Monday, March 11, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, March 11

This Day in Goodlove History, March 11


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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), Washington, Winch (England, traditionally Wales), including correspondence with George Rogers Clark, Thomas Jefferson, and ancestors William Henry Harrison, Andrew Jackson and George Washington.

The Goodlove Family History Website:


The Goodlove/Godlove/Gottlieb families and their connection to the Cohenim/Surname project:

• New Address!
http://www.familytreedna.com/public/goodlove/default.aspx

Remembrance: Clyde C. Godlove, M.J. Hannah

Birthday: Elsie Godlove Gibbens



March 11, 1770; Mr. Crawford set off for Williamsburg and Mr. Magowan for Col…?[1]


John lngman, an employee of William Crawford murders

Indian Stephen.


William Crawford was appointed one of the justices of the

peace in Cumberland Co., PA.[2]


March 11, 1771

The additional commissions issued March 11, 1771, were to William Proctor, Jr., Robert Cluggage, Robert Hanna, George Wilson, George Woods, William Lochrey, William Crawford, Dorsey Pentecost, William McConnell, Thomas ,m Gist….[3]

 
March 11, 1801

PETITION FOR PENSION69

HANNAH CRAWFORD, 1801


To the Honorable Court now sitting:

To the Petition of Hannah Crawford widow of Colonel William Crawford who was killed in active service, humbly Herewith. That your Petitioner has heretofore been allotted a pension or allowance for her support and maintanence, that one whole year has elapsed since the last order for that purpose was made by the, still living unmarried and is old, infirm and indigent circumstances, that your Petitioner has met with an recent accident by getting her arm broke which has rendered her entirely unable to get her living, your Petitioner therefore prays the Court to make such further allowance as to them in their discretion shall seem reasonable and right in pursuance to the act of assembly in such cases made and provided, and your Petitioner

is in duty bound will truly pray.

her

Hannah V Crawfort

mark

***** ** ** * ** * * ** * ** *







Fayette County, S.S.


Personally came Hannah Crawford the above petitioner and being and as the Law directs, sayeth that the facts stated in her petition above are true. Sworn and subscribed to before me this 11thday of March 1801.

her

Andr. Trapp. Hannah V Crawford[5]

mark[6]


March 11, 1801: Paul I of Russia is assassinated, leading the way for his son Alexander I to accede the throne. Paul’s death was no loss to the Jews of Russia. At the time of his death, Paul was preparing to implement the recommendations contained in a report entitled, “An Opinion on How to Avert the Scarcity of Food in White Russia Through the Curbing of the Jews’ Avaricious Occupations, Their Reformation and Other Matters.” Alexander I began his reign by adopting a series of policies that were designed to further degrade and impoverish the Jews. As the threat of Napoleon loomed on the horizon, Paul’s policies towards the Jews softened and improved. The first Lubavitcher Rebbe urged Jews to support Alexander in the fight against Napoleon. After the Napoleonic threat disappeared Alexander’s treatment of the Jews became increasingly less sympathetic. By the time of his death, he had returned to the reactionary views that had marked the start of his reign.[7] Several DNA matches indicate their faimiles earliest known ancestor is from Russia.


March 11, 1805

To the Honorable Orphans Court now sitting for the County of Fayette at March term 1806.

The petitioner Hannah Crawford, widow of Colonel William Crawford, who was killed .by the Indians in actual service at the town of Sandusky, in the year 1782.

Humbly showeth that the Petitioner has heretofore been allowed a

Pension or allowance for her support and maintenance, that one whole year has elapsed since the last order for that purpose has been made by the Court.

That your petitioner is still living unmarried is old and infirm and indigent circumstances and entirely unable to get her living by labors. Your petitioner therefore prays the court to make such further order for your petitioners allowance as to them in their discretion shall seem reasonable and right in furtherance to the act of assembly in such cases made and provided and your petitioner is in duty bound will ever

pray for. her

Hannah V Crawford

mark

Personally came before me the Subscriber Hannah Crawford the above petitioner, and being sworn as the Law requires sayeth that the Facts stated in the petition above are true. Sworn and subscribed before me the eleventh day of March 1805.

her

NATHAN GRANT Hannah V Crawford

Mark[8]

March 11: 1812: Prussian Jews were granted civil rights. The price of citizenship included the adoption of family names in the Western style. Although later reaction revoked most of this freedom, the discrimination never returned to the level existing in the "Middle Ages." That is, until the rise of Hitler.[9]

March 11, 1861: In Montgomery, Alabama, delegates from South Carolina, Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas adopt the Permanent Constitution of the Confederate States of America.

