Monday, October 8, 2012

This Day in Goodlove History, October 8




This Day in Goodlove History, October 8

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.

October 8, 314

In his quest to consolidate his power, Constantine I, the man who will become the first Christian Roman Emperor defeats his rival Licinius at the Battle of Cibalae. Constantine will officially transform the Roman Empire into an anti-Semitic entity. [1]

315-317: Constantine I enacts various laws regarding the Jews: Jews are not allowed to own Christian slaves or to circumcise their slaves. Conversion of Christians to Judaism is outlawed. Congregations for religious services are restricted, but Jews are also allowed to enter the restituted Jerusalem on the anniversary of the Temple’s destruction. [1][2] Under Constantine, Jews were forbidden to live in Jerusalem (315 CE). [2][3]

October 8, 1408: The city of Jassy (Hungarian) or Yas (Yiddish) is mentioned in business correspondence between Prince Alexander the Good (Alexanfrecel Bun) and merchants from Lviv then a part of Poland. The Romanian city of Yas would become a center of Jewish settlement as well as the cite of the largest massacre of Jews in Romaina in World War II.[4]

1409

The second sentence is incomplete, and the full sentence is not

available on Google Books. But here is what I was able to reconstruct:



'One also finds in these sources a Jew by the name of Gottlieb /

Gutleben, who first [appears in the sources (?)] as a Jew from

Mülhausen in 1409 and 1435...'



Ferner begegnet in den Quellen noch ein Jude namens Gottlieb bzw. Gutleben, der

erstmals 1409 und 1435 noch immer als Mülhauser Jude nachweisbar



Good luck with your research,



P.S.[5]



1409

Furthermore, one has to assume on the ground of strong evidence that Isaak had a brother named Salomon, who shared the fate of the novice with him and is identical with the Freiburg city physician Heinrich Gutleben. The history of the nature of medicine in medieval Freiburg in Breisau has been examined extensively by Ulrich Knefelkamp. A physician named Heinrich Gutleben is nowhere mentioned by him, which is not the case with Theodor Nordmann. Instead, Knefelkamp makes the following observations which are important in our context: “In the beginning of the 15th century Master Heinrich the ‘physician’ is noted in the year 1409…[6]



October 8, 1538

The following information on the Smythe branch was graciously provided by Paul and Dorothy Tobler (tobler@omniglobal.net):

"After the death of the said Richard Smyth, the said Wm Wilforde & his co-feoffees were seised of the sd premises to the use of the sd John Smyth. ... "The sd John Smyth being so seised enfeoffed thereof Tho Crumwell, John Bylsdon, Rd Ryche, Guy Crafforde, Wm Gynkes, Rd Holte, John Bodnam, & John Stuk'ey: to hold to them and their heirs to the use of the sd John Smyth & Joan his wife, & the heirs of the sd John Smyth for ever" (Abstracts of IPM relating to the City of London returned into the Court of Chancery: Part I, I Henry VIII to 3 Eliz, 1485-1561 (124 Chancery Lane: British Record Society, Ltd., 1896). Hereinafter cited as London IPM 1.). Died in 1538. Probate on October 8, 1538 Wiltshire PCC 21 Dyngeley (Squibb, Visitation Pedigrees.).

There was also this following excerpt:

"Of 15 Bristol merchants from the 16th century recently identified as being involved in a smuggling ring, ten served as mayors, sheriffs or MPs of the city. Some were all three. Others included customs officers, a mayor of Gloucester and even senior officials in the navy. The Bristol men included some of the city's most important 16th century figures – including John Smyth, who founded the fortunes of the Smyth family of Ashton Court, and Nicholas Thorn, a major Bristol benefactor and the son of Robert Thorn, the principal Bristol backer of Bristol's early voyages of discovery to North America. For such men, with power and wealth behind them, crime really did pay." Year 1547: 1554 Mayor John Smyth, John Smyth Sheriff, Thomas Harris. Giles White Sheriff, William Tindall, John Cutt

The below website is a link to a Doctorial Essay on Bristol Shipping in the Sixteenth Century. It uses records kept by our John Smythe to base his findings.

http://www.bris.ac.uk/Depts/History/Maritime/Sources/1998phd.htm [7]



