin C. Hunter, son of Milton Reader Hunter and Nancy Jane Goodlove, was born 1846 in Clark County Ohio. In the 1860 census he was in the Marion, Iowa Twp. He is Conrad Goodlove’s grandson.

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

[22] Winton Goodlove papers.

[23] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944. Page 251.

[24] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944. Pages 251-252.

[25] Winton Goodlove papers.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

This Day in Goodlove History, October 30

This Day in Goodlove History, October 30
By Jeffery Lee Goodlove
jefferygoodlove@aol.com

The Goodlove/Godlove/Gottlieb families and their connection to the Cohenim/Surname project:
• http://www.familytreedna.com/group-join.aspx?Group=Goodlove

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/ Updates are requested.


The William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary annotated by Jeff Goodlove is available at the Farmer's Daughter's Market , (319) 294-7069, 495 Miller Rd, Hiawatha, IA , http://www.fdmarket.com/

Birthdays on this date:Nicholas Taliaferro, frank smith, Emmaline Smith, Martha M. Reeves, Jean A. Montgomery, Richard C. Marugg, John H. Kirkpatrick, Angeline C. Harrison, Scott C. Gray, Oliver C. Godlove, Ernest Godlove, Emma Godlove, Luann Agnew

Weddings on this date; Rachel Crawford and Nathaniel Silvey, Lenora A. Mack and Forrest C. Godlove

George Washington Diaries of canoe trip with William Crawford (6th great grandfather) and William Harrison (5th greatgrandfather).
October 30, 1770. Incampd Early just by the old Shawna Town distant from our last no more than 15 Miles.
Shawnee Town appears on Lewis Evans’s i 766 map of the middle colonies just north of the confluence of the Ohio and the Great Kanawha rivers.


October 30th, 1770—We set out about fifty minutes past seven, the weather being windy and cloudy, after a night of rain. After about two miles, we came to the head of a bottom, in the shape of a horse-shoe, which I judge to be about six miles round; the beginning of the bottom appeared to be very good land, but the lower part did not seem so friendly. The upper part of the bottom we encamped on, was exceedingly good, bitt the lower part rather thin land, covered with beech. In it is some clear meadow land, and a pond or lake. ‘This bottom begimis just below the rapid at the point of the Great Bend. The river from this place narrows very considerably, and for five or six miles is scarcely more than one hundred and fifty or two hundred yards over. The water yesterday, except the rapid at the Great Bend, and some swift places about the islands, was quite dead, and as easily passed one way as the other; the land in general appeared level and good.
About ten miles below our enc3mpment, and a little lower down than the bottom described to lie in the slmape of a horse-shoe, comes in a small creek on the west side, and opposite to this on the east, begins a body of flat land, which the Indians tell us runs quite across the fork to the falls in the Kenhawa, and must at least be three days’ walk across ; if so, the flat land contained therein, must be very considerable. A mile or two below this, we landed, and after getting a little distance from the river, we came, without rising, to a pretty lively kind of land, grown up with hickory and oak of different kinds, intermingled with walnut. We also found many shallow ponds, the sides of which, abounding with grass, invited innumerable quantities of wild fowl, among which I saw a couple of birds in size between a swat) amId a goose, and in color some what between the two, being darker than time young swan, and of a more sooty color. ‘The cry of these birds was as singular as the birds themselves ; I never heard any noise resembling it before. About five miles below this, we encamped in a bottom of good land, which holds tolerably flat and rich for some distance

October 25, 1771; Assisting Capt. Crawford with his surveys until October 30.


October 30, 1781

“Account of salt due the following persons for beef, flour, pork, etc., purchased by Colonel John Gibson’s orders for the use of the troops in the western department since the first of August, 1781, to the 20th of October,
following: Bushels. Pecks.
“To David Rankin, for three beef cattle. (Three bushels paid by
Gen. Irvine) 5 2
Edward Cook, for 16 hundred weight flour 4
Mr. Wells, for 1.000 weight flour 2 2
Col. Carman and Company, for 8 hundred do 2
Henry Spear, for 1,000 weight of do 2 2
“ Richard McMachan, balances for beef 2 2
Van Camp, for 4 hundred of flour 1
B. Cuykendall, for 2 hundred weight of do 2
“ Thomas Roberts, for one bullock 1 1
Mr. White, for one hundred weight of flour 1
Jacob Bausman, for 4 hundred pounds beef 2
Mr. Moore,(Husband of the 5th great grandaunt) for one bullock 1 3
Sam’l Sample, one bullock 2 2
Mr. Downing, for one bullock 2
“ Robert Lawdon, for 2 hundred weight flour 2


“I do certify that I have purchased, received and delivered the above quan¬tity of beef and flour to John Irwin, D. C. Gen’l of Issues, and as my receipts are given to the different persons to be paid in salt; and as there is no conti¬nental salt here, I beg that Gen’l Irvine will use his influence, if possible, to obtain the quantity of salt, so as I may be able to pay off the debts according
to contract. SAM’L SAMPLE.
“I do certify that I received of Mr. Samuel Sample beef and flour to the full amount of the within account for the use of the continental troops.
“ForT PITT, October 30, 1781. GE0. WALLACE, A. C. I.”

October 30, 1806
In 1806, on their way to the Falls of the Ohio and then Washington after the expedition, Lewis and Clark stopped in Vincennes; Lewis wrote from Vincennes on October 30 to Secretary of War Henry Dearborn. The expedition explored lands of the Louisiana Purchase and the Pacific Northwest, 1803-1806.

1807
Cutlope, Francis: 1-1

1807 Lower District of Hampshire County-John Slane
Hampshire County, Virginia (WV) Personal Property Tax Lists 1800-1814 by Vicki Bidinger Horton =
(Is this “Francis Gottlob” on the 1807 Personal Property tax lists for Hampshire County? JG)

Eliza FOLEY, b. 1807 was one of early births in Clark Co.


A brief history of Moorefield Township where Conrad settled appeared in “The History of Clark County “Ref. 9.4). Reference is made herein to the Newlove’s in Harmony Township which is adjacent to Clark on the South. I find no link to Goodlove at this time. Simon Kenton and George Rogers Clark are the heroes of Clark County and Moorefield Township.

Conrad would have learned from Caty’s brother, Theophylus, of the great Indian-White Council held in 1807 at Springfield (Ref 9.5) which we discovered in an old newspaper article at the Springfield Library. Conrad would have remembered George Washington as he was just seven years old when Jefferson became second president in 1803.

In 1807, two men named Bowyer and Morgan, brothers in law, had settled in the southwestern part of the county, and made a clearing. As the country was open, the Indians, in their hunting expeditions, built lodges near by, which Morgan one day burned. This exasperated the Indians, who sought revenge in shooting Bowyer, whom, by accident, they had mistaken for Morgan. The killing was done in sight of the wives of the two men, who, with their children, fled and hid in a thicket. Five Indians passed close by them and approached the body, and finding thay had shot the wrong man, passed on without carrying off any plunder or committing any depredations. It gave geat alarm to the country. Morgan left the country, and many returned to Kentucky. Henry Weaver, long an old resident of Urbana, then a mere lad, was among the few who refused to leave. A deputatuion from Urbana, among them Joseph Vance, went down to William Lemon’s to make note of matters and bury the body. They reported that the killing indicated a prvate grudge, and that there was no cause for general alarm. Mary Lemon rode to Urbgana on horseback behind Joseph Vance, as was the custom. In December of that year (1807), Joseph Vance and Mary Lemon were married. Joseph(4), Joseph Coleville(3), David(2), Andrew(1).
The killing of Bowyer caused very general alarm, and brought in messages of peace from the Indians. A general meeting of the Indians was held at Springfield, and some of the chiefs stopped at Urbana to talk the matter over. Col. Ward and Simon Kenton were present. Ward exhibited great excitement in talk and manner, while Kenton, throughout, remained composed and silent. His knowledge of the Indian character made him take this course and gave an effectiveness to his words when the time came for him to speak.

1807
Springfield was Scene of Great Indian-White Council Held In 1807
Most import of the historical happening that have occurred in the confines of Springfield and one that may have averted an Indian war that would have blotted Springfield, from the map was the great council held in fall of 1807 on ground at the northwest intersection of Main and Spring st., now occupied by the Springfield Rug and Furniture Co.

Local historians have disputed over this council and there are different accounts of what transpired. It is agreed that Tecumseh and McPherson, the two Indian chiefs of the day met there with leaders in the western part of the state to discuss Indian outrages that had driven the settlers around Springfield into a state of terror, sent families flying southward to Kentucky while others had taken refuge in Springfield and stronger houses like the Foos Tavern and a building at the southeast corner of High and Main sts. Had been fortified as citadels

The cover page of the historical section of this issue depicts the scene of the council with Tecumseh disdainfully rejecting the pipe of Governor Edward Tiffin and using his own tomahawk pipe.

Simon Kenton, noted pioneer of the west, present at the council, wanted to kill Tecumseh, arguing that he would cause trouble in future, but his proposal was rejected, according to the Draper manuscripts.

The outrages referred to included killing of a man named Myers near Urbana, the threatening demeanor of an Indian who had called at the Elliott home west of Springfield, close to what was later the Peter Sintz farm. The Indian driven away from the farm, is supposed to have been the one whom a few days later, fired at Mrs. Elliott, the bullet passing through the front of her sunbonnet and grazing her throat.

