Sunday, January 6, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, January 7


This Day in Goodlove History, January 7

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.

Birthdays: Mary A. Goodlove Davis, Harold Stewart, Alice R. Talley Wesley, 103

January 7, 1325: Alfonso IV becomes King of Portugal. During the early 14th century, more than 200,000 Jews lived in Portugal, which was about 20 percent of the total population. This period was part of what is known as “Portugal’s Golden Age of Discovery, in which Jews made a major contribution to Portugal’s success.” During the reign of King Dinis, Alfonso’s father, the clergy invoked the restrictions of the Fourth Lateran Council in an attempt to get the monarch to restrict the role of Jews in Portuguese society. . The clergy, however, invoking the restrictions of the Fourth Council of the Lateran, brought considerable pressure to bear against the Jews during the reign of King Dinis I of Portugal, but the monarch maintained a conciliatory position. Alfonso remained faithful to his father’s policies. The position of the Jews of Portugal did not begin to deteriorate until the last decades of the 14th century as can be seen by the decree of King Joao I forcing Jews to wear special clothing and obey a special curfew. [1]

1326: Death of Mondino di Luzzi the Italian astronomer, death of Osman I the founder of Ottoman Empire, Isabella wife of Edward II and her lover Roger Mortimer invade England and capture the king, founding of Oriel College in Oxford and Clare College in Cambridge, First Polish War – Teutonic Knights defeat Poles to 1333, Queen Isabella and Roger Mortimer sail from France with army to rebel against Edward II of England, Cannon first used in Europe by Florentine army, Osman I (Ottoman) dies, Edward's wife, Isabella, leaves him for lover Roger Mortimer. They seize power and put Despensers to death. [2]

1327: When first organized, the friars had been a might force for good, with their ideals of holiness, voluntary poverty, and powerful preaching. But in the course of time they had become degraded into idle vagrants and imposters. “They were notorious as seducers of women. Peddling furs and girdles for wenches and wives, and small gentle dogs ‘to get love of them’, the friar in a fourteenth century poem ‘came to our dame when the goode man is from home.’ In the tales of Boccaccio…[and] in all popular literature of the time, clerical celibacy is a joke. ‘Priests lived with mistresses or else went in hunt of them.” This shameless behavior explains why the friars were so often the object of intense hostility, sometimes even of physical assault, because, as a chronicle of 1327 stated simply, “they did not behave as friars ought.”[3] Edward II murdered and Edward III reigns, Death of Meister Eckhart the German preacher and mystic, Aztecs establish Mexico City, great fire of Munich, Grand Canal constructed in China – connects Beijing to North and Yamgtze, England, Parliament declares Edward II deposed and son Edward III rules – Edward II murdered, HRE Louis IV invades Italy and declares Pope John XXII deposed, in this time Roger Mortimer was lover of Queen Isabel of England whose brother was King of France, Petrarch meets Laura, Queen of England's lover, Roger Mortimer forces king to abdicate and Edward III rules - Edward II murdered shortly thereafter, Edward deposed by Edward III, murdered by wife Isabella, Stot Bruce invades England to get England to recognize independence, Edward II forced to abdicate by queen and her lover Roger Mortimer - Edward III becomes king, Edward II murdered. [4]

January 7, 1502: Birthdate of Pope Gregory VIII, famed for the creation of the Gregorian calendar, a method of tracking time has had a unique impact on Jewish historians trying to match events that occurred before 1752 (5512) on the Jewish calendar with the civil calendar.[5]

1503: Spain uses the "pike and shot" formation in the Battle of Cerignola, the first battle won by gunpowder-based small arms.[6]

January 7, 1516: Representatives of several towns including Frankfort and Worms attended a Diet at Frankfort to discuss how the Jews might be banished and never allowed to return.[7]

January 7, 1536: Catherine of Aragon, the wife of King Henry VIII of England, passed away. She was the daughter of the two monarchs who created the Spanish Inquisition and drove the Jews out of Spain. The Spanish monarchs would consent to their daughter’s marriage if Henry’s father would promise that no Jews would ever live in England. Ironically, it was Catherine’s inability to provide a male heir that led to the England’s break with the Catholic Church which would play in an indirect positive role in the return of the Jews to England.[8]

