Wednesday, August 31, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, August 31

• This Day in Goodlove History, August 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.



“Jacob’s Legacy, A Genetic View of Jewish History” by David B. Goldstein, 2008.



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



In the news…

US State Dept Slams Congress Funding Block of PA at UN

The US State Dept. has slammed efforts by a Florida lawmaker to block the PA from seeking United Nations membership as a new country.

by Chana Ya'ar

First Publish: 8/31/2011, 11:55 AM





Capitol Hill

Arutz Sheva: Wikipedia

The U.S. State Department has slammed a Florida lawmaker for trying to block the Palestinian Authority from seeking recognition as a new country and membership in the United Nations in September.

U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee chairwoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen announced Tuesday she had advanced a measure to block U.S. funding to any U.N. member or group that supports an upgrade to the PA's diplomatic status next month.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland told reporters the Republican Congresswoman's proposed measure would “seriously undermine our international standing and dangerously weaken the U.N. as an instrument to advance U.S. national security goals.”

The measure is actually a clause folded into a larger proposed bill that would transform the U.S. portion of United Nations funding into a voluntary contribution, one conditional upon American agreement on each funding target.

“We believe in U.N. reform,” added Nuland, “[but] we just don't think that this is the right way to go about it.” The Obama administration warned long before Ros-Lehtinen submitted her proposal that the president would oppose it, according to the Reuters news agency.

The Congresswoman said her efforts were aimed not only at preventing the PA from gaining recognition as a new country, but also at stopping the entity from achieving a second option in lieu of the first – upgrading its current status from that of a U.N. observer to a non-member state. [1]



I Get Email!

In a message dated 8/30/2011 9:48:57 P.M. Central Daylight Time, newsletter@fvjn.org writes:

Shabbat FAQ

Shabbat is the most important ritual observance in Judaism. It is the only ritual observance instituted in the Ten Commandments. It is also the most important special day, even more important than Yom Kippur. This is clear from the fact that more aliyahs (opportunities for congregants to be called up to the Torah) are given on Shabbat than on any other day.

Shabbat is primarily a day of rest and spiritual enrichment. The word "Shabbat" comes from the root Shin-Bet-Tav, meaning to cease, to end, or to rest.

Shabbat is not specifically a day of prayer. Although we do pray on Shabbat, prayer is not what distinguishes Shabbat from the rest of the week. Observant Jews pray every day, three times a day.

The weekly day of rest has no parallel in any other ancient civilization. In ancient times, leisure was for the wealthy and the ruling classes only, never for the serving or laboring classes. In addition, the very idea of rest each week was unimaginable. The Greeks thought Jews were lazy because we insisted on having a "holiday" every seventh day.

Shabbat involves two interrelated commandments: to remember (zachor) the Sabbath, and to observe (shamor) the Sabbath.

Of course, no discussion of Shabbat would be complete without a discussion of the work that is forbidden on Shabbat. Most Americans see the word "work" and think of it in the English sense of the word: physical labor and effort, or employment.

The problem lies not in Jewish law, but in the definition that Americans are using. The Torah does not prohibit "work" in the 20th century English sense of the word. The Torah prohibits "melachah" which is usually translated as "work," but does not mean precisely the same thing as the English word.

Melachah generally refers to the kind of work that is creative, or that exercises control or dominion over your environment. The word may be related to "melech" (king). The quintessential example of melachah is the work of creating the universe, which G-d ceased from on the seventh day. Note that G-d's work did not require a great physical effort: he spoke, and it was done.

- adapted from www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org


******************

B'shalom,
Fox Valley Jewish Neighbors

FVJN is located at 121 S. 3rd St., Geneva



This Day…

2000 years ago…

We forget that the world was a busy place 2,000 years ago, and our ancestors who were J1 DNA haplotype, were where we would expect them to be, In Israel. Notice they are also in England.

[2]



August 31, 12: Birth date of Gaius Caligula, Roman Emperor. Caligula was crowned in 37 and murdered in 41. Life for Jews during his reign was part of the downward spiral that would result in three rebellions by the Jews over the next one hundred years.

Caligula thought he was divine and insisted on his statue being placed in the Temple at Jerusalem. His efforts were twice thwarted and his untimely death prevented him from taking vengeance against his Jewish subject.[3]



August 31, 38: Riots broke out in Alexandria Egypt after the Jews spurned an order by the Roman Prefect Flaccus to place a statue of Emperor Caligula in the local synagogue. This was an outgrowth of antagonixm between the Jews of Alexandria and some of their pagan neighbors. The paganswere angered by the Jews celebrating Caligula’s decision to restore Agrippa, a descendant of the Hasmonneans to the Jewish kingship in Palestine. They knew that the Jews counld not worship a statue so by forcing statue of Caligula into the synague, Apion, the pagan leader knew he was asking for trouble. The violence ended and Flaccus was was recalled to Rome. But this was not the end of th e trouble much of which rooted in the fact that some pagans begrudged the Jews their commercial success and withed to do away with them as competitiors. This would not be the last time that those who sought to oust the Jews from commersial ventures did nso under the guise of religion.[4]



August 31, 1056: Byzantine Empress Theodora becomes ill, dying suddenly a few days later, without children to succeed the throne ending the Macedonian dynasty. This was period of relative calm for the Jews of the Byzantine Empire. The last official persecution had taken place at the end of the 10th century. Conditions would not seriously deterioriate until the waves of Crusaders that began at the end of the 11th century.[5]

‘In 1066 three brothers, Hubert, Raymond and Robert, the sons of Harold (de Vaux) Lord of Normandy, accompanied William the Conqueror to England and their descendants became Lord de Vaux of Pentry and Bevar in Norfolk, of Gilliesland in Cumberland and Harrowden in Northamptonshire. Quite a number of the family emigrated to the United States."[6]

The family of Harold (de Vaux) Lord of Vaux in Normandy came with William the Conqueror to England. On the continent of Europe the de Vaux have been Dukes of Andrea, Princes of Joinville, Farauta & Altanara, Counts of Orange and Province and Kings of Vienna and Arles.[7]

The invasion and conquest of England in 1066 by William the Conqueror and his Norman French army brought about a new phase in the development of the English language. Originally of Viking ancestry (that is why these French were called Normans, that is Norsemen), the Normans by the middle of the elevent century had become “Frenchified” in language and culture (their language is designated as Norman French, a dialect of Old French).[8]

The Norman invasion of 1066 at once transforms England into a centralized monarchy modeled on a French feudal order and officially brings an end to the Viking age. The renowned Bayou tapestry commemorating the Battle of Hastings on October 14, 1066 depicts the English King, Harold Godwinson, losing his Kingdom, and his life. William the Bastard, the victorious Duke of Normandy, and a descendant of the Viking “Rollo” is forever after known as William the Conqueror. Ultimately it is rather ironic that this Viking descendant brought the French language and culture, but when you look at the Bayou Tapestry it might have been French, but it was also very much Viking. Although the Normans are shown with French style armour and weapons, their ships are of Viking design.[9]

After the Battle of Hastings in 1066, when the Norman French defeated the English, French became the language of the elite in English society, the only langujagge used by governmental officials and in the courts. Latin was the official language of the Catholic Church; only French and Latin were taught in the schools of the day, not English.[10]

August 31, 1703: **. Lawrence Taliaferro9 [Sarah Smith8, Lawrence Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. 1682 in Stafford Co. VA / d. abt. May 1726 in Essex Co. VA) married Sarah Thornton (b. December 17, 1680 in Gloucester Co. VA) on August 31, 1703 in Richmond, VA.

A. Children of Lawrence Taliaferro and Sarah Thornton:
. i. Francis Taliaferro
. ii. John Taliaferro
. iii. Sarah Taliaferro
. iv. William Taliaferro
. v. Elizabeth Taliaferro
. vi. Mary Taliaferro
. vii. Alice Taliaferro[11]



August 31, 1756

British General Webb gives up the Mohawk Valley in New York to the French, during the French and Indian War.[12]



Thursday, August 31st, 1775



At Coashoskis. Mr. Anderson could not find his horse. Sold all my goods for Furs. In the afternoon rambled about the Town, smoking Tobacco with the Indians and did everything in my power to make myself agreeable to them. Went to see the King. He lives in a poor house, and he is as poor in dress as any of them, no emblem of Royalty or Majesty about him. He is an old man, treated me very kindly, called me his good friend, and hoped I would be kind to my Squaw. Gave me a small string of Wampum as a token of friendship. My Squaw uneasy to see me write so much.[13]



New York, August 31st. 1776 Inclination as well as duty, would have Induced me to give Congress the earliest information of my removal and that of the Troops from Long Island & Its dependencies to this City the night before last, but the extreme fatigue, which myself and Family [his military staff] have undergone as much from the Weather since the Engagement of the 27th. rendered me & them entirely







unfit to take a pen in hand. Since Monday scarce any of us have been out of the Lines till our passage across the East River was effected yesterday morning & for Forty Eight Hours preceeding that I had hardly been of my Horse and never closed my Eyes so that I was quite unfit to write or dictate till this Morning.

Our Retreat was made without any Loss of Men or Ammunition and in better order than I expected from Troops in the situation ours were. We brought off all our Cannon & Stores, except a few heavy pieces, which in the condition the earth was by a long continued rain we found upon Trial impracticable. The Wheels of the Carriages Sinking up to the Hobs rendered it impossible for our whole force to drag them. We left but little Provisions on the Island except some Cattle which had been driven within our lines and which after many attempts to force across the water we found impossible to effect circumstanced as we were. I have enclosed a copy of the council of War held previous to the Retreat, to which I beg leave to refer Congress for the reasons or many of them, that led to the adoption of that measure. Yesterday Evening and last Night a party of our Men were employed in bringing our Stores, Cannon, Tents &ca. from Governors Island, which they nearly compleated. Some of the Heavy Cannon remain there still, but I expect will be got away to day.

In the Engagement on the 27th. Generals Sullivan & Stirling were made prisoners. The former has been permitted on his parole to return for a little time. From Lord Stirling I had a Letter by Geni. Sullivan, a Copy of which I have the Honor to transmit. That contains his Information of the Engagement with his Brigade. It is not so full and certain as I could wish, he was hurried most probably as his Letter was unfinished. Nor have I been yet able to obtain an exact amount of our Loss, we suppose it from 700 to a Thousand killed & taken. Gen. Sullivan says Lord Howe is extremely desirous of seeing some of the Members of Congress for which purpose he was allowed to come out & to communicate to them what has passed between him & his Lordship. I have consented to his going to Philadelphia, as I do not mean or conceive it right to withhold or prevent him from giving such Information as he possesses in this Instance.