A. Children of John Smythe and Joan Brounker:
5. i. John Smythe (b. abt. 1521)
+ 6. ii. Thomas Smythe (b. 1522 in Kent, England / d. 1591 in Ashford, England)
7. iii. Henry Smythe
+ 8. iv. Elizabeth Smythe (b. abt. 1524 in Saffron, England)

1539

Taverner’s Bible.[8]



1539

Coverdale produced the Great Bible of 1539.[9] The Great Bible was designed to placed in every Parish Church in the land of England.[10]

1539: Archaeologist Ashley White has found the Indian village of Potano, where Spanish explorer Hernando De Soto made contact in Marion County, Florida, in 1539. White discovered medieval coins, Italian glass beads, bits of Spanish chain mail, pottery, nails, and a jaw bone from an Old World pig. The only other known De Soto site in Florida is in Tallahassee, where he wintered with his troops in 1540. “It gets rid of the guesswork now on the route through Marion County. Now, we know for sure he came up through the Black Sink Prairie to Orange Lake and looped around through Micanopy,” he explained. Other archaeologists assisted White with authenticating the De Soto artifacts. “Like other Spanish explorers, the De Soto expedition brought trade goods, things they could give the Indians to get them to be their friends, to pay them off, to provide bearers to carry supplies, to get food and to get consorts. When De Soto arrived, the Indians would have been cleaning hides, making pottery, carrying on with their lives. All that would change when De Soto shows up,” said Jerald Milanich, curator emeritus in archaeology of the Florida Museum of Natural History.[11]

October 8, 1576: Ottoman Sultan ordered the deportation of 1,000 wealthy Jews from Safed to Cyprus. The Jews would be requested to take with them their possessions and riches. The firman utilized wording which warned the Turks they would receive severe punishment if they accepted bribes from the Jews to have their names removed.[12]

October 8, 1633: Dorchester, in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, organizes the first town government in the Colonies.[13]

1634: In America by 1634 the Pequot Indians went from an estimated 13,000 to about 4,000 because of European diseases brought over by the Puritans. Even so some tribes had suffered 90 to 100 % losses so the Pequots, Naragansits, and Mohicans were not as bad off. [14]

1634 – The Cherokee had migrated into the Southeast from Northern areas around the Great Lakes. They first encountered English colonists from the Colony of Virginia.[15]

October 8, 1770. Vale. Crawford joind us, & he and I went to Col. Cresaps[16] leaving the Doctr. at Pritchards with my boy Billy[17] who was taken sick. I went with Val Crawford to Col. Cresop’s to learn the particulars of the grant said to be sold to Walpole and others for a certain tract of country on the Ohio. Passed by Henry Enoch’s stockade cabin which was on the Cocapehon 8 miles from Cresop’s by Cox’s Fort at the mouth of Little Cacapon.[18]



October 8th, 1770.—My servant being unable to travel, I left him at Pritchard’s with Dr. Craik, and proceeded myself with Valentine Crawford to Colonel Cresap’s, in order to learn from him, being just arrived from England, the particulars of the grant said to be lately sold to Walpole and others, for a certain tract of country on the Ohio. The distance from Pritchard’s to Cresap’s, according to computation, is twenty-six miles.[19]

October 8, 1778: Colonel Crawford was asked to form the militia into a brigade.[20]

October 8, 1787: Gabriel Smith10 [John “LR” Smith9, Ambrose J. Smith8, Christopher Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. 1764 / d. 1841) married Sarah Ann Downs (b. 1767 / d. 1833).

More about Gabriel Smith
* Gabriel is buried in the Old Poplar Springs Cemetery (Now Horsley), Haralson Co. GA.
* It is believed that Gabriel was also a part of the Militia in 1780 during the Revolutionary War.
* A photo copy, Georgia Dept of Archives and History, August 6, 1968 from the old family history. "Copy Photo" by Savory Albritton . Taken from a copy by Girlilee Thomason for heirs of Gabriel Smith, Sr. from Mrs. Lizzie Walker and Rev. War date from Montgomery Co., NC. Gabriel Sr. (1764-1842) enlisted in North Carolina Militia in 1780 from Montgomery Co., NC--Moved to Wilkes Co., Ga 1785 census page 44----Moved to Franklin County, Ga. 1802 (in the 1820 census of Habersham County, Ga.)--Moved to Carroll County, Ga in 1835. Carroll County Will Book B- page 39, will Apr 9, 1846-48 James C. Smith and Sarah Bunt

