Tuesday, December 25, 2012

This Day in Goodlove History, December 26

This Day in Goodlove History, December 26

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.

Anniversary : Laura Brown and Edwin W. Godlove 117

Birthdays: Hazelton File: 115, Winton D. Goodlove: 90

December 26, 1620: In December of 1620, after 66 days at sea, and 5 uneasy weeks on the northern tip of Cape Cod, a scraggaly cult from England anchored it’s sailing vessal, the Mayflower, off the mainland coast and sent a small party of men to scout the wooded shores. Radical religious views had made the Pilgrims unwelcomed and unwanted, in England. They had no home to go back to if they failed to make it in this new world.[1]

102 pilgrims had made the voyage across the Atlantic. That winter, 15 had died of disease or depredation. By the end of the winter the Pilgrims had buried 45, and 13 of the eighteen women, had died.[2]

1620: European immigrants to Colonial America risked their lives and identities leaving home. Virginia’s vast tobacco coast drew immigrants from a variety of nationalities and religions who hoped for stable work, land, and prosperity. German Lutherans hoped to escape nearly constant war. French Protestant Huguenots and Jews fled brutal religious persecution. Young Englishmen of different classes gambled that they could succeed as planters. Forced migration brought many thousand West Africans as enslaved laborers. After 1620, many immigrants who survived the transition to the new climate became small tobacco planters and exporters. [3]

Gilbert Simpson to George Washington, December 26, 1772

DECEMBER: 26 the: 1772

SR

I Received yours of the 18 of this instant by the hand of Mr Crawford and I am agreable to your perposeal in makeing of Corn the next Summer prvided there Could be Corn got to Live on which I doubt of at that time of year but you and I Shall be more able to judg of that in the month of Febuary if Mr Crawford Coms in as he Say he will and if any goos out there must goe more than two for I perpose to goe my Self and my Negro fellow and you must Find one fellow and one wench I shall stand good in labor against one [of] them for one Summer for I should not Care to trust a thing of that Conciquin C with any Common person and there mu[s]t [be] a wagon imployd for to go out for I should Chuse to take tools of Every Sort Sutable for plantation business and to Carry Two of my horsses and two Cows and Calves and other NesCesryes Sr there is one thing in the artickels of your ag[rlement and mine which is not as I perposed to you or Elce I mistake the mening of it which is that my Family was to hold the plantation 21 years after my decees but it looks to me as tho it was but for that Teerm in my hf and theres which is not according to my Expectation and the Shortnes of your Leeses has put the people much out of heart of Setling your Lots which they was very intent to have don but Sr I hope you will Consider that the time is two Short as the Rents is high Sr I should be glad to see you or to Receive a line or two from you the First opertunity I shall Com down to you when Mr Crawford Corns if I should not Chance to see you before So no more but Remain your humble

Servant GILBT. SIMPSON

LOUDOWN[4]



Standing on the spot where George Washington and William Crawford crossed the Delaware, December 26, 1776. Taken January 1, 2005. JG


Continental Lane: Road over which Washington’s Army began its march to Trenton, December 26, 1776

Photo taken January 1, 2005 by JG.


Washington crossing the Delaware, by Emanuel Leutze. The flag hasn’t been designed yet, the boat style is incorrect, people on board the boat were not even there, and it is doubtful that Washington would have been able to stand up, however the impact of the painting is in the intensity of the moment and its ability to convey the determination of the General in one of the greatest surprise attacks in military history. JG.



The Hessian Garrison at Trenton, December 26, 1776



Brigade Rall (Col. Johann Gottlieb Rall)

1,354 effective men “on duty” plus 28 officers; total effectives 1,382





Grenadier Regiment Rall (Col. Johann Gottlieb Rall)

Lt. Col. Baithasar Brethauer, acting commander

Maj. Johann Jost Matthaeus

Reported strength on December 26: 512 “effective men under arms,” 28

and 40 sick in hospitals at New York, 23 sick at Trenton



Fusilier Regiment von Lossberg (also Alt von Lossberg, after Lt. Gen. Baron Ft Wilhelm von Lossberg, commander of a brigade in Rhode Island)