I am much hurried & engaged in arranging and making new Dispositions of our Forces, The movements of the Enemy requiring them to be immediately had, and therefore have only time to add that I am with my best regards to Congress, and to you.

The British, using an unguarded road, had fallen on the rear of the regiments of General John Sullivan and the man the Americans knew as Lord Stirling for his claim to an extinct Scottish earldom. The enemy was suddenly on the slopes of Brooklyn Heights itself and might easily have carried the redoubts against the panicky, green defenders if Howe, probably with grim memories of Bunker Hill, had not held them back. Washington’s water-borne rescue of his army transported across the East River to Manhattan on a foggy night—was a marvel of secrecy, but no retreat is a cause for rejoicing. Through John Hancock, Washington gave Congress his views of a basic weakness of the Army. [14]

August 31, 1777: At every house we passed a pardon letter was nailed, and a watch was posted to prevent looting…[15] (Franz Gotlop’s Regiment?) (

August 31, 1777. Learning that the " Holy Father" desired to

preach this morning, the prisoners vacated the chapel, and

insisted that the members of the congregation should enter

first. The chapel was packed full, and the Hessians accom-

panied the singing with their musical instruments. Bro.

Bader preached on Luke 17. 11. The heat was intense or

the service would have been held in the open air. [16][17] (Conrad Gotlip’s Regiment?)





WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31.



August 31, 1785: At Mount Yernon : " August 31. This day I told Doct r

Craik that I would contribute One hundred Dollars p r An-

num, as long as it was necessary, towards the Education of

His Son Geo Washington either in this Country or in Scot-

land." Washington's Diary.



Dr. James Craik, a graduate of the University of Edinburgh, was born

in Scotland, and settled in Virginia in the year 1753. He joined the

expedition to the Ohio in 1754, and was with Colonel Washington at

the battle of the Great Meadows and the surrender of " Fort Necessity," in

July of that year. Dr. Craik was in the Braddock campaign of 1755, and

remained attached to the Virginia troops until about 1763. He also served

as a surgeon in the Revolutionary war. The friendship formed between

"Washington and the doctor in 1754 lasted through their lives, and he was

a frequent and most welcome guest at Mount Vernon. He attended the

General in his last illness, and was remembered in his will as his " compa-

triot inarms and old and intimate friend." Dr. Craik died February 6,

1814, at the age of eighty-two. [18]



August 31, 1864: Dr. William McKinnon Goodlove (1st cousin, 3 times removed) and the 57th Ohio Volunteer Infantry,Battle of Jonesboro, Georgia, August 31-September 1.[19]

Wed. August 31, 1864

Cold in the morning[20] got five letters

Mrs C Goodlove [21] Maria Winans AR Hodgkins

Hiram Winans MR Hunter[22] wrote one to MR Hunter [23]

August 31, 1916: Miss Bessie Goodlove was a guest in the Owen Turner home in Marion last week.[24]

July 1-August 31, 1941: Eisatzgruppe D,Wehrmacht forces, and Escalon Special, a Romanian unit, kill between 150,000 and 160,000 Jews in Bessarabia.[25].



August 31, 1941: Churchill received 17 reports of the shooting of Jews and Russians in numbers ranging between 61 and 4,200. These reports covered the two month period beginning with June, 1941 when the Nazis invaded the Soviet Union and the special Killing Squads began their work.[26]



August 31, 1941: In response to a Jewish reprisal raid on a German patrol, all Jews were confined to their homes. That evening the “action” commenced. The entire Jewish section of Vilna was raided. As a result 2,019 women, 864 men, and 817 children were taken away to pits in Ponar forsts and all shot dead. This event is notable for two reasons. First it is unusual because it includes the report of Jewish Resistance. Second it is unusual because the Nazis supplied a specific reason for killing Jews.[27]

August 31-September 3, 1941: Eight thousand Vilna Jews are killed in Ponary.[28]



August 31, 1942: The German advance reaches within 16 miles of Stalingrad in the Soviet Union.[29]

August 31, 1943: United States aircraft carriers attack Marcus Island in the Central Pacific.[30]



August 31, 1942: In Ternopil, western Ukraine, at 4:30 am, German SS organize the first deportation of Jews from Ternopilghetto to death camp in Belzec, about 5,000 Jews were deported to face death in Belzedc. When the Germans captured Ternopil, about 18,000 Jews lived in the City.[31]



August 31, 1942: Jonas Gottlob, Haigerloch (place of residence), March 6,1853 (Born), August 31,1942, Theresienstadt. [32]

August 31, 1943: By the end of August 47 Jewish women and 50 Jewish men are executed after being discovered in the “Aryan” section of Warsaw. [33]

August 31, 1944: Jews liberated from the Novaki labor camp joined the battle for Banska Bystrica. Four weeks later Eichmann exacted revenge for the Slovak Uprising by deporting 8,975 Slovak Jews to Birkenau where most met their deaths.[34]



August 31, 1945: President Truman endorsed a proposal for 100,000 Jews to be immediately admitted to Palestine and so informed the British Prime Minister.[35]



August 31, 2010

I Get Email!

In a message dated 8/13/2010 8:14:26 A.M. Central Daylight Time,



Hi Jeff, I am interested in reading your study, “The Goodlove DNA: Coming to America. The story of Franz Gottlob, a Hessian Mercenary Soldier’s Journey to America and his Battle for Freedom” Please let me know how I can access the information. Thanks. Linda



Linda, Thank you for asking about this project. Before I forget, I saw that your book "Our Grandmother's" was at my favorite library in the world, the Newberry in Chicago while I was there. "The Goodlove DNA: Coming to America. The story of Franz Gottlob, a Hessian Mercenary Soldier's Journey to America and his Battle for Freedom" is a work in progress and is large Power Point presentation. It is not really in book form yet. Some of the questions are finding more information about his regimental information, and looking at his last known residence before coming to America, which was Werneck, Bavaria, Germany, as well as getting more DNA tests from Godlove's, and others so we can identify potential descendants. There are really three individuals that draw attention in the Hessian group. Franz Gottlop, that we have already identified as being the patriarch of the Godlove's. Conrad Gotlip, and George Gottliep that are is a strong suspects. Our Conrad Goodlove's DNA shows that we do have a common ancestor to Franz Gottlop, I would like to get an ancestor of the George Gottlieb line to be tested so we can see what we might find. Jeff Goodlove





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

[1] http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/147388

[2] http://www.mcdonald.cam.ac.uk/genetics/mtDNAworld/twelve.html

[3] This Day in Jewish Hitstory.

[4] This day in Jewish History.

[5] This Day in Jewish History.

[6] Ancestors and Friends, by William Lusk Crawford. pg 103.

[7] . LDowd, Clement. Life of Senator Zebulon Baird Vance from N. C. 1824].

[8] Trial by Fire, by Harold Rawlings, page 21.

[9] Vikings, Fury from the North, History’s Mysteries, HISTI, 11/06/2000

[10] Trial by Fire by Harold Rawlings, page 47.

[11] Proposed Descendants of William Smith.

[12] On this Day in America by John Wagman.

[13] The Journal of Nicholas Cresswell, 1774-1777 pg.108

[14] George Washington, A Biography in His Own Words, Ed. By Ralph K. Andrist, 1972

[15] Enemy View, Bruce Burgoyne, pg 171

[16] Records of Moravian Congregation at Hebron, 1775-1781. 453

[17] Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography.

[18] Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography

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

[20] The regiment had spent a glorious fall campaigning in the Valley with Sheridan’s Army of the Shenandoah. The campaign must have sparked memories of Vicksburg with its excellent jayhawking, victorious fighting, and complete confidence in their commander. As at Vicksburg, the cost of success had been excessive. On August 31, 1864, the 24th Iowa had numbered 668 enlisted men and 29 commissioned officers. After the Battle of Cedar Creek, only 9 officers and 238 enlisted men were present for duty. The regiment had lost their respected commander, Colonel Wilds, as well as most of the Company captains who had led the 24th at Vicksburg. Though destined to served their full three year enlistment, the veterans of the 24th Iowa had completed service as a combat regiment. (Longley, Annals of Iowa (Oct., 1894) pp 446, 553, 562.) (A History of the 24th Iowa Infantry 1862-1865, by Harvey H. Kimble, Jr. August 1974. page 191.)

[21] Cordelia Pyle Goodlove, Conrad’s second wife, Born, 1811, Vermont. Married in OH. Died, October 21, 1872, buried Marion. Ia. Lot 13 Oakshade cemetery. (Conrad Goodlove Family Bible).

Came to IA in farm wagon, Conrad rode horse.

[22] MILTON R. HUNTER, physician, Catawba. Of the great number who represent some profession, and especially that of the medical, there are comparatively few who, by hard study and constant devotion to their practice, have reached a more perfect degree of security in their profession than that already attained by Dr. Hunter. His grandfather, Jonathan Hunter, was a native of England, who emigrated to Philadelphia, where he learned the tailoring business, afterward moving to Virginia, where he remained until 1805, when he removed with his family to Pleasant Township, Clark Co., Ohio, and entered Sec. 22, in the western part of the township, where he resided until his death. Jonathan, Jr., the father of Milton R., was one of his sons, and was born in Loudoun Co., Va., March 14, 1786; came to Ohio with his parents, and served in the war of 1812, which broke out a few years after their coming to this State. He followed farming all his life; came into possession of the old homestead, and continued to live in the same section until his death, Nov. 18, 1845. Milton R. was born upon his father's farm, in Pleasant Township, March 24, 1817, and his early life was spent assisting; in the farm labors and in attendance at the district school. Upon attaining manhood he began teaching, and in his leisure time read medicine, studying under Dr. J. S. Howell, of Springfield, Ohio. He began the practice of his profession at Catawba, in 1840, and, after attending lectures at the Eclectic Medical Institute of Cincin nati, Ohio, he graduated in 1852. He was married, Dec. 27, 1842, to Miss Nancy J. Goodlove, daughter of C. Goodlove, she dying April 3, 1852, leaving two children Mary C. and Franklin C. The Doctor was again married, Nov. 6, 1860, to Mrs. Sarah McConkey, the daughter of D. C. and Sarah Skillman, from which union they have had three children born to them, viz., Mary, Frederick M. and Sallie C. Dr. Hunter has now been practicing medicine in Catawba more than forty years, and has always done the biggest portion of the professional work in his vicinity. He is a well read, well-informed gentleman, courteous and generous toward all with whom he comes in contact, pleasant and affable in his manners, and enjoys the confidence of a large circle of the warmest friends, who respect his ability as a physician, and admire his manly integrity in all things. Has been a member of the M. E. Church for forty-one years; believes in the divinity of Jesus Christ, and that the Bible is a revelation of God. http://www.heritagepursuit.com/Clark/ClarkPleasantbio.htm

(History of Clark County, OH

Inside the Conrad Goodlove family bible there is a printed piece of paper enscribed: After 3 days return to : Hunters Drug and Book Store, Wapakoneta, Ohio.