All accounts agree that Tecumseh, McPherson, Roundhead, and other Indian chiefs led parties of warriors to the council and were met there by representatives of the whites that after three days, the Indians left, having satisfied the whites that as a people they were not responsible for the outrages.

Local historians differ as to the precise location of the council. The Daughters of the American Revolution have placed the tablet commemorative of the event on the Tuttle Bros. Store, which stood where the double log tavern of Griffith Foos then was.

Dr. John Ludlow in the Ludlow papers written in the 70’s, largely relied upon R.C. Woodward, an historian, who wrote in 1852 when the early settlers were still living, and is said y Albert Slager, curator of the Clark County Historical Society to have supplemented his story by talks with the father of Cooley McCord, great grandson of Simon Kenton, now resident in Springfield. Beers in county history follows Ludlow and places the council in the sugar grove across the street from the Foos Tavern. Old residents locate the sugar grove also on the slope the hill north of Main st.

Ludlow an Beers speak of General Benjamin Whiteman, Maj. Moore, Walter Smallwood, Captain Ward and Simon Kenton, John Daugherty, Dr. Richard Hunt and Griffith Foos as being at the council, but do not mention Governor Tiffin. The Ludlow and Beers accounts say Tecumseh threw away the pipe of Dr Hunt, and Hunt shrank back in consternation before Tecumseh’s fierce disgust at the dirty, cheap looking pipe.

Theophilos McKinnon, a resident of London in 1880 sent to the Piqua Battle a paper stating he came to Springfield in 1803 and that Gov. Tiffin had called the council, and when it was seen the Indians were armed, had asked that they remove their arms. Tecumseh refused to part with his tomahawk, which was later seen to be his pipe also. Then Hunt offered his pipe to Tiffin, who offered it to Tecumseh, with the result that Tecumseh hurled it over his shoulder into the bushes behind him with such a fierce ejaculation of disgust that Hunt retreated hurriedly.

It may have been at this juncture that Simon Kenton advised the killing of Tecumseh on the ground that he would later make trouble. Albert Slager has this information relative to Tecumseh in response to inquiries made of the Wisconsin Historical Society, which quotes the number of the Draper massacre.

McKinnons account upon which the presence of Tiffin is based was published in the Springfield Republic of Aug. 12th 1880 and is a well written article. How the presence of Tiffin, the governor could have escaped mention in the other local historical accounts is a puzzle. It would have seemed to have been from the viewpoint of that day the outstanding feature of the council.
McKinnon’s account seems plausible since outrages would be reported to the governor, would cause him concern and he would e the natural party to call the council and the Indians would respond far more readily to a call from the governor than from a body of citizens. The fact that many of the Indians came from as far as Fort Wayne, show it was taken seriously. The governor having called the council and brought the chiefs that far could hardly disregard either the Indians orthe fears of the whites and his proper place would have been at the council as McKinnon says he was.

How the fact should have slipped the memory of the men who talked to Woodward and those who handed down traditions to Ludlow is a mystery. The latter dwell upon Hunt offering the pipe. Tecumseh seems to have filled the eyes of the assemblage to the exclusion of all else and if Tiffin was there no better measurement of the natural power of Tecumseh can be found than that he obscured Governor Tiffin who was among the most ( ) governors of the state.


The Account of Theophilus Mckinnon

Aug. 6, 1880,

To the Members of the Pioneer Association:

"When I learned of the proposed
meeting of pioneers to be held near Springfield this month, my
great wish was that I might be one of the number there
assembled: but circumstances are such as will prevent my
attendance. I have some recollections of the early days and
doings in this region, which I will give to the meeting on
paper, if I cannot give them in person. I was born in Harrison
Co., Ky., in Nov., 1795. My father, with part of his family
came to Ohio in the fall of 1802, and settled on Buck Creek
north of Springfield. At that time I was sick and unable to
come, so father left me with my mother and younger children in Kentucky
until the next spring, when he returned and brought us to Ohio.
Thus, it will be seen, my residence in Ohio is as old as the
State itself. On our way up to where my father had selected a
home, we passed through Dayton, then a small town; through what
was called Tapman's Prairie, and crossed Mad River at old Indian
town. This river my mother said, was certainly rightly named,
for it was such a rapid stream. Three men -- David Lowry,
Jonathan Donnell and John Denny -- lived near there. We stopped
overnight with My. Denny. Donnell afterward hung himself. We
again crossed Mad River, and continued on our way up to Buck
Creek. The first man we met was Robert Renick, and soon
afterward we met Col. William Ward, a leading man of that day,
and afterward Clerk of the Court at Urbana. One day, soon after
we settled on Buck Creek, and father and the older boys were
away from the house, four Indians -- two young men and two old
ones -- came to our house and called for their dinners. Mother
provided a dinner for them, and while they were eating she asked
one of the young men if they were at the burning of Col.
Crawford. He said that the two of the older ones were. She
then told him that Col. Crawford was her grandfather. When he
notified the other ones of that fact they all immediately
stopped eating and appeared somewhat alarmed; but she told them
to go on with their eating and not be uneasy. She then asked
them if they could tell her about the death of Maj. Harrison.
They told her that he had been squibbed to death with powder at
Wapatomica, near Zanesfield, Logan Co. She then told them that
Harrison was her father. This report fully corroborated one
given by a man named Trover, I think, who was a prisoner at the
same time with Maj. Harrison. He said he had seen Harrison's
body black and powder-burned.
Another Indian trouble was in the time of Gov. Tiffin. He was advised of coming trouble and he sent word to Tecumseh at Wapakoneta to meet him at council at Springfield, with eighty warriors. The picked men of the (Sha---) tribe. I remember one of them in particular, a man by name of Goodhunter who had formerly camped near our house, when on a hunting expedition. He was a fine a specimen of perfect physical man as I ever saw. The council was held and the pipe of peace was smoked. The following incident occurred in connection with the smoking: A Dr. Hunt had a clay pipe and Gov. Tiffin used it for the occasion. When he had filled the pipe and started it, he passed it to Tecumseh who looked at it a moment, and then throwing it away he brought forth his tomakawk-pipe, and after starting it handed it to Gov. Tiffin. I heard Tecumseh's speech as he made it through an interpreter, and I never heard a finer orator than he appeared to be. The first merchants in Springfield were two Frenchmen named Dubangh and Lucroy. They had their goods in a log cabin between what is now Limestone and Market streets, an Main streets, on Main street. Their goods were better suited to the Indian trade than to any other. When they left, a man by the name of Samuel Simington came on with a stock, and he built the first frame house in Springfield, on the southwest corner of Limestone and Main streets, where Baldwin's building now stands. Siminton afterward sold out to Pierson Spining and went to New Carlisle, and built mills on Honey Creek. The first tavern-keeper was Griffith Foos, who kept on the corner of Main and Spring streets. He had one border for several years that I remember very well. He owned a great deal of land around there. He was a fine looking man, wearing very heavy black side whiskers, but having a head of hair as white as snow. He always took special pains to keep his hair and whiskers in order. The first camp meeting held in that region, and the first one I ever attended, was held about where the County Infirmary now stands. It was conducted by two brothers named Thomas and Richard Clark. They were nicknamed "Newlights." Their hearers got the jerks, both men and women, and kept on jrking until they were exhausted. One Jack Eeles, said to have been the wickedest man in that county, went to one of their meetings drunk, making fun of them and claiming that their jerking was all a sham. But the jerks got hold on Jack and got him down and would not let fo of him. He became so exhausted that his friends had to carry him home. Jack afterward went into the army, was in the war of 1812, and was killed at the battle of Lundy's Lane, in July, 1814. My father was the first settler on Buck Creek, (---) Lagonda. He planted the first apple orchard in that part of the country, and some of the trees
were still standing a year or two ago
James Shipman was the first tailor in Springfield. Walter Smallwood was the first blacksmith. Cooper Ludlow was the first shoemaker. James (---), the proprietor of Springield, lived in a double log cabin which stood on the hill opposite Barnett's mill, near where the public school building now stands.
I never saw but two deformed Indians. One of these had no under jaw. The other one, called Bateast, had a monster of a nowe. If you wish to see how his nose appeared, just take a common-sized turnip, cut it in two, and place a half on each side of a large raddish, and then you can see Bateast's nose.
He and his brother-in-law, Roundhead , and Goodhunter all went off and joined the British army and never came back. Roundhead lived at a little town now called Roundhead, in the southwest corner of Hardin County. Bateast's home was at a place a few miles west of Roundhead, then called Bateasttown. In 1803 or 1804, Congress passed a law donating 3 per cent of all money received from sale of lands for use on roads. This donation was called the 3 per cent fund. One Capt. Moore and his brother Thomas, in 1805 took a contract to open a road from Franklinton to Springfield. When they got within a few miles of Springfield with the road, they made a frolic of the job, and invited all the people around to come and help tem, so they might go into Springfield in one day. The people turned out and put the road through in one day and that night they had a big super and ball at Foos', which was a grand affair. There was great rejoicing that the road was done.
Thomas Moore drove the first hogs East from this region. He bought (--) drove from the people on credit. He bought some from one lady named Nancy Reed, promising to bring her a silk dress patten from Baltimore as payment for her hogs. He drove his hogs to Baltimore, but as his expenses on the trip were more than the original cost of the hogs, he lost money, and could not pay in full for the hogs when he got home. But he brought Nancy her silk dress and she had the honor of wearing the first silk in this part of the country, and at the same time, the satisfaction of getting payment in full for her hogs, a thing which nobody else could say. But Moore paid all a proportional part, and promised the remainder as soon as he could get it. It was several years before he made payment of these debts, but he did it after he got back from serving with Hull in his campaigns. He had saved enough out of his wages to cancel his hog debts. Moore lived and died on the farm where he first settled.
During the first years of our life there, there was only one company of militia in all that region now comprising Clark, Champaign and Logan Counties, so thinly was it populated. My fathers's place was the usual drill ground and I knew every man in all that territory. By 1812, the country was so well settled that there were nine companies, commanded by the following Captains: Black, McCord, Vance, Barrett, Lemon, Cox, Kiser, Stewart, and one other whose name I have forgotten. Nearly sixty years ago, I helped to survey
all the islands in the Mississippi River from the mouth of the
Des Moines River to the mouth of the Illinois. In my early
days, I crossed the Alleghany Mountains twelve times on
horseback. In my early days, I crossed the Alleghany Mountains twelve times on horseback. As may be known from a statement of my birth, I am nearly eighty-five years of age, and was four years old at the death of George Washington. My health is tolerably good. At times I feel very well, and at other times somewhat feeble. Some years ago, my eyesight began to fail, and for the last ten years I have been entirely blind. I claim to be the first man who named "Honest Old Abe" for President. I lacked but a few days of being old enough to vote at James Monroe's first election in 1816. My first vote was for Monroe in 1820, at his second election, when he received the entire vote of the Electoral College, less one.
My votes for Presidents have been as follows: 1824 Adams; 1828 Clay; 1832 Clay; 1836, Harrison; 1840, Harrison; 1844, Clay; 1848, Taylor; 1852, Scott; 1856, Fremont; 1860, Lincoln; 1864, Lincoln; 1868, Grant; 1876, 1872, Grant; 1876, Hayes; and in 1880 I hope to vote for Garfield, which would make me sixteen Presidential votes.
Respectfully, Theophilus McKinnon."
London Ohio.