Lt. Col. Francis Scheffer, acting commander Maj. Ludwig August von Hanstein

“Last Report,” 34 effective men “on duty”; no report of ineffectives



Fusilier Regiment von Knyphausen (after Lt. Gen. Wilhelm von Knyphausen commander 2d Division, Landgraflich Hessischen Corps in America)

Maj. Friedrich Ludwig von Dechow, acting commander

Strength on December 26, 1776: 429 men effective “on duty,” 45 wounded sick at New York, 8 sick at Trenton



Artillery (6 guns)

Lt. Friedrich Fischer

Lt. Johann Engelhardt

Strength included with regiments



Jagers, one company [50 men]

Lt. Friedrich Wilhelm von Grothausen

Estimated effectives, 50 men



Cavalry, British 16th Light Dragoons, [20 men]

Estimated effectives, 18 men[5]





December 25, (William Crawford) crossed the Delaware River with Washington.[6]



WILLIAM CRAWFORD, my 5th Great Grandfather

*Crossed the Delaware in retreat and again in victory on Christmas Day, 1776. [7]





Christmas Eve, 1776


We do not know how long he remained in England, nor how long the voyage lasted, but history tells us that on Christmas eve, 1776, the Hessians under Col. Rahl were keeping the vigil of the Nativity in their customary manner at Trenton, N.J., when General Washington with a handful of troops crossed the Delaware River amidst floating ice, surprised the hilarious (intoxicated) Hessians, killed a few and captured more than a thousand and fled back to Philadelphia. [8]



December 26, 1776

He was promoted to colonel at Trenton, NJ, December 26, 1776, of the Seventh Regiment which he headed 1776-1778. It was raised largely by William Crawford in the district of West Augusta.

1776 December 26, Battle of Trenton, New Jersey.[9]

Colonial troops attack…


The Hessian’s are caught off guard…


The Battle continues…


Ready…


Aim…


Fire!!!

Battle of Trenton - December 26, 1776[10]


We stopped by the Trenton Memorial on New Years (January 1) morning and as we peered through the window, to our surprise a man who name was Henry, peered out and asked if we would like to ride the elevator to the top. We had to sit down and finish our coffee, as we were quite stunned that here, on a national holiday, there was a man who didn’t take a day off. This was what made our visit unique and unforgettable. Henry took us up the monument in the smallest elevator I’ve ever been in and as we learned as we reached the top, one of the oldest. Henry informed us to not let the door blow shut at the top, as a crane would have to bring us down.

I believe that Henry, who was in his mid seventies, takes a great deal of pride in his job. The memorial was immaculate, considering the neighborhood, and as we left Henry was caring for the grounds. The point of this conversation is that this is not only the time on our trip that someone has shown up, as a volunteer, and taken time to help tell the story. The story of the place and what happened there. There were many places where people have shown up to help tell the story of the people who lived there. Those are the people I would like to thank. Those people who understand the importance of telling the story, and passing it along for the next generation. JG.


Gary and Jeff Goodlove, late December, 2004 in Connellsville, PA. JG

December 26, 1776

Sketch of the engagement at Trenton, given on the 26th of December (December 26) 1776 betwixt the American troops under command of General Washington, and three Hessian regiments under command of Colonell Rall, in which the latter a part surrendered themselves prisoner of war. [By] Wiederhold Lieut: from the Hessian Rgmt of Knÿphauss. (Below)


PLAN of the affair which took place on the 26th of December, 1776, at Trenton, between a corps of six thousand rebels, commanded by General Washington, and a brigade of Hessians, commanded by Colonel Rall.

A. Trenton.

B. Picket of an officer and twenty-four men. (Wiederhold.)

C. Captain Aitenbocum’s company of the Lossberg regiment, which was quartered in the neighborhood, and which formed in front of the captain’s quarters, while the picket occupied the enemy.

D. Picket of one captain, one officer, and seventy-five men.

E. One officer and fifty Jagers, who immediately withdrew over the bridge. (Grothausen.)

F. Detachment of one officer and thirty men, which joined Donop’s corps.

G. Place where the regiments stopped after leaving the town, and where Colonel Rall attempted to make an attack on the town with his own regiment and that of Lossberg, but was violently driven back to

I. and taken prisoner with the regiments; meanwhile the Regiment von Knyphausen should have covered the flank.

K. Place where the Regiment von Knyphausen had likewise to surrender, after trying to reach the bridge. The cannon of the Lossberg regiment were with the Knyphausen regiment, and unfortunately stuck in the marsh; and while they were being extricated the moment for gaining the bridge was lost, and the bridge strongly occupied by the enemy.