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

[24] Winton Goodlove papers.

[25] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1766.

• [26] This Day in Jewish History.



• [27] This Day in Jewish History.



[28] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1767.

[29] On This Day in America.

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

[31] This Day in Jewish History.

[32] [2]Memorial Book: Victims of the Persecution of Jews under the National Socialist Oppression in Germany, 1933-1945

[33] This day in Jewish History.

[34] This Day in Jewish History

• [35] This Day in Jewish

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, August 30

This Day in Goodlove History, August 30

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/



Israel: Palestinian Attacker Wounds Seven


Israeli policemen gather at a site where a Palestinian man crashed a car into a crowed of people and stabbed few others near a nightclub in Tel Aviv, early Monday, Aug. 29, 2011.

First Posted: 8/29/11 10:35 AM ET Updated: 8/29/11 10:35 AM ET

JERUSALEM (AP) — A Palestinian attacker wounded seven Israelis, one critically, near a Tel Aviv nightclub early Monday, hitting a police checkpoint with a stolen taxi and then stabbing others, police said.

Meanwhile, Israel's military ordered more troops to the border with Egypt following intelligence reports of an impending attack by Gaza militants, the military said.

Earlier this month, militants opened fire on a desert road in that frontier area, killing eight Israelis.

The flare in violence comes just weeks before Palestinians are expected to ask the United Nations to recognize an independent Palestinian state in east Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza Strip. The Palestinians have adopted that route because vast gaps with the government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu have stymied negotiations for more than two years.

The attacker in Tel Aviv was a Palestinian in his 20s from the city of Nablus, according to Israeli police spokeswoman Luba Samri.

Just before 2 a.m., he stole a taxi in south Tel Aviv and then drove into a police checkpoint securing the street near a popular nightclub, she said.

He then got out of the car and stabbed passers-by, she said, while shouting "Allahu akbar" — Arabic for "God is great," a phrase often used as a battle-cry by Islamic militants.

The wounded included four policemen and three civilians, Samri said.

The attacker was arrested. He was injured and was taken to a hospital.

No further details were immediately available.

Such attacks inside Israel, once common, have fallen off in recent years as Israeli and Palestinian forces have restored security in the adjacent Palestinian territory of the West Bank. But some violence has continued, with one Israeli killed in a similar attack with a vehicle in Tel Aviv in May.[1]



I Get Email!

In a message dated 8/29/2011 11:05:38 A.M. Central Daylight Time, action@honestreporting.com writes:



The Latest From HonestReporting


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



VIDEO: HonestReporting Looks at the Light Side of Life


The more we follow the news, the more we realize that some things are just too outrageous to be taken seriously.

So here we share with you, our readers, the first in a series of 'Media Circus' titles that might

open the eyes of others through an alternative satirical approach.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gc1kDE4jeHc



I Get Email!

In a message dated 8/29/2011 5:02:21 P.M. Central Daylight Time,

You have have seen these before, but they are still worth pondering....especially the last one!







PONDERISMS

1· I used to eat a lot of natural foods until I learned that most people die of natural causes.

2· There are two kinds of pedestrians: the quick and the dead.

3· Life is sexually transmitted.

4· Healthy is merely the slowest possible rate at which one can die.

5· The only difference between a rut and a grave is the depth.

6· Health nuts are going to feel stupid someday, lying in hospitals dying of nothing.

7· Have you noticed since everyone has a camcorder these days no one talks about

seeing UFOs like they used to?

8· Whenever I feel blue, I start breathing again.

9· All of us could take a lesson from the weather. It pays no attention to criticism.

10· In the 60's, people took acid to make the world weird. Now the world is weird and

people take Prozac to make it normal.

11· How is it one careless match can start a forest fire, but it takes a whole box to start

a campfire?

12· Who was the first person to look at a cow and say, 'I think I'll squeeze these dangly

things and drink whatever comes out'?

13· If Jimmy cracks corn and no one cares, why is there a song about him?

15· If quizzes are quizzical, what are tests?

16· If corn oil is made from corn, and vegetable oil is made from vegetables,

then what is baby oil made from?

17· Do illiterate people get the full effect of Alphabet Soup?

18· Does pushing the elevator button more than once make it arrive faster?

19· Why doesn't glue stick to the inside of the bottle?

20· Do you ever wonder why you gave me your email address?






This Day…

August 30: 526 Death of Theodoric the Great, king of the Ostrogoths (the eastern Goths) who controlled the Italian Peninsula and area adjacent to it. Theodoric had a reputation for religious toleration which he extended to the Jewish people. He encouraged them to settle in his kingdom reportedly because he saw them as a source of economic benefit.[2]

527 A.D. Byzantine Emperor Justin I names his nephew Justinian I as co-ruler and successor to the throne. This was a "lose-lose" proposition for the Jewish people. When Justin I assumed the throne he adopted a policy of rigorously enforcing the anti-Jewish laws promulgated by Theodosius including excluding Jews from "all posts of honor" and banning the construction of new synagogues.[3] When an ambitious Emperor Justinian came to power in 527 A.D. he had visions of a reunited Roman Empire. [4]

August 30, 1179: The Muslim invaders had pillaged the castle at Jacob’s Ford and killed most of its residents. On the same day, less than one week after reinforcements were called, Baldwin and his supportin army set out from Tiberias only to discover smodke permeating the horizon directly above Chastellet. Obviously they were too late to save the 700 knights, architects, and construction workers who were killed and the other 800 who were taken captive. Baldwin and his reinforcements turned back towards Tiberias and Saladin ordered the remains of the fortification to be torn down. [5]



Although Saladin claimed a military victory at Chastellet, his troops fell victim to another enemy. Directly after the siege, the 700 Crusaders killed at Jacob’s Ford were placed into a pit. Due to the August heat, the corpses in the pit began to decay and as a a result, a plague incurred several losses to Saladin’s officer corps, approximately ten officers died of disease. However this setback did not diminish Saladin’s military prowess. [6]



1180: Saladin and Baldwin signed a truce.[7]

1180: From the moment of his marriage in 1180, Guy of Lusignan was flooded with good luck. The King of Jerusalem then was Baldwin IV, a wise and intelligent leader who had the misfortune to contract leprosy, which disfigured and blinded and eventually killed him and which, of course, prevented him from producing an heir.[8]

The life of Robin Hood was from between 1180 and 1280.[9]



August 30, 1406

August 30, 1406 the mayor and council of Breisach, are asking the city council of Freiburg for mediation with the city physician regarding a summons before the court of Rottweil.[10]



August 30, 1563: The Jewish community of Neutitschlin, Moravia was expelled.[11]

August 30, 1645

The New England Confederation signs a peace treaty with the Narragansett Indians.[12]

At the battle of Worcester, in 1646, Lauchlan Mackinnon was made knight banneret. His son Daniel had two sons, John, whose great-great-grandson died in India, unmarried, in 1808, and Daniel, who emigrated to Antigua, and died in 1720. His eldest son and heir, William, of Antigua, an eminent member of the Legislature of the Islands, died at Bath, in 1767. [13]

around him on lands presumed to be within the company‘s grant.[14]





July 6, 1752: Eyewittness reports of cannibalism after the attack

At least two eyewitness accounts refer to cannibalism that occurred after the attack. William Trent kept a journal of a 1752 trip to visit the Twightwee Indians. When he was at ―lower Sawanees town‖, he encountered traders Thomas Burney and Andrew McBryer, whom he described as the ―only two men that escaped, when the town was attacked‖. Trent‘s July 6, 1752 journal entry describes their eyewitness account, and includes the sentence ―One of the whitemen that was wounded in the belly, as soon as they got him they stabbed and scalped, and took out his heart and eat it.‖

In his 1902 book ―History of Ohio‖, Rowland H. Rerick states:

As soon as they could take a, French scalp in retaliation, the Maumees of Pickawillany sent

Burney with it and a message to the governors of Virginia and Pennsylvania, saying: ―We saw our great Piankeshaw king taken, killed and eaten within a hundred yards of the fort, and before our faces. We now look upon ourselves as a lost people, fearing our brothers will leave us; but,before we will be subject to the French, or call them our fathers, we will perish here.‖[15]



1752: August The Twightwees originally made the Twightwee Indian Trail

Pages 100 and 101 of Goodman‘s book include information from Trent‘s journal regarding an

August 1752 meeting at Shawanees Town44. Page 100 states:

Then the Twightwees produced a black and white string of wampum, letting the

Shawanees and Delawares know that when they went there before, they had cleared a

road, but as it had been stopped by the French and Indians, they now clear it again.

Page 101 of Goodman‘s book quotes from a speech by the Twightwees to the English, as

follows:

Brothers: When we first went to see you, we made a road* which reached to your

country, which road the French and Indians have made bloody; now we make a new

road, which reaches all the way to the sun-rising, one end of which we will hold fast,

which road shall remain open and clear forever, that we and our brothers may travel

backwards and forwards to one another with safety…[16]



August 30, 1752: Robert Callender writes to the governor about the attack

Pages 47 and 48 of Goodman‘s book provide the following letter that was written to the

Governor by Indian Trader Robert Callender from Carlisle, Pennsylvania on August 30, 1752:

Last night, Thomas Burney, who lately resided at the Twightwees‘ town in Allegheny, came here and gives the following account of the unhappy affair that was latelytransacted there: On the twenty-first day of June last, early in the morning, two

Frenchmen and about two hundred and forty Indians came to the Twightwees‘ town, andin a hostile manner attacked the people there residing. In the skirmish there was onewhite man and fourteen Indians killed, and five white men taken prisoners.

The party who came to the Twightwees‘ town reported that they had received, as a

commission, two belts of wampum from the governor of Canada, to kill all such Indians

as are in amity with the English, and to take the persons and effects of all such English

traders as they could meet with, but not to kill any of them if they could avoid it, which

instructions were in some measure obeyed.

