Monday, November 19, 2012

This Day in Goodlove History, November 20

This Day in Goodlove History, November 20

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.

Birthday: Myrtle I Andrews Goodlove, Clark R. Harrison, Mary Hernandez Snell, William H. McKinnon

November 20, 1745: Either from a feeling that his loyal intentions had been underrated and his interest overlooked, or what is far more probable, from an unconquerable attachment to the Stuart cause, Ian dubh (John the black), thirtieth chieftain of the clan MacKinnon, rose at the summons of Prince Charles Edward and joined him with one hundred men, which number was subsequently increased to two hundred and fifty, or even, as some think, to three hundred. Either figure bears an immense proportion to the total strength of this little clan.

I shall pass at once to the famous march into England which commenced from Carlisle on November 20, 1745. It is a curious fact, that whilst nearly half the highland clans were not represented at all in this expedition, of the rest scarcely one retained the number which the muster roll shows before the army set out from Edinburgh; many from each clan having deserted and gone to their homes, some to secure their plunder, others refusing to march to such a great distance from their native land. There were two honourable exceptions, howver, and two only. These were the Macdonalds of Glencoe and the MacKinnons of Strath. Each of these clans showed and increase of twenty men, when the march from Carlisle to Derby commenced. Of these, there only accompanied him into England, Clan-Ranald, the Macdonalds of Glengarry, Keppoch and Glencoe, MacKinnon, Stuart of Appin, Cameron, Grant of Glenmoriston, Macpherson, and Robertson of Struan, ten in number.[1]

November 20, 1770:. Our Horses arriving about One Oclock at 2 we set out for Fort Pitt & got about 10 Miles.[2]

November 20th, 1770: .—About one o’clock our horse arrived, having been prevented from getting to Fort Pitt by the freshets. At two we set our and got about ten miles; the Indians travelling with us.[3]

November 20, 1776, Hugh Stephenson will[4] (Berkeley Co. 1772-1815.)

November 20, 1776: Colonel William Crawford severed relations with the command of the Seventh Regiment of Virginia.[5]


The Landing of the British Troops in the Jerseys, a drawing by Captain Thomas Davies (1776). [6]

November 20, 1776: At a Court Cont'd and held for the district of West Augusta

County, November the 20th, 1776 : Present, Edward Ward, John McColloch, John Cannon,

David Shepherd, Capt'n Wm. Christy prod a Com of Capt'n of a Comp'y of Militia, took the Oath required by Ordinance of Convention

O C'd.

Leiut Jacob Bousman, the same

Ensign Hugh Smith.
[Here the minutes of this court end.] [7]

November 20, 1777. The commissioners appointed were Colonel Samuel Washington, Colonel Joseph Reed and Gabriel Jones. General Washington was also directed to send Colonel William Crawford to Pittsburgh to take command under General Hand of the continental troops and militia in the Western Department.[8] [9]

November 20, 1777: Brigadier-General Adam Stephen was an officer from Virginia

who had acquired an excellent reputation as lieutenant-colonel of

Colonel Washington's regiment in the French and Indian war,

that great preparatory school for officers of the Continental army,

and who had been made a brigadier-general by Congress, Septem-

ber 4, 1776. He fought well at Trenton, was made a major-general

of the Continental army, February 19, 1777, and took part in the

battle of Brandywincj but it is said that his intemperate habits

brought him under a cloud at the battle of Germantown ; he was

dismissed November 20, 1777, and thereafter his name is not

mentioned in military history.

This letter (Nathaniel Green to the President of the Congress) inclosed the resolves of Congress of November 20, appointing three commissioners to repair to Fort Pitt to investigate the frontier troubles, engage the Delawares and Shawanese Indians in the friendship and services of the United States, aid in every military activity, and arrange an expedition against Detroit, Also Washington was requested to send Col. William Crawford to Pittsburgh to act under General Hand.

November 20, 1781: Marshel had become tired of “volunteer plans.” [10]


Irvine’s portrait is from an oil painting by B. Otis, after one by Robert Edge Pine, an eminent English artist, who came to America in 1784. The original was taken in New York, when Irvine was a member of Congress-age forty eight.[11]

November 20, 1802: “The spring near this spot had the appearance of a lasting one.”

