Friday, September 30, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, September 30

This Day in Goodlove History, September 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/



• Books written about our unique DNA include:

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



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



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





• Birthdays on this date; Charles Wright, Battaile Muse, George R. Marietta, Flora Jones, Susan J. Goodlove, S. Goodlove, Catherine Goodlove, Jonathon Forman,

Weddings on this date; Susannah Parker and Samuel Winch, Rachel D. Truax and Hendrich Van Bommel, Martha E. Goodlove and F. Robertson, Elizabeth DeClare and John DeBurgh, Pamela Cross and Robert R. Burgess





• In a message dated 9/25/2010 1:43:26 P.M. Central Daylight Time,



• Dear Jeff- Sorry to have bothered you. The answer came through from Linda

• Pedersen. Ruth (Sargeant,Johnson) Gray was born April l5 l900

• at Anamosa Iowa. She died at the age of l00 on on Sept.20 2000

• at San Antonio Texas



• As Ever Al Bowdish





• Al, thanks for the info, I did not know that. By the way, do you know Mr. Johnson's first name, the former husband of Ruth Gray? Jeff Goodlove



• This Day…



• September 30, 1337: A German knight named Harmann von Deggenburg led his horseman through the gates of Deckendorf, where they joined the local citizenry, in slaughtering the local Jewish population and seizing their property. The Jews had been accused of desecrating the host or communion wafer and the slaughter was the punishment for the foul deed. In reality the councilors of the city of Deckendorff desired to free themselves and all the citizens from the debts owed to the Jews. [1]



• To this day people come on pilgrimages to the church where paintings show Jews in Medieval dress desecrating the host “wafers.”[2]



• September 30 1452: The first printed book, the Johann Gutenberg Bible, appeared. [3]



• 1453: It was a period of of crisis for Greeks, Jews and Muslims. In 1453 the Ottoman Turks conquered the Christian capital of Constantinople and destroyed the empire of Bysantium. [1][4]

• Like previous Muslim empires, the Ottomans permitted Jews and Christians to keep their religions. [2][5]



• 1453 Jews expelled from Breslau and Franconis.[6] [6]



• 1453 Jews expelled from Moravia. [8][7]


September 30, 1780: They crossed the Blue Ridge at Gillespies’s Gap and rode on to arrive at Quuaker Meadows on September 30. There, at McDowell’s Plantation, their numbers were increased to 1,400 by North and South Carolina reinforcements.
Besides Shelby and Sevier, the expedition had already been joined by Colonel William Campbell, the six-foot-six giant who was an Indian fighter and a born leader. He had fought in Lord Dunmore’s War (1774) and had married Patrick Henry’s sister.[4][8]

In Hank Messick’s summation, Other leaders who gathered on this venture were Joseph McDowell, a Virginian who had forsaken the easy life to move to the Carolina Piedmont, and Benjamin Cleveland, another Virginian, who had moved west and built his reputation as an Indian fighter. These would soon be joined by other outstanding fighters: James Williams, a longtime Tory hatrer who had served as a delegate to the provincial legislature of South Carolina; William Chronicle, a veteran of the 1780 skirmishes and a resident of the south fork of the Catawba; Joseph Winston, a leather-tough frontiersman who had been fighting Indianssince he was 17; and Edward Lacey, a one-time Pennsylvanian who at the age of 13 had served with Edward Braddock’s army in the Indian campaigns. (King’s Mountain)[5] [9]


Fall, 1780
He (Samuel Vance3)(Samuel2, Andrew1) ,was engaged in most of the scrapes which took place with the Indians in those dark times and in the fall of 1780 he joined a regiment under the command of Colonel William Campbell, marched into South Carolina and was present when the British and Tories were so completely used up at the memorable little battle of King's Mountain, of which event he has always been fond of talking. He would laugh heartily while relating the anecdote of the British officer who wrote to his friends in England that the detachment under Major Ferguson had been surrounded and cut to pieces in the mountains by a savage horde dressed in long hunting shirts, with long teeth, etc.[6] [10]
1780
Walter Crockett belonged to a family that early settled on the headwaters of the South Fork of Holston. He was a county magistrate and at the Battle of King’s Mountain in 1780. (Walter Crockett is on the deposition with Conrad and Francis, Augusta County Court. JG) In 1774 he was a captain in the militia for Fincastle County.[7][11] Regarding the hanging of Francis Hopkins, the Tory bandit, …At the ensuing October session of the Virginia Legislature, an act was passed, at the instance of Gerneal Thomas Nelson, Jr., one of the signers of the Declatation of Independence, and afterwards Governor or the state, to fully meet the case, though it sould seem to have hardly been necessary. The act states, that while the measures may not have been “strictly warranted by law, it was justifiable from the immediate urgency and imminence of the danger”, hence, that ”William Campbell, Walter Crockett , and other liege subjects of the Commonwealth, aided by detachments of the militia and volunteers from the County of Washington and other parts of the frontiers, did by timely and effectual exertion, suppress and defeat such conspiracy,” and they were declared fully exonerated and indemnified for the act.”[8] [12]


Advancing across the border into North Carolina, Major Ferguson became alarmed by news that the mountaineers of North Carolina, Virginia, and the future state of Tennessee were rising against him. Ferguson turned about, retreated to what he hoped was an impregnable position atop King’s Mountain just across the South Carolina border, and called on Cornwallis for help, which failed to arrive on time.[9][13]



September 30, 1781:



Col. John Gibson to Gen. Washington.

A large party [of Indians] has since done some mischief in the County of Ohio, and on Ten Mile Creek they have killed and taken 16 persons, and have effected this with the loss of only two of their party.

In my last, I informed your Excellency that I had fixed on ye 4th of September as a day of general rendezvous for the troops to assemble at Fort Mcintosh, to make an excursion against the Wyandot Towns. On receiving the intelligence contained in the minister’s letter, with the advice of the principal officers, I postponed it until the 12th day of September, as by that time we might be able to obtain certain intelligence of the enemy.

Colonel Brodhead, though for what reason I am at a loss to determine, wrote circular letters informing the country that he had fixed on the 15th of September as a day of general rendezvous on Montour’s Run for the militia to assemble. This, and the Indians striking near Wheeling, threw the country into confusion. However, at the day I had appointed, upwards of 100 assembled, but the number was too small to attempt anything; while Colonel Brodhead had the mortification to find that not a single man appeared on the day fixed on for his general rendezvous. A day or two after, the officers wrote Colonel Brodhead a letter, informing him it was their opinion he could not, with propriety, in the present situation of affairs, re-assume the command, a copy of which I did myseif the honor of enclosing in my last letter to your Excellency. He sent me an arrest by the Brigade Major, informing me that I was arrested for assuming the chief command at this post, thereby exciting mutiny and sedition amongst a number of the officers in this Department, and also for neglect of duty and disobedience of orders, and I was to confine myseif to the range of the garrison; on receipt of which I desired the Brigade Major to inform him that I should pay no attention to his arrest, as it was evident to me as welifrom the letters of your Excellency, as also from the charge that had been exhibited against him, that he could not with any degree of propriety re-assume the command.

He continued attempting to command until the return of the express with letters from your Excellency at the Head of Elk. This put an end to the dispute, though Colonel Brodhead, even after the receipt of those letters, sent to inform me that he intended to publish it in General Orders that I was to take command of the Western Department, and wished to know whether it would be agreeable to me. I returned him for answer, that I thought there was no necessity for doing so, as the letters from your Excellency had been made known to the officers.

The express returned here on the 17th instant, and the depositions against Colonel Brodhead were not begun being taken until yesterday, owing to a difference between Colonel Brodhead and Captain Fowler respecting the appointment of the Deputy Judge Advocate; however, the matter is now settled, and I hope the business will go on without any interruption.

I hope your Excellency will pardon my intrusion on your patience with the length of this letter, as I do it in justification of my conduct in this dispute, lest any reports may prejudice me in your Excellency’s esteem.

I have, with the advice of Colonel William Crawford and other principal gentlemen of this country, fixed on the 15th day of October for the militia to assemble at Fort McIntosh, in order, if possible, to make an excursion against the Wyandotte Towns; and from the accounts which I have from the different parts of the country, the people will turn out, and I expect to be able to collect 700 men at least for that purpose. Colonel Crawford goes with me, and most of the principal gentlemen of this country.

Inclosed are the returns of the troops of this department. This will be handed your Excellency by Major William Croghan, who has spent some time in this department; he will be able to give your Excellency a full account of every transaction in this country. Permit me, therefore, to refer your Excellency to him.

I have the honor to be, with perfect respect,



Your Excellency’s most ob’t. humble Servant, John Gibson, Col.

Comdg. W. D.

His Excellency Genl Washington [14]

September 30, 1796: Page 14, Military Warrant no. 21, no. 2680. John Crawford (heir). On lower side of Darb’s Creek, 955 acres. September 30, 1796-November 29, 1796. No. On line of survey no. 2679. Surveyed by Lucas Sullvant, D. S., John Ellison, Robert Dixson C.C., John Florence.[15]

September 30, 1797: William Crawford (6th great grandfather): Vol. 21, No. 4627. 1000a. Military and Shelby. Little Kentucky. 930-1797, Bk. 6, p. 624. Same and Heirs June 19, 1800, Bk. 15, p. 94-95.[16]

September 30, 1809: Ancestor and future President William Henry Harrison negotiated numerous land cession treaties with American Indians, including the the Treaty of Fort Wayne on September 30, 1809, in which Miami, Pottawatomie, Lenape and other tribal leaders sold 3,000,000 acres (approximately 12,000 km²) to the United States.[2][3]





Tenskwatawa, by Charles Bird King.