Mr. Burney is now here, and is willing to be qualified not only to this, but to sundry other

matters which he can discover concerning this affair. If your Honor thinks it proper for

him to come to Philadelphia to give you the satisfaction of examining more particularly

in relation to it, he will readily attend your Honor upon that occasion, or make any

affidavit of the particulars here. Such orders as your Honor pleases to send on this

occasion, shall certainly be obeyed…[17]




Fall, 1752

“Andrew Harrison died in the fall of the year 1752.[18]



Fall 1752
Andrew2 Harrison died in the fall of the year 1752. At Orange County Court, November 22, 1753, on motion of William Johnson, certificate was granted him for obtaining letters of administration on the estate of Andrew2 Harrison, deceased, Elizabeth, widow of the said Andrew2 Harrison, and Battaile3 Harrison, the heir-at-law, having refused. William Johnson's bond was placed at two hundred pounds currency. [19]





Wednesday, August 30th, 1775



My bedfellow very fond of me this morning and wants to go with me. Find I must often meet with such encounters as these if I do not take a Squaw to myself. She is young and sprightly, tolerably handsome, and can speak a little English. Agreed to take her. She saddled her horse and went with us to New Hundy about 3 miles off, where she had several relations who made me very welcome to such as they had. From there to Coashoskis, where we lodged in my Squaw’s Brother’s, made me a compliment of a young wolf but I could not take it with me. [20]



August 30, 1776: Glover's splendid regiment of seafaring men from Marble-

head, Massachusetts, lent a willing and skillful hand, as he

had promised they would, the expedition would no doubt

have failed. These sailors and fishermen, armed with rifles,

clad in blue round-jackets and trousers with large leather

buttons attached, were then, as they had been in New York

harbor early in the morning of August 30, when the retreat

was made from Long Island, the men on whom all relied to

see the army safely landed.^ [21]



August 30, 1777

At noon today we received orders to march tomorrow and those among the sick needing special care were sent aboard the hospital ship…[22]



August 30, 1777: Late in the afternoon two hundred and eight

prisoners of the Regiment Knyphausen arrived, which

created much confusion and little discipline was maintained.

A few handsome looking Hessians remained, but the others

were hastily taken to town. One hundred more are ex-

pected, but there is no way to accommodate them, for even

our stable is filled. At evening those in the stable sang

songs; those in our house remained quiet, as they did not

wish to disturb the " Holy Father !" [23]





August 30, 1778

American forces withdraw from Rhode Island.[24]



August 30, 1781

The French fleet commanded by Admiral de Grasse arrives off the coast of Yorktown, Virginia.[25]



SATUKDAY, AUGUST 30, 1794:



At Germantown : " I will undertake without the gift of

prophecy, to predict, that it will be impossible to keep this

country in a state of amity with Great Britain long, if the

posts are not surrendered. A knowledge of these being

my sentiments would have little weight, I am persuaded,

with the British administration, and perhaps not with the

nation in effecting the measure ; but both may rest satisfied

that, if they want to be in peace with this country, and to

enjoy the benefits of its trade, to give up the posts is the

only road to it. Withholding them, and consequences we

feel at present continuing, war will be inevitable." — Wash-

ington to John Jay, at London.



It was stipulated in Article VII. of the definitive treaty of peace of

September 3, 1783, that the British government should with all convenient

speed withdraw its armies from every post, place, and harbor within the



* This requisition was afterward augmented to fifteen thousand.







United States. The troops, however, had not as yet been withdrawn from

the posts of Mackinaw, Detroit, Fort Erie, Niagara, Oswego, Oswegatohie (on

the St. Lawrence), and Port-au-fer and Dutchman's Point on Lake Cham-

plain. It was the opinion of the President that all the difficulties with the

Indians were the result of the conduct of the British agents protected by

these frontier posts. They endeavored to remove friendly tribes over the

line, and also to keep those who were hostile to the United States in a state

of irritation ; and they also furnished the whole with arms, ammunition,

clothing, and even provisions to carry on the war. Prom these facts came

the positive conviction (expressed in the above-quoted letter) that without

their surrender a state of amity with Great Britain could not long be con-

tinued. The surrender of these posts, thus urged by Washington, was incor-

porated in Article II. of the " Jay Treaty," concluded at London, October

25, 1795, it being stipulated that His Majesty should withdraw all his troops

and garrisons from all posts and places within the boundary lines assigned

by the treaty of peace with the United States ; this evacuation was to take

place on or before the first day of June, 1796. [26]



Tues. August 30, 1864

In camp all day nothing of importance

Transpired cold night[27]



1867

Six children of William Harrison Goodlove and Sarah Catherine Pyle were born between 1867 and 1882; he would have been 46 and Sarah would have been 38 when Jessie Pearl was born. (Ref#46) [28]



1867

At wars end Southern States Legislatures passed measures designed to maintain white superiourity. These laws known as black codes severely curtailed the newly freed slaves civil rights. In effect, returning them to a state of bondage and making them second class citizens. In response, angry Congressional republicans passed the Reconstruction act of 1867. A strict set of laws that temporarily abolished southern state governments, divided the south into military districts, and gave blacks the right to vote. The defeated south again felt invaded by the Northern authority. White supremacy was threatened.

Soon after passage of the reconstruction act, Clan leaders from all over Tennessee held a secret meeting in Nashville. The man granted control of the clan was Nathan Bedford Forest, former Confederate General and out spoken critic of Federal Reconstruction.[29]



August 30, 1873: Michael Spaid, born October 1, 1795, in Hampshire County, Virginia, died March 26, 1872, in Buffalo, Ohio. Was married to Margaret ("Peggy") Godlove (Gottlieb), daughter of George Godlove, German lineage, born August 13, 1792, Hampshire County WV, died August 30, 1873 in Buffalo, Guernsey County, Ohio.[30] They were Lutherans and Democrats. Eight children. She had to the last the Virginia accent and kindly ways. [31]



George Gottlieb was a Hessian Soldier. So was George Nicholas Spaid, and of course, Francis Gotlop (Godlove). What they have in common was that they were Hessians, they deserted and stayed in America, and their children got married together. In the case of George Gottlieb and Francis Gotlop, they both had similar last names and I suspect that George had the Cohen Model Haplotype, as we know Francis Gotlop did. Perhaps they were among a small group of “Jewish Hessians” or “Hessians with Jewish ancestry” that came to America during the American Revolution and stayed afterwards. I do not have time to go into this today. I have created a study called “The Goodlove DNA: Coming to America. The story of Franz Gottlob, a Hessian Mercenary Soldier’s Journey to America and his Battle for Freedom”.




• Also, George Gottlieb the elder had a daughter , Margaret (Peggy”) Godlove, born August 13, 1792 in Hampshire Cnty WVA or Pennsylvania?, died August 30, 1873 in Buffalo, Guernsey County, OH Married 1816 to Michael Spaid.

Is this Conrad’s father and is there a descendant out there that would do a DNA test?


More to come.[32]



1873

All this family, except the infant, is buried at the Buffalo cemetery, Michael died October 10, 1872, and the widow (Margaret Gottlieb/Godlove) followed him August 30, 1873. [33]



1873

In 1873, the German Jewish historian Heinrich Graetz afforded Yiddish ust two paragraphs in his magisterial six volume “History of the Jews”. Never mind the Yiddish was then the first or only language of 80 percent of the world’s Jews; for Graetz, it was “eine halbtierische Sprachye,” a half bestial tongue. [34]



August 30, 1940: Registration of all Jewish property becomes mandatory in Slovakia.[35]



August 30, 1941: The SS at Chelmo work camp ordered fifty Jewish workers to dig trenches. Five were shot at a time, as five would dig a new trench, until all but the last five were killed.[36]



August 30, 1942: Members of the Jewish community at Rabka, Poland are murdered.[37]



August 30, 1942: French Bishop Pierre-Marie Theas reminds his parishes that all human beings are created by the same God, Christians and Jews alike, and that “all men regardless of race or religion deserve respect from individuals and governments.”[38]



August 30, 1944: Approximately 68,000 Jews remained in the Lodz Ghetto.. This was the largest gathering of Jews outside of the camps left in all of Europe. Of this remnant, 67,000 of were told they were to be resettled. Instead they are sent to Birkenau. The shipment of Jews that began on August 7 lasted 23 days, finally ending on August 30. Once there, most of the Jews meet the usual horrific fate - selection, death by gas, and then the cremation of their bodies. Some of the crippled were specially selected by Dr. Mengele. He still had plenty of subjects to use for his medical "studies" and experiments[39]



August 30, 1944: After visiting Majdanek and seeing first hand what the Germans had done, W.H. Lawrence wrote in the New York Times, “I am now prepared to believe any story of German atrocities no matter how savage, cruel and depraved.[40]



• Alice Gottlieb,

• December 6,1918, resided, Wohnhaft Frankfurt a.M. . Deportation: 1942, Majdanek .



August 30, 1997: Covert Lee Goodlove Initiated March 11, 1946 Passed April 1 1946, Raised April 22, 1946, all at Vienna Lodge No 142. Suspended November 13, 1972, Reinstated January 10, 1973. Demitted May 10, 1988 when they closed. Birthdate November 12, 1911, Died August 30, 1997. May 10, 1988 joined Benton City LodgeNo. 81, Shellsburg, IA. Became a 50 Year Mason, June 19, 1996. Karen L. Davies Administrative Assistant, Grand Lodge of Iowa A.F. & A.M.PO Box 279, Cedar Rapids, IA 52406-0279. 319-365-1438.







By William Fischer, Jr., November 9, 2008


3. George Rogers Clark Statue







Credits. This page originally submitted on November 26, 2008, by William Fischer, Jr. of Fort Scott, Kansas. This. Photos: 1, 2, 3. submitted on November 26, 2008, by William Fischer, Jr. of Fort Scott, Kansas. • Kevin W. was the editor who published this page. [41]







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

[1] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/08/29/israel-palestinian-attack_n_940289.html

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

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

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

[5] Wikipedia

[6] Wikipedia

[7] Wikipedia.

[8] Warriors of God by James Reston Jr, page 15.

[9] The Real Robin Hood, HISTI, 5/18/2010.

[10] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 6.

[11] This Day in Jewish History.

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

[13] Torrence and Allied Families, Robert M. Torrence pg 478.

[14] In Search of Turkey Foot Road, page 23

[15] In Search of Turkey Foot Road, page 35.

[16] In Search of Turkey Foot Road, page 37.

