Thursday, October 25, 2012
This Day in Goodlove History, October 25
This Day in Goodlove History, October 25
Jeff Goodlove email address: 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, Russia, Czech 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, Thomas Jefferson,and ancestors Andrew Jackson, and William Henry Harrison.
The Goodlove Family History Website:
http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/g/o/o/Jeffery-Goodlove/index.html
The Goodlove/Godlove/Gottlieb families and their connection to the Cohenim/Surname project:
• New Address! http://www.familytreedna.com/public/goodlove/default.aspx
• • Books written about our unique DNA include:
• “Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People” by Jon Entine.
•
• “ DNA & Tradition, The Genetic Link to the Ancient Hebrews” by Rabbi Yaakov Kleiman, 2004.
“Jacob’s Legacy, A Genetic View of Jewish History” by David B. Goldstein, 2008.
Please watch these videos I found today on youtube of my 6th great grand uncle, Colonel Hugh Stephenson.
See Video:Beeline March to Cambridge, MA – Part I (5:25)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x5Uca5EkKtw
See Video: Beeline March to Cambridge, MA – Part II (4:39)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8LrkTrGXrO4
October 25, 1744: Andrew, Battle, Charles, George and William all appear in 1739, and the first two with Lawrence in 1741. Andrew Harrison and his two sons --not named-- are mentioned October 25, 1744; the sons among others being allowed "26 pounds of tobacco" for patroling and guarding a prisoner. (Order Book, 1743-46, p. 224)[1]
October 25, 1770: Incampd in the long reach abt. 30 Miles from our last lodge according to my Computation.
The “long reach” of the Ohio is a section of the river with relatively few curves stretching approximately from Paden City to Raven Rock, W.Va. Its length is 18 to 20 miles. According to the second diary, on 24 Oct. GW had sent Nicholson and one of the Indians to investigate the rumored death of
the trader. They returned on 25 Oct. reporting “they found no body at the Town but two Old Indian women (the Men being a Hunting). From these they learnt that the Trader was not kild, but drownd in attempting to Ford the Ohio; and that only one boy, belonging to the Trader, was in these parts; the Trader (fathr. To him) being gone for Horses to take hom their Skins.”
October 25th: 1770:—About seven o’clock, Nicholson and the Indian returned; they found no body at the town but two old women, the men being a hunting; from these they learned that the trader was not murdered, but drowned in attempting to cross the Ohio; and that only one boy, belonging to the traders, was in these parts ; the trader, his father, being gone for horses to make home their skins. About half an hour after seven, we set out from oar encampment, around which, and up the creek is a body of fine land.
In our passage down to this place, we saw innumerable quantities of turkeys, and many deer watering and browsing on the shore side, some of which we killed. Neither yesterday nor the (lay before did we pass any rifts, or very rapid water, the river gliding gently along; nor did we perceive any alteration in the general tace of the country, except that time bottoms seemed to be getting a little longer and wider, as the bends of river grew larger.
About five miles from the Vine creek, conies in a very large creek to the eastward, called by the indians Cut creek, from a town or tribe of Indians, which they say was cut off entirely in a very bloody battle between them and the Six Nations. This creek empties just at the lower end of an island, and is seventy or eighty yards wide; and I fancy it is the creek commonly called Wheeling, by the people of Redstone. It extends, according to the Indian’s account, a great way, and interlocks with the branches of Split-Island creek, abounding in very fine bottoms, and exceeding good land. Just below this, on the west side, comes in a small run ; and about five miles below it, on the west side also,another creek empties, called by the Indians, Broken-Timber creek; so named from the timber that is destroyed on it by a hurricane ; on the head of this, was a town of the Delawares, which is now deserted- Two miles lower down, ott the same side, is another creek, smaller than the last, and bearing, according to the Indians, the same name. Opposite to these two creeks, on the east side, appears to be a large bottom of good land. About two miles below the last mentioned creek, on the east side, at the end of the bottom before mentioned, comes in a small creek. Seven miles from this is , on the east side of the river, a pretty large creek, which heads with some of the waters of the Monongahela. according to the Indian’s account, and is bordered by bottoms of very good land ; but in general, the hills are steep, and the country broken. At the mouth of this creek, is the largest fiat I have seen upon the river; the bottom extending two or three miles up the river above it, and a mile below ; though it does not seem to be of the richest kind. About half way in the Long Reach we encamped, opposite to the begining of a large bottom, on the east side of the river. At this place we threw out some lines, and found a catfish of the size of our largest river catfish, hooked to one of them in the morning, though it was of the smallest kind here. We f~und no rifts in this day’s passage. but pretty swift water in some places, and still in others. We found the bottoms increased in size, both as to length and breadth, and the river more choked up with fallen trees, and the bottom of the river next to tine shores, rather more muddy, but in general stony, as it has been all the way down.