Tenskwatawa, known as the Prophet, had been leading a religious movement among the northwestern tribes calling for a return to the ancestral ways. His brother, Tecumseh, was outraged by the Treaty of Fort Wayne, and thereafter he emerged as a prominent leader. Tecumseh revived an idea advocated in previous years by the Shawnee leader Blue Jacket and the Mohawk leader Joseph Brant[17],

[18]

which stated that American Indian land was owned in common by all tribes, and land could not be sold without agreement by all the tribes.[2][4] Not yet ready to confront the United States directly, Tecumseh's primary adversaries were initially the American Indian leaders who had signed the treaty. He began by intimidating them and threatening to kill anyone who carried out the terms of the treaty. Tecumseh began to travel widely, urging warriors to abandon the accommodationist chiefs and to join the resistance at Prophetstown. Tecumseh insisted that the Fort Wayne treaty was illegitimate.[5] In a 1810 meeting with Harrison, he demanded that Harrison nullify the treaty and warned that Americans should not attempt to settle the lands sold in the treaty. Harrison rejected his demands and insisted that the tribes could have individual relations with the United States.[6]

Fri. September 30, 1864

Started back at 1 pm marched to Harrisonburg at snset cold and rainy out of rations land hilly red clay good for wheat and fruit



Late Sept.? After spending four weeks in Libby Prison in Richmond, VA, Gilbert Prey (from Job Kirby's 104th New York Volunteer Infantry, Possibly Job was here as well) was sent to Salisbury, North Carolina for two weeks and then on to Danville, VA, until he was exchanged nearly six months later on February 21, 1865.[19]



• September 30, 1938: Hitler convinced Chamberlain and Daladier that he wanted to protect German rights in the Sudetenland by annexing it, (hence, the Munich Agreement) and that he had no further demands. Chamberlain gave in, claiming that by doing so he had achieved “peace in our time”.[20]



September 30, 19391

A Polish government is formed in Paris after the fall of Warsaw to the German Army.[21]

1939-1945

The Holocaust. About 6 million Jews, including 1.5 million children, systematically killed by Nazi Germany.[22]



September-October 1939

Following instructions issued by SS chief Reinhard Heydrich “the leading strata of the population should be rendered harmless” the SS killed some 20,000 Poles, mainly priests, politicians and academics, in September and October 1939.[23]



September 30, 1941

German Panzer groups attack and break the Soviet lines east of the Dnieper River in the Soviet Union. [24]

On September 30, Brunner telexed to Eichmann and asked for the green light for the departure of a convoy on October 7 (XLIX-49). On October 1, Eichmann responded favorably (XLIX-50) and added that a commando to escort the convoy would come from Stuttgart.



• September 30, 1941: After two days, the Germans had slaughtered 33,000 Jews at Kiev in the Soviet Union.[25]



• September 30, 1941: Opening of the Battle of Moscow. This clash of the Nazi and Red armies would last for five months. If the Nazis had been successful, and in the opening stages it looked as if they would the Soviet capital, it might well have meant the end of meaningful Soviet resistance in Europe. As the two armies slammed against each other through the Russian Winter, the fate of European Jewry hung in balance. Had the Red Army not held, the total Jewish victims of the Holocaust would have been closer to nine or twelve million and not the six million who actually perished.[26]



• September 30, 1942: New construction at the Treblinka death camp greatly increases its gas chamber capacity.[27]



• September 30, 1942: Polish Jews trapped in the Warsaw Ghetto begin the construction of bunkers for a military defense. By January of 1943, they will have constructed more than 600 fortified bunkers.[28]



• September 30, 1942: The Ternopol Judenrat is ordered to hand over 1,000 Jews to the Nazis, and refuses. The Nazis and their helpers arrest Jews and deport 800 of them to Belzec.[29]

• End of September, 1942: Because of increasingly dire reports from France, the American relief agencies soon asked Washington to raise the number from 1000 to 5,000 visas for Jewish children. By the end of September, the State Department had complied.[30]

• September 30, 1943: The Krupp arms factory at Mariupol, Ukraine, is dismantled and relocated west to Funfteichen, Silesia, Poland, where it is staffed by Jewish slave laborers.[31]



September 30, 1943: Convoy 60 included 564 males and 436 females. One hundred eight were children under 18. The routine telex (XLIX-52) was signed by Rothke. It established that on October 7, at 10:30 AM, a convoy of 1,000 Jews left Paris/Bobigny with the Meister der Schupo, Schlamm, head of the escort. On October 13, Hoss, Commandant of Auschwitz, telexed to Rothke (XLIX-53) that on October 10 at 5:30, the convoy actually arrived.



When they arrived in Auschwitz, 340 men were selected and went to Buna, the I.G Farben synthetic rubber plant at Auschwitz. They were assigned numbers 156940 through 157279. One hundred sixty nine women remained alive and were given numbers 64711 through 64879. The rest, 491 people, were gassed.



In 1945, less than two years later, 31 of the 509 selected had survived. Two of the survivors were women.



Professor Waitz, who was on this convoy, gave an account of the voyage from Drancy to Auschwitz:



“The voyage in closed cattle cars began at Drancy on October 7, 1943. In each car, one or two pails of water and a sanitary bucket; 95 to 100 persons squeezed together, without sufficient provisions. In two infirmary cars, where there are some straw mattresses on the floor, are the old, those recovering from typhoid or pneumonia, pregnant women, women with infants, ets., and nine screaming women who were taken from an insane asylum by the Germans.

“It is difficult to care for people in these infirmary wagons as the medicine is in an ordinary car and we are not allowed to go pick it up during the stops. During one stop, I try to obtain heart medicine for one old man who is fainting repeatedly; the German NCO tells me: ‘Let him croak, he’ll be dead soon anyway.’



“During another stop, I request water for the sick, and another NCO answers: ‘It’s useless to give them any, they’ll be finished soon.’

“After three days and three nights of travel, the train arrives at a station platform on October 10, 1943, around three in the morning, and remains standing there until dawn.”



On board Convoy 60 was Mosiek Gottlibowicz, born December 12, 1888 from Wilezyn, Russia.[32]



• September 30, 1943 to April,1944: Between now and April of 1944, Jewish slave laborers exhume at least 68,000 corpses of murdered Jews and Soviet POWs at the Ponary, Lithuania, killing ground, near Vilna.[33]



• September 30, 1946: Twenty two top Nazi leaders were found guilty of war crimes at Nuremberg.[34]



• The only Nazi ever excommunicated by the Church of Rome, even after all the war crime tribunals was Joseph Gerbils. His crime? He married a Protestant. [35]



• 1946: A year after the end of hostilities a Nazi underground movement remained active in Bavaria.[36]



September 30, 1970

The New American Bible is published in its entirety for the first time.[37]





From This Day… September 30, 2009



Hi Folks,I was looking thru local newspapers today and spotted this." Spirit of Jefferson " newspaperCharlestown, Va. (Jefferson Co, WV now)Tues Dec 4 (December 4), 1866- Married -On the 27th ultimo (November 27, 1866), at the residence of the bride's father, by Rev. F. L. Kregel, Mr. Wm. D. Briscoe, of this county, to Miss Evie Goodlove, only daughter of Geo. P. Goodlove, Esq., of Spottsylvania county, Va.[1]
I don’t know a George P. Goodlove, but I do know a George Phillip Gottlieb born 1809 died 1875 who married Wilhelmina Hendrick Van Schaik. His father was George Phillip Gottlieb born 1758, died 1812 who was married to Machteld Koppelhof.

Summary


During the American War of Independence troops from var-
ious German territories fought on the British side,
including one unit from Waldeck called the Third English-
Waldeck Mercenary Regiment. All these auxiliary troops
are known under the name "Hessians" because the Land-
gravate of Hesse-Kassel provided the largest contingent
of mercenary units.

1875 DOTTLIEB GEORD 0/ 0 GE WLD5 62 June 1782 942,118
1876 GOTTLIEB GEOR~ 0/ 6 GE WLD5 01 June 1783 942/132
3877 GOTTLIEB GEORD 0/ 6 WLD 12 August 1783 978/25

Ge Private (Gemeiner)
WLD 5 Fifth Company (Captain Georg von Haacke,
after August 1778 Major Konrad von Horn)

62?
01 appointed, especially in the unit rolls
12 deserted; deserted to the enemy


• 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 their a descendant out there that would do a DNA test?

More to come.[38]



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

[1] This Day in Jewish History.

[2] This Day in Jewish History

[3] This Day in Jewish History

[4] [1] A History of God by Karen Armstrong, page 257-258.

[5] [2] Introducing Islam, by Dr Shams Inati, page 88.

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



[7] [8] A History of God by Karen Armstrong, page 264.



[8] [4] Battles of the Revolutionsary War 1775-1781 by W.J. Wood pgs. 193.



[9] [5] Battles of the Revolutionsary War 1775-1781 by W.J. Wood pgs. 193-194..