January 7, 1699

Hostililties end in King William’s War, with the signing of a treaty at Casco, Maine.[9]

Monday January 7, 1754

George Washington and his guide Christopher Gist arrive in Wills Creek[10] (present day Cumberland Maryland) "after as fatiguing a journey as it is possible to conceive, rendered so by excessive bad weather: From the first day of December to the 15th there was but one Day but it rained or snowed incessantly and throughout the whole Journey we met with nothing but one continued Series of cold wet Weather," (George Washington). [11]

Janury 7, 1765: John STEPHENSON. Born on January 7, 1765 in Frederick County, Virginia. John died in Kentucky on March 17, 1832; he was 67. Buried in Concord Cemetery, Kentucky.

John first married Elizabeth MOORE. Born on March 19, 1773. Elizabeth died on July 6, 1812; she was 39.

They had the following children:

i. Elizabeth (1796-1852)

ii. Mariah.

Mariah married Thomas CALVERT.

iii. Sally.
Sally married Asher COX.

iv. Eliza T. (1811-1847)

On March 4, 1813 when John was 48, he second married Alice “Alsey”. Born in 1771. Alice “Alsey” died in Kentucky on September 19, 1846; she was 75. Buried in Concord Cemetery, Kentucky.

They had the following children:

i. Presley L.

ii. James F.

iii. Edward.

iv. Julia Ann.

Julia Ann married Clifton CALVERT. [12]

January 7, 1768: Birthdate of Joseph Bonaparte, brother of Napoleon Bonaparte. As King of Spain, he abolished the Inquisition.[13]

No. 3.—William CRAWFORD TO George WASHINGTON.

SPRING GARDEN,[14] January 7, 1769.[15]

Sir:—By Valentine Crawford I received your letter dated November 13th,[16] and the inclosed twenty pounds Pennsylvania money. I wrote you by Mr. Harrison.[17] He told me he gave Mrs. Washington my letter, as you were not at home. At my return from Frederick, [18] over the mountain, the surveyor was running land out for such as were ready to pay him. Immediately I got him to run out your land. I have done it as if for myself, taking all the good land, and leaving all that is sorry, only some joining the mill-seat. It came out in locations as other land, but was all run out in one body. The surveyor will be paid for every three hundred acres, notwithstanding he run the whole in one body. He says it is the rule of the office. There are in each survey three hundred and thirty-two and three hundred and thirty-three acres; so I had good measure.

The land you were to have of my brother, John Stephenson,[19] when the surveyor came was located. He will lose all that is good, without he can purchase the man’s right. This he intends to do, if he can, hut I doubt it, as people from Pennsylvania hold land high.

You mentioned that the lines of’ the colonies would be extended soon, or, at least, that such a plan was on foot,[20] and that the officers would obtain their lands agreeable to His Majesty’s proclamation.[21] I am at a loss where they will lay it oft’ (as the land to the southward of Penn’s line[22] is very sorry, except in some spots), unless it is laid off as you, in a letter, before wrote me.

I have not been down on any part of the Little Kanawha,[23] but have conversed with numbers that have been from the head to the mouth. They tell me there are no large bodies of good land on it. It is chiefly mountains and broken land, with here and there a very good piece.

In a few days, I intend going up the Monongahela, to run out some land there. The draft I shall bring down with me to your house, about the first or middle of Febru­ary. I should have gone before, but I was stopped by the road I had to finish. I have found out a piece or two more of good land in Penn’s lines, which you may have. I have taken them good for you, if you choose them. I could have taken more if I. had thought they would have been lessened, as it is from a half-penny to a penny an acre.

As soon as I return from up the river, I am to go over the Monongahela to look at some land two men have found on. A stream called Ten-mile creek; [24] and, if I like the land, you shall have any of it you may want. I shall he better able to satisfy you when I see you. I am, etc.