L. Cannon of the Lossberg regiment.

M. Cannon of the Knyphausen regiment, which were not with the regiment during the affair.

N. Cannon of Rall’s regiment, dismounted in the beginning.

0. Attack of the enemy from the wood.

P. The enemy advance and surround the town.

Q. Two battalions of the enemy following the Knyphausen regiment.

R. Last manceuvre and attack upon the Knyphausen regiment.

S. Cannon of the rebels.

T. Place where General Washington posted himself and gave his orders.



Christmas Eve 1776 to January 3, 1777

Another verification which Butterfield made on page 104 of Chapter 5 is that “He (Crawford) was one of the heroic band that crossed the Delaware with Washington on Christmas Day (1776), participating in the Victory at Trenton on the next day, and at Princeton on the third of January, 1777.”[11]

December 26, 1776

December 26 1776 - In Jersey (New Jersey), part of the British and Hessian units have posts at Amboy (Perth?), Elizabethtown, Bergen, Powles Hook, Princeton, Bordentown, Pennington, Burlington, Maidenhead, and Trenton. The Hessian Battalions including the Von Minnigerode, Von Linsing Battalions and Hessian Jägers are at Bordentown. General Washington and his American troops cross the Delaware River, surpising and capturing three Hessian regiments at Trenton, New Jersey. Colonel Rall, commanding the three regiments is killed in the attack. In Cassel it was reported that of the 8,000 men, only 800 had escaped, and the whole of Germany was stirred up by the news.(False report, about 900 were captured at Trenton). [12]

Strength Estimates of American Forces

December 26, 1776: committed to the Delaware Crossing, 6,500 men

About 2,400 officers and men crossed the Delaware River at McConkey’s Ferry. Three other forces were ordered to cross the river: 8oo men under General James Ewing at the South Trenton Ferry, 1,8oo men under Colonel John Cadwalader at Bristol Ferry, and 1,ooo men under General Israel Putnam at Philadelphia. Putnam’s men were to join 500 militia who had been under Colonel Griffin in South Jersey. All three forces were unable to get across to NewJersey on Christmas night, except a few light infantry under Cadwalader and 300 men from Philadelphia who had crossed earlier. The total number of men committed to the operation was 6,500, of which only 2,400 were able to cross the river and engage at Trenton.[13]

December 26, 1776: Fifth Regiment General Stevens Brigade, William Crawford was promoted to lieutenant-colonel. He served until August 14, 1776. He was promoted to colonel at Trenton, NJ, December 26, 1776, of the Seventh Regiment which he headed 1776-1778. It was raised largely by William Crawford in the district of West Augusta. It was accepted by Congress February 29, 1776 and was taken on the Continental Establishment June 17, 1776. It seems to have been attached to General Woodford’s Brigade during its entire term of service. The Regiment was nearly cut to pieces in the defeat at Brandywine.[14]

“December 26, 1777- The regiment still spent this day aboard ship.”[15]

On December 26th, the fleet sailed right into the teeth of a storm which made the poor soldiers very wretched, and soon scattered the ships, which met a succession of storms, and finally reached a harbor only on the 28th of January, and the point fixed for disembarkation on the 3ist. There, at Tybee Island, lay the transport “Polly,” with two companies of the Grenadier battalion v. Linsingen, which had been safely landed for two weeks, and were comfortably encamped on the shore.[16]

December 26, 1779: On the morning of the 26th at eight o’clock the signal was given to weigh anchor. The fleet set sail under a favorable northwest wind and passed the Hook and the Middle Ground where the men-of-war were anchored, under whose escort the entire fleet under Admiral Arbuthnot’1 sailed to the east in the following formation.

Perseus frigate, 32 guns, Captain Elphinstone,’2 an excellent and celebrated naval officer who was very familiar with the southern coast of North America.

Roebuck, The transport EEurope, The transport Romulus,

44 guns, ships with 64 guns,] ships of 44 guns,

Captain the English Principal the light Captain

Hamond,’3 grenadiers. Agent, infantry. Clinton

a very Captain [Gayton].15

meritorious Tonken.’4 The

naval officer, Commander

where Lord in Chief,

Cornwallis General

was aboard. Clinton was

aboard here.