1807

The first steamboat by Robert Fulton in 1807.


Sun. October 30, 1864
In camp all day looked at the town
Had inspection quite a nice day

Friday, October 29, 2010

This Day in Goodlove History, October 29

• This Day in Goodlove History, October 29

• By Jeffery Lee Goodlove

• jefferygoodlove@aol.com



• Surnames associated with the name Goodlove have been spelled the following different ways; Cutliff, Cutloaf, Cutlofe, Cutloff, Cutlove, Cutlow, Godlib, Godlof, Godlop, Godlove, Goodfriend, Goodlove, Gotleb, Gotlib, Gotlibowicz, Gotlibs, Gotlieb, Gotlob, Gotlobe, Gotloeb, Gotthilf, Gottlieb, Gottliebova, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlow, Gutfrajnd, Gutleben, Gutlove



• The Chronology of the Goodlove, Godlove, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlieb (Germany) etc., and Allied Families of Battaile, (France), Crawford (Scotland), Harrison (England), Jackson (Ireland), LeClere (France), Lefevre (France), McKinnon (Scotland), Plantagenets (England), Smith (England), Stephenson (England?), Vance (Ireland from Normandy), and Winch (England, traditionally Wales), including correspondence with -George Rogers Clarke, George Washington, and Thomas Jefferson.



• The Goodlove/Godlove/Gottlieb families and their connection to the Cohenim/Surname project:

• New Address! http://www.familytreedna.com/public/goodlove/default.aspx



• This project is now a daily blog at:

• http://thisdayingoodlovehistory.blogspot.com/

• Goodlove Family History Project Website:

• http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/g/o/o/Jeffery-Goodlove/



• Books written about our unique DNA include:

• “Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People” by Jon Entine.



• “ DNA & Tradition, The Genetic Link to the Ancient Hebrews” by Rabbi Yaakov Kleiman, 2004.



• My thanks to Mr. Levin for his outstanding research and website that I use to help us understand the history of our ancestry. Go to http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/ for more information. “For more information about the Weekly Torah Portion or the History of Jewish Civilization go to the Temple Judah Website http://www.templejudah.org/ and open the Adult Education Tab "This Day...In Jewish History " is part of the study program for the Jewish History Study Group in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.



• A point of clarification. If anybody wants to get to the Torah site, they do not have to go thru Temple Judah. They can use http://DownhomeDavarTorah.blogspot.com

• and that will take them right to it.





The William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary annotated by Jeff Goodlove is available at the Farmer's Daughter's Market , (319) 294-7069, 495 Miller Rd, Hiawatha, IA , http://www.fdmarket.com/

Birthdays on this date; Cheryl G. Sargent, Jacob C. Pyle, Mary L. Marugg, Lee R. Gibbons

I Get Email!

In a message dated 10/24/2010 3:43:05 P.M. Central Daylight Time



A point of clarification. If anybody wants to get to the Torah site, they do not have to go thru Temple Judah. They can use http://DownhomeDavarTorah.blogspot.com

and that will take them right to it. Again, thanks for your kind words. Mitchell Levin



Mitchell, What a nice site! It is a good way to understand the Jewish way of life and in this reading, death. I hope others will take a look at this on a weekly basis as a way of getting a better understanding of the Torah and a new way to look at the “Old Testament”. Jeff

This Day…

October 29, 1652

The Massachusetts Bay Colony declares itself an independent commonwealth.

1653

There is no Westmoreland W VA. Westmoreland VA formed 1653 from Northumberland, VA.[1]



October 29, 1769:

No. 2435, Moses Crawford, Franklin Township, Fayette County, Penn. 302.1/2 acres, As & All.

Surveyed October 29, 1769 and Patented September 28, 1789.

Page 16, 74.

Another listed, which may be the same land, is located very near the Dunbar Township line. (May be an overlap of township on map).

No. 3453, Moses Crawford, Dunbar Township, Fayette County, Penn. 302 ½ acres, As & All. Surveyed October 29, 1769 and Pat. Date, September 28, 1789. A Wt. to accept.

Moses sold his rights before the patent date, to Andrew Byers.



Whether this plot was provided to him by his grandfather is not certain; but by all means should be considered, only a short distance from his father’s plantation ‘Crawford’s Delight’, and ‘Stewart’s Crossing’, also his grandfather’s ‘Spring Gardens’. There are no other surveys on the original survey map to suggest that Richard and
William (half-brother to Richard and Moses), ever was provided land by their grandfather, however, it is possible they may have received land located elsewhere[2]



October 29, 1769

[3]

No. 2435, Moses Crawford, Franklin Township, Fayette County, Penn. 302 ½ acres, As and All. Surveyed October 29 and Patented Sept. 28, 1789, page 16, 74.[4]

At the concession stand at the Washington Home at Mt. Vernon I purchased a copy of “George Washington’s Diaries,” an abridgment by Dorothy Turohig. She gives an explanation behind the messages and events which Washington describes (Ref36). Of particular interest this writer points out that “This land which William and Valentine Crawford had surveyed for the Washingtons in 1769 is in the vicinity of Perryopolis, PA, in what is now Fayette County, PA.” (Ref 33.9) I believe this is the parcels she is referring to.[5]



George Washington’s Journal:

October 29, 1770: Went round what is calld the Great Bend[6] & Campd two Miles below it distant from our last Incampment abt. 29 Miles.



October 29th 1770.—The tedious ceremony, which time Indians observe in their counsollings and speeches, detained us till nine o’clock. Opposite to the creek, just below which we encamped, is a pretty long bottom, and I believe tolerably wide; but about eight or nimie miles below the aforementioned creek, and just below a pavement of rocks on the west side, comes in a creek, with fallen timber at the mouth, on which the Indians say there are wide bottoms and good land. The river bottoms above, from some distance, are very good, and continue so for near half a mile below the creek. ‘The pavement of rocks is only to be seen at low water. About a mile below the mouth of the creek there is another pavement of rocks on the east side, in a kind of sedgy ground. On this creek are many buffaloes, according to the Indians’ account.

Six miles below this comes in a small creek on the west side, at the end of a small naked island, and just above another l~avement of rocks. This creek comes through a bottom of fine land, and opposite to it, on the east side of the river, appears to be a large body of fine land also. At this place begins what they call the Great Bend. Two miles below, on the east side, comes in another creek, just below an island, on the upper point of which are some dead standing trees, and a parcel of white-bodied sycamore; in the mouth of this creek lies a sycamore blown down by the wind. From hence an east line may be run three or four miles ; thence a north line till it strikes the river, which I apprehend would include about three or four thousand acre of valuable land. At the mouth of this creek is the warrior’s path to the Cherokee

country. For two miles and a half below this the Ohio runs a north east course, ammd finishes what they call the Great Bend.