[10] [6] Obit. For Samuel Vance b. 1749, d. 8 Dec 1838. In the vicinity of the evening of the 8th inst. Samuel Vance, Sr. in the 89th year of his age. The deceased was one of the oldest settlers in the country. He emigrated from Frederick County in this state some time in the year 1773, has resided on the farm where he died, near 65 years. He was engaged in most of the scrapes which took place with the Indians in those dark times and in the fall of 1780 he joined a regiment under the command of Colonel William Campbell, marched into South Carolina and was present when the British and Tories were so completely used up at the memorable little battle of King's Mountain, of which event he has always been fond of talking. He would laugh heartily while relating the anecdote of the British officer who wrote to his friends in England that the detachment under Major Ferguson had been surrounded and cut to pieces in the mountains by a savage horde dressed in long hunting shirts, with long teeth, etc. Like most of the farmer's sons of those days, the deceased received a very limited education, but he had a good mind and an extraordinary memory, was fond of reading and perhaps there were few men among the yeomanry of our country who were better read in ancient and modern history, or who had a better knowledge of the affairs of our government and the world at large. As a husband, father and friend he had few equals, and though he was somewhat eccentric in his manners, he yet possessed in a high degree that amiable trait of human character -- a bevalent (sic) heart. Fro 60 or 70 years he was a hard laborin man and during his long life enjoyed more than an ordinary share of good health. His late illness (which he bore with uncommon fortitude) was nothing more than the struggle of a powerful constitution with old age. He passed quietly and calmly from the troubles of this world to that bourne from which no traveller returns.Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett pp. 1820.28-29.



[11] [7] Documentary History of Dunmore’s War, 1774. by Thwaites and Kellogg, 1905. p. 44.



[12] [8] Statement of Colonel Samuel Newell, December 9, 1833, in The land We Love, May, 1867; King’s Mountain and its Heroes, History of the Battle of King’s Mountain, Lyman C. Draper, LL. D. page 385



[13] [9] Military Leaders in the American Revolution, by Joseph B. Mitchell, page 156.

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

[15] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969 p. 183.

[16] Index for Old Kentucky Surveys and Grants in Old State House, Fkt. KY. (Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett, Page 454.50.)

[17] When the smoke of wood fires and burning leaves clings to the November mists in the Mohawk Valley, men still talk about Joseph Brant, the great Mohawk war captain who tried all his life to keep a foot in two worlds, the red and the white.

He refused to bend his knee to King George but gallantly kissed the hand of his queen. He had his portrait painted by the famous English painter George Romney. He was at ease drinking tea from fragile china cups, but could hurl a tomahawk with deadly accuracy. He was a graduate of the Indian school that later became Dartmouth College, and he translated the Bible into the Mohawk language, yet he could leave the Mohawk a blazing ruin from Fort Stanwix, near Rome, to the very outskirts of Schenectady. He was one of the greatest of American Indians; had he given his support to the struggling Continental army the course of our history would certainly have been changed.

But it would have been improbable if not impossible for Brant to wear a Continental tricorn;he was too vain and too closely allied with the Lords of the Valley to consider casting his lot with the humble Palatine Dutch farmers who talked so much of freedom. For Brant, they had the stink of cow dung about them; he was familiar with buckled shoes and cologne.

His decision to side with the British was tragic for the Iroquis Confederacy or Six Nations as it was called. That ancient confederation bound together by wisdom, skill at war, and diplomacy became helplessly divided when it was agreed that each nation should go its own way. In the past a declaration helplessly divided when it was agreed that each nation should go its own way. In the past a declation of war had to be voted unanimously. Some nations like the Oneida went with the Americans other tried to stay neutral, or like Brant’s Mohawk fought for the British.

Brant joined Colonel Barry St. Leger’s invasion of the Mohawk, one of the prongs of Burgoyn’s doomed campaign. The famous Battle or Oriskany, undoubtebly the bloodiest and most ferocious of the Revolution, was fought with Herkimer’s gallant farmer standing musket to musket with the King’s Own, the best of his Hessian gamekeeper-sharpshooters, and Brant’s painted warriors. Brant, who despised defeat,m led his Indians back to Frot Niagara, bitterly advising the British high command in Montreal that from now on he would fight his way.

For six years he led his Indian raiders into the Mohawk, again and again leaving the beautiful valley a sea of flames while the alarm bells in the tiny forts clanged frantically.

Some raids became classic atrocity stories of American wars: Cherry Valley, where women and children lay dead in the snow with Brant protesting fiercely that Walter Butler, who led Butler’s Rangers, was to blame; Wyoming, which gave birth to the celebrated eighteenth-century poem “Gertrude of Wyoming,” which pictures Brant as a murderousd fiend who slaughtered the innocent. But as it developed Brant was never there.

Following the Revolution Brant led his people, the first American DPs, across the border to settle in Canada.

He came in solitary glory to Philadelphia in 1792 to see Washington and his cabinet, but olnly after the other Iroquois chiefs, like Cornplanter and Red Jackt, had already left the capital. It was typicalof Brant. Humilyut was alien to the Mohawk; in fact, pride and arrogance were his major flaws.

Brant was no wigwam, story book Indian dressed in Buckskins staind with bear grease and smelling of a thousand campfires. He was educated, he wrote with the grace and lucidity that was far beyond many of the farmers he had fought against. His clothes were of the finest material, and in his luxurious home elaborate meals were served on crisp Irish linen. He had a host of slaves, as many as the aristocratic Virginians who would later rule the United States

He died in his fine home on Grand River, Ontario, November 24, 1807, whispering with his last breath: Have pity on the poor Indians.” Painter: Brant was painted by many famous artist; among them were Romney, Charles Willson Peal, George Catlin, and Wilhelm Berezy. It is not certain who painted this post-revolutionary portrait. (The McKenney-Hall Portrait Gallery of American Indians by James D. Horan.)

[18]

[19] (Stories from the Prisoners of War by Kathy Dhalle page 65.)

• [20] This Day in Jewish History.

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

[22] www.wikipedia.org

[23] Smithsonian, February 2010, page 60

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

• [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] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1774

[30] The Abandonment of the Jews, America and the Holocaust, 1941-1945 by David S. Wymen page 37.

• [31] This Day in Jewish History.

[32] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 450

• [33] This Day in Jewish History.

• [34] This Day in Jewish History.

• [35] Remnantofgod.org/NaziRCC.htm

• [36] Encyclopedia Judaica, volume 4, page 346.

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



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

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

Thursday, September 29, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, September 29

• This Day in Goodlove History, September 29

• By Jeffery Lee Goodlove

• jefferygoodlove@aol.com



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



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



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

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



• This project is now a daily blog at:

• http://thisdayingoodlovehistory.blogspot.com/

• Goodlove Family History Project Website:

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



• Books written about our unique DNA include:

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



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



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



Birthdays on this date; Eleanor Stewart, Elizabeth B. Harrison, Franklin P. Gatewood, Absolom Cornell



I Get Email!



In a message dated 9/24/2010 12:17:20 A.M. Central Daylight Time,














Dad, I miss you! These are the pictures from when I went to Eastern Oregon to see Coulter play in his Shriners game. I will send you pictures school soon. I was looking for the ball that I wanted and I found this one Select Numero 10 White. Im going back to Stayton this weekend and I'm bringing my bike.. I have seen a lot of different colored Schwinns, but not a green one.. I cant wait to have my wheels! :)



love you! xoxo



Anna Lee



Anna, Thanks for the pictures! Say Hi to Coulter and tell him I am very proud that he played in the Shriners Game. Good luck at school and keep the pictures and emails coming. Love Dad.





• September 29, 522 BCE: Darius I of Persia kills the Magian usurper Gaumata, sevuring his hold as king of the Persian Empire. The success of Darius was a good thing for the Jewish people. From the Book of Haggai, we can infer that the building of the Second Temple was completed in his reign. According to Ezra, Darius supported the claims of the Jews when the Samaritans tried to stop the building of the Temple.[1]

• 520 BCE: The prophet Haggai and Zechariah interpret the upheavals in Persia as a sign of YHWH’s return to the historical stage. They press the Judeans to resume construction of the Temple under the leadership of a scion of the Davidic line, Zerubabbel.[2]

• 520 to 515 BCE: The Second Temple is completed.[3]

• 516 BCE: By this time, Judea was little more than a battered capital city, Jerusalem, surrounded by a scattering of towns. Almost immediately upon assuming control over Yehud, Cyrus decreed that the Temple should be rebuilt, and construction of the Second Temple began in 516 BCE. [4]

• The Second Temple was rebuilt with the permission of the Persian rulers, under the supervision of Nehemia and Ezra the Scribe, a Kohen, after the 70-year Babylonian Exile. A high spiritual level was maintained in the Second Temple until the passing of the High Priest Shimon HaTzadik, a member of the Great Assembly. Until the very end of the Temple, open miracles took place daily. [1] [5]



• They brought back the sacred objects of Solomon’s Temple…They came back and they built the second temple right over Solomon’s Temple…Inside the Holy of Holies is where the High Priests kept the temple treasure. They had everything they had before in the first temple except for the ark of the covenant, that went missing. [6]

• …They had everything else, the menorah, the trumpets, the golden table. Worth millions even in those days, billions today.

• The second temple was not just a place to worship and store expensive holy things, it was a massive bank, for all of Israel, kind of like an ancient Fort Knox.[7]

• It housed gold and silver reserves, and was where the temples tax collection was deposited. Inside the temple at any given time was what would be today billions and billions of dollars worth of gold and silver in the form of coins and big bricks called Talents. [8]



• September 29, 106 BCE: Birthdate Gnaeus Popeius Magnus who is known to history as Pompey, the failed opponent of Julius Caesar and the man who ripped the veil from the Holy of Holies.[9]

• September 29,1612: Vincent Fettmilch, who called himself the “new Haman of the Jews”, leads a raid on Frankfurt synagogue that turned into an attack which destroyed the whole community. [1] [10]



No. 2.—William CRAWFORD [11] TO George WASHINGTON.