P. S.—by the commanding officer at Fort Pitt, there is a negro woman sent me who was taken, during the last war, [25] from a place called Draper’s Meadows, [26] then the property of one Major Winston.[27] He is since dead. There were twenty-two taken in all from him, but several got away and reached their master again. I understand the colony paid for theni; if so, she now belongs to Virginia. If it is not too much trouble for you, I should be obliged to you to in­quire and find out the truth of the matter. I wish you to purchase hei’ of’ the colony for me, provided they will wait a time for the money. It would be doing me a great favor. There are three more, I believe, I can get from the Indians with some trouble. The wench I have, ran away from them, amid came to Fort Pitt. I am afraid there are some schem­ing already to purchase her.[28]

January 7, 1773: Wednesday, rode 7 miles to Mr. Stevenson’s & preached. The hearers mostly Virginians. Preached in the open air. Several present, appeared almost intoxicated. Christmas & New Year holly days, are seasons of wild mirth & disorder here. Rode to Mr. Vance’s-to Hugh Bay’s-to Sam’l Newels-to Joseph Erwine’s.[29]

1773

In this log house where church services may have begun, following the times they met under the tree, holding their rifles under their arms, evidence points that the following were married here: Dr. Knight and Polly Stephenson; John Minter and……….Stephenson; John Crawford, his first wife Frances Bradford;Francis Hickman to Sallie Massey and Others.[30]

January 7, 1775: For the second time in tw o months, Empress Maria Theresa banished all the Jews of Bohemia and Moravia.[31] Due to the protests of the Jews and the governments of England and Holland, the decree was dropped everywhere but in Prague. To put this in perspective, this happened five months before the outbreak of the American Revolution. In other words, while the Old World was continuing to find ways to persecute Jews, the New World was about to enjoy a new birth of freedom that would include the Jews.[32]

January 7, 1777: Valentine Crawford[33] dies of pneumonia. He was a Colonel in the Virginia Militia December, 1776, where he served as Wagon Master General. He also acted as secretary and assistant to George Washington. He died January 7, 1777 in

Fayette County, Pennsylvania. While returning home from a battle with Indians, he fell through thin ice and drowned (some sources say he died of pneumonia after falling through ice). His brother, William, recovered his body and brought it home

for burial near his mother, Honoria Grimes Crawford. He is buried at Bullskin Creek in Shepardstown, West Virginia.

Colonel Valentine Crawford is the compilers 6th great granduncle

WASHINGTON-CRAWFORD LETTERS.

January7, 1777: “nearly 12,000”?

Colonel Lambert Cadwalader estimated “our Army in the jersies altogether must amount to near twelve thousand.” [34]


Prisoners taken at Trenton being marched through Philadelphia.

On January 7th, 1780 a northwester came up, during which the sea rose so high that one could call it a half a storm.[35]

Moore to Irvine

PHILADELPHIA, January 7, 1782.

Sir:— I wrote you a few days since by Messrs. Proctor and Meason, two of our assembly men, from Westmoreland county, who had an order on the treasurer of Lancaster couhty for five hundred pounds specie to be delivered you for the pur­pose of recruiting. From their information and the gentle­men of the council for the western frontiers,[36] we are in hopes you will be able to get a considerable number of recruits. As it is difficult for want of opportunities, as well as hazardous, to send you money hence, if you can get any persons in your parts to advance specie for drafts on council, for the purpose of recruiting, you may be assured of punctuality in honoring them, having laid by in the treasury, separate and apart front all monies, a considerable sum for the purpose of recruiting only. We have begun this business here under the superin­tendence of Colonel [Richard] Humpton [of the sixth Penn­sylvania regiment], who has sent recruiting parties into most of the counties of the state. Our line[37] is very thin. General Washington is very desirous of having a respectable army in. tile field by the first of March. I hope we shall not be behind-hand with our sister states in their complement of men, and that every exertion will be used for that purpose.[38]