October 29, 1771 George Washington’s Journal: Reach’d Williamsburg before Dinner. And went to the Play in the Afternoon.[7]



October 29, 1777: Colonel von Donop was removed from the Whitall house to the Low house across the dam at Woodbury Creek, where he died on October 29; he was buried with military honors at the lower end of the fort. His grave was later despoiled and his remains reportedly scattered as relics and souvenirs. The Rutgers University Library displays a skull which a New Jersey physician claimed was the colonel’s. But the Rev. Schroeder states that the government of Hesse-Cassel removed von Donop’s remains for reinterment in his own country.[8]



October 29, 1811: With the army resupplied, Ancestor and future President William Henry Harrison resumed his advance to Prophetstown on October 29.[12][13][9]



• October 29, 1833: All Jews except for peddlers and petty traders were granted civic equality in the Germanic domain called Hesse-Cassel. The remainder of Germany took nearly forty years to follow suit. (Perhaps this is why more Goodlove/Godlove’s did not come to America at this time.)[10]



• 1840-1920: The largest mass migration in human history took place between 1840 and 1920 when nearly 40 million people (more than double the U.S. population in 1840) moved from Europe to the United States. These immigrants included 4.5 million Irish spurred on by the devastating effects of the potato famine, 5 million Italians escaping poverty, and 2 million Jews fleeing the pogroms of eastern Europe. [11]





October 29, 1845

From the Draper Collection, 11E, 44-46, can be found a letter from Wm. McCormick to Mr. Draper, dated June 24, 1845, in which he states “My father and mother both died in Fayette Co., PA. The first died in 1818 and my mother in 1821. The former was of the age of nearly 80 and my mother was nearly 74. Mrs. Springer, the widow of Major Harrison was younger than my mother and John Craford was younger than both.” This would indicate that Effie was the oldest child of William and Hanna, being born in about 1746-7, then Sarah ca. 1748 and John in May of 1750. These dates fit all the known proven facts.”[12]





District of Columbia, Washington County, ss:



At an Orphans Court held in and for said county, on this twenty eighth day of October 1845 (October 28, 1845). On motion of Henry Northop, it was proven on open court to the satisfaction of the Court by the deposition of Captain Bedinger and a certificate from the Register of the Law Office at Richmond, Virginia line of the Army of the Revolution and was killed at the surrender of Fort Washington on the 16th day of Nov. 1776. (November 16, 1776) And it was further proven by the letter of Battle Harrison from Columbus, Ohio, and by the deposition of Crawford and Ann Springer that William Harrison who was killed in Crawford’s defeat was the eldest brother of Lt. Battle Harrison and that John Harrison now living is the eldest son of the said William Harrison, all of which is ordered to be certified.

Nathl. Pope Causin.



District of Columbia, Washington County, to wit:

I certify that the aforegoing is a true copy from the Original filed and recorded in the Office of the Register of Wills, for Washington County, agoresaid.

Witness my hand and seal of office, this 29th day of October in the year 1845. (October 29, 1845) Ed. N. Roach, Register.[13]





Sat. October 29, 1864

bought gloves and had a good dinner in

martinsburg its quite a large business

place on Potomac bal & ohio railroad[14]



October 29, 1914

Ethel Goodlove daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Willis Goodlove met with a bad accident yesterday. She came to town with her parents in Ed Andrews automobile. Mr. Goodlove was driving the car and while driving up the street he killed the engine and the auto stopped. Ethel jumped out to crank it up again and though her father told her not to, before he could get out she had given the crank a turn and it flew back, breaking her arm just above the wrist.[15]



1915

The World War I prompts expulsion of 250,000 Jews from Western Russia.



Germans tried to win the support of Jews in Eastern Europe, by promising them liberation from the Russian yoke. Meanwhile the assimilated Jews of Germany showed their patriotism by joining up. 100,000 Jews would fight for the Kaiser. 12,000 German Jewish soldiers were killed in the war. Nearly 30,000 received decorations. But while Jews were tolerated in the German army, many soldiers despised them. [16]



The Leo Frank trial and lynching in Atlanta, Georgia turns the spotlight on anti-Semitism in the United States and leads to the founding of the Anti-Defamation League.[17]



October 29, 1929

The New York Stock Market crashes, with a record of more than 16 million shares traded, on “Black Tuesday.”[18]



• 1930: “Yakov (Jacob) Gutfrajnd, an Ashkenazi Jew, was my gggg grandfather. Levek (Levi) remained in Praszka, as did his son Yakov. However, Yakov's son Shaya (Isaiah) moved to the nearby own of Zloczew, were my grandfather Zulo (an unusual name) was born in 1909. Zulo moved to Paris in about 1930 and changed his name to Jacques. My father, Charles, was born in Paris in 1935, and they all came to the US as refugees in 1949, after WWII. When they arrived in the US, "Jacques Gutfrajnd" became "Jack Goodfriend" They knew that they were Cohens, i.e. the Jewish priestly caste from the tribe of Levi, descended from Aharon, brother of Moses.” [19]





• October 29, 1941: The SS and Lithuanian Police carried out the brutal massacre of those Kovno (Lithuania) Jews who were not “selected” the prior day for work. In groups of a hundred, Jews were stripped naked, marched to the edge of ditches, and then fired upon. Most were killed instantly. Many were left to die slowly of their wounds.

• Einsatkommando reported the killing of 2,008 men, 2920 women and 4,257 children.[20]



• October 29, 1942 Written comments by Winston Churchill excoriating Germany for the systematic extermination of European Jews are read at a London protest meeting chaired by the archbishop of Canterbury.[21]



• October 29, 1942

• The Nazis murdered 3230 thousand Jews from Sandomierz, Poland at the Belzec extermination camp.[22]



• German to English translation:

• Lazarus Gottlieb, born • July 20.1866 in Lemberg, Galicia. • Charlottenburg, Bleibtreustr. 49; 67
• AlterTransport
• Resident Berlin
• Deportation: from Berlin
• September 25.1942, Theresienstadt
• Date of death:
• October 29.1942 am, Thereseinstadt[23]



• October 29-November 1, 1942: The Nazis killed 16,000, nearly all the Jews in Pinsk, Russia.[24]



• October 29, 1942: Leading clergymen, including the Archbishop of Canterbury, and political figures held a public meeting to register outrage over Nazi Germany’s persecution of Jews. This expression of outrage did not include a meaningful demand that the British government lift the ban on Jewish immigration to Eretz, Israel. This would have meant that Jews who escaped from Nazi control would have a place of refuge.[25]



German to English translation:

• • Eisig Gottlieb, born June 17.1891 in Berhometh, Romani:• Charlottenburg Kaiser-Friedrich-Str. 55: 23
• Resident Berlin
• Deportation: from Berlin
• October 29, 1942, Auschwitz
• Place of death: Auschwitz missing, [26]



October 29, 2009

I get Emails!

Hi Dad,

My sorority is selling candles for a fundraiser and we will receive 40% of everything that we make. If you would like to order something, please let me know:) You could get a head start on some of your Christmas shopping, maybe for Sherri or Aunt Ann because I know she likes candles and she is always difficult to shop for. Orders are due Monday, November 2.

Love,
Jillian



Hi Jillian, nice catalog, I love the Yankee theme!

Dad
--

Dear Jeff - Greetings, This afternoon I was copying some item from today's presentation
and came across this item - " October 28 l87l Oscar Sherman was born October 28
l87l and married Margie Jenkins Nov. l6 l892 at home of bride's parents Mr. And Mrs.
J.L. Jenkns. ".... Is this Oscar Goodlove ? Was his middle name Sherman ?

Al Bowdish

Al,

Yes, this is Oscar Sherman Goodlove. William Harrison Goodlove (civil war diary) named his two sons born after the war Oscar Sherman Goodlove, (after the Union General) and Earl Lee Goodlove (after the Confederate General). Oscar named his son Ralph Jenkins Goodlove, and so Sherman was dropped but Earl Lee named his son Covert Lee, and Covert Lee named his son Gerol Lee, and Gerol Lee named his son Jeffery Lee and his daughter Jennifer Lea, and Jeffery Lee named his daughter Anna Lee, and Jay Covert named his son Lee Covert. We were all named after a Confederate General!

Jeffery Lee Goodlove





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

[1] Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett, Page 908.21

[2] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, 1969, page 66-67.

[3] The Horn Papers, Early Westward Movement on the Monongahela and Upper Ohio 1765-1795 by W.F. Horn Published for a Committee of the Greene County Historical Society, Waynesburg, Pennsylvania by the Hagstrom Company, New York, N.Y. 1945

Ref. 33.4 Conrad and Caty by Gary Goodlove 2003

[4] From River Clyde to Tymotchee and Col. William Crawford, page 66.

[5] Gerol “Gary” Goodlove, Conrad and Caty, 2003

[6]The Great Bend of the Ohio is in the region of Meigs County, Ohio.

[7] About four weeks before GW arrived in town, Christiana Campbell had moved again, this time to Wailer Street behind the Capitol, and in a newspaper advertisement she had announced that “I shall reserve Rooms for the Gentlemen who formerly lodged with me” (Va. Gaz., P&D, ~ Oct. 1771). But for the first time in ten years, GW did not stay with her. He chose, instead, to lodge with John Carter, a well-established merchant who ran a general store next door to the Raleigh Tavern and who at this time lived in a house directly across the street from the Raleigh (Va. Gaz., P&D, February 6, 1772). The play was performed by the American Company of Comedians, which had again returned to Williamsburg from Annapolis.

[8] (Heston, South Jersey, I, 167-68; Barber and Howe, Historical Collections.., of New Jersey, p. 210; Lossing, Pictorial Field-Book of the Revolution, II, 84; John F. Schroeder, Life and Times of Washington, 2 vols. [New York, 1857], I, 597).