September 29, 1767.

DEAR SIR:—I was favored with two letters from you, one dated the 13th and the other the 17th[12] instant.

I believe I can procure you what land you want in Pennsylvania, but can not tell what quantity they will allow in a survey: I shall inform myself the first opportunity. I have been through a great part of the good land on the north side of the Monongahela,[13] as far up as the mouth of Cheat river[14] and on both sides of the [15] to the mouth and all its branches on the western side of the mountains. The chief part of the good land is taken up between the two rivers. When I came down there was some unsettled, yet very good, which I think would please you. Few or none had settled over the Monongahela, as they did not care to settle there for fear of disturbing the Indians. [16]

I have pitched upon a fine piece of land on a stream called Chartier’s creek, near the head, about twenty-five miles from Fort Pitt. It empties into the Ohio about five miles below the fort on the south side.[17] The land consists of low bottoms, from a quarter to half a mile wide. The upland is as level as common for that country to be—rich and well-timbered; the stream is a good one, fit for waterworks. There may be had, in one tract, about two or three thousand acres or better, I believe, where I was on the creek; and I am told by the Indians that it holds good down to the mouth. You may, if you please, join me in that, if no person has taken it before I get out. The chiefest danger is from the fort,[18] as I understand there have some surveyors gone up lately from Pennsylvania,[19] in order to run -out some land; but when or for whom, I know not. I will get you what you want near my settlement, if it should not be all taken up before I get out.

I have hands now engaged to work for me; and when I go out, I shall raise a cabin and clear some laud on any I shall like or think will suit you. I shall take a set of surveyor’s instruments,[20] and pitch upon a beginning, and run round the whole, and slash down some bushes, taking the several courses, which will enable you the better to make the entry.

As to the land on the King’s side of the line, there have but few settled there yet, or had when I came down; as the line runs farther south of Pittsburgh than was ever imag­ined. The line crosses Cheat River at McCulloch’s Landing, about five miles from the mouth. They have run as far as Monongahela[21], but are stopped there by the Indians, who, I understand, say they shall not run any farther till they are paid for the land. This will put a stop to the line being run till a council is held, and the result of it is known. But as to the truth of this, I do not know, as it was only flying news; but I am ready to think there may be something in it, as the Indians are not paid for the land. They have told me they could not tell the reason that Sir William Johnson[22] should ask them for land to settle his poor people on, and then not pay them for it, nor allow the poor people to settle on it. Some of them say they believe some of the great men in Philadelphia want to take the land themselves; but, however, be that as it may, it can not be settled until the line is run, and then the Crown will know what each has to pay the Indians for, which would have been done this fall if they had not been stopped. There is no liberty[23] for settling in Pennsylvania—or in that part supposed to be in that province—yet but I believe there would be as soon as the line was run. The line, if run out, would go over Monongahela about thirty miles. Where the north line will cross the Ohio River, I do not know until I see the end of the west line. Then I can come pretty near to it; but I am apt to think it will cross below Fort Pitt; of that I shall be better able to satisfy you in my next letter.[24]

With regard to looking out land in the King’s part, I shall heartily embrace your offer upon the terms you pro­posed; and as soon as I get out and have my affi~irs settled in regard to the first matters proposed, I shall set out in search of the latter. This may be done under a hunting scheme (which I intended before you wrote me), and I had the same scheme in my head, but was at a loss how to ac­complish it. I wanted a person in whom I could confide

—one whose interest could answer my ends and his own. I have had several offers, but have not agreed to any; nor will I with any but yourself or whom.you think proper.

There will be a large body of land on the south side of the west line toward the heads of Monongahela waters, and head-waters of Greenbrier[25] and New river; [26] but the latter I am apt to think will be taken before I can get to see it, as I understand there have been some gentlemen that way this summer—Dr. Walker[27] and some others; but you can inform yourself of their intentions. I shall examine all the creeks from the head of Monongahela down to the fort, and in the forks of the river Ohio and New river, or as far as time will allow me between this and Christmas. You may depend upon my losing no time. I will let you know by all opportunities what may happen worthy your notice, and I shall be glad if you will keep me also fully advised.

I think it would be advisable to write to Colonel Armstrong the first opportunIty. I understand that he is one of the surveyors, and may have his office in Carlisle for all I know; but I shall be informed soon myself You may depend upon my keeping the whole a profound secret, and trust the searching out the land to my own care, which shall be done as soon as possible; and when I have com­pleted the whole, I shall wait on you at your own house, where I shall be able to give you a more satisfactory account of what I have transacted.

As to Neale and Company’s grant, it was laid on the fork of Monongahela and Yonghiogheny, which, if Pennsylvania takes in this region in its charter, will include it at any rate. As to the Ohio Company, you are the best judge yourself what will be done in it, or where it will be laid.

I have a mind to trade some with the Indians,[28] which may be of advantage to me in some respects toward finding the best land, as the Indians are more obliging to those who, trade with them than others; and it would put me on an equal footing with other traders at Fort Pitt who might want to take an advantage of me if I trade without licenses. If it is not too much trouble for you to procure them for me, if you would do it, it would greatly oblige me.

As to the particulars of what you wrote me, I can not satisfy you better at present than I have; but you may depend upon time and my own industry to comply with cverything else as soon as in niy power. Excuse any errors that I may have committed. I am, etc.

P. S. There is nothing to be feared from the Maryland back line, as it does not go over the mountain. [29]





1768



John Stephenson was William and Valentine Crawford's half brother. After the death of the Crawfords' father, their mother, Onora Grimes Crawford (d. 1776), married Richard Stephenson, by whom she had five sons and one daughter[30]. John Stephenson had served in the French and Indian War and settled in the vicinity of the Great Crossing of the Youghiogheny about 1768. He was involved from time to time in the Crawfords' land activities.[31]



1767-1768

If the McKinnon family tree is correct that Daniel McKinnon was born “in 1767”, then Daniel’s parents were also settlers about the same time as Harrisons, because the Fayette history (Ref#33­) states “The Harrisons were settlers here in the spring of 1768 when the Rev. John Steele and his associates came to inspect the settlements in the Youghiogheny and Monongohela Valleys. The Harrison lands ad- joining those of Crawfords were entered at the land office that year.”

Lawrence Harrison and Catherine were married in Orange County, Virginia, the same county in which William Crawford was born. According to a “Family Group Sheet” located in the Frankfurt Genealogy Library the present location is Berkeley County, Virginia. (Ref 31.2)

The entwining of the family trees of the Harrisons and Crawfords is displayed in other reports located in Frankfort. (Ref 31.1, 31.2, 31.3, 31.4. 31.5 and 31.6) Please note that an earlier report on the Harrisons (Ref 31.6) states that a “Samuel Murphy remembered that John Stephenson, William Crawford, and the brothers Lawrence Harrison and Charles Harrison crossed the mountains (Alleghenies) at the same time. Murphy had been reared in the home of Crawford’s mother and second husband, Stephenson. “John” was a half brother to William Crawford.[32]



1768

In 1768 Daniel appears to have again returned to England and was ordained by the Bishop of London in 1768, (Maryland State Archives, MSA SC 5200, School Teachers of Early Maryland, Robert Bames.) Hardly something that would have been done if Daniel had been divorced. Thus it suggests that Ruth may have died.[33]



1768



In 1768, the Reverend Steel[34] was sent to the Redstone Settlement, the object of his mission being to persuade the settlers there to abandon the lands on which they had “squatted”; A meeting of settlers was held at Gist‘s plantation, and among the names of those who met there with the Reverend Steel, were Richard and Lawrence Harrison. [35]



1768

The Youghiogheny River has its upper waters in Fayette Co PA and its lower waters in Westomoreland. It meets the Monongahela River at McKeesport in Allegheny Co PA. Oliver Crawford came to set up a ferry at Muddy Creek on the Monongahela in 1768, one year after William Crawford settled in the area as an Indian trader. This seems too much of a coincidence for them not to be related somehow.[36]





September 29, 1786: Lincoln County, Ky. Grantee no. 12501, John Crawford, 913 acres, Surveyed September 29, 1786, on Hanging Fork of Dix River. 1787. Book 4, page 13. [37]



September 29, 1789: Congress authorizes the establishment of a 1,000 man standing army.[38]

September 29, 1864: Dr. William McKinnon Goodlove (1st cousin, 3 times removed) and the 57th Ohio Volunteer Infantry Operations against Hood in North Georgia and North Alabama September 29-November 3.[39]



Thurs. September 29, 1864

Started on the march at 6 marched 8 miles

To Mt Crawford went in camp at 2 pm

Got some honey and pork[40]



• September 29, 1933: Hitler approves the decree forbidding German Jews from the occupation of farming.[41]

• September 29, 1937: Hitler showed off his Army, Navy and Air Force to Mussolini. Mussolini returned to Italy sure that his alliance with Hitler was the right thing despite the anti-Jewish policies that were part of the Nazi regime. [42]

• September 29, 1938: The Sudentland was about to fall. Bowing to German pressure, France and Britain agreed to the annexation of this part of Czechoslovakia to Hitler as part of the infamous Munich Agreement. Slovakia feigned independence but became a satellite of Germany. [43]

• September 29, 1939: Berlin issues a command to establish Jewish ghettos in Poland on the same day that formal Polish military resistance collapses. [44]

• September 29, 1941: The Jewish owned newspaper in Tunis ceased operation at the order of the government.[45]


• Oskar Gotlob was born in Brno April 26, 1890 to Zigmund and Sofie. He was a merchant. Prior to WWII he lived in Brno, Czechoslovakia. During the war he was in Brno, Czechoslovakia. Oskar perished September 29, 1942 in Auschwitz, Camp at the age of 54. This information is based on a Page of Testimony (displayed on left) submitted on 15-May-1999 by his nephew, a Shoah survivor.