[17] In Search of Turkey Foot Road, page 35.

[18] Torrence and Allied Families, Robert M. Torrence pg. 317

[19] [Robert Torrence, Torrence and Allied Families (Philadelphia: Wickersham Press, 1938), 317; Orange County, Virginia Records, Order Book, 1747-1754: 509] A Chronological listing of Events in the Lives of Andrew1,Andrew2 and Lawrence Harrison by Daniel Robert Harrison, Milford, Ohio, November, 1998.

[20] The Journal of Nicholas Cresswell, 1774-1777 pg. 108

[21] Trenton

[22] Enemy View, Bruce Burgoyne, pg 171

[23] Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography

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

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

[26] Washington after the Revolution

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

[28] Gerol “Gary” GoodloveConrad and Caty, 2003

[29] Klu Klux Klan: A Secret History.1998 HIST.

[30] Capon Valley, It’s Pioneers and Their Descendants, 1698 to 1940 by Maud Pugh Volume I page 259.

[31] Capon Valley, It’s Pioneers and Their Descendants, 1698 to 1940 by Maud Pugh Volume I page 190.

[32] Posted by: Daniel Robinson (ID *****7243)
Date: June 02, 2008 at 16:17:28

http://genforum.genealogy.com/g/goodlove/messages/4.html

[33] "The Spade Family in America", author Abraham Thompson Secrest. Published privately November 1920, Columbus, Ohio.

[34] Outwitting History, by Aaron Lansky, page 13.

• [35] This Day in Jewish History



[36] This Day in Jewish History

• [37] This Day in Jewish History.

[38] This Day in Jewish History.

[39] This Day in Jewish History.

[40] This Day in Jewish History.

[41] http://www.hmdb.org/Marker.asp?Marker=13887

Monday, August 29, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, August 29

This Day in Goodlove History, August 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/

Calls to raise Israel-Egypt treaty troop limits
AMY TEIBEL | August 29, 2011 06:30 AM EST |

JERUSALEM — A deadly attack on Israel from Egypt's Sinai Peninsula has sparked calls to raise the number of Egyptian troops allowed in the area under the historic peace treaty with Israel, to counter a surge in Islamist militant activity.

But some in Israel, afraid the recent revolt in Egypt might lead to the collapse of the pact, are wary of altering it in any way.

Israel says Palestinian militants crossed from Gaza into Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, made their way along the Israel-Egypt border, crossed back into Israel, attacked Israeli vehicles and killed eight people on Aug. 18.

The assault underscored the increasingly lawless situation in Sinai, where weak policing and difficult terrain may be letting it turn into the latest focus of Islamic militant activity in the region. A new attack alert led to the deployment of additional Israeli troops along the border, the military said Monday.

Israel's insistence that the peninsula be significantly demilitarized was a key aspect of the 1979 accord between Israel and Egypt. The stipulation, essential for reassuring Israel back then, reflected skepticism that Egypt would remain eternally friendly.

Today, however, this provision makes it difficult for Israel itself to demand the Egyptians do a better job of policing the vast desert triangle that separates Asia from Africa.

"Israel is sitting on a time bomb," said counterterrorism expert Boaz Ganor. "The fact that the peace border between Israel and Sinai ... is no longer a peace frontier requires Israel to regroup."





In the aftermath of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak's fall earlier this year, Israel permitted Egypt to send in more troops than the 750 allowed under the treaty. Egyptian security officials said about 10,000 troops are already present in the 23,000 square mile (60,000 square kilometer) territory, and about 4,000 are posted along the Israeli border. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief reporters.

Calls are mounting for permitting far greater numbers – if not totally freeing Egypt from any need to get Israel's permission, which the Egyptian public had always considered an affront to its national pride and sovereignty.

The matter generated discussion in the region over the weekend.

In an interview with Dubai-based Al-Arabiya TV, Arab League chief Nabil Elaraby, a former Egyptian foreign minister, said the treaty with Israel was not sacrosanct, and provisions could be revisited – including the limitations on troops.

On Sunday, a senior Israeli official said Israel should consider revising the provisions of the peace treaty to allow Cairo to deploy more troops.

Many Israelis are leery, though, fearful that the Muslim Brotherhood that inspired Gaza's Islamic militant Hamas rulers could gain influence in Egypt after an election later this year, and that the peace treaty with Egypt would ultimately fall apart.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu seemed cool to the idea in comments attributed to him Sunday.

"I am against the idea of changing the peace treaty," a government official quoted Netanyahu as telling members of his ruling Likud Party. The prime minister also said if changes are proposed, he would bring them before a Cabinet body for approval.

The 1979 peace accord – the first between Israel and an Arab nation – is one of the few achievements of decades of Mideast peace efforts. As part of that deal, Israel returned the Sinai, captured from Egypt in the 1967 Mideast war.

That was a major strategic gain for Egypt, not only undoing a humiliating territorial loss but also restoring to Egypt total command over the Suez Canal, allowing it to reopen for global shipping.

In 1967, Egypt menacingly beefed up troops in the Sinai and used its control of the tip of the peninsula to close the Straits of Tiran, cutting off shipping to Israel from the south – and leading Israel to attack. In 1973, Egypt attacked, and the Sinai was the scene of bloody tank battles.

Such scenarios seem a world away from the reality that has prevailed since the peace treaty. Israel has kept few troops along that border. There was almost no military on the other side, the peninsula is sparsely populated, and the frontier was quiet for decades.

The bloody Aug. 18 attack shattered any sense of calm. The brazen attack on Israel and the deaths of several Egyptian police during the firefight strained relations between Israel and Egypt, prompting officials to examine security measures already being beefed up.

Israel is speeding up construction of a fence along the 150-mile (230-kilometer) frontier, and Defense Minister Ehud Barak said Sunday it would be completed within a year or so. Additional visual and electronic intelligence-gathering devices have been put in place. The military has deployed hundreds more troops along the border, including elite forces, defense officials said.

Critics say the cross-border attack should have come as no surprise. In recent years, tens of thousands of illegal African migrants have shown how easy it is to sneak into the country over the porous frontier with Egypt. Further evidence comes from the thriving weapons and goods-smuggling trade Palestinian militants have set up with Sinai Bedouin to dodge the Israeli blockade of Gaza.

The mountainous desert now harbors an array of militant groups, including Palestinian extremists and al-Qaida-inspired jihadists, Egyptian and Israeli security officials say.

In recent years radical factions, some of them Palestinian, attacked popular Sinai beach resorts, killing more than 120 people between 2004 and 2006. In 2007 and 2008, Palestinian militants attacked Israel twice from Sinai. In 2009, Egyptian authorities said they had uncovered a conspiracy by Lebanon's Hezbollah guerrilla group to attack Sinai tourist sites.

Since Mubarak's fall, and despite the infusion of more troops, militants have repeatedly attacked Egyptian police facilities and a natural gas pipeline that supplies Israel and Jordan. Islamic radicals who fled Egyptian prisons during the chaos surrounding the revolution sought asylum in Sinai, hooking up with radical groups that already had built strongholds there.

All this places Israel in a very sensitive position regarding the Sinai, said Ely Karmon, senior research scholar at the Institute for Counter-Terrorism at the Interdisciplinary Center near Tel Aviv.

"On the one hand, Israel has to operate resolutely against terror groups and rocket fire. It also has to ... cooperate with Egypt to prevent Sinai from becoming a center of global terror, and terror against Israel," Karmon said. "I hope the introduction of forces into Sinai won't become a security threat to Israel in the future. That is the risk Israel is taking."[1]

I Get Email…

Dear Jeffery,

My husband isn’t even home yet, and he is already making plans to go to New York City to stand for Israel. He will be there among those who hate Israel the most…including President Ahmadinejad of Iran, and I can assure you Mike isn’t going there to shake his hand! Mike was the first Christian Zionist ever to meet with Ahmadinejad when he confronted him last year in New York and arranged the exclusive Fox News interview that exposed Ahmadinejad’s evil hatred of Israel.

For Israel’s safety,

Carolyn Evans

This Day…

August 29, 1236: King Jaime of Spain gave the Jews three weeks to remove all blasphemy from their books (Talmud).[2]



1236: Pope Gregory IX in 1236 ordered the confiscation of Hebrew books.[3]



1236: Crusaders attack Jewish communities of Anjou and Poitou and attempt to baptize all the Jews. Those who resisted (Est. 3,000) were slaughtered.[4]



1236: The Emperor published findings of investigation into blood libel.[5]



August 29, 1255 Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln (England) was the subject of an infamous ritual murder libel. It was alleged that Jews enticed the boy and while starving him,invitede Jews of Lincoln to murder him ritually. (Jews did come to Lincoln at that time to attend a wedding.) His body was cast into a well and a month later, “miracles” followed the discovery of his corpse. On the basis of the alleged “confession”by Jopin (Jacob), the secular authorities (for the first time) and the Church sent 91 Jews to the Tower of London. Eighteen were executed before Richard and the friars stopped the killings. This incident provided Chaucer with the idea for his Prioress Tale and the Hero of the popular ballad, “Little Sir Hugh.”[6]

August 29, 1484: Pope Innocent VIII, a staunch supporter of the Spanish Inquisition, is elected Pope. The significance to Jewish history of this event is self evident.[7]

1485 Jews expelled from Vincenza (Italy).[8]

August 29, 1526: An Ottoman army defeated the Hungarians at the Battle of Mohacs following which the Turks pillaged the city. The Christians nobles and the handful of wealthy Jews fled in fear of the Ottomans. While Jews had lived in Hungary since the third century C.E., many of them had fallen on hard times during the 15th and 16th centuries as they dealt with acquisations of Blood Libels and decrees designed to avoid repayment of just debts. The Ottomans left but returned to stay in 1541 when much of central Hungary became part of the Ottoman Empire and a refuge for Sephardic Jews moving eastward to avoid the clutches of the Inquisition.[9]

August 29, 1632: Birthdate of English philosoipher John Locke. Locke influenced the Founding Fathers of the United States. In 1689 he wrote his “Letter Concerning Toleration” in which he stated “Neither Pagan, nor Jew, ought to be excluded from the civil rights of the commonwealth because of his religion.” Locke was asked to write a constitution for the new colony of South Carolina. At the time,Christian merchants were complaining about the active involvement of Jews in the tradebetween South Carolina and the English Colony of Barbados. Locke saw the problem as bigotry, not “swarming Jewish merchants. “He inserted a line in the colonial charter that called for the protection of “Jews, heathens and other dissenters.”[10]

August 29, 1655: Warsaw falls without resistance to a small force under the command of Charles X Gustav of Sweden during The Deluge. The Deluge is a general expression for a series of misfortunes that befell the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth starting with the uprising of the Cossacks and including an invasion by the Swedes. When it was all over, Poland was a much diminished entity and much less tolerant of its Jewish population. This defeat was part of the long road that would lead to the partion of Poland in the late 18th century, which, among other things, would give Russia its large and unwanted Jewish population.[11]

August 29, 1730: Richard Taliaferro
Colonel in the English and Colonial Armies. Richard owned more than 10,000 acres in Amherst and Nelson Co, Virginia and additional land in Patrick Co. he served as a Colonel in the English and Colonial Armies and attained the rank of Captain. It is said that he met his death while he and his men were crossing the Potomac in a flat boat.