January 7, 1785: On this date in 1785, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart received his 2nd degree in Masonry.[39]

January 7, 1806 – Treaty of Washington ceding land.[40]

January 7, 1808: On this date in 1808, the Grand Lodge of Ohio was established.[41]

January 7, 1815

On the evening of January 7, Pakenham issued orders for an all-out assault on Line Jackson early the next morning. Despite the three prior clashes in December and January, this fourth engagement is the one generally referred to as the Battle of New Orleans.[42]

January 7, 1829: Mary Ann Goodlove, born January 7, 1829, in Moorefield Twp. Clark County, Ohio. She died April 29, 1926 in Columbus Ohio. She was the daughter of Conrad Goodlove and Catherine “Katie” McKinnon. She married Peter T. Davis October 7, 1852. She is the sister of William Harrison Goodlove. (Conrad Goodlove Family Bible)

January 7, 1829-April 29, 1926

Mary Ann Goodlove Davis

Birth: January 7, 1829

Death: April 29, 1926


Burial:
Green Lawn Cemetery
Columbus
Franklin County
Ohio, USA

Created by: Dave
Record added: Aug 03, 2008
Find A Grave Memorial# 28749189

Cemetery Photo
Added by: Mike Reed

January 7, 1838:

Detachments arrive With Cherokee refugees at Ft. Gibson, led by named men, on the following dates:

January 7, 1838 – John Bell. [43]

January 7, 1860: On the Origin of Species was first published on Thursday November 24, 1859, priced at fifteen shillings. The book had been offered to booksellers at Murray's autumn sale on Tuesday 22 November, and all available copies had been taken up immediately. In total, 1,250 copies were printed but after deducting presentation and review copies, and five for Stationers' Hall copyright, around 1,170 copies were available for sale.[1] Significantly, 500 were taken by Mudie's Library, ensuring that the book promptly reached a large number of subscribers to the library.[55] The second edition of 3,000 copies was quickly brought out on January 7, 1860,[56] and incorporated numerous corrections as well as a response to religious objections by the addition of a new epigraph on page ii, a quotation from Charles Kingsley, and the phrase "by the Creator" amended to the closing sentence.[57] During Darwin's lifetime the book went through six editions, with cumulative changes and revisions to deal with counter-arguments raised. The third edition came out in 1861, with a number of sentences rewritten or added and an introductory appendix, An Historical Sketch of the Recent Progress of Opinion on the Origin of Species,[58] while the fourth in 1866 had further revisions. The fifth edition, published on 10 February 1869, incorporated more changes and for the first time included the phrase "survival of the fittest", which had been coined by the philosopher Herbert Spencer in his Principles of Biology (1864).[59] [44]

Thurs. January 7, 1864:

Was mustered into the united states service went to camp mcclelan[45] and got a furlough at Gregorys theater at night – staid all night at Pennsylvania hotel davenport


http://www.sonofthesouth.net/leefoundation/civil-war/1861/june/camp-defiance-cairo.htm

January 7, 1901

(Pleasant Valley) It was reported Miss Jessie Goodlove had scarlet fever, but it proved to be la grippe, and she is quite well at present.[46]

January 7, 1942: : Throughout the day at the Chelmno death camp, Jewish deportees from nearby villages are systematically gassed in vans; German and Ukrainian workers pull gold teeth and fillings from the corpses' mouths. Germans undertake van gassings of 5000 Gypsies from Lódz, Poland. [47]

January 7, 1942: Support arrived the following day, January 7, when Enterprise - flagship of Vice Admiral William F. Halsey - returned to Pearl Harbor from an uneventful patrol. Halsey immediately approved of Pye's plan, and was first astounded and then outraged by the opposition against it. In the words of a biographer, Halsey "cleared the air", going so far as to volunteer to lead the operation. As perhaps no other man in Oahu at the time better appreciated the offensive power of the carrier, Halsey's opinion won the day, not to mention Nimitz's gratitude. [48]

January 7, 1864…

[49]