• September 29, 1942: The Nazis killed 685 French Jews at Berkinau. They were the first of 4,000 who would die that week.[46]

• September 29, 1942: 500 of nearly 800 Jews who attempt to escape Serniki, Poland, are killed by the Germans. Of 279 who reach nearby forests, 102 will perish before the end of the war.[47]

September 29, 1943: Italian Field Marshall Badoglio signs an armistice agreement aboard the HMS Nelson.[48]



• September 29, 1943: More than 320 Jews and Soviet POWs on work detail at the Babi Yar, Ukraine, mass-murder site attempt a mass escape. Nearly all are shot down almost immediately, but about 14 find hiding places.[49]

• September 29, 1943: The last 2,000 Amsterdam Jews are sent to Westerbork.[50]

• September 29, 1944: Another 1,000 Jews sent from Birkenau to Theresienstadt were gassed.[51]

• September 29, 1944: Fifteen hundred prisoners are deported from the Theresienstadt ghetto in Czechoslovakia to Auschwitz. Upon arrival 750 are gassed.[52]

• September 29, 1949: After an attack on the Jews at Krems, Austria, Albert II forcibly ended the riot. Austria was thus one of the few places of relative security in Europe at that time.[53]



Sundown, September 22 to September 29th, 2010

Harvest festivals are found in all civilizations, from Sukkot in ancient Israel to Thanksgiving in the U.S.A.



In the book of Leviticus, a major source of Jewish Law, the time and manner of celebration of the harvest is laid out.



“Now, the fifteenth day of the seventh month, when you have gathered in the produce of the land, you shall keep the festival of the Lord, lasting seven days; a complete rest on the first day, and a complete rest on the eighth day. On the first day you shall take the fruit of majestic trees, branches of palms trees, boughs of leafy trees, and willows of the brook; and you shall rejoice before the Lord your God for seven days. You shall keep it as a festival to the Lord seven days in the year; you shall keep it in the seventh month as a statute for ever throughout your generations.” [54]



A festival celenbrating the harvest is an ancient tradition and a common attribute of an agrarian society. It was formalized for the Hebrews in Leviticus and is known as Sukkot, the Festival of Booths. The modern version of this ancient festival is found on the fourth Thursday of November with Thanksgiving in the United States.[55]



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

[1] This Day in Jewish History

[2] The Time Tables of Jewish History, A chronology of the Most Important People and Events in Jewish History, by Judah Gribetz, page 28.

[3] The Gifts of the Jews, How a Tribe of Desert Nomads Changed the Way Everyone Thinks and Feels, by Thomas Cahill; Page 273.

[4] Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People, by Jon Entine, page 107.

[5] [1] DNA & Tradition, The Genetic Link to the Ancient Hebrews by Rabbi Yaakov Kleiman, 2004, pg. 109-114.

[6] The Naked Archeologist, History Channel 04-16-08.



[7] The Naked Archeologist, History Channel 04-16-08

[8] The Naked Archeologist, HISTI 04-16-08

[9] This Day in Jewish History



• [10] [1] www.wikipedia.org

[11] Captain, afterwards Colonel, William Crawford was born in Virginia about 1722. He moved with his family to Fayette County, Pennsylvania, in 1766. Captain Crawford served under Washington all through the Forbes campaign of 1758; he also took an active part in “Dunmore’s War” of 1774, and in 1776 entered the Revolutiionary service as lieutenant-colonel of the Fifth Virginia Regiment. As a surveyor also he held many positions of importance. In 1782 he commanded the expedition to Sandusky against the Ohio Indians, by whom he was taken prisoner, and tortured to death. His aid-de-camp on this occasion, Major John Rose (Baron Rosenthal), in a journal of the expedition, describes Colonel Crawford as “a man of Sixty and upwards. … In his private Life, kind and exceedingly affectionate; in his military character, personally Brave, and patient of hardships…. As a Commanding Officer, cool in danger, but not systematical….No military Genius & no man of Letters.”

[12] Crawford has’ here incorrectly given the date of Washington’s second letter. It was written on the 21st. At that period, it was eight days of ordinary travel from Mt. Vernon to the home of Crawford.

[13] The Monongahela is formed by the West Fork and Tygart’s Valley rivers, West Virginia. After receiving on the right two principal tributaries—Cheat River and the Youghiogheny—it unites at Pittsburgh with the Alleghany, to form the Ohio.

[14] Cheat river is formed by the junction of Shavers, Laurel, Glade, and Dry Forks, in West Virginia. It enters the Monongahela on the right, at the southwest extremity of Fayette County, Pennsylvania.

[15] Youghiogheny The Youghiogheny (pronounced Yoh-ho-ga-nee) rises in West Virginia, flows through Maryland into Pennsylvania, and enters the Monongahiela on the right, fifteen miles south of Pittsburgh.

[16] The Six Nations (including the Mingoes), with the Delawares and Shawanese, claimed, at this date, the whole country west of the Alleghany mountains, lying upon the Ohio.

[17] Chartier’s creek rises in Washington County, Pennsylvania, flows a north-northeast course, and empties into thie Ohio on the left, a short distance below Pittsburgh.

[18] Fort Pitt.

[19] From Pennsylvania; “—that is, from over the Alleghany mountains.

[20] Crawford was a surveyor. He learned the art of Washington, while the latter was surveying Lord Fairfax.

[21] The party running the line reached the Monongahela on the 27th, two days before the date of Crawford’s letter. The surveyors were not actually stopped at the river, but at a point a little west of what is now Mount Morris, in Greene county; Pennsylvania. It was seventeen years before the line was extended farther.

[22] Sir William Johnson resided in the Mohawk valley, in the province of New York. He was, at that date, colonial agent and sole superintendent of the affairs of the Six Nations and other northern tribes. He received his appointment from King George II.



[23] Not only was there “no liberty for settling in Pennsylvania” west of the mountains at that date, but settlers, except such as had permits from the military authorities, were considered as trespassers upon Indian Territory. In February following, a law was passed inflicting the severest penalties against any who should remain beyond the Ahleghanies within the limits of that province, with the exceptions before mentioned. Happily, however, at the treaty of Fort Stanwix, in the ensuing autumn, the Indians disposed of their lands southeast of the Ohio; and the proprietaries of Pennsylvania purchased a large tract, including all the territory west of the mountains as far north as Kittanning on the Alleghany river, and bounded on the west and south by the limits of that province. This took in all the western settlements within its charter lines, and put an end, for some years, to troubles with the Indians in that section.



[24] Crawford’s idea of the southern and western boundary of Pennsylvania rest of the Alleghanies was pretty nearly correct; but he, along with many other Virginians in that region, afterward changed his mind.



[25] The Greenbrier River rises at the base of the Greenbrier Mountain, in West Virginia, flowing south-westward until it enters New river.



[26] New River, at that date, was a name frequently given to the Kanawha. It is now restricted to the upper portion, above the mouth of the Gauley, in West Virginia, while all below is known as the Great Kanawha. The latter enters the Ohio on the left, at Point Pleasant, a distance of two hundred and sixty-seven miles, by the course of the river, below Pittsburgh. In early times, the name was generall written Kenhawa.



[27] Thomas Walker was born in King and Queen County, Virginia, in the year 1710. He studied medicine and became a skillful physician. His home was at “Castle Full,” in Albemarle County. He was an extensive land speculator. In 1748, he went on a tour of discovery down the Holston. In the month of March, 1750, in company with five others, lie started upon a trip to explore the country west of the back settlements of Virginia. Before his return, he penetrated far into the present State of Kentucky. His party, in April, erected a small cabin in what is now Knox county—the first one, probably, ever built by an American within the limits of that State. “Walker’s settlement” is noted on some of the old maps. He died at “Castle Hill,” in 1794. He had been for many years a prominent Virginian.





[28] The Indians who traded, at this date, with the settlers at Fort Pitt and vicinity, were the Senecas, Delawares, and Shawanese; also the Monseys (who were in reality Delawares), and a few Mohicans. All these dwelt upon the Ohio and its tributaries.

[29] At this period, “the Maryland back line” was a subject of controversy between the provinces of Maryland and Virginia, depending upon the question of the location of the first fountain of the Potomac;” as the line was defined to be a meridian, extending from that point to the southern boundary line of Pennsylvania. The province of Virginia claimed all the territory west of the head of the south branch, while Maryland insisted that her territory extended as far west as the head of the north branch. As in neither case would it be beyond “the mountain,” Crawford could, with propriety, declare there was “nothing to he feared from” it.

[30] (BUTTERFIELD [1],93)

[31] George Washington Papers at the Library of Congress, 1741-1799: The Diaries of George Washington. The Diaries of George Washington. Vol. II. 1766-70. Donald Jackson and Dorothy Twohig, eds. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1976





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

[33] (http://washburnhill.freehomepage.com/custom3.html)

[34] In February, 1768, Governor Penn commissioned the Rev. John Steele, of Carlisle, a Presbyterian clergyman of some celebrity, and three other citizens of Cumberland county, to visist the obnoxious settlements, distribute proclamations embodying the bloody act, and warn the settlers to quit. These envoys set out early in March, and traveled by way of Fort Cumberland and Braddock’s road.