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



Isle of Skye, Scotland, 2000. Photo by Kelly Goodlove.



1730

Daniel McKinnon appears to have been born about 1730 in Isle of Skye, Inverness, Scotland[13] and some compilers report that he and his brother Joseph were sons of Lord Michail McKinnon.[14]



August 29, 1756: Frederick the Great attacks Saxony, beginning the Seven Years War. The Seven Years War was one of what seems to be a long list of interminable wars in Europe. Americans know the Seven Years War as the French-Indian War, a fight that led directly to the American Revolution and the creation of the United States, and all that that means for the Jews of the world. Frederick the Great’s mistreatment of his Jewish subjects is too big a subject for this brief entry. After visiting Frederick’s Berlin, the French statesman Mirabeua described the Prussian monarh’s decrees concerning Jews as “worthy of a cannibal.” Frederick characterized Jews “usurious vermin,” “wretches who “multiply infamously.” Saxony was the cite of Martin Luther’s famous fight with the Roman Catholic Church. He had the Jews expelled from Saxony in 1537. It would be centuries before they would be readmitted and they would not gain full rights of citizenship until the second half of the 19th century.[15]



August 29, 1765: William Elliot deposed, that he settled and improved a plantation about seven miles from Fort Pitt on the Public Read at a Place called “the Bullock Pens” in the year 1776, by permission of Colo. Reed, the Officer Commanding at that place, dated August 29, 1765, and is now in possession of the same. He knows the following persons to have settled in his neighborhood before the year 1768 viz.: Thos Small, Eneas McWhay, Alexander McGregoe, James Royal, Devereuax Smith & Jasper Tabbs, by the same authority—that the Improvements above mentioned are laid to he within the bounds of a grant from the Indians to Col. Croghan, and are claimed by him— [16]





August 29: 1976: Washington, realizing he could not permit a major portion of his army to be bottled up and captured, put into effect secret plans for their evacuation. On the evening of August 29, having already assembled a sizable flotilla of small craft of many descriptions, he assigned Col. Glover the formidable task of ferrying the 9,000 colonial

Troops with their equipment across the mile wide East River to Manhattan. The exodus had to be carried out under blackout conditions and with a minimum of noise to avoid alerting the British. Despite a strong ebb tide and variable winds, when dawn came only a small rear guard was left on Long Island.[17]



August 29, 1777: Ensign Carl Friedrich Rueffer, of the Hesse-Cassel von Mirbach Regiment, entered comments about the progress of the army in his diary also. “29 August – In this stretch of land we have not seen any females because they were told by the rebels that the because the Hessians would have misused them in an unpleasant manner, so they have all fled…[1] [18]



August 29, 1777: During the afternoon upwards of four hun-

dred prisoners arrived, when we had the opportunity of pre-

senting our protest to Colonel Grubb. However, he was

determined to occupy our building; assigned the four rooms

on the lower floor to our use and put two hundred prisoners

in the chapel and side rooms on the second floor. The

remaining prisoners were taken to the Reformed church in

town. [19]



August 29, 1793:

This offer was brouglit tefore the Lodge at a meeting held August 29, 1793,

and, heing received with favor, the application was ordered to he made.



Being thus armed, Mr. 'Williams met with better success, and obtained a

sitting from the President in September, 1794.* This portrait, a half-length,

is still in the possession of the Alexandria Lodge ; it represents "Washington

as a Mason, with the collar and jewel of a Past Master, and amounts so

nearly to a caricature (judging from the print after it by O'Neill) f that it

would seem the President, in refusing the original application, must have

had some inkling as to the lack of artistic powers on the part of Mr.

Williams. [20]



August 29, 1831: Thomas McKinnon married Elizabeth Arbogast.[21]



August 29, 1850: Mary Jane McKinnon married Ebenezer R. Watts.[22]

Mon. August 29, 1864

Started back on account of being exposed

To small pox got back to convalescent camp

At noon wrote to wildcat[23]



August 29, 1941: The remainder of 11,000 displaced Hungarian Jews (forced laborers), now living in Kamenets Pololsk and whom Hungary did not want to take back were taken out of town to a pit and machine gunned down.[24]



August 29, 1942: The Jewish community from Olesko, Ukraine, is deported to the Belzec death camp.[25]



August 29, 1942: By the end of August SS officer Kurt Gerstein failed in his attempt to publicize his knowledge of the mass gassings of Jews. He is rebuffed in his approach to the German papal nuncio, Cesare Orsenigo.[26]



August 29, 1942: Occupation officials in the East inform Berlin that the “Jewish problem” has been “totally solved” in Serbia. Since German occupation, 14,500 of Serbia’s 16,000 Jews have been murdered.[27]



August 29, 1944: More than 800 Jews earmarked for forced labor are transported from Auschwitz to the Sachsenhausen, Germany, labor camp for assignment to nearby factories. Elsewhere in Germany, about 72 ill or pregnant Jews are taken from a labor camp near Leipzig and transported to gas chambers at Auschwitz.[28]



August 29, 1945: Lt. Colonel Judah Nadich entered the Feldafing D.P. camp. Nadich was a rabbi serving as the senior Jewish chaplain in Europe. Nadich was repelled by the barbaric conditions under which the Jews were living; especially by the fact that they were confined behind barbed wire just as had been the case in the Concentration Camps while “The conquered Germans had complete freedom.”[29]



Immediately after the war :



During World War II, an estimated 70 million people were killed. More than half of them were civilians.[30]




August 29, 1962: Willis Ralph Goodlove (March 22, 1869-April 8, 1953) married Myrtle Isabelle Andrews, March 4, 1896. She died August 29, 1962, at age 86 years. Both are buried at Jordan’s Grove Cem­etery (Bk. II, F-87). Their children were: Wallace Harold (Bk. II, F-88), Ethel Vinetta, Bessie Marie, Wilma Laura, Mary lone, William Paul, Gladys Lavona, and Kenneth Ivan. [31]



[32]

Myrtle (Andrews) Goodlove

Myrtie and Willis were divorced in 1921

November 20, 1876 – August 29, 1962



August 29, 2005: Hurricane Katrina hit the southern coast of the U.S. killing almost 1,800 and causing more than $81 billion in damages.[33]



August 29, 2009:

It was brought to my attention by the descendants of the above mentioned Mary Ione Goodlove, daughter of Willis Goodlove, who was the son of William Harrison Goodlove, who was the son of Conrad Goodlove that one of their children contracted the disease known as Gaucher’s disease. I was told that at the time the doctors called this a “Jewish disease”. Unknown at that time was their connection to Jewish ancestry by way of the Cohen Modal Haplotype DNA. It is passed through the Goodlove male side through the Y-chromosome. All Goodlove male’s have this very unusual and rare DNA. It is the DNA of the Jewish Priestly line called Cohen’s. Some of the DNA matches are named Cohen. The significance of this event of this disease is that is the first known disease to be passed on by this recessive gene. It illustrates the importance of the education of our family and extended family to our ancestry. Gaucher’s disease is only passed on if both the male and female have this recessive gene and since this is widely known in the Jewish people they are usually tested before marriage.

The Goodlove’s only recently found out of their connection to their Jewish Ancestry after a DNA test by Gary Goodlove revealed that he had the Cohen Modal Haplotype. This was announced at the family reunion that year and is that basis behind my work.

It is through this awareness and education that I hope can occur and continue so that medical decisions can be more accurately determined. Gaucher’s is only one of many diseases that can occur to those of Jewish ancestry and unfortunately sometimes there is misdiagnoses because of a lack of awareness.

This project will hopefully develop into a method of education for those family members so they can pass on this awareness and questions can be answered.

I myself am not a doctor and what I say should not be construed into medical advice. The facts are what I am interested in and today, it is clear that there is a more serious side to “This Day in Goodlove History.” Our biological and genetic history affects the lives of our children and our children’s children and we owe it to them to be educated.

Jeffery Lee Goodlove







Books written about our unique DNA include: “Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People.”



August 29, 2010:

From the editor:

On my list of things to do or if someone has the time, inclination, and money, I believe that we might find some records of Franz Gotlop at the Castle Church in Werneck, Germany. Read below as to the reasoning but on this date August 29, 1745 this church was inaugurated. Franz was born shortly after this and came later came to America as a Hessian soldier during the American Revolution and fought with the British. He would stay in America after the war. Perhaps there are some baptismal records at the church in Werneck or some cemetery markers in the church cemetery or even in the Jewish cemetery. Franz Gotlop’s military records show that he was from Werneck, Bavaria (Germany) and that he was a Catholic. We now know he also had the Cohen Modal Haplotype that indicates he was from Jewish ancestry. Werneck had a synagogue and had a Jewish population and cemetery.





August 29, 2010

To the Fox Valley Jewish Neighbors organization www.FVJN.org .

I saw your building at the Geneva fest and last night I saw that you had a picnic at wheeler while I was playing tennis. I would like to join your group if possible. I write a blog called www.thisdayingoodlovehistory.blogspot.com where I research our families Jewish ancestry. We discovered we have a unique DNA called the Cohen Modal Haplotype and have been learning a lot about the connections we have through DNA matches to about 50 Cohens around the world. It has been very interesting. I look forward to hearing from you. Jeff Goodlove



ps. check out todays blog (August 29).







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

[1] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/huff-wires/20110829/ml-israel-securing-sinai/

[2] This Day in Jewish History.

[3] The Changing Face of Anti-Semitism from Ancient Times to the Present day, by Walter Laqueur, page 54

[4] w www.wikipedia.org

[5] www.wikipedia.org

[6]

[7] This Day in Jewish History

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

[9]

[10] This Day in Jewish History.