Early in the spring of 1776 this deponent in company with Benjamin Harrison, John Morgan, Belles Collier and one [Robert] Keene came down the Ohio to the mouth of Licking River and from thence up Licking to Hingston station and from thence we proceeded up this stream now called Sonter’s Fork, being pilated by John Morgan, who had been in this country the year before, till he informed us we were about [Christopher] Gists’s military survey and sometime, as this deponent thinks, in the month of April we built a cabin covered it over and made it fit for habitation. AT this spot we cleared about a half an acre or ¾ of an acre of land and planted corn. This improvement we made for John Morgan and after making several other improvements on the right hand fork, which puts in about 300 yards above this place, Harrison and this deponent returned up the river, leaving Morgan and Collier at Morgan’s cabin, who were to remain there and to endeavor to prevent others from making improvements to interfere with ours, and we were to return the ensuing fall, and bring to Morgan and Collier such necessaries as they had sent for. The spring near this spot had the appearance of a lasting one was intended by Morgan as his useing spring.[12]

November 20, 1802: In early 1776, Benjamin Harrison and Thomas Moore were among a party of explorers and settlers that entered Kentucky and occupied lands in and around what is now Cynthiana, the county seat of Harrison County KY. (The town was named for Cynthia and Anna, daughters of an early settler; the county was named for Benjamin Harrison.)

The 1776 expedition is confirmed by a deposition Thomas Moore made “on the west bank of Stoner’s Creek near James Patton’s house in Clark county, on November 20th 1802 before D. Harrison and H. Chiles, J.P” (recorded in the Circuit Court of Fayette County PA) In this document, Thomas Moore swears,

“Early in the spring of 1776 this deponent in company with Benjamin Harrison, John Morgan, Belles Collier and one [Robert] Keene came down the Ohio to mouth of Licking River and from thence up Licking to Hingston station and from thence we proceeded up this stream now called Stoner’s Fork, being pilated by John Morgan, who had been in this country the year before, till he informed us we were aboyut [Christopher] Gist’

S military survey and sometime, as this deponent thinks, in the month of April we built a cabin covered it over and made it fit for habitation. At this spot we cleared about a half an acre or ¾ of an acre of land and planted corn. This improvement we made for John Morgan and after making several other improvements on the right hand fork, which puts in about 300 yards above this place, Harrison, and this deponent returned up the river, leaving Morgan and Collier at Morgan’s cabin, who were to remain there and to endeavor to prevent others from making improvements to interfere with ours, and we were to return the ensuing fall, and bring to Morgan and Collier such necessaries as they had sent for. The spring near this spot had the appearance of a lasting one was intended by Morgan as his using spring.” [13]

Thomas Moore’s 1802 deposition supported the claims of those who had arrived in and made improvements on lands in territory, which was under the authority of the governor of Virginia Colony. This region became the Commonwealth of Kentucky in 1792.[14]

November 20, 1811: Construction of the Cumberland Road, to connect Cumberland, Maryland, with Wheeling, West Virginia, begins.[15]

November 20, 1863: Dr. William McKinnon Goodlove (1st cousin, 3 times removed) and the 57th Ohio Volunteer Infantry moved to Memphis, thence march to Chattanoogo, Tenn., September 27-November 20, 1863. [16]


Sun. November 20, 1864

At work all day building a shanty

Cloudy dul day report that the rebs

Have fell back to Staunton[17][18]


November 20, 1876


[19]

Myrtle (Andrews) Goodlove

Myrtie and Willis were divorced in 1921

November 20, 1876 – August 29, 1962


November 20, 1876 –August 21, 1962

Myrtle I. Andrews Goodlove

Birth:
1876
Linn County
Iowa, USA

Death:
1962
Whittier
Linn County
Iowa, USA


Burial:
Jordans Grove Cemetery
Central City
Linn County
Iowa, USA

Created by: John Wilkinson
Record added: Oct 09, 2009
Find A Grave Memorial# 42891964