[35] Monongahela of Old, by James Veech, p. 93.Torrence and Allied Families, Robert M. Torrence pg 323-324.

[36] Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett, Page 454.51.

[37] River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, by Grace U. Emahiser. P.183

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

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

[40] William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary

[41] This Day in Jewish History.1

[42] This Day in Jewish History.

[43] This Day in Jewish History.

[44] This Day in Jewish History.

[45] This Day in Jewish History.

• [46] This Day in Jewish History.

• [47] This Day in Jewish History.

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

• [49] This Day in Jewish History

[50]

• [51] This Day in Jewish History.



• [52] This Day in Jewish History.



• Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1777.

• [53] This Day in Jewish History.

[54] Leviticus 23:39-41.

[55] Scottish Rite News, September-October, 2006, page 6.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, September 28

• This Day in Goodlove History, September 28

• By Jeffery Lee Goodlove

• jefferygoodlove@aol.com



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



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



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

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



• This project is now a daily blog at:

• http://thisdayingoodlovehistory.blogspot.com/

• Goodlove Family History Project Website:

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



• Books written about our unique DNA include:

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



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



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





• I Get Email!



In a message dated 9/23/2010 7:25:41 P.M. Central Daylight Time,

Thank you for including me on your email list - my brother gave you my email address. Please use this yahoo address instead - the other is my work email account. I am interested in the DNA project, and would appreciate a copy on CD, if possible.



your relative,

L…

P.S.
My daughter's … grandfather…came to the U.S. with his family when he was just 4 years old. They were from Vilna, I believe. The area was part of Russia or Poland.







L…, I made the changes on your email address. Just for clarification, what part of the DNA project were you interested in? www.FamilytreeDNA.com contains a lot of information about how the whole DNA project works and also contains information about the Godlove project. You can find that project by typing Godlove into the Surname Search box. They also have information about testing. That is very interesting about your daughters grandfather being from Vilna. Just so I can try to connect all the dots, who is your father and grandfather? Jeff Goodlove







• Birthdays on this date; Ethel R. Coup

Weddings on this date; Mary Hitchon and Lawrence Smith, Mary Debham and Lawrence Smith, Susanna Cline and Alfred McAtee, Jean M. Sackett and Ronald Johnson, Cheryl A. Meneely and Robert L. Armstrong.



• September 28, 48 BCE: Pompey the Great was assassinated on orders of King Ptolemy of Egypt after landing in Egypt. He was the Roman who desecrated the Holy of Holies and then mocked the Jews for praying to nothing. [1]



• 44 BCE: Caesar assassinated.[2]



• September 28, 1066: Jews followed the Norman Conquest, in 1066, into England. Jewish urban enclaves swelled with immigrants, who became craftsmen, artisans, and moneylenders. The Rhineland region, which the Jews called Askenaz, emerged as a spiritual center of Judaism.[3]



• September 28, 1251: King Jaime I declared, “No Jews will hold office in the Kingdom of Valencia.” The following year Jews were banned from office in all of Catalan and Aragon.[4]



• September 28, 1577: The Sultan ordered a census of the Jews of Safed for the purposes of raising taxes.[5]



• 1578-1581: The Talmud was published in Switzerland in 1578-1581, as well as in Wilna, lublin, and in other European cities. Some these editions from the late Middle Ages were expurgated, omitting, for instance, attacks against Christianity, but they were expurgated also because of the very length of the Talmud.[6]



September 28, 1728: ’On November 28, 1751, Andrew Harrison, of St. Thomas Parish, Orange County, Virginia, conveyed to his son Charles Harrison, of the same parish and county, land whereon the said Charles Harrison now lives, and adjoining Lawrence Harrison and Lott Warren, being a part a tract for 1000 acres granted to Andrew Harrison on September 28, 1728.” [7]



6 John Harrison (Andrew,’ Andrew 1), “on November 28, 1751,Andrew Harrison, ‘of St. Thomas’ Parish, Orange County, planter, conveyed by deed of gift to his son John Harrison, of the same parish and county, 100 acres on the branches of Ferry’s Run, in the same parish and county, which is part of a patent for 1000 acres granted to the said Andrew Harrison, September 28, 1728, adjoining land o~ Charles Har­rison, Lott Warren, Richard’ Cousins.[8]





September 28, 1776

Strength estimates of American Forces reported totals 31,748; effectives 20,435

This report included troops at Fort Lee and Fort Washington. It did not include troops on the northern frontier under General Gates.[9]



September 28, 1778

Winch, David, Lancaster, Col. Wade's regt. for service at Rhode Island; Capt. Belknap's co.; muster rolls sworn to at East Greenwich, Sept. 28, Nov. 10, and Dec. 30, 1778; enlistment to expire Jan. 1, 1779.[10]



September 28, 1779



COLONEL WILLIAM CRAWFORD TO THE VIRGINIA COURT



September 28, 1779. Colonel William Crawford came before the Court and made oath that Hugh Stephenson[11] now dec’d. obtained a Virginia Land Warrant from Lord Dunmore while Governor of Virginia for 3,000 acres of land and that the said Hugh Stephenson was an inhabitant of Virginia and that he was Captain of a Company actually raised in Virginia and in the service of Virginia of Boquet’s Campaign 1764 and the said Crawford further made oath that he was also witness to the said Hugh Stephenson’s assignment to a certain Richard Yeats 1,000 acres of the said Warrant.[12] .



Court met according to adjournment September 28th, 1779.

Present Wm. Harrison Thomas Freeman Oliver Miller Richard Yeates Gent. Justices.

Absent Wm. Harrison.

Ordered that Jno. Crawford be sum’d. to appear at the next Court to shew by what authority he detains James Crago as his Servant.

Col. Wm. Crawford came before the Ct. and made Oath that Hugh Stephenson now deed. obtained a Warrant from Lord Dunmore while Governor of Virga. for three thousand Acres of Land & that the sd. Hugh Stephenson was an Inh’t. of Virginia & that he was a Captain of a Company actually raised in Virg’a. & and in the Service of Virg’a. in the year of Boquet’s Campaign 1764, & the said Crawford further made oath that he was a witness to the sd. Hugh Stephenson’s assigning to a certain Richd. Yeates one thousand Acres of the said Warrant.

William Crawford came before the Court & made Oath that Burton Lucas was a Subaltern Officer in the Service of Virg’a. in Col. Wm. Byrds Regt. in the year 1758 or 59 in consequence of which he obtained a Warrant from Lord Dunmore while Gov. of Tirg’a. for two thous’d. Acres of Land which was assigned by the sd. Lucas to Matthew Ritchie & Wm. Bruce.



Prest. Benja. Kuykendali & Joseph Beckett Gent.

Deed Labat to Chambers prov’d. by the Oath of Wm. Christy 0. R. being formerly proved by the other subse. Witnesses.

Andrew Swearengen gentleman Present.



Deed Edwd Ward to Jacob Haymaker ackd. by sd. Ward.



0. for R.

Two Deeds James McGoldrick to Edwd, Ward ack’d. 0. R.

Deed Edwd. Ward to MeGoidrick ackd. 0. R.



William Crawford Gent. Sworn Surveyor.



Ordered that Ct. be adjourned until Tomorrow morning 9 ocbock.[13]



September 28, 1789

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

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

Page 16, 74.

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

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

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



Whether this plot was provided to him by his grandfather is not certain; but by all means should be considered, only a short distance from his father’s plantation ‘Crawford’s Delight’, and ‘Stewart’s Crossing’, also his grandfather’s ‘Spring Gardens’. There are no other surveys on the original survey map to suggest that Richard and
William (half-brother to Richard and Moses), ever was provided land by their grandfather, however, it is possible they may have received land located elsewhere[14]



September 28, 1787

Congress votes to submit the proposed Constitution to the states for ratification.[15]



• September 28, 1823: Pope Leo XII chosen to lead the Catholic Church. Leo was a reactionary seeking to undue the lingering ef`fects of the French Revolution and the wave of liberalism that it had unleashed. He did pass harsh laws aimed that made life in the ghetto even more miserable for the Jews than it had been. [16]



September 28, 1850: In an attempt to ascertain the actual “whereabouts” of Conrad Goodlove after he was released from the War of 1812 “on or about the 25th of November A.D. 1812, as will appear from the muster roles of said company,” I have very carefully screened the documents and letters pertaining to the application for Bounty Land Warrants.