[9] Wikipedia.com

[10] This Day in Jewish History

[11] Deep Ancestry, Inside the Genographic Project by Spencer Wells, page 11.

[12] Sent by Allen W. Scholl, 1005 Maumee Ave., Mansfield OH 44906, * June 1980.(Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett, Page 454.33.)

[13] Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett Page 452.23

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

[15] Winton Goodlove Papers.

[16] The First World War, Part 5 of 10. 10/18/2003.

[17] www.wikipedia.org

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

[19] Andre Goodfriend, FTDNA match.

[20] This Day in Jewish History

[21] This Day in Jewish History.

[22] This Day in Jewish History.

[23] [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,

• . {2}Der judishchen Opfer des Nationalsozialismus

“Ihre Namen mogen nie vergessen werden!”

[24] This Day in Jewish History

Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1774

[25] This Day in Jewish History.

• [26] [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,.

• Gedenkbuch Berlins

• Der judischen Opfer des Nationalsozialismus

• “Ihre Namen mogen nie vergessen werden!”

Thursday, October 28, 2010

This Day in Goodlove History, October 28

• This Day in Goodlove History, October 28

• By Jeffery Lee Goodlove

• jefferygoodlove@aol.com



• Surnames associated with the name Goodlove have been spelled the following different ways; Cutliff, Cutloaf, Cutlofe, Cutloff, Cutlove, Cutlow, Godlib, Godlof, Godlop, Godlove, Goodfriend, Goodlove, Gotleb, Gotlib, Gotlibowicz, Gotlibs, Gotlieb, Gotlob, Gotlobe, Gotloeb, Gotthilf, Gottlieb, Gottliebova, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlow, Gutfrajnd, Gutleben, Gutlove



• The Chronology of the Goodlove, Godlove, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlieb (Germany) etc., and Allied Families of Battaile, (France), Crawford (Scotland), Harrison (England), Jackson (Ireland), LeClere (France), Lefevre (France), McKinnon (Scotland), Plantagenets (England), Smith (England), Stephenson (England?), Vance (Ireland from Normandy), and Winch (England, traditionally Wales), including correspondence with -George Rogers Clarke, George Washington, and Thomas Jefferson.



• The Goodlove/Godlove/Gottlieb families and their connection to the Cohenim/Surname project:

• New Address! http://www.familytreedna.com/public/goodlove/default.aspx



• This project is now a daily blog at:

• http://thisdayingoodlovehistory.blogspot.com/

• Goodlove Family History Project Website:

• http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/g/o/o/Jeffery-Goodlove/



• Books written about our unique DNA include:

• “Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People” by Jon Entine.



• “ DNA & Tradition, The Genetic Link to the Ancient Hebrews” by Rabbi Yaakov Kleiman, 2004.



• My thanks to Mr. Levin for his outstanding research and website that I use to help us understand the history of our ancestry. Go to http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/ for more information. “For more information about the Weekly Torah Portion or the History of Jewish Civilization go to the Temple Judah Website http://www.templejudah.org/ and open the Adult Education Tab "This Day...In Jewish History " is part of the study program for the Jewish History Study Group in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.



The William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary annotated by Jeff Goodlove is available at the Farmer's Daughter's Market , (319) 294-7069, 495 Miller Rd, Hiawatha, IA , http://www.fdmarket.com/



Birthdays on this date; Michael K. Wagner, Anna T. Harrison, Oscar S. Goodlove, Ruth Campbell, Cynthia L. Bergan.

Weddings on this date; Terre L. Perius and David B. Steves, Cordelia Pyle and Conrad Goodlove.



I Get Email!



In a message dated 10/23/2010 7:23:24 A.M. Central Daylight Time, nsohnworks@aol.com writes:

Jeff,



Glad this was helpful. And I'll look forward to perhaps meeting you Sunday.



Best,

Nancy



Nancy, did you happen to know a violinist named Fritz Siegal or his wife Marijane Carr?



Jeff Goodlove





This Day…



October 28, 1636

Harvard College is founded by the General Court of Massachusetts.[1]





George Washington Diaries while on Canoe Trip with 6th gr. grandfather William Crawford and 5th Great Grandfather William Harrison;

George Washington’s Journal:

October 28, 1770:. Meeting with Kiashuta[2] & other Indian Hunters we proceeded only 10 Miles to day, & Incampd below the Mouth of a Ck. on the west the name of wch. I know not.





In his second diary GW describes the meeting: “In the Person of Kiashuta I found an old acquaintance. He being one of the Indians that went with me to the French in 1753. He expressd a satisfaction in seeing me and treated us with great kindness, giving us a Quarter of very fine Buffalo. He insisted upon our spending that Night with him, and in order to retard us as little as possible movd his camp down the River about 3 Miles just below the Mouth of a Creek the name of which I could not learn (it not being large). At this place we all Incampd. After much Councelling the overnight they all came to my fire the next Morning, with great formality; when Kiashuta rehearsing what had passd between me & the Sachems at Co. Croghan’s, thankd me for saying that Peace & friendship was the wish of the People of Virginia (with them) & for recommending itto the Traders to deal with them upon a fair & equitable footing; and then again expressd their desire of having a Trade opend with Virginia, & that the Governor thereof might not only be made acquainted therewith, but of their friendly disposi­tion towards the white People. This I promised to do.”



George Washington’s Journal:

October 28th, 1770.—Left our encampment about seven o’clock. Two miles below a small run comes in, Of the east side, through a piece of land that has a very good appearance, the bottom beginning above our encamnpment, and continuing in appearance wide for four miles down, where we found Kivashuta and his hunting party encamnped. Where we were under the necessity of paying our compliments, as this person was one of the Six Nation Chiefs, and the head of those upon this river.

In the person of Kiyashuta I found an old acquaintance, he being one of the Indians that went with me to the French, in 1753. he expressed a satisfaction at seeing me, and treated me with great kindness, giving us a quarter of very fine buffalo. He insisted upon our spending that night with him, and, in order to retard us as little as possible, moved his camp down the river just below the mouth of a creek, the name of which I could not learn. At this place we encamped. After much counselling over night, they all carrie to nny fire the nest morning with great formality; when Kiyashuta, rehearsing what had passed between me and the Sachems at Col. Croghan’s, thanked me for saying that peace and friendship with them was the wish of the people of Virginia, and for recommending it to the traders to deal with them upon a fair and equitable footing; and then again expressed their desire of having a trade opened with Virginia, and that the Governor thereof might not only be made acquainted therewith, but with their friendly disposition towards the white people. ‘This I promised to do.





October 28, 1774 Parole Peace



The Guards as usual. This day numbers of the Troops crossd the River the Rear is expected tomorrow. A list of the Kiled and wounded in the Action of the 10th those markd with a Cross died of their wounds some time after the engagement



Botetourt Line

Capt Murray

*Robt McClennachan

*Jas. Ward

*Buford

Lieut. Bracken

Goldman
Ensgn Condif
Seventeen Private


Wounded

Col. Fleming

Lieut Robinson

Thirty five privat



Augusta line

Col. C. Lewis

Col. T. Fields

Capt. Saml Wildon

Lieut. Hugh Allen

Eighteen Private



Wounded

Capt. Jn Dickinson

Skidmore

Lieut. Scard

Vance

Fifty one private

[3]



October 28, 1776

The Continental Army led by General George Washington suffers heavy losses at the Battle of White Plains, New York.[4]



October 28, 1779: Winch, Charles, Framingham.Private, Capt. Amasa Cranston's co., Col. Samuel Denny's regt.; enlisted October 28, 1779; discharged November 23, 1779; service, 1 mo. 6 days, at Claverack, including travel (200 miles) home; regiment raised for 3 months;[5]





• The Grenadier Battalions Linsing* and Lengerke at Jamaica. (*Franz Gotlop’s regiment?)



October 28, 1780

The 28th. Since the New Englanders maintained more than one hundred armed vessels to plunder the coast of Long Island, and often landed strong detachments to roam through the countryside, the Jager Corps was ordered to march there at once. Toward evening the Corps crossed the East River at Maston’s Wharf and arrived on the 29th in the vicinity of Westbury. It had to occupy the following cordon along the Sound: Lieutenant Colonel Wurmb ordered me to cover the left flank. I held Cow Bay, Cow Neck, Searingtown, and Hempstead Harbor.6° The Wurmb, Donop, Hinrichs, and Prueschenck companies occupied the area from Westbury up to Mosquito Cove. The lieutenant colonel was quartered in Westbury, which was the center, and the two Anspachjäger companies, under Captain Waldenfels, were billeted at Jericho. At Oyster Bay were the Queen’s Rangers, under Colonel Simcoe, who covered the right flank.61 At Norwich, behind me, lay the mounted jãgers for support. The line of the entire cordon was well over two good German miles, which was occupied by about one thousand men.

The places mentioned are mostly single houses, of which perhaps ten to twelve lie together at one spot. The entire Corps was in cantonment and usually ten, twelve, to sixteen men were placed together. The main roads to the bays and landing places were occupied by pickets of each company, for which straw huts were erected for the winter, and large watch fires had to be maintained for the men’s warmth. In front of the lieutenant colonel’s quarters at the center a redoubt was built on a height, in which there was a guard and the two amusettes. In the meantime, everyone was glad that he was under a roof, although every officer could rest only with his saber in his hand.

From this time on the army occupied its winter quarters, and it seemed as if all courage was gone with Major André’s death.