Added by: John Wilkinson

Cemetery Photo
Added by: Jackie L. Wolfe

November 20-25, 1940: Hungary, Romania, and Slovakia become members of the Tripartite Pact.[20]

November 20, 1941: Twenty thousand Minsk Jews are killed at Tuchinka.[21]

November 20-December 7, 1941: Thirty thousand Jews are killed in the Rubula Forest outside Riga, during the so-called Jeckeln Aktion including Flora and Sidonie Gottlieb.[22]

On November 20, 1941: al-Husseini met the German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop[125][23]

November 20, 1945: The trial of 21 German war criminals begins in Nuremberg, Germany.[24] Julius Streicher could tell the tribunal at Nurnberg that Martin Luther ought to have been standing in his place as the accused, for he, Streicher, was merely putting into effect Luther’s counsel respecting the Jews.[25]

At the end of 1945, when the terrible conditions facing European displaced persons were widely known, only 5 percent of the respondents thought the United States should “permit more persons from Europe to come to this country each year than we did before the war.” (Thirty-two percent believed the same number should be allowed in as before, 37 percent wanted fewer to enter, and 14 percent called for closing the doors entirely.)[26]

November 20-21, 1963: ...A comparable incident was the appearance of the "Wanted for Treason" handbill on the streets of Dallas 1 to 2 days before President Kennedy's arrival. These handbills bore a reproduction of a front and profile photograph of the President and set forth a series of inflammatory charges against him.490 Efforts to locate the author and the lithography printer of the handbill at first met with evasive responses 491 and refusals to furnish information.492 Robert A. Surrey was eventually identified as the author of the handbill.493 Surrey, a 38-year- old printing salesman employed by Johnson Printing Co. of Dallas, Tex., has been closely associated with General Walker for several years in his political and business activities.494 He is president of American Eagle Publishing Co. of Dallas, in which he is a partner with General Walker.495 Its office and address is the post office box of Johnson Printing Co. Its assets consist of cash and various printed materials composed chiefly of General Walker's political and promotional literature, 496 all of which is storm at General Walker's headquarters.497

Surrey prepared the text for the handbill and apparently used Johnson Printing Co. facilities to set the type and print a proof.498 Surrey induced Klause, a salesman employed by Lettercraft Printing Co. of Dallas,499 whom Surrey had met when both were employed at Johnson Printing Co.,500 to print the handbill "on the side." 501 According to Klause, Surrey contacted him initially approximately 2 or 2 1/2 weeks prior to November 22.502 About a week prior to November 22, Surrey delivered to Klause two slick paper magazine prints of photographs of a front view and profile of President Kennedy,503 together with the textual page proof.504 Klause was unable to make the photographic negative of the prints needed to prepare the photographic printing plate,505 so that he had this feature of the job done at a local shop.506 Klause then arranged the halftone front and profile representations of President Kennedy at the top of the textual material he had received from Surrey so as to simulate a "man wanted" police placard. He then made a photographic printing plate of the picture.507 During the night, he and his wife surreptitiously printed approximately 5,000 copies on Lettercraft Printing Co. offset printing equipment without the knowledge of his employers.508 The next day he arranged with Surrey a meeting place, and delivered the handbills.509 Klause's charge for the printing of the handbills was, including expenses, $60.510

At the outset of the investigation Klause stated to Federal agents that he did not know the name of his customer, whom he incorrectly described; 511 he did say, however, that the customer did not resemble either Oswald or Ruby.512 Shortly before he appeared before the Commission, Klause disclosed Surrey's identity.513 He explained that no record of the transaction had been made because "he saw a chance to make a few dollars on the side." 514

Klause's testimony receives some corroboration from Bernard Weissman's testimony that he saw a copy of one of the "Wanted for Treason" handbills on the floor of General Walker's station wagon shortly after November 22.515 Other details of the manner in which the handbills were printed have also been verified.516 Moreover, Weissman testified that neither he nor any of his associates had anything to do with the handbill or were ,acquainted with Surrey, Klause, Lettercraft Printing Co., or Johnson Printing Co. 517 Klause and Surrey, as well as General Walker, testified that they were unacquainted with Lee Harvey Oswald and had not heard of him prior to the afternoon of November 22.518 The Commission has found no evidence of any connection between those responsible for the handbill and Lee Harvey Oswald or the assassination. [27]

November 2001: “The real matter is the extinction of America. And, God willing, it will fall to the ground.”