March 30 – June 10, 1964: The longest filibuster in the history of the Senate was waged against the Civil Rights Act of 1964, with 57 days of debate over a 73 day period. It ended when the Senate voted 71–29 to invoke cloture, the first successful cloture motion on a civil rights bill.[1][2][3]
[50]

January 23, 1885-January 7, 1968


Bessie Meek Goodlove

Birth: January 23, 1885, USA

Death: January 7, 1968
Knoxville
Knox County
Tennessee, USA

Family links:
Spouse:
Charles S Goodlove (1877 - 1936)*

Children:
Blanche G Goodlove Barber (1904 - 1992)*

*Calculated relationship

Burial:
Highland Memorial Cemetery
Knoxville
Knox County
Tennessee, USA

Created by: Doug Wheeling
Record added: Jun 12, 2012
Find A Grave Memorial# 91845504

Added by: Doug Wheeling

Cemetery Photo
Added by: Jimmy Sweet

[51]

January 7, 1997: Denise Grady. "Finding Genetic Traces of Jewish Priesthood." The New York Times (January 7, 1997): 6.

January 7, 1997: Debra Nussbaum Cohen. "Kohen gene pioneers fear misuse." Jewish Telegraphic Agency (January 7, 1997). [52]

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


[1] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/


[2] mike@abcomputers.com


[3] Trial by Fire by Harold Rawlings page 39-40


[4] mike@abcomputers.com


[5] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/


[6] http://www.talonsite.com/tlineframe.htm


[7] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/


[8] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/


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


[10] The earliest recorded ―road‖ heading west from ―Wills Creek‖ was the circa 1749 Twightwee Indian road to Pickawillany at or near the present town of Piqua, Ohio. By 1753, branches of a second road, financed by the Ohio Company, went to the present-day areas of Brownsville and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. At least part of the Ohio Company road was laid out and marked by the Indian Nemacolin13. The Ohio Company road was repaired by Washington‘s forces in 1754, and further improved by Braddock‘s forces in 1755. Braddock‘s road and the new Turkey Foot Road became the principal routes of travel west from Cumberland. A variety of literature reports, without supporting documentary evidence, that Nemacolin and Thomas Cresap blazed and cleared the Ohio Company road in 1749. Such statements are probably the conflation of two facts: (1) According to the Ohio Company‘s ―second petition‖, their land charter was dated March 18, 1749, and (2) According to the biographer of Thomas‘s son Michael Cresap, the Ohio Company employed Nemacolin to mark and lay out the road. The earliest actual evidence of a completed road that we have seen was written on November 22, 1752. In Search For Turkey Foot Road, Page 6.


[11] http://www.nps.gov/archive/fone/1754.htm


[12] www.frontierfolk.net/ramsha_research/families/Stephenson.rtf


[13] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/


[14] Spring Garden was one of the names by which Crawford designated his home upon the Youghiogheny.


[15]Colonel William Crawford brought his family from Virginia to Stewarts Crossing, the site of New Haven, Pa., in 1769. He had spent several years in preparing a place for them, which he called “Spring Garden”.


[16] The letter here referred to has not been preserved. Crawford’s re­ply, however, is so full as probably to indicate all its important points.


[17] 4 Lawrence Harrison. His son, William, married Sarah, one of the daughters of Crawford.


[18] 5 By “Frederick” is meant Frederick county, Virginia, the former home of Crawford. His residence was upon Bullskin creek, in what was afterward Berkeley County, Virginia— now, Jefferson County, West Virginia.


[19] A half-brother of Crawford. He had five half-brothers, sons of Richard Stephenson: John, Hugh, Richard, James, and Marcus.


[20] The lines of Virginia were greatly exceeded after the treaty, in 1768, at Fort Stanwix; in the end, to the Mississippi. At least, such was the extent she claimed. She afterward relinquished her sover­einty over all territory west of the Ohio and Big Sandy, and the Cum­berland mountains.