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

[12] Proposed descendants of William Smith

[13] (FamilySearch Ancestral File v 4.19 AFN: 19RC-OCJ).

[14] (http://www.gengorum.com/mckinnon/messages/38.html by DaleMyers, August 6 1998.)

[15] This Day in Jewish History

[16] Calendar of Virginia State Papers and Other Manuscripts, 1652---1781, Preserved in the Capitol at Richmond, Arranged and Edited by Wm. P. Palmer, M. D. Volume 1 pgs. 277-282.



[17] The Northern Light, November 1982, Volume 13, #5, George Washington’s Amphibious Commander by H. Sterling French. Page 14.

[18] [1] Enemy View, Bruce Burgoyne, pg 171

[19] Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography

[20] Washington after the Revolution

[21] Typescript Record of Marriages in Clark County 1816-1865, compiled under a DAR-WPA project. (MIcrofilm copy available through LDS). Volume and page numbers from Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett Page 112.47 Record Books provided by Mrs. G. W. (Sylvia Olson), 1268 Kenwood Ave., Springfield, OH 45505, June 29, 1979.

[22] Vol. 38, page 221. Typescript Record of Marriages in Clark County 1816-1865, compiled under a DAR-WPA project. (MIcrofilm copy available through LDS). Volume and page numbers from Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett Page 112.47 Record Books provided by Mrs. G. W. (Sylvia Olson), 1268 Kenwood Ave., Springfield, OH 45505, June 28, 1979.

[23] William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary

[24] This Day in Jewish History.



• [25] This day in Jewish History

• [26] This Day in Jewish History.

• [27] This Day in Jewish History.

[28] This Day in Jewish History.

• [29] This Day in Jewish History

[30] WWII in HD 11/19/2009 History Channel

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



[32] Linda Peterson Archives, June 12, 2011

[33] Jerusalem Prayer team email 3/30/2010

Sunday, August 28, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, August 28

This Day in Goodlove History, August 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/

I Get Email…

In a message dated 8/26/2011 10:55:17 A.M. Central Daylight Time,

anon

I'd prefer that you not post this to your blog, but someone who says they are a friend of Israel and then comes up with anti Semitic rhetoric like this lets me know who and what that person really is. I have no love for Glenn Beck and he can go to Israel as much as he wants and stomp and preach but he is not a friend of Jews nor a person interested in the welfare of anyone who is not allied with his reactionary discourse.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/08/25/glenn-beck-jewish-people-_n_936795.html?icid=maing-grid10%7Chtmlws-main-bb%7Cdl12%7Csec3_lnk1%7C89528

Just had to share.

Anon.



Glenn Beck: Jewish People 'Drive Me Out Of My Mind' With Their Constant Talking (AUDIO)



Anon, Thanks for your comment about Beck. I am not for or against Beck, but I did listen to the tape about Jewish people always talking at the same time. I hope not to offend anyone so I will be more careful in the future. I for one thought it was a cultural comment, not an negative comment. Jeff

Glenn Beck: Jewish People 'Drive Me Out Of My Mind' With Their Constant Talking (AUDIO)


First Posted: 8/25/11 01:44 PM ET Updated: 8/26/11 11:43 AM ET

Glenn Beck was in South Africa on Thursday, fresh off his "Restoring Courage" event in Israel. He understandably spent his Thursday show recapping and reflecting on the multi-day extravaganza he had just pulled off.

Beck said that some people who were slated to perform at the controversial event had had to pull out.

"The reason why they canceled is because they were under death threat," he said. "...I don't blame them for [canceling] at all."

Beck also said he had been overwhelmed by one aspect of his trip. "I love the Israelis, he said. "I love the Jewish people. But they drive me out of my mind when they talk over each other. They're constantly talking!"

Beck compared being around Jews in Israel to a family that had eight children. "Eating dinner at their house was like having dinner in Israel," he said. "Everybody is just talking at the same time, you can't even think!"

This Day…

August 28, 388: Magnus Maximus, an Hispanic usper to the throne of the western Roman Empire passed away. During his disputed reign Maximus issued an edict of which censured Christians at Rome for burning down a Jewish synagogue which wascondemned by Bishop Ambrose who said people exclaimed: ‘the emperor has become a Jew’.[1]

August 28, 430: St. Augustine of Hippo passed away. Augustine believed that Jews should be allowed to survive in a Christian world to provide credence to roots of Christianity. But Jews should live at best as “second class” citizens in that Christian world to serve as a reminder of their fall from God’s favor for rejecting Jesus as the Son of God and as proof that God had made the Christians the new Chosen People.[2]

431: With regard to religion, we may note that, in A.D. 431, Palladius was sent from Rome as Primus Episcopus to the “Scotos in Christum credentes;” in A.D. 432, Patrick went to Ireland; in A. D. the British Bishop Ninian converted the Southern Picts; in A.D. 565, the Irish Presbyter, Columbus, converted the Northern Picts, and theirs was called the Culdee Church. [3]

The Emperors tried to preserv uniformity by summoning Eecumenical Councils, Councils to which all the bishops of Christendom werer invited, in the hope that the Holy Ghost would descend on them as it had on the disciples at Pentecost. The Councils would descend on them as it had on the disciples at Pentecost. The Councils achieved unanbimity only because dissident bhishops either refused to vfote or were prevented from voting. After each Council a section of Christendom broke away from the main body. The Arian heretics who seceded in the fourth century fated out in the East. But after the Council of Ephesus in 431 there was a separated Nestorian Church, which soon found its missionaries were to travel into India and into Tartary.[4]

August 28, 1189: The Crusaders begin the Siege of Acre under Guy of Lusignan. This two year long seige was part of the Third Crusade which is known as a confrontation between Richard I aka the Lionheart and Saladin. The siege followed the Crusader defeat at the Battle of the Horns of Hittin but was followed by victories by the Crusaders near Jaffa. In the end, the Moslems kept Jerusalem, the Jews of England suffered under the rule of Prince John in the absence of the Crusading Richard and Jewish population of Eretz Israel suffered further depradations and despoilation. [5]

1190: Saladdin takes over Jerusalem from Crusaders and lifts the ban for Jews to live there. Saladin is remembered as the ruler who readmitted the Jews to Jerusalem in 1190 (4950) as ecstatically recounted by the Jewish poet Al-harzi.[6]

August 28, 1453: Zbigniev Olessnicki, Bishop of Cracow and a heretic hunter named Capistrano, began a six month long campaign to stir up King Casimir against the Hussite heretics and the Jews of Cracow. [9][7]

1454 Jews expelled from Wurzburg.[8]

1454/1455

When printing was invented, the first book to come from the press of Johannes Gutenberg of Mainz, Germany, in 1454/1455 was Jerome’s Latin Vulgate.[9]

1454

The Teutonic Knights were overthrown by the Prussians with help from Poland and Lithuania in 1454. Prussia was divided into Royal Prussia in the west and Ducal Prussia in the east. Royal Prussia was incorporated into Poland providing it with a corridor to the Baltic Sea (the “Danzig Corridor”). Ducal Prussia became a Polish territory. At this time, the port city of Danzig (modern day Gdansk) was designated a “free city”.[10]

August 28, 1636:

Dan Harrison writes on 4/17/1999:

I was poking around on the online FamilySearch Ancestral File and came across the following information on Andrew Harrison, Sr. (Andrew is in the Harrison Repository at http://moon.ouhsc.edu/rbonner/harrison/d0055/g0000087.html#I1018 )

It lists Eleanor Ellitt as the wife of Andrew Harrison, Sr.; born abt. 1642 in New Kent, VA.

It lists Eleanor's parents as Samuel Ellitt and Elizabeth ?

It lists Andrew Harrison, Sr.'s father as Andrew Richard Harrison, born abt 1611 in London, England; died 1667 in London, England; Married August 28, 1636 in St. Giles, Cripplegate, London, England to Margaret Barber.

There is also an entry listing Andrew Harrison, Sr.'s father as Richard Harrison. Both entries list Margaret Barber as Andrew's mother.

Margaret Barber born abt. 1615 St. Giles, Cripplegate, London, England; died 1676/1677 in London, England. [11]

Wednesday August 28, 1754

A Mohawk Indian, Moses the Song, brings another letter and a map from Major Robert Stobo to George Croghan. The map detailed the size of Fort Duquesne. The letter gave information on how popular and important several French prisoners were that were in prison in Williamsburg Virginia. Essentially upon Stobo's advice, Lt. Governor Dinwiddie decided not to exchange those prisoners for Stobo and his compatriot Captain Jacob Van Braam. [12]



August 28, 1776: Washington’s forces numbering 9,000 men were forced to retreat into a culdesac on Brooklyn Heights with their backs to the East River, directly opposite the tip of Manhattan Island. It was into this desperate situation that Glover’s 24th Regiment was ordered on August 28, 1776.[13]

Washington, realizing he could not permit a major portion of his army to be bottled up and captured, put into effect secret plans for their evacuation. On the evening of August 29, having already assembled a sizable flotilla of small craft of many descriptions, he assigned Col. Glover the formidable task of ferrying the 9,000 colonial

Treoops with their equipment across the mile wide East River to Manhattan. The exodus had to be carried out under blackout conditions and with a minimum of noise to avoid alerting the British. Despite a strong ebb tide and variable winds, when dawn came only a small rear guard was left on Long Island.[14]



August 28, 1777

On the 28th at four o’clock in the morning the greater part of the army marched toward Elktown in the following order: (1) the foot jãgers and an officer and twenty mounted jãgers; (2) the two battalions of English light infantry; (3) the Queen’s Rangers; (4) Ferguson’s sharpshooters; (5) the two battalions of English grenadiers; (6) an artillery brigade; (7) the three Hessian grenadier battalions; (8) an artillery brigade; (9) the English Guards; (10) the 1st and 2d brigades of English infantry, and the wagons with the military chest, tools, hospital, ammunition, and provisions; (11) three troops of English dragoons; (12) the mounted jagers; and the 71st Highland Regiment. -

The rest of the army remained on Turkey Point under command of General von Knyphausen.[15]



August 28 — The army departed Turkeypoint and marched to Elktown which had been deserted by all the inhabitants. We had no reports about the enemy, and no maps of the interior of this land, and no one in the army was familiar with this area. After we had passed the city, no one knew which way to go. Therefore, men were sent out in all directions until finally a negro was found, and the army had to march according to his directions. [16]



August 28, 1777

From the first movements of the British in advance, active skir­mishing, sometimes of considerable bodies, took place. On the twenty-eighth the Americans took between thirty and forty prisoners, and twelve deserters from the navy and eight from the army came into .their camp. These stated the British forces to be in good health, but the horses as having suffered from the length of the voyage. [17]



Perhaps this is where “Francis” Conrad Gotlib is captured and later deserts. JG

1777

CONRAD GOTLIB (his mark), deserted the Brittish Army at the head of the Elk in 1777. Labourer

Signed Aug 17, 1782. [18]

August 28, 1777: Bro. Bader sent Adam Orth with a letter to

Colonel Grubb, and while on the way met the latter mounted,

as he was viewing the empty house offered to him yesterday.