October 25, 1772. Assisting Crawford[2] with his Surveys.[3]
October 25, 1772; Assisting Capt. Crawford with his surveys until October 30.[4]
October 25-27, 1774
On the night after the return of the interpreters to camp Charlotte (the name of Dunmore’s encampment,) Major William Crawford, with three hundred men, left the main army about midnight, on an excursion against a small Mingo village, not far off. Arriving there before day, the detachment surrounded the town; and on the first coming of the Indians from their huts, there was some little firing on the part of the whites, by which one squaw and a man were killed, the others about 20 in number were all made prisoners and taken to the camp; Every thing about the village, indicated an intention of their speedily deserting it.[5]
October 25, 1774: 3 Lucy Woodsb: October 25, 1774 in Albemarle County, Virginiad: 1854
.........+William Capertonb: Unknownm: December 13, 1790d: Unknown
.....3 William Woodsb: March 22, 1776d: July 8, 1884
.........+Mary Harrisb: Unknownm: January 12, 1802d: Unknown
.....3 Susanna Woodsb: June 13, 1778d: October 2, 1851
.........+William Goodloveb: Unknownm: February 23, 1796d: Unknown[6]
George Washinton, October 25, 1777, General Orders
Head Quarters, Whitpain Township, October 25, 1777
Parole Braintree. Countersigns Concord, Danvers.
The intention of a certificate upon pay abstracts under the hands of the Brigadiers, was, that the truth of them should be made apparent, upon a comparison with the weekly returns, and unless the Brigadiers make such comparison, the sighning their names is but an empty form. The Commander in Chief therefore requires, that henceforward the Brigadiers, or officers commanding brigades that aare without brigadiers, carefully compare the pay-abstracts, with the weekly returns, before they make a certificate concerning them.
The Commander in Chief orders that a weekly return be made, of each brigade tomorrow morning at ten o’clock without fail The returns to be made with all possible exactness, and of those men returned on Command, their respective commands and the number on each, are to be pointede out. The General will look to the Brigadiers, or officers commanding brigades, for the punctual compliance with this order.
The Commander in Chief approves, the following sentences of a General Court Martial, held the 14th. Instant, whereof Colonel Brodhead[7] was president, and orders them to be put in execution immediately.
Lieut. Nathaniel Ferris of Col. Swift’s regiment, charged with “Being drunk, and incapable of doing his duty, when the army engaged with the enemy of the 4th instant,” , and also with being much desguesed with liquor,” was acquitted of the first charge, but found guilty of being much disguised with liquor, and sentenced therefore, to be reprimanded, by the Brigadier General, in the presence of the officers of the brigade.
The General again congratulates the troops on the success of our arems. On Wednesday last a body of about 1200 Hessians, under the command of Count Donop, made and attack on Fort Mercer at Red Bank, and after an action of 40 minutes were repulsed with great loss Count Donop himself is wounded and taken prisoner, together with his Brigade Major, and agout 100 other officers and soldiers, and about 100 were left dead on the field, and as they carried of a great many of their wounded, their whole loss is probably at least 400: Our loss was trifling, the killed and wounded amounting only to about 32.
The next morning a number of the enemy’s ships came up, and attacked Fort Mifflin and the Gallies, and after a severe cannonade of several hours, the ships thought proper to retire, but in retiring a 64 Gun-ship and a frigate ran aground and were burnt.
AFTER ORDERS
The Court of enquiry, of which Genl. Greene is president, is to sit tomorrow morning at nine o’clock at the president’s quarters, to enquire into the conduct of Major General Stephen, on the march from the Clove to Schuykill falls, in the action of the 11th of September last on the Brandywine, and more expecially in the action of the 4th. instant at and about Germantown, on thich occasions he is charged with “Acting unlike an officer.”Also into the charge against him for “Drunkenness, or drinking so much, as to act frequently in a manner, unworthy the character of an officer.”
Capt Thomas Patterson of Col. Dayton’s regiment, is appointed Brigade Major (pro tempore) for Genl. Maxwell’s brigade, and is to be obeyed as such.