ON LONG ISLAND



The 17th Regiment of Dragoons, behind the jãgers at Hempstead.

The English grenadiers at Newtown.

The light infantry in the huts at Bedford.

The 37th Regiment and Diemar’s hussars at Denys’s Ferry.

The 28th Regiment at Brooklyn.

Loyal Americans on the Fly.

3d Battalion of DeLancey’s. 1

New England Volunteers. Lloyd s Neck

The Grenadier Battalions Linsing and Lengerke at Jamaica.

Those of Loewenstein and Graff at Flushing.



PAULUS HOOK IN JERSEY





The 54th Regiment.



NEW YORK





The 22d, 42d, Landgraf, Erb Prinz, Prinz Carl regiments and the Anspach Brigade.



YORK ISLAND





The 57th Regiment at the East River, the Hessian Leib Regiment at the North River, Mirbach’s at McGowan’s Pass, the 76th and 80th regiments at Laurel Hill and the pass at Kings Bridge.



STATEN ISLAND





The 43d Regiment at the flagstaff, Hessian Regiment Bünau near Watering Place, two battalions of Skinner’s in Richmond.[6]



In the latter part of 1780, Capt. Uriah Springer (a resident of that part of Westmoreland County which is now Fayette) was on duty with his company, engaged in the collection of supplies in the Monongahela Valley, at and in the vicinity of Fort Burd,[7] and while on this service experienced great trouble from the opposition and enmity of the people there, ans is shown by the following letter, written to him by the commandant at Fort Pitt.



“Capt. Uriah Springer,



“I have this moment received your favor of yesterday, and am sorry to find the people about Redstone have intentions to raise in arms against you. I believe with you that there are amongst them many disaffected, and conceive that their past and present conduct will justify your defending yourself by every means in your power. It may yet be doubtful whether these fellows will attempt anything against you, but these fellows will attempt anything against you, but if you find they are determined you will avoid, as much as your safety will admit, in coming to action until you give me a further account, and you may depend upon your receiving succor of infantry and artillery. I have signed your order for ammunition, and have the honor to be, etc.”



Daniel Broadhead[8]



October 28, 1790

England and Spain negotiate the Nootka Sound Convention, reinforcing disputed British claims to territory in the Oregon region.[9]



October 28, 1811: By October 19, rations were cut and remained so until October 28 when fresh supplies arrived via the Wabash River from Vincennes. With the army resupplied, ancestor and future President William Henry Harrison resumed his advance to Prophetstown on October 29.[12][13][10]

October 28, 1845:

District of Columbia, Washington County, ss:



At an Orphans Court held in and for said county, on this twenty eighth day of October 1845 (October 28, 1845). On motion of Henry Northop, it was proven on open court to the satisfaction of the Court by the deposition of Captain Bedinger and a certificate from the Register of the Law Office at Richmond, Virginia line of the Army of the Revolution and was killed at the surrender of Fort Washington on the 16th day of Nov. 1776. (November 16, 1776) And it was further proven by the letter of Battle Harrison from Columbus, Ohio, and by the deposition of Crawford and Ann Springer that William Harrison who was killed in Crawford’s defeat was the eldest brother of Lt. Battle Harrison and that John Harrison now living is the eldest son of the said William Harrison, all of which is ordered to be certified.

Nathl. Pope Causin.



District of Columbia, Washington County, to wit:

I certify that the aforegoing is a true copy from the Original filed and recorded in the Office of the Register of Wills, for Washington County, agoresaid.

Witness my hand and seal of office, this 29th day of October in the year 1845. (October 29, 1845) Ed. N. Roach, Register.[11]



October 28, 1852

[12]

His March 26, 1855, letter (Ref#20) on the second page he testified “that he has heretofore made application for Bounty Land under the Act of September 28, 1850, and received a land warrant for forty acres of land which he entered upon land at Defiance Land Office, Ohio, and received a patent therefore and has since disposed of said land and has therefore legally disposed of said land warrant and land and cannot now return the same.”

I believe the explanation for the second application for Bounty Land had to do with the information on the mustering out rate and the documents on file with the government office (Ref #9.1 & 9.2) showed he terminated on the 18th of September whereas he has claimed he served as a “volunteer” until November 25th. It appears he did obtain an additional warrant for 120 acres. Whether he used this to purchase the Iowa property as well as the sale of land near the Defiance, Ohio, land office, I have not been able to determine to date. Another possible theory regarding the 40 acres “entered on” at Defiance, Ohio, is that after receiving warrant #24784 for 40 acres dated Dec. 4, 1850, he sold the property in Clark County to Eli Arbogast April 1, 1853 (see Deed in Ref #14) and also sold the 40 acres “entered on” at the Defiance Land Office before departing to Iowa.



Mary and I visited the Ohio State Library and the Ohio State Historical Society in February, 2002, after attending the booth of our Agri-Safety, Inc. (wholesale agricultural safety supplies) at the National Farm Machinery Show. In search of records of Bounty Land Warrants we located an old handwritten log pertaining to warrant number 15231 which appears in Ref. #24: It was issued to Conrad

Goodlove. (Ref #___)



We also located an old handwritten copy of the roll of Samuel McCord, Regiment, Ohio Calvary, militia for the War of 1812.

Ref.# _________.[13]





Based on my research it was at least after March 26, 1855, that William Harrison Goodlove left Clark County, Ohio, with his father for Iowa. Conrad’s signature of that date was notarized verifying his presence in Clark County. [14]

October 28, 1852

Three years after the death of Caty the marriage of Conrad and Cordelia Pyle took place on October 28, 1852, before Mr. Granville Moody, a minister of a Methodist Episcopal Church. (Ref #17)

Note that it was “Filed and Recorded October 20, 1853” a year later.



1853

In the newspaper article it says “In company with his father (Conrad) and his stepmother (Cordelia) he came to West Union, Fayette County, Iowa, at the age of sixteen. Only a year were they at that point when they removed to Wildcat Grove near Marion, in 1853.”

This date, 1853, may not be accurate as indicated by a notarized signature of Conrad in Ohio on March 26, 1855.



Fri. October 28, 1864

got to martinsburg at sunset quite a large

place got a good supper cold & windy

wrote F Hunter a letter[15]



[16]

VIEWS IN AND AROUND MARTINSBURG, VIRGINIA.—SKETCHED By A. R. WAUD.--[



October 28, 1871: Oscar Sherman Goodlove was born October 28, 1871 and married Margie Jenkins on November 16, 1892, at the home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Jenkins. To this union were born a son, Ralph, December 14, 1893, and a daughter, Rachel, born March 1, 1896. [17]



• October 28, 1922: Italian fascists led by Benito Mussolini march on Rome and take over the Italian government with the assistance of the Catholic Church; pope Pius XI declares that “Mussolini is a man sent by divine providence.”[18]



• 1923: In the reaction which followed World War I there was a new wave of anti-Semitism, and in 1923 most of the East European Jews residents in Bavaria were expelled. This was the time when the National Socialist Movement made its appearance in the region, and anti-Semitic agitation increased. [19]



• 1923: Due to a delay in the payment of German reparations, French and Belgian forces occupy the Ruhr district and other areas right of the Rhine in January. Ruhr occupation triggers national outrage at France in all of Germany; temporary national unity.
Britain condemns the Ruhr occupation.

• In reaction to the Ruhr occupation, the German government declares passive resistance (a gigantic, state-sponsored mass strike in the occupied areas), which fans hyperinflation, since the government in Berlin pays the strikers in the Ruhr. Having no monetary reserves left, the government resorts to the printing press, thus destroying the currency, which had lost value already since 1914 (effect of huge wartime deficit spending). The hyperinflation wipes out all middle-class savings and has catastrophic social effects in 1923. [20]



• 1924: German sabotage. Bloody clashes in the occupied territories. France tries to set up separatist governments in West Germany.

• At this time of renewed hostility, efforts for secret German rearmament intensify. Rightist paramilitary groups receive military help from the army (formation of secret units, the "Black Reichswehr"). The Inter-Allied Military Control Commission stops its missions in the face of popular outrage. Resumes controls only in the summer of 1924. [21]



• October 28, 1938: Germany expels “some 18,000” Jews with Polish citizenship to the Polish border. Poles refuse to admit them; Germans refuse to allow them back into Germany. Seventeen thousand are stranded in the frontier town of Zbaszyn, Poland. (Including possibly the following Gottliebs who were deported on this date.)[22]



German to English translation


Dorian Gottlieb, born • March 17, 1931. • Resident Nordhausen.
• Deportation:
• October 28, 1938, after Bentschen
• • Date of Death:
• Unknown

• [23]



Wolf Gottlieb, Wolf born • January 10, 1902 in Perehinsko.
• Resident Nordhausen
• Deportation:
• October 28, 1938, Poland

• [24]



Dora Gottlieb, • Born Seinfeld, • April 29.1905 in Perehinsko. • Resident Nordau.
• Deportation:• October 28, 1938, after Bentch.
• Deported
• date of death:
• Unknown

[25]



• Sulamith Gottlieb, born January 17, 1936. Resident Nordhausen. Deportation October 28, 1938 after Bentschen. Deported. Date of death unknown. [26]



• October 28, 1940: Mussolini’s Italian army cross Albania and invades Greece. The Greek army included 12,000 Greek Jews which fought fiercely and stopped the Italian advance. Between 510 and 615 Greek Jewish soldiers from Salonica were killed.[27]



• October 28, 1940: German occupiers in Belgium pass anti-Semitic legislation.[28]



• October 28, 1941: 27,000 Jews assembeld in Democracy Square in Kovno, Lithuania, must pass before an SS officer named Rauca, who signals life or death for each. 9,200 of the Jews, 4,300 of them children, are sent to their deaths at pits outside Kovno at the nearby Ninth Fort. 17,412 Jews remain in the Kovno ghetto.[29]



• October 28, 1941: Eichmann noted “in view of the approaching final solution of the European Jewry problem, one has to prevent the immigration of Jews into the unoccupied area of France.”[30]



• Zikmund Gottlieb, born March 1, 1874.
• October 28, 1944 Auschwitz
• Exemption lived to

• [31]





October 28, 1962

Soviet Premier Khrushchev agrees to withdraw all missile bases from Cuba.