The constitution resembled the Constitution of the United States, even repeating much of its language, but was actually more comparable to the Articles of Confederation--the initial post-Revolutionary War U.S. constitution--in its delegation of extensive powers to the states. The constitution also contained substantial differences from the U.S. Constitution in its protection of slavery, which was "recognized and protected" in slave states and territories. However, in congruence with U.S. policy since the beginning of the 19th century, the foreign slave trade was prohibited. The constitution provided for six-year terms for the president and vice president, and the president was ineligible for successive terms. Although a presidential item veto was granted, the power of the central Confederate government was sharply limited by its dependence on state consent for the use of any funds and resources.

Although Britain and France both briefly considered entering the Civil War on the side of the South, the Confederate States of America, which survived until April 1865, never won foreign recognition as an independent government.[10]

Fri. March 11, 1864:

Turned over our tents. Wrote a letter to Wildcat. Drilled once. Laid without tent

Heavy dew. Low flat land. BurvicBay

Wide as Wapsie and as deep [11]

March 11, 1865: William McKinnon Goodlove, on March 7, 1864 enlisted in the Union Army, K Co. 57th Inf Reg. in Ohio at the age of 18. On this day at the Battle at Fayetteville, North Carolina on March 11, 1865 [12]


William Mckinnon Goodlove is the 1st cousin 3 times removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove

March 11, 1867: Governor Vance was arrested by Federal forces on his birthday in May 1865 and spent time in prison in Washington, D.C. Per President Andrew Johnson's amnesty program, he filed an application for pardon on June 3, and was paroled on July 6.[6] After his parole, he began practicing law in Charlotte, North Carolina. Among his clients was accused murderer Tom Dula, the subject of the folk song "Tom Dooley." Governor Vance was formally pardoned on March 11, 1867, though no formal charges had ever been filed against him leading to his arrest, during his imprisonment, nor during the period of his parole.[6]

In 1870, the state legislature elected him to the United States Senate, but due to the restrictions placed on ex-Confederates by the 14th Amendment of the Constitution, he was not allowed to serve. In 1876, Vance was elected Governor once again (during which time he focused on education), and in 1879 the legislature again elected him to the United States Senate. This time he was seated, and he served in the Senate until his death in 1894. After a funeral in the U.S. Capitol, Vance was buried in the Riverside Cemetery in Asheville.[6]

Zebulon Baird Vance is the 3rd cousin 6x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove[13]

March 11, 1893: Samuel Gottlieb, born March 11, 1893 in Berlichingen. Resided Berlichingen. Deportation: from Westerbork. May 25, 1943, Sobibor. Todesdaten:

May 25,1943, Sobibor.[15]


March 11, 1918: An army private reported to the camp hospital before breakfast. He had a fever, sore throat, headache, nothing serious. One minute later, another soldier showed up. By noon the hospital had over 100 cases. In a week, 500. That spring 48 soldiers, all in the prime of life, died at Fort Riley. The cause of death was listed as pneumonia.[16] marking what are believed to be the first cases in the historic influenza epidemic of 1918. The flu would eventually kill 675,000 Americans and more than 20 million people (some believe the total may be closer to 40 million) around the world, proving to be a far deadlier force than even the First World War.

The initial outbreak of the disease, reported at Fort Riley in March, was followed by similar outbreaks in army camps and prisons in various regions of the country. The disease soon traveled to Europe with the American soldiers heading to aid the Allies on the battlefields of France. (In March 1918 alone, 84,000 American soldiers headed across the Atlantic; another 118,000 followed them the next month.) Once it arrived on a second continent, the flu showed no signs of abating: 31,000 cases were reported in June in Great Britain. The disease was soon dubbed the Spanish flu due to the shockingly high number of deaths in Spain (some 8 million, it was reported) after the initial outbreak there in May 1918.