* !Bible record printed in Carroll Co. (GA) Genealogical Quarterly vol. II Fall & Winter 1981 No. 3 By Carroll Co. Genealogical Society pg 93 & 94. Births taken from this bible record where possible. "Gone To Georgia" Copyright 1965 by National Genealogical Society, special publication No. 30. pg 79 In Franklin Co., #2 Gabriel Smith enlisted in Montgomery Co., NC 1780; moved to Wilkes Co., Ga 1784 where he was taxed 1785 and then to Franklin Co., Ga 1802. !REV: "Roster of Rev. Soldiers in Ga." by McCall (Gen. R973.34) pg 274. Gabriel Smith applied for Pension in Franklin Co., Ga. CENSUS 1830 Franklin Co., Ga vol II Roll 209 dwelling 251/household 20 - 1male 60-70, 1 female 50-60. Census 1840 Carroll Co., GA 754th Div. pg 056. Census 1850 Carroll Co., GA 11th Div. pg 052. Census 1860 Carroll Co., GA Kansas Dist., P.O. Carrollton.

A. Children of Gabriel Smith and Sarah Downs:
. i. Ezekiel Smith (b. July 18, 1786 in Wilkes Co. GA)
+ . ii. Gideon Smith (b. October 8, 1787 in Wilkes Co. GA)
. iii. William Smith (b. February 15, 1789 in Wilkes Co. GA)
+ . iv. Richard Smith (b. June 13, 1790 in Elbert Co. GA)
+ . v. Mary Smith (b. October 1793 in Anson Co. NC / d. abt. 1833 in GA)
+ . vi. Morning Smith (b. October 1793)
+ . vii. Grace Louisa Francis Smith (b. January 1795 in Elbert Co. GA)
. viii. James Claiborne Smith (b. May 14, 1796 in Elbert Co. GA)
+ . ix. Gabriel D. Smith (b. June 18, 1798 in Elbert Co. GA / d. October 3, 1880 in GA)
. x. Mark Smith (b. April 6, 1800)
+ . xi. Sarah Smith (b. September 2, 1802)
. xii. Hugh Smith (b. January 5, 1805 in Franklin Co. GA)[21]



October 8, 1793

The tall white pillar beside a nearby building marks the tomb of John Hancock. This stone shaft is a replacement; the original tombstone disappeared over a century ago. It has even been suggested that Hancock’s remains may have been lifted by a graverobber, as the tomb lay open for some time while a nearby wall was being rebuilt. [22]

[23]

[24]

October 8, 1836: Winans, Hiram W., farmer, P.O. Springville; was born October 4, 1830, in Miami Co., Ohio; son of Moses P. and Susan Simmons-Winans. He married May 27, 1852, to Priscilla A., daughter of John B. and Elizabeth Persinger Hollingshead; she was born November 24, 1832, in Shelby Co., Ohio; moved here in 1852, have four children-Moses W., born January 8 1854; Ella E., born May 16, 1856; Myrtle May, born May 1, 1867; Ivy D., born November 10, 1872; the first was born in Johnson Co., Iowa, and the others here. Mr. Winans served in Co. H, 24th I. V. I., over eighteen months, and until the close of the war. Members of the M. E. Church. He is a Republican. His father was born January 4. 1808; son of Lewis and Lydia Winans. Married in Miami Co, Ohio, September 11, 1828; moved to Shelby Co. about 1831;in 1853, he came here; have nine children, all born in Ohio: Lewis, born June 29, 1829;still single; Hiram W., John S., born July 11, 1832, died February 28, 1869; Amy, born September 18, 1834; married to Jas. Cornell; Esther J., born October 8, 1836, died August 7, 1864, wife of W. H. Goodlove; William B., born December 21, 1838, married Mary J. Gibson; David C., born November 30, 1843, married Mary M. Hossler; Susan M., born November 29, 1845, married O. D. Heald, and live in Cedar Co., Lydia K., born June 13, 1849, married O. F. Glenn and live in St. Paul Minn. Moses P. Winans died here August 25, 1871; was a member of the M. E. Church, and a Republican; left a farm of 265 acres, valued at $15,000. Susan Simmons Winans was born February 18, 1812; her father was killed, and her mother and she were taken prisoners by the Indians, and held six monthes or more; a little brother 3 years old was also killed; in the following Spring, mother, with Susan, made her way to friends in Miami Co., Ohio. Mrs. Simmons afterward married John Redenbaugh, who died in Ohio, August 1847, she came here and died Feb. 27, 1857, aged about 72 years.. [25]



October 8, 1838: General Benjamin LeFever born born on a farm in Salem township, ten miles northeast northeast of Sidney, October 8, 1838. His parents were pioneers and the ancestral acres of great fertility.