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

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

[2] GW met Guyasuta during his journey to the French commandant in 1753. Afterjoining the French in 1755, Guyasuta had actively engaged in hostilities against the British during the French and Indian War and was a leader in Pontiac’s rebellion. Changing his allegiance after the war, he again sup­ported the English and aided the firm of Baynton, Wharton, & Morgan in opening up the Illinois trade. He continued to support the British during the Revolution and participated in the attack against Hannastown, Pa., in 1782. After the Revolution he settled in the area of Pittsburgh and died there about 1800.

[3] Fleming’s Orderly Book, Documentary History of Dunmore’s War, 1774 by Thwaites and Kellogg. P 355.

[4] ON This Day in America by John Wagman.

[5] Ancestry.com. Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors in the War of the Revolution, 17 Vols. [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 1998. Original data: Secretary of the Commonwealth. Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors in the War of the Revolution. Vol. I-XVII. Boston, MA, USA: Wright and Potter Printing Co., 1896.

[6] Diary of the American War, A Hessian Journal by Captain Johann Ewald pg.250-251

[7] Fort Burd (Brownsville) was used as a depot of supplies for some years during the Revolutionary war, and was guarded, while so used, by detachments of militia detailed for the purpose.

[8] History of Fayette County, Edited by Franklin Ellis Vol. 1 L. H. Everts & Co. 1882.

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

[10] Wikipedia

[11] Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett Page 452.23

[12] Conrad and Caty; Gary Goodlove, 2003



[13] Gerol “Gary” Goodlove Conrad and Caty, 2003

[14] Gerol “Gary” Goodlove Conrad and Caty, 2003





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

[16] http://www.sonofthesouth.net/leefoundation/civil-war/1864/december/martinsburg-virginia.htm

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

[18] This Day in Jewish History

[19] Encyclopedia Judaica, Volume



• [20] http://www.colby.edu/personal/r/rmscheck/GermanyD4.html



• [21] http://www.colby.edu/personal/r/rmscheck/GermanyD4.html



[22] This Day in Jewish History

• [23]

[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,.

[24] [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,.

• [25] [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,.

[26] [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,.

[27] This Day in Jewish History.

[28] This Day in Jewish History

[29] This Day in Jewish History

Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor,

[30] This Day in Jewish History.

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

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

This Day in Goodlove History, October 27

This Day in Goodlove History, October 27
By Jeffery Lee Goodlove
jefferygoodlove@aol.com

The Goodlove/Godlove/Gottlieb families and their connection to the Cohenim/Surname project:
• http://www.familytreedna.com/group-join.aspx?Group=Goodlove

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/ Updates are requested.


The William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary annotated by Jeff Goodlove is available at the Farmer's Daughter's Market , (319) 294-7069, 495 Miller Rd, Hiawatha, IA , http://www.fdmarket.com/


Birthdays on this date;Cari M. Winch, Homer Melvin, George P Kirby

Weddings on this date; Susan Newmyer and Joseph T Mccormick, Feora E. Godlove, and Hiram Beshoar

----------
I get Email!

From Don Weber (FTDNA Match)

Hey, could i ask you to do a search in the records you have for the name Hatton.
I'm told Adam Hatton served with Washington, and also served in the
French/indian war (may have been a diff Hatton)

can you let me know if you find anything at all.

looking for proof for a sons/daughters of the American Revolution Line
for this Surname


From Jeff

Don, here is what I found concerning Adam Hatton. Let me know if you need more info. He was the only Hatton I had in my records. FYI, there are several Goodlove ancestors listed in this documents particularly Richard and Lawrence Harrison and James and Josiah Crawford. Jeff Goodlove

“April 2d, 1768.
“We arrived at the settlement on Redstone on the 23rd day of March. The people having heard of our coming, had appointed a meeting among themselves on the 24th, to consult what measures to take. We took advantage of this meeting, read the Act of Assembly and Proclamation—explaining the law and giving the reasons of it as well as we could, and used our endeavors to persuade them to comply; alleging to them that it was the most probable method to entitle them to favor with the Honorable Proprietors when the land was purchased.
“After lamenting their distressed condition, they told us the people were not fully collected; but they expected all would attend on the Sabbath following, and then they would give us an answer. They, however, affirmed that the Indians were very peaceable, and seemed sorry that they were to be removed, and said they apprehended the English intended to make war upon the Indians, as they were moving off their people from the neighborhood.
“We labored to persuade them that they were imposed upon by a few straggling Indians; that Sir William Johnston, who had in¬formed our Government, must be better acquainted with the mind of the Six Nations, and that they were displeased with the white people’s settling on their unpurchased lands.
“On Sabbath, the 27th, of March, a considerable number attended (their names are subjoined,) and most of them told us they were resolved to move off and would petition your Honor for a prefer¬ence in obtaining their improvements when a purchase was made. While we were conversing we were informed that a number of Indi¬ans were to come to Indian Peter’s. We, judging it might be sub¬servient to our main design that the Indians should be present, while we were advising the people to obey the law, sent for them. They came, and, after sermon, delivered a speech, with a string of wampum, to be transmitted to your Honor. Their speech was— ‘Ye are come, sent by your great men, to tell these people to go away from the land, which ye say is our’s; and we are sent by our great men, and are glad we have met here this day. We tell you, the white people must stop, and we stop them till the treaty, and when George Croghan and our great men talk together, we will tell them what to do.’ The Indians were from Mingo town, about eighty miles from Redstone (a little below Steubenville).
“After this the people were more confirmed that there was no danger of war. They dropped the design of petitioning, and said they would wait the issue of the treaty. Some, however, declared they would move off. We had sent a messenger to Cheat River and to Stewart’s Crossings of Youghiogheny with several pro¬clamations, requesting them to meet us at Gist’s place as most central for both settlement:. On the 3oth of March, about thirty or forty met us there. We proceeded, as at Redstone, reading the Act of Assembly and a Proclamation, and endeavored to con¬vince them of the necessity and reasonableness of quitting the unpurchased land; but to no purpose. They had heard what the Indians had said at Redstone, and they reasoned in the same man¬ner, declaring they had no apprehensions of a war, that they would attend the treaty, and take their measures accordingly. Many severe things were said of Mr. Croghan; and one Lawrence Har¬rison (6th greatgrandfather) treated the law and our Government with too much disrespect.
“On the 31st of March we came to the Great Crossings of Youghiogheny, and being informed by one Speer that eight or ten families lived in a place called the Turkey Foot, we sent some proclamations thither by said Speer, as we did to some families nigh the Crossings of Little Yough, judging it unnecessary to go amongst them.
“It is our opinion that some will move off in obedience to the law; that the greatest part will await the treaty, and if they find the Indians are indeed dissatisfied, we think the whole will be persuaded to remove. The Indians coming to Redstone, and delivering their speech, greatly obstructed our design.
“We are, &c.
John Steel,
John Allison,
Christopher Lemes,
James Potter.
“To the Honorable John Penn, Esquire,
Lieutenant-Governor, &c., &c’~

“The Indians names who came to Redstone, viz:
Captains Haven, Hornets, Mygog Wigo, Nogawach, Strikebelt, Pouch, Gilly and Slewbells.

The names of the inhabitants near Redstone:
John Wiseman, Henry Prisser, William Linn, William Colvin,
John Vervalson, Abraham Tygard (Teagarden), Thomas Brown,
Richard Rodgers, John Delong, Peter Young, George Martin,
Thomas Downs, Andrew Gudgeon (Gudgel), Philip Sute (Shute),
James Crawford, John Peters, Henry Swats, James McClean, Jesse
Martin, Adam Hatton, John Verval, Jr., James Wailer, Thomas Douter (Douthitt), Captain Cohurn, Michael I-looter, Andrew Linn,
Gabriel Conn’~ John Martin, Hans Cack (Cook), Daniel McKay, Josias Crawford (1st cousin 6 times removed), one Provence (William Yard, or John William), (j).

Names of some who met us at Guesse’s (Gist’s) place.
One Bloomfieid, (Thomas or Empson Brownfieid), James Lyne, (Lynn or Lyon), Ezekiel Johnson, Thomas Guesse (Gist), Charles Lindsay, James Wallace (Wailer), Richard Harrison, Phil. Sute (Shute), Jet. (Jediah) Johnson, Henry Burkon (Burkham), Lawrence Harrison (6th great grandfather), Ralph Higgenbottom. [1]~


________________________________________
• October 27, 1765
• The last public Auto da Fe was held in Portugal.


From the Diaries of George Washington while on canoe trip with 6th g grandfather William Crawford and 5th G grandfather William Harrison;

October 27, 1770. Incampd at the Mouth of great Hockhocking distant from our last Incampment abt. 32 Miles.