[21] At the commencement of the Seven Years’ War, in 1754, Governor Dinwiddie, of Virginia, to stimulate enlistments, issued a proclamation, granting two hundred thousand acres of land on the Ohio to officers and soldiers. This grant was afterward confirmed by the king. As an officer in that war, Washington was entitled to his share of land.


[22] By “Penn’s line” is meant tile southern boundary line of Pennsylvania, west of the Alleghanies.


[23] Little Kanawha is a river of West Virginia. It is a tributary of the Ohio, entering that stream on tile left, at Parkersburgh, one hundred and ninety miles below Pittsburgh.


[24] Ten-mile creek empties into the Monongahela on tile left, at Millsboro, Washington county, Pennsylvania.


[25] Pontiac’s War of 1763—’64.


[26] Afterward Smithfield, Montgomery county, Va., the home of the Preston family.


[27] William Winston, Uncle of Patrick Henry.


[28] The Washington Crawford Letters, by C. W. Butterfield, 1877


[29] Diary of David McClure, Doctor of Divinity 1748-1820 with notes by Franklin B. Dexter, M.A. 1899. pg.107.


[30] Since Rev. McClure mentions Frances Bradford as John Crawford’s first wife, the author is inclined to believe that John was married to his second wife at that time. Rev. McClure judged him to be married there, but John was really married in 1764 and this takes him back to Virginia. Effie Grimes was the second wife to John Crawford and it appears that second marriage took place before 1773, the year of Rev. McClure’s arrival. This being the case, Lt. John Crawford (son of Col. William and Hannah Crawford), was married previously to Frances Bradford, long enough to have two Sons (Moses and Richard), loss of his wife Frances, and be married again to Effie Grimes; all before Rev. David McClure’s arrival to that locality in 1773. (See John Crawford’s marriage date in the records of the old Bradford Bible). John Minter married Elizabeth, the daughter of Valentine Crawford, and Dr. Knight married Polly, daughter of Richard Stephenson, Jr. (half—brother to William and Valentine Crawford). Since Rev. McClure was not present when these marriages took place, he would be justified in using the term, ‘evidence points’ to a good advantage. From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford pg. 58-59.

[31] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/

[32] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/

[33] Valentine was supposed to be two years younger than his brother William, and then must have been born c. 1724, not 1734 at most as most sources have. He died Jan 7, 1777. He was a Colonel in the Virginia Militia. He married Sarah Morgan, daughter of David Morgan. They had nine children. (Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett, Page 908.9)

[34] The source is Cadwalader to Peggy Meredith, 7 Jan. 1777, rpt. in Dennis P. Ryan, ed., A Salute to Courage (New York, 1979), 64 Washington’s Crossing, by David Hackett Fischer pg. 381

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


[36] Matthew Jack, of Westmoreland, and Dorsey Pentecost, of Washington county, were the “gentlemen of the [supreme executive] council for the western frontiers,” at that date.

Washington-Irvine Correspondence by Butterfield page 235.


[37] That is, the Pennsylvania line; consisting of the various regiments, in the continental service, belonging to that state.

(Washington-Irvine Correspondence by Butterfield page 235.)


[38] Washington-Irvine Correspondence by Butterfield page 235.


[39] http://www.bessel.org/datemas.htm


[40] Timetable of Cherokee Removal


[41] http://www.bessel.org/datemas.htm


[42] Military History Magazine, May/June 2008 page 32.


[43] Timetable of Cherokee Removal.


[44] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_the_Origin_of_Species


[45]A major Union supply depot at Cairo Point. Originally called Camp Prentiss, renamed Camp McClernand in 1861. A reproduction of the fort is in the park.


[46] Winton Goodlove papers.


[47] http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Holocaust/Chronology_1942.html


[48] http://www.cv6.org/1942/marshalls/marshalls_2.htm


[49] * LBJ Presidential Library, Austin TX. February 11, 2012


[50] LBJ Presidential Library, Austin TX. February 11, 2012


[51] http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Goodlove&GSbyrel=in&GSdyrel=in&GSob=n&GRid=91845504&


[52] http://www.khazaria.com/genetics/abstracts-cohen-levite.html

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