October 8-13, 1862: Battle of Perryville, KY.[26]



Sat. October 8, 1864

Started at 6 am stoped at fishers hill 3

Hours than went on battle field at Strasburg

To camp skirmish in rear cold wind

Went on picket at 10 at night about froze

On reserve post[27]

October 8, 1871

Mrs. O’leary’s cow kicks over a lantern beginning a fire that destroys over 17,500 buildings and leaves 98,500 people homeless in Chicago.[28]

October 8, 1880: Mindla Gottlieb, born Geb Goldhammer, October 8, 1880 in Boryslaw, Galizien. Mitte, Kaiserstr. 22-24; 34. Resided Berlin. Deportation: from Berlin, March 4, 1943, Auschwitz. Place of death: Auschwitz, missing[29]



October 8, 1937: The Palestine Post reported that the Franco-Luxembourg-German borders were closed to Jews. All trains arriving at the border were searched and Jews were turned back. Jews seeking to retuirn to Germany were also turned back. In Germany Jews were called to police stations and asked point-blank when they were going to emigrate, or they would face serious consequences.[30]



October 8, 1938: The Slovak Peoples Party establishes Hlinkova Garda (Hlinka Guard), an anti-Semitic militia that will collaborate with the Germans.[31]



October 8, 1939: The Nazis ordered to the establishment of a Ghetto in Piotrkow Trybunalski, Poland. This was the first of a series of ghettos and camps planned by Heydrich.[32]



October 8, 1939: The Nazis orchestrated a pogrom against the Jews of Lodz.[33]



October 8, 1939: Germany annexed Western Poland marking the next level of the downward spiral that would come to be known as the Final Solution.[34]



October 8, 1941: The Vitebsk (Belorussia) Ghetto is liquidated, more than 16,000 Jews are killed.[35]



October 8, 1943 : Three thousand Italian prisoners of war are murdered by the SS and Ukrainian guards at La Risiera di San Sabba, Italy, south of Trieste. Of 1,920 Jews in Trieste, 620 are murdered by the SS.[36]



October 8, 1943: On the eve of the Jewish Day of Atonement, several thousand ill or weak Jewish men are gassed at Auschwitz.[37]



October 8, 1943: On Yom Kippur, over 1,000 men and women at Birkenau, deemed too sick to work, were gassed to death. At Plaszow, 50 Jews were murdered. Ironically, 600 Jews were permitted to pray in Sobibor.[38]



October 10, 1943: At the Sobibor death camp, a revolt is planned by Jewish laborers and Jewish Red Army POWs.[39]



October 13, 1943 : Italy declares war on Germany.[40]







October 8, 1960: Launching of USS Scamp (SSN-588) James Kirby, Sonar











Career







Name:


USS Scamp




Ordered:


23 July 1957




Builder:


Mare Island Naval Shipyard




Laid down:


23 January 1959




Launched:


8 October 1960




Commissioned:


5 June 1961




Decommissioned:


28 April 1988




Struck:


28 April 1988




Honors and
awards:


Three campaign stars for Vietnam War service




Fate:


Entered the Submarine Recycling Program in 1990




General characteristics




Class and type:


Skipjack-classsubmarine




Displacement:


2,830 long tons (2,880 t) surfaced
3,500 long tons (3,600 t) submerged




Length:


232 ft (71 m)




Beam:


32 ft (9.8 m)




Draft:


30 ft 5 in (9.27 m)




Propulsion:


1 × S5W reactor
2 × Westinghouse steam turbines, 15,000 shp (11 MW)
1 shaft




Speed:


More than 20 knots (23 mph; 37 km/h)




Complement:


83 officers & men




Armament:


6 × 21 in (530 mm) torpedo tubes








Service record




Part of:


US Seventh Fleet




Operations:


Vietnam War




Awards:


3 Battle stars


For other ships of the same name, see USS Scamp.

USS Scamp (SSN-588), a Skipjack-class nuclear-powered submarine, was the second ship of the United States Navy to be named for the scamp, a member of the serranidae family of fish.