The flu showed no mercy for combatants on either side of the trenches. Over the summer, the first wave of the epidemic hit German forces on the Western Front, where they were waging a final, no-holds-barred offensive that would determine the outcome of the war. It had a significant effect on the already weakening morale of the troops--as German army commander Crown Prince Rupprecht wrote on August 3: poor provisions, heavy losses, and the deepening influenza have deeply depressed the spirits of men in the III Infantry Division. Meanwhile, the flu was spreading fast beyond the borders of Western Europe, due to its exceptionally high rate of virulence and the massive transport of men on land and aboard ship due to the war effort. By the end of the summer, numerous cases had been reported in Russia, North Africa and India; China, Japan, the Philippines and even New Zealand would eventually fall victim as well.[17]

March 11, 1920

Although accepting a call to a town church, the regional superintendence he had accepted entailed heading up rural parish work in the Iowa conference for the Board of Home Missions of the Methodist Episcopal Church under the general directorship of Paul L. Vogt. Buck Creek remained the centerpiece, the exemplar, for this work; hence, his success in this capacity was still linked to Buck Creek.[18]


March 11, 1938: The newly appointed Nazi Chancelor of Austria invited Hitler to unify the two countries into a greater Reich.


March 11, 1939: A law permitting the establishment of the Hungarian Labor Service (Munkaszolgalat) System is enacted.[19]


March 11, 1941: The United States approves the Lend-Lease Act.[20]


March 11, 1942

Informing the German Foreign Ministry of planned deportations, (from France) to ensure against possible diplomatic obstacles, Eichmann writes; “We inform you that in addition to the evacuation planned for March 23, 1942 of 1,000 Jews from Compiegne, 5,000 Jews identified by the Gestapo should, after a brief delay, be evacuated from France to the concentration camp of Auschwitz (Upper Silesia). I must also ask your agreement for this case.” On March 20, the Foreign Ministry replies that it has no objection to the deportation of the 6,000 Jews to Auschwitz.[21]


March 11, 1943: A total of 341 Macedonian Jews are concentrated in Skopje. Most are subsequently deported to Treblinka.[22]


March 11, 1946: Covert Lee Goodlove Initiated March 11, 1946 Passed April 1 1946, Raised April 22, 1946, all at Vienna Lodge No 142. Suspended November 13, 1972, Reinstated January 10, 1973. Demitted May 10, 1988 when they closed. Birthdate November 12, 1911, Died August 30, 1997. May 10, 1988 joined Benton City LodgeNo. 81, Shellsburg, IA. Became a 50 Year Mason, June 19, 1996. [23]


1946: A year after the end of hostilities a Nazi underground movement remained active in Bavaria.[24]


1946: Jerusalem population during Late British Mandate (Christian rule), 165,000.[25]

March 11, 1947: On this day in 1947, President Harry Truman writes to his good friend, former President Herbert Hoover, thanking him for his help in investigating post-World War II reconstruction issues in Germany and Austria. Truman's letter was just one exchange in a friendship that began in 1945 when Truman first consulted the former president for his expertise on foreign policy.

Truman's letter was in response Hoover's work in 1945-46 to combat the famine in Europe and Asia that had resulted largely from the devastation of World War II. Truman sought out Hoover for his experience leading the effort to stave off a similar food crisis caused by World War I. In 1914, Hoover had established a food-aid program for Belgium while serving as U.S. food administrator. He had also headed the American Relief Administration from 1917 to 1921 and implemented critical food-rationing and distribution policies for the U.S., Europe and Russia before becoming president in 1929. Truman appointed former President Hoover as honorary chairman of the Famine Emergency Committee in 1946. Hoover, at age 71, worked tirelessly, traveling the world to study the famine and devising solutions to food-distribution problems.

In 1947, Truman assigned Hoover to conduct a survey on the German and Austrian food crisis. He also asked Hoover to propose ways to wean Germany and Austria off U.S. financial aid and retool their economies to be more self-supporting. After filing his report on Germany and Austria, Hoover returned to Washington, D.C., and had barely settled into his new job when Truman asked him to chair the Commission on Organization of the Executive Branch; he agreed. In this capacity, Hoover worked closely with Truman in devising ways to pare down and refine the post-World War II federal government to improve administrative efficiency, curb the powers of the executive branch and loosen what both men considered to be excessive regulatory control of the private business sector. This commission became known as the Hoover Commission.[26]

March 11, 2011: A massive earthquake registering 9.0 hit Japan. It was followed by a tsunami and a nuclear crisis unlike anything since Chernobyl in April 1986.[27]


“…The time is near…” Rev. 1:3

“and…the place…is called Armageddon…” Rev. 16:16[28]


“Soon shall we cast terror into the hearts of the unbelievers.” The Qur’an, Surah 3:151[29]


“All that is on earth will perish.” The Qur’an, Surah 55.26[30]

“There was a great earthquake… the sun turned black… the whole moon turned blood red and the stars in the sky fell to earth.” Rev. 6:12[31]



“During those days men will seek death, but will not find it: They will long to die, but death will elude them.” Revelations 9:6


“The last hour will not come unless there is much bloodshed.” Hadith Sahih Muslim, 41:6903


“The grace of the Lord Jesus be with God’s people. Amen.”Revelations 22:21


“Praise be to Allah… Master of the Day of Judgment” Sarah Al-Fatihah 1:2-4


“Acquiring nuclear weapons for the defense of Muslims is a religious duty.” Osama bin Laden


2nd Samuel 7:10:

Moreover I will appoint a place for my people Israel, and will plant them, that they may dwell in a place of their own, and move no more; neither shall the children of wickedness afflict them anymore.