In a letter dated November 9, 1850, (Ref#23) he made his first application in response to the Act of Congress “granting bounty land to certain officers and soldiers who have been engaged in the military service of the United States and passed September 28, A.D. 1850.”[17]

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

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

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

Goodlove. (Ref #___)

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

Ref.# _________.[18]

Based on my research it was at least after March 26, 1855, that William Harrison Goodlove left Clark County, Ohio, with his father for Iowa. Conrad’s signature of that date was notarized verifying his presence in Clark County. [19]

September 28-30, 1851

5S 122-4. Interview with Captain Sam Murphy, Sep. 28, 29, 30 1851. At age of 3 years Sam Murphy was bound out to John Stephenson half brother to Colonel Crawford. Old Lawrence Harrison moved over with and settled near Colonel Crawford on the Yough, and died same year as first election in West-moreland Co., PA. - - - Sons, William, Benjamin, Lawrence, and Battle. Charles Harrison brother of old Lawrence had a son John. Mr. and Mrs. Crawford father and mother of William and Valentine were Irish. He was once an officer in the British Army. Early settled on Bullskin and thinks his two sons were born there (??). He traded in Redemptioners (White persons unable to pay their passage over the Atlantic who were sold for some seven years of service - Richard Stephenson was one of these - a tall Irishman who married Crawford’s widow. His sons were John, Hugh, Richard, James, Mark and one crippled daughter. William Crawford had no sister. He was a fine looking man- weighing over 200, perhaps 240 pounds, about 5’ 10", had some grey hair, and was 50 or 60 when killed. He left 3 (?) daughters and one son John. He raised Thomas Ravens-croft. Valentine had two sons Moses who died in 1774 and William, born 1759 and died 1782. [20]



Wed. September 28, 1864

In camp all day got plenty of forage

Our cavalry reported to be in Stanton

Wrote a letter to wildcat grove[21]



September 28, 1899

(Jordan’s Grove) Born to Mr. and Mrs. Willis Goodlove and wife, Saturday, baby girl. (Winton Goodlove’s note:This would have been my Dad’s sister, Ethel.)[22]



1900

The 1900 United States Federal Census lists Earl L. Goodlove’s home in 1900 as being in Maine, Linn County, Iowa. His Race listed as White, Ethnicity was American, Gender Male. His relationship to the head of house was son and his father, William, was born in Ohio. His mother Sarah, was also born in Ohio. His Marital status was single and his Residence was Central City, Linn County, Iowa. Other Household members were William Goodlove age 63, Sarah Goodlove, age 56, Cora Goodlove, age 23, Earl L. Goodlove age 21, and Jessie P. Goodlove age 17. [23]



1900

By 1900, the population of the Pale had grown to 5 million, and the Jewish population worldwide exceeded 10 million. [24]



• September 28, 1918: Near a french village Henry Tandy becomes Britains highest decorated private of WWI. A one man firing squad. During the battle a lone German enters his sights. The German soldier is ready to accept his fate, waiting for private Tandy to shoot him. Private Tandy sees that the German is just a desperate looking individual and he passes him by and refuses to kill him. Tandy is later told that the German was a corporal in the 16th Bavarian reserve regiment. His name was Adolf Hitler. (Franz Gottlop was also from Bavaria.)[25]



• September 28, 1937: Mussolini and Hitler gave speeches in front of 1,000,000 people in Berlin. Italians would later try and portray themselves as victims after they switched sides during World War II. The reality is that the Axis Alliance was seen by Hitler as a valuable tool in his plan to create a Third Reich that would be Jew-free.[26]



• September 28, 1938: The Munich Conference is attended by French Premier Edouard Daladier, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, Italian dictator Benito Mussolini, and Hitler. Climaxing the Allies appeasement policy, France and Great Britain permit Germany to illegally annex the Sudetenland of Czechoslovakia. Most Europe breathes a sigh of relief because war is averted. [27]



• September 28, 1938: The Czech representatives to the conference, who had been forced to wait helplessly in the corridor outside the conference hall, break down into sobs after hearing the news of the Allied concessions to Germany. Also at the conference, Chamberlain signs a Friendship treaty with Germany without informing his French ally. Arriving home, he triumphantly holds this scrap of paper up to the crowd that surrounds his airplane and promises “peace in our time.” [28]

September 28, 1939

Germany and Russia sign a secret treaty dividing up Poland between them.[29] The result was a sudden mass expulsion of Jews during which thousands were robbed and hundreds murdered.[30]



• September 28, 1939: The SS selects the start of the weeklong Jewish festival of Sukkoth to forcibly deport more than 8000 Jews from Pultusk, Poland.[31]



• September 28, 1941: The Massacre at Babi Yar continued for its second and final day. In Kiev, 2000 notices had been posted around Kiev ordering all Jews to appear with documents, warm clothes, and valuables. Rumors had been rife that they were going to be sent to a labor camp. Instead they would be massacred at Babi Yar. According to German records, 33,771 Jews were slaughtered in a Ravine outside of Kiev by Einsatzkommando 4a. The massacre is immortalized in Yevgei Yevtushenko’s poem Babi Yar. The monument placed on the site by the Soviet government did not mention the victims were Jews.[32]



• September 28, 1942: The Nazis activated a new train schedule that included the following daily direct transports one train a day from Radom to Treblinka, one train a day from Cracow to Belzec, and one train a day would go from Lvov to Belzec. Each train would consist of 50 cars and carry 2,000 Jews. By November two more direct connections would be established; Lublin to Sobibor and Chlemno to Sobibor.[33]

• October 19-September 28, 1943?Luxembourg Jews are deported to Lodz in eight transports.[34]



• September 28, 1943: For two days, the Jews from the community from Split, Yugoslavia, are killed at the concentration camp in Sajmist, Yugoslavia.[35]



• September 28, 1943: Over a forty-eight hour period Roman Jews deliver 50 kilograms of gold to the Gestapo in Rome, as ordered. Pope Pius XII had offered to lend the Italian Jews 15 kilograms of gold if they could not collect the full amount themselves. In the end, it does not matter. The Germans lied, taking the gold and the Jews.[36]



• September 28, 1943: The Last Nazi “Action taken” took place in Amsterdam. Two thousand Jews were deported. This meant that almost 110,000 Jews which was 95% of Holland’s former Jewish population, would not survive the war.[37]



• September 28, 1944: The Nazis resume deportations from the Theresienstadt, Czechoslovakia, camp/ghetto to Auschwitz after a four-month hiatus. Among the 2499 prisoners deported on this day in is teenager Petr Ginz, a Czech of Jewish background who was the guiding light behind Vedem (In the Lead), a secret “magazine” created and distributed throughout Theresienstadt. More than 1000 of these 2499 prisoners are gassed immediately.[38]



• September 28, 1944: German forces defeat British airborn troops at the Battle of Arnhem in the Nertherlands. This marked the end of Operation Market Garden, Field Marshall Montgomery’s poorly planned, poorly executed “plan to defeat Germany with a single “masterstroke.” This egomanical mission meant fuel and supplies were defeated from Pattons hard charging Third Army and that the war would be prolonged which of course meant more Jews perishing in the Holocaust.[39]



• September 28, 1944: Soviet troops liberate Klooga Concentration Camp in Kalooga, Estonia.[40]





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

[1] This Day in Jewish History.

[2] The Greatest Pharaohs, HISTI, 1/25/2001

[3] Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People, by Jon Entine, page 204.

[4] This Day in Jewish History.

[5] This Day in Jewish History.

[6] The Changing Face of Anti-Semitism From Ancient Times to the Present Day, by Walter Laquer, page 59.

[7] Orange County, Virginia, Records, Deeds, Book 12 p. 53

[8] .”Orange County, Virginia, Record~, Deeds, Book 12 p. 51

[9] The source is a strength report in the National Archives, as tabulated in Lesser, The Sinews of Independence, 34—35. Washington’s Crossing, by David Hackett Fischer pg. 381

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

[11] Hugh Stephenson was a half-brother to Col. William and Valentine Crawford; and died in the service at Camp Roxbury, MA, during the American Revolutionary War.

From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, by Grace U. Emahiser, page 134.

[12] The Brothers Crawford, Scholl

[13] MINUTE BOOK OF VIRGINIA COURT HELD FOR YOHOGANIA COUNTY MINUTE BOOK OF VIRGINIA COURT HELD FOR YOHOGANIA COUNTY, FIRST AT AUGUSTA TOWN NOW WASHINGTON, PA.), AND AFTER WARDS ON THE ANDREW HEATH FARM NEAR WEST ELIZABETH; 1776-1780.’ EDITED BY BOYD CRUMRINE, OF WASHINGTON, PA. pg. 358-360.

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

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

[16] This Day in Jewish History

[17] Conrad and Caty by Gerol Lee Goodlove 2003

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

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

[20] THE LYMAN DRAPER PAPERS Univ. of WI

[21] William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary

[22] Winton Goodlove papers.

[23] 1900 United States Federal Census, Year: 1900, Census Place, Maine, Linn County, Iowa, Roll T623. 443, PAGE 14 a, Enumeration district, 79.

[24] Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People, page 180.

[25] Hitler and the Occult, 11/05/2007 NTGEO

[26] This Day in Jewish History.

[27] This Day in Jewish History.

[28] This Day in Jewish History.

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

[30] This Day in Jewish History.

[31] This Day in Jewish History.

• [32] This Day in Jewish History. Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1768.

• [33] This Day in Jewish History.

[34] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1768.

• [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.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, September 27

This Day in Goodlove History, September 27

• By Jeffery Lee Goodlove

• jefferygoodlove@aol.com



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



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



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

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



• This project is now a daily blog at:

• http://thisdayingoodlovehistory.blogspot.com/

• Goodlove Family History Project Website:

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



• Books written about our unique DNA include:

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



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



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



I Get Email



In a message dated 9/23/2010 1:43:13 P.M. Central Daylight Time,



Jeff:



Here's the address, telephone, and email of the book store that has the brochure.



Perhaps babblefish can translate your request so you can plug it into an email?



Buchhandlung Lesezeichen
Schönbornstraße 1
97440 Werneck
Tel.: 09722/9453842
Fax: 09722/9453843
E-Mail: info@buchhandlung-werneck.de
Homepage: buchhandlung-werneck.de



Jim Funkhouser



Thanks Jim, I will try to contact them today about ordering the “History of the Jews of Werneck”.