Taliban leader, Mullah Omar, November 2001 [28]

November 2003: President George W. Bush said at a November 2003 press conference that Christians and Muslims worship the same God. Many evangelical Christians publicly displayed their outrage.[29]

2004: Death to Israel! Iranian TV.[30]

Throughout history Jerusalem has been conquered by 26 nations and has been leveled to the ground 5 times. Every nation and world leader that has lifted their hand against Israel has been cursed by God almighty.

Genesis 12:3

And I will bless them that bless thee, and curse him that curseth thee: and in these shall all families of the earth be blessed. [31]

2004 : “Until Israel is wiped off the face of the earth, these cries will continue.

Death to Israel!”

2004 Iranian TV[32]


In 2004 Jewish groups in the United States protested outside screenings of the movie The Passion of Christ, claiming that the film portrays Jews as responsible for Jesus’ crucifixion.[33]

2004: Islam is a religion practiced by over 1 billion people worldwide. The word “Islam” means “submission to God” in Arabic. It is the second largest religion, next to Christianity and is the fastest growing religion in the world. About 4 million Muslim’s live in the United States….Fewer than one fifth of all Moslem’s in the world are Arabs. [34]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[1] Clan Mackinnon, compiled by Alan McKie, page 24, 1986.

[2] George Washington Journal

[3] George Washington Journal

[4] W. VA. Estate Settlements, Library of Congress #76-53168, International Std. Book #8063-0755-2 (Rosella Ward Wegner)

[5] The Brothers Crawford

[6] This scene shows the second division of Cornwallis’s force landing with artillery on the morning of November 20, 1776. Emmet Collection, The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations. Washington’s Crossing by David Hackett Fischer.

[7] http://www.archive.org/stream/cu31924017918735/cu31924017918735_djvu.txt

[8] Journals Cont. cong., Ix., 942, 944.

[9] George Rogers Clark Papers, Vol. III 1771-1781, James Alton James, Editor. Pg. xiv

[10] (See Appendix J,— Marshel to Irvine, November 20, 1781.) Washington-Irvine Correspondence by Butterfield.

[11] Washington-Irvine Correspondence by C.W. Butterfield, 1882.

[12] John Moreland’s book, page 261-262.

[13] John Moreland’s book, page, 262.

[14] John Moreland’s book, page, 262.

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

[16] Ohiocivilwar.com/cw57.html

[17] Staunton played a pivotal role during the Civil War years when the Shenandoah Valley served as the "Breadbasket of the Confederacy". While most of the battles were being fought north or west of the town, it was the presence of the Virginia Central Railroad that provided a vital link between the Valley and eastern Virginia, making Staunton an important supply depot for the Confederacy.

http://www.staunton.va.us/default.asp?pageID=90F8F592-A0AB-43EF-8DB5-1E7199264360

[18] William Harrison Goodlove 24th Iowa Infantry Civil War Diary annotated by Jeff Goodlove

[19] Linda Peterson Archives, June 12, 2011

[20] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1764.

[21] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1769

[22] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1769

[23] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haj_Amin_al-Husseini#World_War_I

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

[25] Your People, My People by A. Roy Eckardt, page 24.

[26] The Abandonment of the Jews, America and the Holocaust, 1941-1945 by David S. Wymen page 9.

[27] Source: http://www.jfk-assassination.de/warren/wcr/page298.php[27]

[28] The Taliban. History.com 01/05/2006

[29] Introducing Islam, Dr. Shams Inati, pg 105-106.

[30] Save Jerusalem Campaign, 4/23/2011

[31] Save Jerusalem Campaign, 4/23/2011

[32] Obsession, Radical Islam’s War Against the West.

[33] Introducing Islam, by Dr. Shams Inati, page 85.

[34] Islam: History, Society and Civilization, DISC, 2/20/2004

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