He would not read the letter, because the orders could not

be changed. He also remarked that he could not ride

through the town in safety, on account of the feeling

against himself. Adam Orth, Baltzer Orth and George

Buehler discussed the situation of affairs with us when

it was decided that they should return to town and use

their utmost efforts to prevent the prisoners being con-

fined in our house ; that it was against all laws, against our

wishes, and could only be accomplished by force. They

met Colonel Grubb and for hours endeavored to induce him

to change the order, that they would provide two houses or

rent a large one in town and pay for the necessary changes.

But it was all of no avail and they came back at night, with

the news that the prisoners would arrive the following day.

The officers promised that a guard would be detailed to

protect the house and also a body guard for the pastor and

family, if he desired it. [19][20]



August 28, 1780

The first sessions of the County Court, held by these last

named Justices or some of them, was held at Fort Dunmore, on

February 21, 1775; and from this date there were, west of the

Alleghanies, not only two different sets of magistrates, with their

subordinate officers, constables, assessors, and organized companies

of militia, over the same people in the Monongahela valley, but

within a few miles of each other had been established two different

courts regularly (or irregularly) administering justice under the

laws of two different governments.



These conditions, with these Virginia Courts exercising judicial

powers in the same territory with the courts of Pennsylvania, con-

tinued until August 28, 1780, after which no Virginia court was ever

held within the limits of Pennsylvania, the general assembly of

Pennsylvania having ratified on September 23, 1780, the Baltimore

agreement as to where the boundary lines between the two states

should be run, as they were finally run and marked on the grouna

in 1784 and 1786.



As the Virginia adherents were no doubt largely in the

majority, the Westmoreland County Court seems to have done

much the smaller amount of business than did the Virginia courts,

during the concurrent existence of both; indeed, there was a period

of two years, from April Term 1776 to April Term 1778, during

which there were no sessions at all of the Court of Common Pleas

for Westmoreland County, while the Virginia courts were in

session regularly. Hereafter our attention will be confined to the

Virginia courts, and chiefly to the Court for the District of West

Augusta.



The new justices embraced in the commission of the peace

for the District of West Augusta, as held at the first day's session

of that court on February 21, 1775, were, in the order in which

their names were given, as follows: George Croghan, the deputy

Indian agent at Pittsburgh; John Campbell, of Pittsburgh, or near

thereto, owning a mill-seat at the mouth of Campbell's Run (so

Imown to this day) just below the railroad station at Carnegie;

John Connolly of Pittsburgh, the principal representative of Lord

Dunmore in this country; Edward Ward, who had surrendered to

the French and Indians the Virginia fort building at the Forks of

the Ohio on April 17, 1754; Thomas Smallman, of Pittsburgh;

Dorsey Pentecost, lately removed from the Forks of the Youghio-

gheny to the East Branch of Chartiers Creek; John Gibson, of

Pittsburgh, bi other of George Gibson who was afterward the father

of Chief Justice Gibson of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania;

Captain William Crawford, afterwards burned at the stake by the

Indians at Sandusky, Ohio, in 1782; John Stephenson, one of the

half-brothers of Crawford; John McCoUoch, of now West Liberty,

Ohio County, Virginia, the father of Major Sam. McColloch, who made

the famous leap on horseback from the Wheeling hill; John Canon

who laid out the town of Canonsburg; George Vallandigham, of the

Noblestown neighborhood, the grandfather of the notorious Clement

L. Vallandigham of Ohio; Silas Hedge and David Shepherd, both

of what is now Elm Grove in Ohio County, Virginia, near Wheeling;

and William Goe, from what is now Fayette County, north of

Brownsville, an ancestor of the Bateman Goe family of Pittsburgh. [21]



August 28, 1787

On August 28, 1787, John Crawford sold to Isaac Meason, “Stewarts Crossing” on the Youghiogheny. Recorded November 5, 1787.[22]

August 28, 1833

England abolishes slavery.[23]

Sun. August 28[24], 1864

Started to the reg. went 1 mile west of

Harpers ferry camped staid all night[25]



• August 28, 1896: Bedriska Gottliebova born August 28, 1896. Bn- September 22, 1942 Maly Trostinec.



• Transport Bf – Praha

• 866 zahynulych

• 133 osvobozenych

• 1 osud nezjisten [26]





August 28, 1902

Willis Goodlove and wife are rejoicing over the arrival of a new little daughter. (Winton’s note:Bess) [27]



• August 28, 1924:

• Linda, Love your book, “Our Grandmothers”. I recommend it to anyone who wants to know more about their family history. It has a lot of info that I did not have!

Regarding your email about Ursula Armstrong and John A. Lorence...John Anthony Lorence (Frank, Frantisek, Lorenc) was born May 16, 1901, and died September 1989 in Cedar Rapids, Linn Cnty, IA. He married Ursula Armstrong, August 28, 1924 in Cedar Rapids, IA, daughter of Frank Armstrong and Edna Valenta. She was born May 27, 1906 in Tipton, Iowa.

John Anthony Lorence is buried in Cedar Memorial, Cedar Rapids Iowa.

Child of John Lorence and Ursula Armstrong is Jack Junior Lorence, born February 4, 1927, Cedar Rapids, Ia.

Jack Junior Lorence (John Anthony, Frank, Frantisek Lorence) was born February 4, 1927 in Cedar Rapids, Ia. He married Jean LaRose Goodlove October 15, 1949 in Center Point, Ia., daughter of Covert Goodlove and Berneita Kruse. She was born April 13, 1931 in Linn Cnty, IA. Jack Junior Lorence graduated 1944 from McKinley H.S. bet 1944-1946 was in the Navy. Jean Larose Goodlove was a school secretary at Linn Mar in Marion.

Jack and Jean (my aunt and uncle) were instrumental in the transcription of the original William Harrison Goodlove diary and visited many of the battle grounds that William Harrison Goodlove was at. This information of their visits should be in the edition of the diary.

Hope this answers some of your questions.

Jeff Goodlove



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On August 28, 1942 Convoy 25 left Drancy, France for Auschwitz with 285 children. On board was Salomon Gottlob born December 2, 1934 in Anvers, France age seven, and his sister Tama Gottlob, born May 17, 1940, age 2. Their home was L.de demark. (5) Prison, Orleans. Prior to deportation to Auschwitz they were held at Camp Pithiviers[28]. Pithiviers is of global historical interest as one of the locally infamous World War II concentration camps where children were separated from their parents while the adults were processed and deported to camps farther away, usually Auschwitz. [29]

Also on board was Bension Gotlob, born November 11, 1901 from Pologne, France, and Regina Gotlop born November 25, 1898 from Tarnow, Poland.[30]

August 28, 1942: In Geneva, Gerhart Riegner cables Rabbi Stephen S. Wise in New York and Sidney Silverman in London about Nazi plans for the extermination of European Jewry. The United States Department of State holds up delivery of the message to Wise, who finally receive it from Silverman on August 28.[31]



August 28, 1942: Ernst Gottlieb, born November 15, 1923 in Kassel. Resided Borken i. Hessen/Bez. Kassel. Deportation 1942, Auschwitz. Date of death: August 28, 1942, Auschwitz. [32]

August 28, 2010

Rochelle, recently I had in inquiry about the progress of the translation of the Gottlober works. I appreciate the effort that you have already put forth in this project and was wondering if you were interested in doing some more translating? Also, I was wondering if there was a way that we could compensate you for your time and effort in the project. Perhaps we could agree on a fee structure that would work for you. Abraham Baer Gottlober is an important Russian Jewish writer that lived in a period that is largely forgotten and I would like to bring that time back to life for the family and others who would like to learn about his writing. As a DNA link, a Cohen, a Jew, and writer, Abraham Baer Gottlober has a great deal to tell ancestors, and others. With your help perhaps we could pass his writings along to others to learn and enjoy, now and in the future. I hope to hear from you soon. Jeff Goodlove



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[1] This Day in Jewish History

[2] This Day in Jewish History

[3] M E M O I R S OF C LAN F I N G O N BY REV. DONALD D. MACKINNON, M.A. Circa 1888

[4] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 11.

[5] This Day in Jewish History

[6] www.wikipedia.org , This Day in Jewish History.

[7] [9]This Day in Jewish History.

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

[9] Trial by Fire by Harold Rawlings, page 30.

[10] http://www.kolpack.com/packnet/prussia.html

[11] http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~harrisonrep/Harrison/d0055/g0000087.html#I1018

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

[13] The Northern Light, November 1982, Volume 13, #5, George Washington’s Amphibious Commander by H. Sterling French. Page 14.

[14] The Northern Light, November 1982, Volume 13, #5, George Washington’s Amphibious Commander by H. Sterling French. Page 14.

[15] Diary of the American War: A Hessian Journal by Captain Johann Ewald pgs. 75-76.

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

[17] The Battle of Brandywine, by Joseph Townsend

[18] Names of Persons who took the Oath of Allegiance to the state of Pennsylvania, between the years 1777 and 1789: by Thompson Westcott, Clearfield Company, pg 87.

[19] Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography

[20] Records of Moravian Congregation at Hebron, 1775-1781



[21] Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography.

[22] Item 363, Book A. page 176. Recorder of Deeds Office, in Fayette County, PA (Uniontown.)From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser. 1969 p.173)

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

[24] After returning to Charlestown [August 28, 1864], the “Army of the Shenandoah” began preparations to march into Early’s headquarters at Winchester [September 3, 1864]. (Pvt. Miller, 24th Iowa Volunteer, http://home.comcast.net/~troygoss/millbk3.html)

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

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

[27] Winton Goodlove papers.

[28] “Memorial des enfants deportes de France” de Serge Klarsfeld

[29] Wikipedia.org

[30] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France 1942-1944 by Sergv Klarsfeld page 221.

[31] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1772.

• [32] [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] Gedenkbuch (Germany)* does not include many victims from area of former East Germany).