Jeff Goodlove



This Day…



• September 27, 1940: The Catholic King of Spain, Ferdinand and his wife Queen Isabella ordered a tribunal in their kingdoms to study cases of heresy. This is the start of what would soon be known as the Spanish Inquisition. [1]



• 1481: Prodded by Queen Isabella, Friar Talavera, the Inquisitions early theologian, wrote an apologia for the Holy Office in 1481. In it he declared his scorn for Jews and all things Jewish, for they were aberrations and anachronisms of history. The true Israel belonged to the passionate and evangelizing Christian. The Law of Moses was obsolete, and any who adhered to it served Satan.[2]



• 1481: The Spanish Inquisition: By 1481, inquisitors began the task of separating feckless Judaizers from “true Christans,” whose souls could be saved and whose lives would be spared. The first auto-da-fe (act of faith) was held in Seville, where six New Christians were burned alive as religious heretics, with the toll of murdered conversos climbing to 298 by year’s end. The spendidly solemn, fiery executions were usually held on Sundays. A version of what would later become the “one-drop rule” to determine one’s race (and by proxy one’s religious beliefs) prevailed. Conversos who had married into the highest nobility and their children often stood accused of Judaizing, their property confiscated.[3]



• September 27, 1540: The Society of Jesus known as The Jesuits was founded by Ignatius Loyola. The first Jesuits were Spanish Christians who began their work at a time when the reconquest of Spain from the Moslems was but recently accomplished, and persons with Moorish or Jewish ancestry were under suspicion. It is accordingly much to their credit that the Jesuits were firmly opposed (particularly under Ignatius and his first three successors as Superior General of the Jesuits) to ecclesiastical anti-Semitism and to the Inquisition’s persecution of suspected Jews. When Ignatius was accused of having partly Jewish ancestry, he replied, “If only I did! What could be more glorious than to be of the same blood as the Apostles, the Blessed Virgin, and our Lord Himself?”\[4]

• September 27, 1601: Birthdate of King Louis XIII. Louis was king of France for 33 of his 43 years. He and his son Louis XIV were the two monarchs who ruled the dominate European power for almost the entire 17th century. When Louis came of age and began ruling in his own right he reaffirmed the ban on Jews living in France that had been in effect since the fourteenth century. [5]



• September 27, 1777: During the American Revolution, Lancaster, PA is capital of the United States for one day. Lancaster was approximately 60 miles west of Philadelphia. “A Jewish burial plot had been set aside there as early as 1747. “[6]





September 27, 1779

The Continental Congress appoints John Adams to negotiate peace with England.[7]



September 27, 1812

First, a few long-winded remarks and then the will:

If there is one thing CUTLIPs have, it's "Georges." I have a cousin George CUTLIP. I have an uncle George CUTLIP. My mother's father was George CUTLIP. His father was George CUTLIP and his father was Samuel CUTLIP the son of George CUTLIP the son of George CUTLIP! I have a dozen George CUTLIPs in my database and that's not counting the women: Georgeanne, Georgia, etc. [For what it's worth, George means "farmer" and goes back to the ancient Greek word for "earth-tiller" -- "georgas." Remember ge-ography: writing about the earth? And, ge-ology: study of the earth? "Ge" = Earth. Variations of the name George occur in all European languages: Italian, Spanish, French, German, English, etc.]

The following will is on file at the courthouse in Chillicothe, Ross County, Ohio. When the will was made, Ross County was more than twice the size it is now. Most of PeePee Township became Pike County in 1815 ... a small strip on the east was cut off and joined with pieces of other counties to form Jackson County at about the same time ... an extreme southern strip was joined to Scioto County. What all this means is that the political boundaries shifted. Records for the area were kept in Ross County up to 1815, then in Pike County later. George didn't move ... but the county line did!

For those who must have the small details I will explain more fully later. For now take my word for it. When George died he was living along the banks of Beaver Creek about 1.5 miles south southwest of where the present town of Beaver, Pike County, Ohio stands. You can find Beaver on almost any Ohio map. It is just west of the Jackson County line in Pike County. You will see the Appalachian Highway running south of Beaver. This highway runs through what was originally CUTLIP and STEWART land. Samuel CUTLIP married Jane STEWART (next door neighbors) in 1815 right after Pike County was formed. So, theirs is one of the first marriages listed in Pike County records.

Finally, I know you can't wait to ask: In 1785 a trail-blazer named Peter Patrick marked an overland trail from the east into the area by "blazing" trees [chopping off a section of bark] and putting his initials in the white part of the trunk: P.P. To reach the fertile bottom lands along the Scioto River you just followed the P.P. trail to P.P. Creek and PeePee Creek to the Scioto River. PeePee Creek and PeePee Township still exist today ... of course, the township is greatly reduced in size. Once it encompassed all of Pike County. Today it's just one of a dozen or so townships.

If you read many wills of the time you will soon discover that the first few lines are the formula of the time. Today they may sound religious. At the time everyone's will started very much like this one does before getting down to specifics. The square brackets indicate where I had some trouble reading the handwriting. When we get a website going, I'll scan in the handwritten will and y'all can make your own guesses as to what it says.


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

N.B.: The spellings, capitalization, punctuation (or lack thereof) are as they appear in the document. -- Rod Bias [8]

From the Ross County, OH 1813 Wills (Case #1273), packet A:


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



September 27, 1830

The Choctaws agree to remove in the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek.[9]



September 27, 1863: Dr. William McKinnon Goodlove (1st cousin, 3 times removed) and the 57th Ohio Volunteer Infantry, Duty at Big Blacktill September 27. Moved to Memphis, thence march to Chattanoogo, Tenn., September 27-November 20.[10]



Tues. September 27, 1864

Resting in camp got a hog and some apples

Got orders to march tomarro

Cavary bought in 50 prisoners[11]



September 27, 1878: Earl Lee Goodlove: (September 27, 1878-December 14, 1954) mar­ried Fannie Vesta McAtee, daughter of Frank McAtee (Bk. I, F-il), who lived east of the old Kearns later Pleasant Valley (Bk. II, Schools). [12]



• September 27, 1938: Jews are barred from practicing law in Germany.[13]



• September 27, 1939: The Reichssicherheitshauptamt (Reich Security Main Office; RSHA) is established.[14]







September 27, 1939

The Germans take over 150,000 prisoners as Warsaw surrenders.[15]



September 27, 1940

German military administration regulations define a Jew as any person who now or ever has professed the Jewish religion or who has more than two Jewish grandparents. The regulations order a census of Jews in the Ocdcupied Zone, the stamping of the words “Juif” or “Juive” on their identity cards, and the posting of placards identifying Jewish owned shops and businesses. (The stamping of the word “Jew” on identity cards was not imposed in the Unoccupied Zone until after the Germans occupied all of France in November 1942. A Vichy decree issued December 11, 1942, required the stamp of Jews’ identiy cards and food rationing cards.)[16]



September 27, 1940

Germany, Italy, and Japan sign the Tripartite Pact, promising to declare war on any third party joining the war against the others.[17]



• September 27, 1941: The two day massacre of the Jews began at Babi Yar. Over 30,000 Jews gathered in Kiev, still believing that they were being resettled. They were brought to the ravine at Babi Yar, where they are ruthlessly shot down by machine gun. By the hundreds, men, women and children fall into the ravine, as they were riddled with bullets. [18]



• September 27, 1941: Heydrich arrives in Prague as Reichsprotektor.[19]



• September 27, 1942: Arrested on September 24, more than 700 Romanian Jews were deported the next day. The majority of them were gassed in Auschwitz on September 27, less than 80 hours after they lost their freedom in Paris.[20] An additional 897 French Jews were killed at Berkenau.[21]





Erwin Gotlieb, born August 6, 1896 in Caica, Romania was on board Convoy 37. [22]



• September 27, 1942: Three hundred cold and hungry women and children, part of the 1000 Jews still at large following a September 24 escape from the ghetto at Tuchoin, Ukraine, return to the city under German promises of safe repatriation. All 300 are shot. Of the 700 Tuchin Jews who remain at large. Only about 20 will survive the war.[23]



• September 27, 1943: Ugo Foa, head of the Jewish community in Rome approached the Vatican in hopes of getting a Papal loan for the fifty kilograms of gold the SS was demanding if the Jews were to avoid deportation to the death camps. In a rare act designed to save Jews, Pius XII approved the request. Funds were never released since the Jews, acting in desperation, raised the funds on their own.[24]



September 27, 1944

Operation Market Garden, an Allied invasion of Holland, ends in failure.[25]



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

[1] This Day in Jewish History

[2] Dogs of God Columbus, the Inquisition and the Defeat of the Moors by James Reston. Jr. pg. 76.

[3] Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People, page 178.

• [4] This Day in Jewish History

[5] This Day in Jewish History

[6] This Day in Jewish History



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

[8] http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~cutlip/wills/will1812.html

[9] http://www.milestonedocuments.com/document_detail.php?id=49&more=timeline

[10] Ohiocivilwar.com/cw57.html

[11] William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary

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

• [13] This Day in Jewish History.

• [14] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1762.



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

[16] French Children of the Holocaust, A Memorial, by Serge Klarsfeld, page 9.

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

• [18] This Day in Jewish History.

[19] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1768.

[20] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 312.

• [21] This Day in Jewish History.

[22] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 315

• [23] This Day in Jewish History.

• [24]This Day in Jewish History



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