Her keel was laid down on 23 January 1959 at Mare Island Naval Shipyard in Vallejo, California. She was launched on 8 October 1960, sponsored by Mrs. John C. Hollingsworth, widow of Commander John C. Hollingsworth, the commanding officer of Scamp (SS-277) at the time of her loss in November 1944. She was commissioned at Mare Island on 5 June 1961 with Commander W. N. Dietzen in command.





Operational history

1960s

Scamp’s first four months in the fleet were taken up by advanced trials and training exercises in the Bremerton, Washington, San Diego, California, and Pearl Harbor, areas. Following these operations, she returned to Vallejo, California, for post-shakedown availability at Mare Island Naval Shipyard. Leaving the shipyard Scamp completed her final acceptance trials and began local operations in the San Diego area. In April 1962 she deployed to the western Pacific, returning to San Diego in July. She operated locally until September, when she departed on another extended training cruise. Scamp returned to San Diego and local operations until February 1963 when she entered Mare Island Naval Shipyard for interim drydocking. She refloated in March and, in April, deployed again to the western Pacific. While in the Far East, she conducted another extended period of advanced training, including operations in the Okinawa area. Scamp reentered San Diego Bay in October 1963. She resumed her West Coast operations out of San Diego until June 1964, then, she headed west again for advanced readiness training. She arrived back in San Diego in September 1964.

Scamp entered Mare Island Naval Shipyard again in January 1965 for extensive modification. In June 1966 after the installation of the SUBSAFE package and overhaul, she left Mare Island and returned to training cruises in the San Diego operating area. In November she ventured north to Puget Sound for a month of operations and returned to San Diego in December. The nuclear submarine operated out of San Diego for the first six months of 1967. On 28 June, she departed San Diego to join the Seventh Fleet in the western Pacific. She remained in the Far East, participating in fleet operations along the Vietnamese coast, until returning to San Diego on 28 December 1967.

Scamp operated out of San Diego in the local operating area from January to May 1968. On 11 May, she arrived at Pearl Harbor to conclude an extended training cruise. She returned to San Diego on 19 May and remained there until 15 June, when the submarine shifted to San Francisco to enter Mare Island Naval Shipyard for a three-week restricted availability. She returned to San Diego on 16 July and finished out the year sailing from that port on various exercises and training cruises.

Scamp continued stateside duty throughout 1969. She alternated in-port periods with training cruises until early March when she began pre-overhaul tests in the San Diego operating area. She continued preparing for overhaul and participating in exercises until 1 November when she entered Puget Sound Naval Shipyard for regular overhaul. While at Bremerton, Scamp was assigned that port as her new home port. The overhaul continued through 1970 and ended in January 1971.

1970s

Following post-overhaul sea trials in Puget Sound, Scamp was reassigned back to San Diego, as home port on 12 February 1971, but did not enter that port until 16 April after a voyage to Pearl Harbor. On 27 July, she deployed to the western Pacific. Scamp stopped at Pearl Harbor from 2 August to 13 August, then headed on to Subic Bay, R.P., arriving on 30 August. For the bulk of 1971, she operated with the Seventh Fleet in Far Eastern waters other than off the coast of Vietnam, except for one short two-day period, 8 October and 9 October.

She returned to San Diego on 2 February 1972, but due to increasing tension in Southeast Asia, redeployed to the Seventh Fleet in May. She operated in the South China Sea for most of the summer, returning to San Diego on 1 August. Upon arrival, she went into a two-month standdown period, followed by more than a month of restricted availability at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard. She departed Puget Sound on 28 November, conducted weapons system accuracy tests, and returned, on 11 December, to San Diego, where she remained for the remainder of the year.

Scamp operated locally around San Diego until 29 March 1973. At that time, she departed the West Coast for deployment to the Far East. She stayed at Pearl Harbor between 5 and 10 April, then headed for Yokosuka, Japan. She arrived in Japan on 23 April and operated with the Seventh Fleet until 1 September, when she departed Guam for Pearl Harbor. Scamp stopped at Pearl Harbor during the period 10 to 15 September, then set sail for San Diego. Arriving on 21 September the nuclear submarine immediately entered a period of standdown and upkeep until 1 November, when she resumed operations in the vicinity of San Diego.

History for 1973-1988 needed.