AFTER ORDERS
The execution of Thomas Roach is respited for three days.[8]
October 25, 1805 – Treaty of Tellico for more land cession, including for the Federal Road.[9]
October 25, 1812
The United States frigate, United States, commanded by Captain Stephen Decatur, captures the British frigate, Macedonian, off the Madeira Islands, during the War of 1812.[10]
1812
Thomas Meason (1st cousin, 6 times removed) was a brigadier-general in the militia of General David Marchand, and George Armstrong, Greensburg lawyer, and Uriah Springer, of Fayette County, were brigade inspectors in 1812, and John Kirkpatrick, of Westmoreland and George Death, of Fayette County occupied the same positions in 1814. All of these forces were in the siege of Fort Meigs on the Maumee River in 1813.[11]
Tues. October 25, 1864
On fatigue duty had general inspection
Drawed rations[12]
October 25, 1865: Salomon Gottlieb, born October 25, 1865. Resided Stuttgart. Date of death: May 26, 1933. Suicide.[13]
October 25, 1936: The Rome-Berlin Axis agreement is signed.[14]
1937- Orde Wingate forms "night squads" for Jewish self-defense. [15]
1937-1938: Peel and Woodhead commissions recommend partitioning Palestine into a small Jewish state and a large Arab one.[16] According to the Peel Commission (British, 1937): “The Arab charge that the Jews have obtained too large a proportion of good land cannot be maintained. Much of the land now carrying orange groves was sand dunes or swamp and uncultivated when it was purchased.”[17]
1937-1939: Between 1937 and 1939 Jews build 54 "stockade and watchtower" (Homa Umigdal) settlements to circumvent British regulations against new settlements, and bring tens of thousands of illegal immigrants into Palestine (Aliya Bet).[18]
October 25, 1940
The Vichy Minister of War dismisses Jewish officers and enlisted men from the French armed forces.[19]
Jews who Died in Internment Camps in France:
The treatment accorded to the Jews interned in ‘France was such that those who died there were just as surely victims of the Nazi oppression as were the deportees. The conditions n Camps such as Gurs, le Vernet, Noe, Nexon, Recebedou, Compiegne, etc., were inhuman even for persons in the best of health. For the sick, for the elderly, for children, they were unbearable, as the number of deaths attest.
October 25, 1941: Zelly Gottlieb, born January 12, 1886 in Hamburg. Resided: Hamburg. Deportation: from Hamburg, October 25, 1941, Litzmannstadt.[20]
October 25, 1942: Frantiska Gottlobova born October 10, 1894. Transport AAo- Olomouc. Terezin July 8, 1942. Bc- October 25, 1942 Maly Trostinec[21]
October 25, 1942: Eighteen hundred Lublin Jews are deported to Majdanek.[22]
October 25, 1943: Dnepropetrovsk is liberated.[23]
October 25, 1960: John F. Kennedy visits Elgin, Illinois.[24]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[1] Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett Page 452.20.
[2] William Crawford had returned from the Ohio country with 13 surveys totaling 127,899 acres out of the 200,000 acres of bounty land promised in 1754 by Governor Dinwiddie to soldiers and officers of the Virginia Regiment. Crawford and GW were now preparing to enter the surveys and have patents issued to the various officers and men, or to their survivors. (receipt for surveys from Thomas Everard, 13 Nov. 1772)
[3] George Washington’s Diaries, An Abridgement, Dorothy Twohig, Editor 1999
[4] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969, page 120.)
[5] The reason for the attack was, that the Mingoes were implacable, and Dunmore had learned that instead of coming into the treaty they purposed retreating to the Great Lakes with their prisoners and stolen horses. This Mingo village was Seekonk (sometimes called Hill Town), 30 or 40 miles up the Scioto. Crawford left Camp Charlotte the night of the 25th, and surprised the town early in the morning of the 27th. Six were killed, several wounded, and fourteen captured; the rest escaping into the forest. Crawford burned several Mingo towns in the neighborhood. Chronicles of Border Warfare by Alexander Scott Withers, (Reuben Gold Thwaites notation) 1920 edition; pgs. Pgs. 184-185.
[6] Berks County, Pennsylvania Church Records of the 18th Century Volume 4
Pennsylvania Births Berks County 1781-1800 by John T. Humphrey
[7] Brodhead. Colonel Daniel Brodhead. (1736-1809). Born in Ulster County, NY, died in Milford, PA. He had been a delegate from Berks County to the PA convention in 1775 and commissioned as a lieutenant colonel July 4, 1776. He fought in the battle of Long Island in August 1776. After being assigned to the 4th Pennsylvania, he was later transferred to the 8th Pennsylvania and promoted to full colonel. On March 5, 1779, he followed Brigadier General Lachlan McIntosh as commandant of the western forces at Fort Pitt.