October 27th—Left our encampment a quarter before seven, and after passing the creek near which we lay, and another of much tile same size, and on the same side: also an island about two miles in length, but not wide, we came to the mouth of Muskingum, distant from our encampment about four miles. This river is about one hundred and fifty yards wide at the mouth; it runs out in a gentle current and clear stream, and is navigable a great way into the country for canoes. From Muskingum to the Little Kenhawa is about thirteen miles, ‘This is about as wide at the mouth as the MLmSkingurn, but the water much deeper. It runs up towards tile inhabitants of Monongahela, and according to the Indians account, forks about forty or fifty miles from time mouth, and the ridge between tile two Prongs heads direr tlv to We setttlement. ‘To this foi-k and above, the water is navigable for canoes. On the upper side of this river there appears to be a bottom of exceedingly rich land, and the country from hence quite up to the Timree Islands level and in appear¬ance fine. ‘I’he Ohio running around it in the form of a horse shoe, forms a neck of flat land, which added to that running up tine second Long Reach aforementiomed, cannot comltain less than fifty thousand acres in view.
About six or seven miles below the mouth of Little Kenhawa, we camne to a small creek on the west side, which the Indians called Little Hockhocking; but before we did this, we passed another small creek on the same side near the mouth of that river, and a cluster of islands after¬wards. ‘The lands for two or three miles below the moumli of the Little Kenha~va, on both sides of the Ohio, appear broken amid indifferent; but opposite to the Little Hockhocking there is a bottjm of good land, through which there runs a small water course. I suppose there may’ be, of this bottom and flat land together, two or three thousand acres. The lower end of this bottom is opposite to a small island, of which I dare say, little is to be seen when the river is high. About eight miles below Little Hockhocking we •ncamped, opposite the mouth of Great Hockhocking, which, though so called, is not a large water; though the Indians say c~noes go up it for forty or fifty miles. Since we left the Little Kenimawa the lands appear neither so level nor so good. The bends of the river and bottoms are longer, but not so rich as on the upper part of the river.


October 27, 1778

At a Court ‘Continued and held for Yohogania County October 27th, 1778.
Present Edward Ward Benjaman Kuykendall, Oliver Miller, Samuel Newell, William Harrison, James Rogers Gentlemen
Justices.
Ordered that the Ordinary Keepers within this County be allowed to sell at the following rates —
Whiskie by the half pint 2S.
The same made into Toddy 2S.6,




for a Greater or Lesser Quantity in the same proportion
Beer p Quart iS6
the same proportion for a Larger or Lesser Quantity
for a hot Breakfast
for a Cold ditto 2S6
- for a Dinner 4S.
for a Supper 3S.
for Lodging with Clean Sheats iS6
Stablage with good hay or fodder 5S.
Corn p. Quart
Oats p. Quart 6d

Inventory of the Estate of Daniel Greathouse deceased Returned by the administrator and Ordered to be recorded.
Richard Crooks and Nathaniel Brackmore is Recommended to the Governor as proper persons to Serve as Captains of the Melitia.
James Burriss & John RoadharmiB be recommended to the Governour as proper Persons to Serve as Lieutenants of the Melitia.
James Guffee is recommended to the Governour as Proper Person to Serve as Ensign of the Melitia.
Michael Tygert, Samuel McAdams, John Shannon, James Morrison Ju. & Francis Morrison is recommended to the Governour as proper persons to Serve as lieutenants of Melitia.
Jacob Long Jun. & Moses Cooe are Recommended to the Governour as proper Persons to Serve as Ensigns of the Melitia.
On the Motion of Col. John Campbelle License is granted him to Build and Compleat a Water Mill on Campbell’s Run emtying into Churtees Creek on the West side, a’short distance
below Robertson’s Run.’ It being made appear in this Court that the Building Said Mill will effect the property of no Person, the Lands on both sides being the Property of the said Campbell.
Ordered that Court be adjourned to Court in Course.


October 27, 1778, Colonel Crawford was requested to join the Berkeley and Augusta troops at Fort Mcintosh into one corps, and the Hampshire and Rockingham troops into another, to be called the Third and Fourth Regiments of his brigade, from 1778 which he was to select a company of officers and men for light infantry duty.

Autumn, 1778
We were shown a very old copy of a book entitled “Crawford’s Expedition Against Sandusky in 1782” written by C. W. Butterfield (Ref#39.3) David Barth claims this is the most comprehensive historical account of the expedition. One of the significant pieces of information to me was the facts on William Harrison (page 347) whose body was recognized by Sloner who escaped and later wrote of his experiences. According to Butterfield, “ William Harrison was a lawyer by profession, high minded and well educated. His manners were grave and sedate; his conduct, prudent, his good sense and public spirit duly appreciated by all who knew him. He had been a Sheriff of Yohogania County, Virginia, and one of its members in the House of Delegates. He was also familiar with the duties of a soldier. He had been a Major and Lieutenant-Colonel of a military regiment under McIntosh, in the expedition of the latter into the indian country west of the Ohio, at the building of Forts McIntosh and Laurens, in the autumn of 1778.”
...a son of Lawrence Harrison who was one of the first settlers in the Younghiogheny Valley, Va. He (William) was a Virginian by birth and a man of much note. He was a lawyer by profession, high minded and well educated. He had been sheriff of Yohogania Co., and one of its members in the House of Delagates. He was also a soldier, had been a Maj. and Lt. Col. of a militia regiment under McIntosh at the building of Forts McIntosh and Laurens,
1778."

October 27th, 1779
October 27th, 1779 Court met according to adjournment. Present William Crawford. Thomas Smallman, Isaac Cox Benjamin Kuykendall and Oliver Miller, Gent. Justices.
Certificate Adam Stephens to Isaac Cox On motion ordered to be record.
Col. Crawford being Sworn Sayeth that The sd. Isaac Cox was a Subaltron Officer in the Virginia Service in the year 1764.

Ordered that John Lad serve his master Wm. Crawford, Eighteen month after the Expiration of his Time by Ind’tr. for Loss of Time in runing away and Expence in Taking him up.
James Hoge is app. Ensign & Joseph Kirkpatrick Liut. of Militia.
Ordered that Court be adjourned untibb Court in Course.
TH0. SMALLMAN.


1801 October 27, John Stephenson (half sixth great grand uncle) dies in Harrison Co., KY


57 Ohio Volunteer Infantry;
Bear Creek, Tuscombia, October 27, 1863

Thurs. October 27, 1864
started to martinsburg went to Winchester
and camped Will Winans came to reg to supper rained the water run us out
of our tent


• October 27, 1911
• In an article datelined Yuzivka, Russia, “More Jews to be Expelled: Will Cause much Hardship,” The New York Times reports that the Governor has signed a proclamation stating that all Jews in the Province of Ekaterinoslaff are subject to expulsion, with some limited exceptions.

• October 27, 1913
• From Itchip, practically the entire Jewish community (about 710 people) fled to Salonica before the arrival of the Bulgarians. Only 5 men and 2 youths stayed behind. Two of the old men were killed; all the Jewish homes were plundered and demolished. Synagogues were desecrated and burned as were 24 Jewish stores and homes.


• October 27, 1937
• The Palestine Post reported that in Danzig Jewish shops and houses were pillaged and windows smashed. This outbreak of violence against the Jews took place almost two years before the outbreak of World War II.

• October 27, 1938
• Hitler expelled 18,000 Jews from Germany who were born in the former Polish provinces. The Jews were abused and tortured as they made their way to the border. The Poles did not want to admit the Jews and for a while many were left to languish on the border.

• October 27, 1940
• Ritual slaughter is banned in Belgium.

October 27, 1941
• Jews of Sluzk, 60 miles south of Minsk, Belorussia, are annihilated by Einsatzkommando troop, half of whom are German, half Lithuanian.

• October 27, 1941
• IN the Polish town of Kalisz (Kalisz is where the Goodfriend family is from who are a DNA match to the Goodlove family.) a large black truck drove up and took on a passenger load of Jews. Escorted by two Gestapo cars, the truck drove away. Its passengers were never heard from again. This was the first of the gas wagons. This method of extermination was not efficient and ould give way to that ultimate in German efficiency, the gas chamber.

• October 27, 1942
• The Nazis sent 3,000 Jews from Opocno, Poland to Treblinka. At the start of the war almost half the town of Opoczno was Jewish. Jews had lived there since the 14th century. The Jews had lived there continually since the start of the 18th century. At the time of the mass deportation in October 1942, scores of Jews fled to the forests and organized opartisan units there. The best known unit, “Lions”, under the command of Julian Ajzenman-Kaniewski, conducted a number of successful guerilla actions against Nazi forces and the OpocznoKonskie railway line. Aftetr the war the Jewish Community of Opocznowas not reconstituted.

• October 27-28 1942
• Seven thousand Krakow Poland, Jews are deported to Belzec; 600 are killed in Krakow.

• October 27, 1942
• Germany announced that any Pole helping Jews to escape should be dealt with “without the necessary delay of court hearings.” The penalty for assisting Jews was death.