Genesis 12:3

God told Abraham…

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


March 11, 2012

Crabtree Forest Preserve, Barrington, IL







































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



[2] The Brothers Crawford, Allen W. Sholl, 1995



[3]Annals of Southwesten Pennsylvania by Lewis Clark Walkinshaw, Volume I, pg. 361.



[4]Proposed Descendants of William Smith



[5]Hannah “Vance” Crawford. Hannah is the daughter of John Vance and Elizabeth Glass. JG



[6] Fayette Co., Pennsylvania Petitions Book, No. 1 p. 37

The Brothers Crawford, Scholl, 1995, pg 34-35



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



[8] The brothers Crawford by Scholl



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



[10]http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/confederate-constitution-adopted



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



[12](Historical Data Systems, comp,. American Civil War Soldiers [database on-line], Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 1999.)




[13]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zebulon_Baird_Vance



[14]Proposed descendants of William Smith



[15][1] Gedenkbuch, Opfer der Verfolgung der Juden unter der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft in Deutschland 1933-1945. 2., wesentlich erweiterte Auflage, Band II G-K, Bearbeitet und herausgegben vom Bundesarchiv, Koblenz, 2006, pg. 1033-1035,.

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



[16]American Experience, Influenza 1918, 10/29/2009



[17]http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/first-cases-reported-in-deadly-influenza-epidemic



[18]There Goes the Neighborhood, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 175.



[19]Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page1761.



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



[21]French Children of the Holocaust, A Memorial, by Serge Klarsfeld, page 28.



[22]Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1775



[23] Karen L. Davies Administrative Assistant, Grand Lodge of Iowa A.F. & A.M.PO Box 279, Cedar Rapids, IA 52406-0279. 319-365-1438.



[24]Encyclopedia Judaica, volume 4, page 346.



[25]Fascinating Facts about the Holy Land, by Clarence H. Wagner, Jr. page 200.



[26]http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/truman-thanks-herbert-hoover-for-aiding-post-wwii-reconstruction



[27]Jerusalem Prayer Team email, March 30, 2011



[28]Religulous, 1/1/2008



[29]Religulous, 1/1/2008



[30]Religulous 1/1/2008



[31]Religulous 1/1/2008




[32]Crabtree Forest Preserve



[33]Crabtree Forest Preserve



[34]Crabtree Forest Preserve



[35]Crabtree Forest Preserve



[36]Crabtree Forest Preserve



[37]Crabtree Forest Preserve



[38]Crabtree Nature Center, Barrington, IL



[39]Crabtree Nature Center, Barrington, IL



[40]Crabtree Nature Center, Barrington, IL



[41]Crabtree Nature Center, Barrington, IL



[42]Crabtree Nature Center, Barrington, IL



[43]Crabtree Nature Center, Barrington, IL



[44]Crabtree Nature Center, Barrington, IL



[45]Crabtree Nature Center, Barrington, IL



[46]Crabtree Nature Center, Barrington, Il



[47]Crabtree Forest Preserve, Barrington, IL



[48]Crabtree Forest Preserve, Barrington, IL



[49]Crabtree Forest Preserve, Barrington, IL



[50]Crabtree Forest Preserve, Barrington, IL



[51]Crabtree Forest Preserve, Barrington, IL



[52]Crabtree Forest Preserve, Barrington, IL



[53]Crabtree Forest Preserve, Barrington, IL March 11, 2012



[54]Crabtree Forest Preserve, Barrington, IL



[55]Crabtree Forest Preserve, Barrington, IL



[56]Crabtree Forest Preserve, Barrington, IL



[57]Crabtree Forest Preserve, Barrington, IL



[58]Crabtree Forest Preserve, Barrington, IL



[59]Crabtree Forest Preserve, Barrington, IL



[60]Crabtree Forest Preserve, Barrington, IL



[61]Crabtree Forest Preserve, Barrington, IL

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