Decommissioning

Scamp was decommissioned and stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on 28 April 1988. ex-Scamp entered the Nuclear Powered Ship and Submarine Recycling Program in Bremerton, Washington, in 1990 and on 9 September 1994 became the first hulk to complete the program and ceased to exist.

Honors and awards

Scamp earned three campaign stars for service in the Vietnam War.[41]



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


[1] This Day in Jewish History


[2] [1] www.wikipedia.org


[3] [2] The Changing Face of Anti-Semitism, from Ancient times to the Present Day, by Walter Laqueur, page 50.


[4] This Day in Jewish History




[5] P.S. Email May 8, 2010.


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


[7] http://freepages.family.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~ja7smith/Genealogy_of_William_Smyth.html Proposed Descendants of William Smyth (b. 1460)


[8] Trial by Fire, by Harold Rawlings, page 303.


[9] Trial by Fire, by Harold Rawlings, page 116.


[10] The Reformation, The Adventure of English. 12/10/2004, HISTI


[11] http://www.archaeology.org/news/


[12] This Day in Jewish History.


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


[14] 10 Days that changes America, Massacre at Mystic, 4/09/2006 Histi.


[15] Timeline of Cherokee Removal


[16] Thomas Cresap’s establishment was at Shawnee Old Town (now Oldtown, Md.).


[17] Billy is GW’s mulatto body servant William, whom he had bought in 1768 from Mrs. Mary Lee of Westmoreland County, the widow of Col. John Lee, for £6i 15s. (Ledger A, 261). Billy had assumed the surname Lee, and was also referred to by GW as Will or William. He was to accompany his master throughout the Revolutionary War. Washington’s Journal, From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969, page 109.


[18] Washington’s Journal, From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969, page 109.


[19] The second set of entries for this day notes that GW, Craik, and Valentine Crawford proceeded to Cresap’s in order “to learn from him (being just arrived from England) the particulars of the grant said to be lately sold to Walpole & others, for a certain Tract of Country on the Ohio.” Undoubtedly one of the factors that prompted GW’s trip to the Ohio in the fall of 1770 to examine western lands was information concerning a new land scheme being promoted in England. While Cresap was in England, he had made particularly inquiry into the affairs of the new company. The project grew out of negotiations between Thomas Walpole, a prominent British politician, and Samuel Wharton, Philadelphia merchant and land speculator. The plan called for the acquisition of over 20,000,000 acres, which would have encompassed much of the area of Kentucky, southwestern Pennsylvania, and the western part of what is now West Virginia. The proposal included a plan to establish a new colony to be called Vandalia. In Dec. 1769 the Grand Ohio Company was formed to further the scheme. In the fall of 1770 GWwrote to Lord Botetourt pointing out the conflict between the Walpole associates’ plans and the interests of Virginia. See Papers, Colonial Series, 8:378—380, 388—93. It had soon become evident that the boundaries of the new grant would overlap the claims of the Mississippi Company (of which GW was a member) and those of the Ohio Company of Virginia and would encroach on the bounty lands claimed by veterans of the Virginia Regiment.


[20] The Brothers Crawford, Allen W. Scholl, 1995




[21] Proposed Descendants of William Smith


[22] The Complete Guide to Bosyton’s Freedom Trail, Third Edition by Charles Bahne, page 12.


[23] Photo by Jeff Goodlove, November 14, 2009


[24] Photo by Jeff Goodlove, November 14, 2009


[25] Brown Township, p 735 is in History of Linn County, Iowa, published 1878 by Western Historical Company, Chicago. IL


[26] State Capital Memorial, Austin, TX, February 11, 2012


[27] William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary


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


[29] [1] Gedenkbuch, Opfer der Verfolgung der Juden unter der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft in Deutschland 1933-1945. 2., wesentlich erweiterte Auflage, Band II G-K, Bearbeitet und herausgegben vom Bundesarchiv, Koblenz, 2006, pg. 1033-1035,.

{2}Der judishchen Opfer des Nationalsozialismus

“Ihre Namen mogen nie vergessen werden!”

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




[30] This Day in Jewish History


[31] This Day in Jewish History


[32] This Day in Jewish History.


[33] This Day in Jewish History.


[34] This Day in Jewish History


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










[41] This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. The entry can be found here.Skipjack-class submarine:







•Skipjack
•Scamp
•Scorpion
•Sculpin
•Shark
•Snook




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