Transport Second Transport

ships with Agent, ships with

the Hessians. Captain the English

Chads.’6 infantry.

Robust, Defiance,

74 guns.17 64 guns.’8

Ordnance Third Agent, Transport

ships with Captain ships with the

the artillery Winter.’9 engineers,

and all that pontoniers,

belonged to and pioneers,

it. including the

equipment

and horse

transports.

Renown, Raisonnable,

50 guns.2° 64 guns.2’

Provisions ships.

Provincial corps ships.

Russell, 74 guns.22

Richmond frigate, 32 guns, Captain Hudson,23

a very courageous and experienced seaman.

The entire fleet consisted of one hundred and thirty-three sail, among which were a number of one-masters which had on board the horses for the dragoons, the mounted of the Legion, and the artillery.[17]


December 26, 1803: Treaty of Fort Wayne
Recognition of American ownership of the Vincennes Tract

Signed
June 7, 1803

Location: Fort Wayne, Indiana Territory

Effective:December 26, 1803

Condition:Transfer of money and goods to natives; US to relinquish land claims in adjacent territory

Signatories:William Henry Harrison, Little Turtle, Topinabee, Winnemac

Parties:United States of America, Delawares, Shawnee, Potowatomi, Miami, Kickapoo, The Eel River band, Weas, Piankeshaws, and Kaskaskias

Language:English

The Treaty of Fort Wayne was a treaty between the United States and several groups of Native Americans. The treaty was signed on June 7, 1803 and proclaimed December 26, 1803.

Parties: William Henry Harrison, who at the time was governor of Indiana Territory and superintendent of Indian affairs and commissioner plenipotentiary of the United States for concluding any treaty or treaties which may be found necessary with any of the Indian tribes north west of the Ohio river, negotiated the treaty for the United States. The native peoples were represented by chiefs and head warriors of the Delawares, Shawnee, Potowatomi, Miami and Kickapoo. The Eel River band of Miami, the Weas, Piankeshaws, and Kaskaskias were represented by proxy agents.[1]

Terms

The first article more precisely defined the boundaries of the Vincennes Tract surrounding Fort Vincennes on the Wabash River, which had been confirmed as a possession of the United States in the 1795 Treaty of Greenville.[1] The land was originally purchased from the tribes by the Kingdom of France. It was transferred to Great Britain in 1763, and to the United States in 1783. The area was a rectangular tract of approximately 160,000 acres (650 km2) lying at right angles to the course of the Wabash River at Vincennes.[2]

In the second article, the United States relinquished claims to any lands adjoining the tract defined in article one.[3]

Article 3 cedes to the United States a salt spring upon the Saline creek, which falls into the Ohio below the mouth of the Wabash, with a quantity of land surrounding it not exceeding 4 square miles (10 km2). The U.S. agreed to deliver to the Indians annually a quantity of salt not exceeding 150 US bushels (5.3 m3).[3]

Article 4 cedes to the United States the right of locating three tracts of land (of such size as may he agreed to by the Kickapoo, Eel River band of Miami, Wea, Piankeshaw, and Kaskaskia tribes), for the purposes of erecting houses of entertainment for the accommodation of travellers on the main road between Vincennes and Kaskaskia and one other on the road between Vincennes and Clarksville.[3]

Article 5 allowed for alterations to the boundary lines described in the first article if it is found that settlements of land made by citizens of the United States fall in the Indian country. It was agreed that a quantity of land equal in quantity to what may be thus taken shall be given to the said tribes either at the east or the west end of the tract.[3]

Notable among the Indian signatories were
•Meseekunnoghquoh, or Little Turtle for the Miamis
•Tuthinipee (also known as Topinabee) for the Potawatomi
•Winnemac for the Potawatomi
•Bukongehelas for the Delawares

Subsequent treaties

The Eel River band of Miami, Wyandot, Piankishaw, Kaskaskia, and also the Kickapoo represented by the Eel River chiefs in a treaty of August 7, 1803 concurred in the cessions for houses of entertainment provided for Article 4 of this treaty.[4]

At two treaties concluded at Vincennes in August 1805, the Delawares and Piankishaw ceded claims to lands south of the Vincennes Tract.[5][18][19]