In June 1779, he ordered Colonel Bayard to build a fort at Kittanning to protect the settlers in that area. During August-September 1779 Brodhead led a force of some 600 up the Allegheny River against Seneca and Muncy Delaware into NY destroying hostile Indian villages in the area. This attack was coordinated with the main thrust by General John Sullivan up the Susquehanna River into Iroquoia. Captain Sam Brady was among Brodhead’s officers.
In April 1781 he organized a force of 300 at Wheeling (Fort Henry) with Colonel David Shepard second in command. They marched to the forks of the Muskingum (junction of the Tuscaroras and Walhonding Rivers), the present site of Coshocton (at that time the Indian village of Goschachgunk). Brodhead reached this point on April 19, 1781. The Delaware group was split on opposite sides of the river. Sixteen Indians were captured and killed. A group from this same Delaware tribe on the other side of the river asked to talk to the "big captain" (as they called Brodhead) and sent their chief to Brodhead's encampment the next day to negotiate. The chief was killed. Lewis Wetzel is suspected of the murder. Wetzel's father had been killed by Indians, and Lewis and his four brothers became life-long hunters of "any" Indian they came across.
The 300-man force then marched two and one-half miles north to Lichtenau, a Moravian village, which they also destroyed. They met little opposition as only a few stray Delaware were remaining at the nearly abandoned site. Later Brodhead met with the Reverend John Heckewelder and other Moravians at Newcomerstown and urged them to return to Fort Pitt with him as the frontier was in a state of chaos and their safety was in peril ("between two fires"). These Delaware Moravians refused the offer. They were the same Christian Indians massacred in 1782 at Gnadenhutten by Colonel David Williamson and—perhaps some of the same men who had accompanied Brodhead in 1781.
Brodhead and Shepard turned their men away from further fighting and took their twenty prisoners and headed back to Fort Pitt. On the trip back to the forks of the Ohio, they killed the warriors, leaving only the women and children.
Later in 1781, Brodhead was replaced at Fort Pitt by Colonel John Gibson, temporarily, and then by General William Irvine, September 24, 1781. Brodhead was promoted to general and given command of the 1st PA Colonial regiment. He remained in the army until the end of the war when he was given (and purchased) several thousand acres of land in the Kittanning area. He was married twice. His second wife was the widow of Governor Mifflin.
http://www.thelittlelist.net/boatobye.htm
[8] The George Washington Papers at the Library of Congress, 1741-1799
The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources, 1745-1799. John C. Fitzpatrick, Editor.
[9] Timetable of Cherokee Removal
[10] On This Day in America by John Wagman.
[11] Annals of Southwestern Pennsylvania by Lewis Clark Waldinshaw, Vol. III pg. 358.
[12] William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary annotated by Jeff Goodlove
[13] [1] Gedenkbuch, Opfer der Verfolgung der Juden unter der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft in Deutschland 1933-1945. 2., wesentlich erweiterte Auflage, Band II G-K, Bearbeitet und herausgegben vom Bundesarchiv, Koblenz, 2006, pg. 1033-1035,.
2]Memorial Book: Victims of the Persecution of Jews under the National Socialist Oppression in Germany, 1933-1945
[14] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page1760.
[15] http://www.zionism-israel.com/his/Israel_and_Jews_before_the_state_timeline.htm
[16] http://www.zionism-israel.com/his/Israel_and_Jews_before_the_state_timeline.htm
[17] 365 Fascinating Facts about the Holy Land by Clarence H. Wagner, Jr.
[18] http://www.zionism-israel.com/his/Israel_and_Jews_before_the_state_timeline.htm
[19] French Children of the Holocaust, A Memorial, by Serge Klarsfeld, page 14.
[20] [1] Gedenkbuch, Opfer der Verfolgung der Juden unter der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft in Deutschland 1933-1945. 2., wesentlich erweiterte Auflage, Band II G-K, Bearbeitet und herausgegben vom Bundesarchiv, Koblenz, 2006, pg. 1033-1035,.
[21] Terezinska Pametni Kniha, Zidovske Obeti Nacistickych Deportaci Z Cech A Moravy 1941-1945 Dil Druhy.
[22] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1774
[23] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1777.
[24] Daily Herald, Section 5, page 1. Tuesday November 2, 2010.
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