1804

Conrad would have learned about the Lewis and Clark expedition in 1804.[20]



1804-1805: William Henry Harrison administered government of District of Louisiana 1804-1805.[21] In Vincennes, he served as a contact during the expedition; surviving records document his support[22] and his involvement in decisions about western Indian chiefs visiting Washington.[23]



Tenskwatawa

Also known as The Prophet

1804: Tenskwatawa (also known as The Prophet), a member of the Shawnee Indians, was born in 1775. Named Lalawethika (the Rattle), his mother abandoned him in 1779. By all accounts, Lalawethika was a homely child and lacked the physical abilities that his other siblings, including his elder brother Tecumseh, enjoyed. His older siblings refused to train him in hunting and fighting. He was so unskilled with a bow and arrow that he blinded himself in his right eye with a wayward arrow. As an adult, he became reliant on the kindness of his fellow tribesmen to feed himself and his family. He also turned to alcohol to forget his problems, quickly becoming dependent upon liquor. Not having the physical abilities to become a warrior, Lalawethika attempted to learn the ways of his village's medicine man. When the man died in 1804, Lalawethika quickly proved unable to meet his people's needs. They remembered the drunken Lalawethika and did not respect his medicinal abilities. He quickly turned back to alcohol to provide himself with solace.[24]



In 1804, Col. Meason filled the first order for sugar kettles called for by Southern planters.[25]



1804

By 1804 few Jews remained in Lancaster, and Jewish life there ended until a new group of Jews settled there fifty years later.[26]



1804

In 1804 the first post office was recorded for Springfield. Simon Kenton built a gristmill and distillery where the old International Harvester plant now stands.[27]



In 1804, Andrew Jackson (2nd cousin 8 times removed) acquired the "Hermitage", a 640-acre (2.6 km2) plantation in Davidson County, near Nashville. Jackson later added 360 acres (1.5 km2) to the farm. The primary crop was cotton, grown by enslaved workers. Jackson started with nine slaves, by 1820 he held as many as 44, and later held up to 150 slaves.[28]

1804: Napolean crowns himself emporor.[29]


The dark green line on this field is a cropmark that reveals the path of an 1804 alteration to the Turkey Foot Road. This 2010 photo shows both Maryland and Pennsylvania. [30]

1804: In the Napoleonic era Jewish children were permitted to attend the general schools (1804) in Bavaria.[31]

December 26, 1812

The British announce a naval blockade of Chesapeake and Delaware Bays, during the War of 1812.[32]

December 26, 1822

26 Dec 1822: Sally McKinnon married Gabriel Banes.[33]

1823

Just four years later Conrad and Caty sell 80 acres of the identical description for $483. to John Hamilton. (Ref #12 & 12.1) Whether they kept three acres is not known, but they recovered $517. Less than was paid for the land four years earlier purchased under the name of Conrad only. It is somewhat interesting to note that the deed to Mr. Hamilton was signed by “Caty Goodlove”; she no doubt went by Caty and preferred it to the extent she signed the instrument as “Caty”. This signature prompted me to use the name in the title of this article: “Conrad and Caty”[34]

Sir William Mackinnon (1823-1893) Born in Campbeltown, Scotland. Became a partner in a general store in the Ganges in 1847; then to Calcutta as senior partner in Mackinnon, Mackenzie and Co., East India Merchants. In 1855 he developed the British India Steam Navigation Co., one of the greatest shipping companies in the world. He was the chief adviser to the government on granting the charter to the Imperial British East Africa Co. He obtained funds for Enim relief expedition under Stanley.[35]

1823 – George Guess, better known as Sequoyah, emigrated to the Cherokee Nation West. • In the Cherokee Nation East, the National Committee is given the power to review acts of the National Council.[36]

December 26-28, 1862: Dr. William McKinnon Goodlove (1st cousin, 3 times removed) and the 57th Ohio Volunteer Infantry at the Chickasaw Bayou. [37]

Sunday Morning, December 26, 1915

Dr. William Goodlove, about seventy years of age, Civil war veteran and a man well known in Logan county, died Sunday morning at his home in Washington, D.C., after an illness of some months duration of kidney trouble. Dr. Goodlove was at one time located in Rushylvania and engaged in the practice of medicine. Although he had been away from this community for many years, he cherished a love for the people here that was often manifested. Not long ago he sent a collection of valuable books to the Bellefontaine Public Library and he also sent some rose bushes to be planted in the Library lawn.

For some years Dr. Goodlove has held a good position in the treasury department at Washington, D.C. and was so engaged when illness overtook him.

Among the staunch friends of Dr. Goodlove in this community are General Robert P. Kennedy and Walter S. Roebuck

Mrs. Goodlove, who survives, is a sister on Hon. Benj. Lefevre, who is prominent in this section of Ohio and who resides near Sidney.

The body of Dr. Goodlove will be brought to Sidney where funeral service will be held Tuesday. General Kennedy and Mr. Roebuck will attend the service. Interment in Port Jefferson cemetery.

Dr. Goodlove was the son of John Goodlove who died at Quincy in 1856. Dr. Goodlove’s mother later married D. H. McKinnon, then of Logan county, but they later moved to Clay county, Illinois. Dr. Goodlove was born October 15, 1846, near Springfield, O. At the age of fifteen he enlisted in the Civil war in the 57th O. V. I. and served until the close of the war in the Fifteen Army corps. Under General John A. Logan, “Sherman’s Army,” and was discharged at Little Rock, Ark. In the fall of 1865 entered Medical College at Cincinnati, where he took a progressive course and graduated the same year. He began practice in Montra, Shelby county, O. In 1874 he became a member of the State Medical Society at Toledo, and also of the National Medical Society at Detroit in the same year. On May 23, 1869, Dr Goodlove married Miss Mary L. Lefevre…(missing section).[38]

1916

During the First World War (1914-1918), the KKK began to reorganize. It was prompted by a movie, The Birth of a Nation, which showed the first Ku Klux Klan organizing to defend white people, especially women, against blacks, especially men. The movie played in Des Moines in 1916. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) protested. The members were afraid that it would create a backlash against blacks. For the NAACP, which had just organized in Des Moines in 1915, this was one of its first actions. [39]

[40]

1916: National Parks Service established.

1916


[41]


[42]

1916: In 1916, just before B retain conquered Palestine, there was a change of government in Britain, and Balfoiur became the foreign secretary and Lloyd George became the prime minister. [43]

December 26, 1978: In Iran there were violent clashes o the streets of Tehran, in particular between troops and students.[44]

4:30 PM: December 26, 2004: An earthquake, magnitude between 9.1 and 9.3 sent a terrible tsunami crashing into countries bordering the Indian Ocean taking almost 230,000 lives. [45] Each mile of shoreline is slammed by 33 million cubic feet of water and debree. Its as if Thailand’s western shoreline is hit by a tide of wet cement the size of the great wall of China. Three giant waves hit every fifteen minutes. It was the most destructive Tsunami in modern history. Victim’s are spread along 5,,000 miles of coastline in eleven countries. [46]

December 26, 1915:

From: C. Michael Watson [mwatson@freemason.com]

Sent: Monday, January 3, 2011

To: mwatson@freemason.com

Subject: Grand Lodge of Ohio: Masonic History of Ancestors



Goodlove, W. M. (William M.)

Bellefontaine

Lodge No. 209

Initiated February 10, 1873

Passed December 1, 1873

Raised May 17, 1875

Dimitted June 25, 1877

Affiliated July 17, 1877

Susp. N.P.D. July 1, 1793

Reinstated December 3, 1895

Died December 26, 1915[47]

December 26, 1922 – January 2, 2007


Winton D. Goodlove

Birth: December 26, 1922

Death: January 2, 2007

h/o Berniece E.

Family links:
Spouse:
Berniece E. Goodlove (1923 - 1999)


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

Created by: Gail Wenhardt
Record added: Apr 04, 2011
Find A Grave Memorial# 67902190

Added by: Gail Wenhardt

Cemetery Photo
Added by: Jackie L. Wolfe

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


[1] American Experience, We shall Remain; After the Mayflower, 4/13/2009


[2] American Experience, We shall Remain; After the Mayflower, 4/13/2009


[3] Yorktown Victory Museum, 2008


[4] Letters to Washington and Accompanying Papers. Published by the Society of the Colonial Dames of America. Edited by Stanislaus Murray Hamilton.--vol. 04


[5] Other estimates vary in detail. Smith estimates the Hessian strength at ? this is extrapolated from prisoners plus a rough guess of escapees plus killed and ? Dwyer variously estimated “1,400 hessians in crowded Trenton,” and repeated ? estimate of 1,6oo Hessians (The Day Is Ours! [New York, 1983], 264, 276).

SOURCES: Rall regiment, testimony in Hessian Court of Inquiry by Maj. Joha Matthaeus, New York, 17 Aug. 1778; Lossberg regiment, Corp. William Hartung, P phia, 22 April 1778; Knyphausen regiment, Lt. Christian Sobbe, regimental adjutan delphia, 25 April 1778; all LT, ML 591, 200, 377. Secondary accounts include Wi Stryker, The Battles of Trenton and Princeton (Boston, 1898), 316, 378, 388—94, 408; bi data from Samuel Stelie Smith, The Battle of Trenton (Monmouth Beach, N.J.), 30. R tal reports do not include officers. Washington’s Crossing by David Hackett Fischer pg. 396






[6] The Brothers Crawford


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


[8] http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~rosemarypro/spaid/beginning.htm


[9] The Brothers Crawford




[10] http://historicalartprints.com./hap/cmd?CMD=BROWSE&parent=17&catid=24


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




[12] http://members.tripod.com/~Silvie/Schilling.html


[13] Sources include a report from Washington to John Hancock, December 27, 1776:

“I ordered the troops intended for this service which were about 2400 to parade back of McConkey’s Ferry.” GW, 7:454. Henry Knox’s estimate was a little higher: “a part of the army consisting of about 2500 or three thousand pass’d the River on Christmas night with almost infinite difficulty, with eighteen field pieces.” The source is a letter from Henry Knox to Lucy Knox, December 28, 1776, in William S. Stryker, The Battles of Trenton and Princeton (Boston, 1898), 371. Cadwalader wrote to Washington, probably on December 27, “we had about 1800 rank and file including artillery.” Cadwalader had first written 1,700, then crossed it out and wrote 1,800. GW, 7:445. In another letter dated December 26 at nine o’clock he wrote that “General Putnam was to cross at Philada to day, if the weather permitted. with 1000 men; 300 went over yesterday & 500 Jersey militia are now there as Col. Griffin informs me to day.” The source is a letter from Cadwalader to Washington, 2[7?] Dec. 1776. The date of this letter is mutilated in manuscript; editors of the Washington Papers believe that it was sent on December 26; I think that it would have been December 27, 1776. GW, 7:442. Washington’s Crossing by David Hackett Fischer pg. 381




[14] The Brothers Crawford




[15] Lieutenant Rueffer, Enemy Views by Bruce Burgoyne, pgs. 244-245.


[16] The German Allied Troop in the North American War of Independence, 1776-1783 by Max Von Eelking pg. 176.






[17] Diary of the American War, A Hessian Journal by Captain Johann Ewald pgs.191-196.


[18] Notes

1. ^ a b Kappler, p. 47

2. ^ Woodfill, Roger. "Greenville and Grouseland treaty lines". Surveyors Historical Society. http://www.surveyhistory.org/greenville_&_grouseland_treaty_lines1.htm. Retrieved 2008-10-01.

3. ^ a b c d Kappler, p. 48

4. ^ Kappler, p. 49

5. ^ Kappler, p. 54

Sources
•Kappler, Charles Joseph (1903). Indiana Affairs:Laws and Treaties by United States. Government Printing Office. http://books.google.com/books?id=WoUTAAAAYAAJ. Retrieved 2009-02-23.




[19] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Fort_Wayne_(1803)


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


[21] The District of Louisiana (1804), or Territory of Louisiana (1805), included most of the land in the Louisiana Purchase north of the 33rd parallel (the present day northern boundary of the state of Louisiana). For administrative purposes, this portion of the territory was attached to the Indiana Territory. The land south of this boundary line was the "Orleans Territory." See "1803 Map of U.S. after the Louisiana Purchase, " compiled by H. George Stoll, Hammond Incorporated, 1967, revised by U. S. Geological Survey, 1970, Civics Online Web site, http://www.civics-online.org (accessed November 9, 2005). (B00592)


[22] Harrison sent William Clark a copy of the "Indian Office" map that included the Missouri River and Mandan Country, acknowledged Clark's intent to keep him informed, and asked Clark to invite Meriwether Lewis to visit him in Vincennes on the way home. Harrison to Clark, Vincenes, November 13, 1803, Letters of the Lewis and Clark Expedition with Related Documents, 1783-1854, ed. Donald Jackson (Urbana, 1962), 135-36. B00600)

For acts regarding the division of the lands of the Louisiana, see U.S. Statutes at Large, II, 283-89, 331-32, Library of Congress http://memory.loc.gov/cgibin/ampage (accessed August 26, 2005). (B00594, B00595) In a letter to Harrison dated March 31, 1804, President Thomas Jefferson informs Harrison of his new responsibilities and directs him to move quickly to determine how to implement the division and governance of the lands, Messages and Letters, Esarey, ed., 94. (B00596)

John D. Barnhart and Dorothy L. Riker, Indiana to 1816: The Colonial Period (Indianapolis, 1971), 342-44, provides a good summary of the process of bringing the Louisiana Purchase under U.S. governance. (B00589)




[23] For Harrison's involvement in sending a group of Indian chiefs to Washington, see the following sources: Pierre Chouteau (Agent of Indian Affairs, Saint Louis) writes to Harrison regarding the Indian chiefs who had arrived in St. Louis from Fort Mandan. Chouteau asked Harrison for instructions for conducting the chiefs to Washington. There are numerous references to taking Indians to Washington to meet the "father." Pierre Chouteau to Wm. H. Harrison, St. Louis, May 22, 1805, Messages and Letters, Esarey, ed., 128-30. (B00603)

Harrison writes back to Chouteau agreeing that the Indians' trip to Washington should be postponed-if the Indian chiefs agree-until cooler weather arrives. Harrison to Pierre Chouteau, Vincennes, May 27, 1805, Messages and Letters, Esarey, ed., 135-36. (B00604)

Harrison informs the Secretary of War about the possible travel of Indian chiefs to Washington. Harrison also relays that Clark has sent him a letter [April 2, 1805] saying that all is well. William Henry Harrison to Henry Dearborn, Vincennes, May 27, 1805, Letters, Jackson, ed., 246-47. (B00606)

Chouteau indicates that some of the Indians sent by Lewis are impatient to get back to their villages and some are sick (the "Mahas" and "Poncas"). The "Ottos, " Missouris and some Sioux have gone home but will return at the end of September. Those remaining with Chouteau are the great chiefs of the "Ottos" and "Missoury, " the chief "ricaras" and some Sioux. The Indians are worried about so long a journey (to Washington) in the warm season and prefer to travel in the fall. Chouteau will prepare for that and try to get some "Sakias" and "foxes" to come. Chouteau to Harrison, St. Louis, June 12, 1805. Papers of William Henry Harrison, Clanin, ed., microfilm, reel 2, pp. 215-16. (B00607)




[24] http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/entry.php?rec=312


[25] History of Fayette County Pennsylvania, by Franklin Ellis, 1882. pg 509.


[26] Jewish Life in Pennsylvania, by Dianne Ashton, 1998 pg. 3.


[27] Ci.springfield.oh.us/profile/history.html


[28] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Jackson


[29] We Built This City, Paris, 10/12/2003.


[30] Dietle and McKenzie


[31] Encyclopedia Judaica, Volume 4, page 345.


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


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


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


[35] Clan Mackinnon compiled by Alan McKie 1986, page 34.


[36] Timetable of Cherokee Removal


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


[38] Weekly Index-Republican, Bellefontaine, Ohio, Thursday, December 30, 1915, page 1.


[39] http://www.iptv.org/iowapathways/mypath.cfm?ounid=ob_000303


[40] Nature Center, Crabtree Forest Preserve, Barrington, IL March 11, 2012


[41] Art Museum, Austin, TX. February 11, 2012


[42] Art Museum, Austin, TX. February 11, 2012


[43] Fascinating Facts about the Holy Land by Clarence H. Wagner, Jr.


[44] Jimmy Carter, The Liberal Left and World Chaos by Mike Evans, page 504


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


[46] Underwater Universe, Seven Deadly Seas. 6/1/2009, H2.


[47] Grand Lodge of Ohio, January 10, 2011

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